Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 288 - 288: Beyond the Quarantine



Bennu led me away from the central courtyard and toward a section of the Sanctum we hadn't explored. It was a partially collapsed dormitory wing where the ancient, white stone had yielded to the relentless encroachment of Wahash's root systems.

The air grew perceptibly colder the deeper we went.

"Stay close," I whispered to Bennu, who had dialed down his luminescent glow to a faint ember to avoid casting shadows.

Kaelen was waiting for us at the end of a long, dark corridor where the floor had completely caved in. He wasn't growling or exhibiting aggressive posture. Instead, the massive Glimmerfox was sitting perfectly still on the edge of the jagged drop-off, staring intently down into the blackness. His starlight-speckled fur was rippling, not from wind, but from localized spatial fluctuations reacting to something below.

"What is it, buddy?" I asked softly, engaging my [Nullifying Veil] and stepping up beside him.

I looked down.

I saw only absolute, impenetrable darkness — a sinkhole created by millennia of geological shifting.

"[Void Perception]," I commanded mentally.

My vision snapped from physical reality into the conceptual weave.

The darkness vanished, replaced by the brilliant, intersecting lines of gravity, thermal currents, and raw magic. I traced the chaotic root structures and the inert, dead enchantments of the collapsed stone.

Then, my perception snagged.

A migraine hit me instantly — a sharp, piercing spike of agony right behind my eyes. I flinched, almost deactivating the skill entirely.

"What…?" I grunted, forcing my awareness to stabilize.

I peered deeper into the hole, past the physical rubble.

Hidden nearly two hundred feet down, completely masked by layers of physical stone and what must have been incredibly potent obfuscation magic that had survived the ages, was a structure.

It was a ring, roughly ten feet in diameter, constructed from a material that didn't just radiate power; it resonated with a divine, overwhelming presence. Through the lens of the Void, it looked like looking directly into a newborn star. The color was a searing, absolute golden-white that stung the conceptual edges of my Soul.

"That is… loud," I winced, reeling my Perception back significantly to avoid more pain. "And it's active."

More importantly, the entire vertical shaft leading down to it was laced with active, dormant defenses. These weren't like the traps or automated turrets from the armory upstairs.

These were conceptual. Wards designed not to kill the body, but to sever the soul or lock the space in an unbreakable temporal loop.

"Okay," I breathed, realizing my earlier arrogance in dismissing the Sanctum as purely a ruined backup base. "Something big is down there. I am going to use a Glimpse to look ahead."

"Here goes," I muttered, stretching my shoulders. "Patience and absolute paranoia."

[Glimpse of a Path].

I [Void Walked].

I didn't teleport through the Void to my destination. Instead, I moved inch by agonizing inch through the grey-space of the Lattice, keeping myself entirely conceptually decoupled from reality, watching every String for any trap.

I encountered the first one ten feet down.

A web of barely-there, crimson threads stretched across the shaft. I examined them carefully in the Void. They were anchored to the very fabric of local time. If broken, they wouldn't trigger an explosion; they would revert the state of the surrounding rock by five seconds, effectively burying the intruder in thousands of tons of instantly reforming solid stone.

I had to pass through using a different Layer.

But as I pushed my [Void Walk] past the plane of the crimson threads… something reacted.

The trap snapped.

A conceptual lash of crimson energy whipped through the grey-space, striking my shoulder.

It bypassed my [Abyssal Carapace]. It ignored my body and struck my soul directly.

I choked back a scream. The sensation was horrifying — not burning or cutting, but feeling my left arm violently, forcibly trying to exist in the position it had occupied ten minutes ago, twisting my internal geometry into a paradoxical knot.

"[Syntropy]" I commanded frantically.

The Mythic skill engaged, eating my mana reserves at a terrifying rate. It debated the reality of the paradoxical injury, consuming the 'damage history' the trap had attempted to impose, and snapped my Body and Spirit back to its rightful state.

I materialized forty feet down, hovering on a disk of condensed mana, gasping for air.

"It hit me within the Deep," I realized, eyes wide with genuine shock. "Whoever built these traps… they understood subspace manipulation terrifyingly well."

It took me two hours to descend the remaining hundred and sixty feet.

I dodged runic tripwires that sought to invert my gravity permanently. I navigated through 'silence zones' where ambient mana was so violently stripped away I felt like I was drowning, relying purely on my internal reserves to power my movement. I used every ounce of my experience from fighting Vasud on Floor 100 to predict the traps' underlying Authority and override it.

I suffered a few more hits.

Each time, [Syntropy] proved its worth, reverting the damage almost before I could fully process the pain, though my overall mana pool was taking a serious beating. My [Hunger] seemed to struggle to Consume whatever made these defenses, taking longer to replenish my reserves. It was definitely slowly improving though.

Finally, I touched down on the smooth, polished floor of the underground chamber.

The cavern was hemispherical, its walls lined with ancient, unreadable script that pulsed softly in time with the object in the center of the room.

It stood atop a raised dais. Unlike the rigid, violet energy of the Spires or the tearing, jagged green of Azrael's demonic summonings, the energy here was completely tranquil.

The ring was made of a material that resembled twisted roots fused with platinum. The space within the ring was filled with that blinding, golden-white light I had seen from above.

But standing before it now, without peering into the Lattice, it didn't hurt my eyes. It didn't exude the weight of a high-tier artifact or the Authority of an Ascendant.

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It radiated… peace. An ancient, sorrowful peace. A welcoming warmth that smelled faintly of old wood and rain.

I stood there for several minutes, catching my breath and allowing my cores to replenish from my [Void Star] reserves.

"It's a door," I concluded quietly. "A door to the Outside."

I gazed at it longer.

"It feels safe," I reasoned. "Too safe, perhaps. The traps in the shaft were brutal, but the room itself is completely devoid of hostile intent."

"Kaelen. Bennu. Come down, but move carefully, I left a path for you to follow."

The response was immediate, but unexpected.

I didn't hear the familiar sound of Bennu rocketing down the shaft or Kaelen utilizing his careful space-distortions to navigate the rubble.

Instead, less than thirty seconds later, Kaelen simply padded out from the darkness behind me, looking entirely unbothered, with Bennu riding happily on his back.

"How…?" I started, staring at the ceiling of the cavern.

The dense, overlapping web of conceptual traps, tripwires, and paradox-snares I had just spent two grueling, mana-draining hours bypassing… were dark.

I maximized my Perception.

The entire defensive network had shut down. It hadn't been dismantled or destroyed; it had simply entered a dormant, passive state the moment Kaelen descended the shaft.

The Glimmerfox trotted past me, entirely ignoring the awe-inspiring, ancient portal, and walked straight toward the golden-white light.

He sat down directly in front of the dais, his tail wrapping around his paws. He looked at the swirling energy not with the feral alertness of a predator discovering something new, but with the quiet recognition of a traveler recognizing a familiar landmark.

The portal hummed. The light within shifted from a solid blinding sheet into a swirling vortex of deep golds and greens. It seemed to recognize him. It was welcoming him.

"The expedition," I remembered, recalling the journal entry I had dictated to Jeeves. "Reyna's familiar, the Glimmerfox, tracked the spatial tearing to a crevasse… They found a world outside the System."

Kaelen's family. The assassins with the S-sigil. The origin of the unique, unauthorized spatial magic.

It all connected through this doorway.

"This isn't just a rift," I realized aloud. "This is Kaelen's front door. The traps deactivated because they recognized a legitimate, authorized biological signature. This place's owner wasn't Brunnk, it was the Glimmerfox… and maybe, Kaelen's mom…"

Bennu chirped a curious, slightly confused note, while Kaelen quietly looked at the solid stone.

I looked at the swirling gold vortex.

It was inviting.

But invitations are how most horror stories begin.

My internal clock chimed. My Glimpse was over.

"Right," I breathed. "Guess we'll have to wait."

After spending three days in the Sanctum trying and failing to find out more information regarding this portal, my Soul Ability was ready.

I sat cross-legged near the edge of the dais, instructing Bennu to return to Kaelen's back for safety. I ensured my [Veil] was completely solid and my [Hunger] was ready to devour any incoming magical feedback after getting it used to Consuming this mana while waiting for my Glimpse.

[Glimpse of a Path.]

The physical chamber faded into the subjective grey. In the simulation, I stood up. Kaelen fell in step beside me.

I walked up the dais and stepped directly into the golden-white light.

Usually, a System portal yanked you through a stabilized dimensional tube. You just went from A to B within nanoseconds.

This felt like falling upward through a stained-glass window while someone attempted to re-tune my internal biology to a different radio frequency. It was agonizing, nauseating, and profoundly wrong.

Just before my senses completely oriented themselves to the new reality, a harsh, invasive chime overrode the ambient noise.

It wasn't a standard, sterile blue box.

It was a notification window rimed in aggressive, warning-red, the text blazing fiercely across my vision.

[CRITICAL SYSTEM OVERRIDE.]

[Warning: User Entity 'Eren Kai' is breaching established Prime Quarantine Parameters.]

[Status: Trans-Dimensional Boundary Crossed.]

[Notice: You have entered an Uncatalogued Domain. You are currently traversing within a Severed Reality Pocket, leaving your Plane of existence and heading towards a place colloquially known as an 'External Realm'.]

[Caution: Prime System Jurisdictional Authority is heavily restricted in this Zone.]

[Disclaimer: The Local Rules of Physics, Mana Conductivity, and Causality apply. Core System functionality (Inventory, Skill Menus, Baseline Interface) remains operative via tethered connection to your Soul, but System Support (Target Identification, Area Mapping, Automated Hazard Warnings, and other User Preservation Protocols) will be INACCESSIBLE.]

"Different System Laws," I thought, processing the text as it vanished as quickly as it appeared. "Different Administrator."

At least I could still use my skills, still heal, still access my Storage and even personal System. But the 'helpful' warnings, the Edicts, and the veiling from external godlike entities, masters in divination, karma manipulators, and whatever else might be out there are gone.

I was operating without a safety net in a universe that might not agree on how gravity worked.

The dizziness passed, and my simulated senses fully snapped into the new reality.

I gasped.

The welcoming golden-white light of the portal was a catastrophic lie.

I found myself standing in the exact center of a perfectly spherical, transparent, protective dome of energy, perhaps fifty feet in radius. The portal gate hummed softly behind me.

Outside the dome, however, was an absolute, unchecked apocalypse.

It wasn't a vibrant, magical wonderland of Fae courts or noble Tauren campaigns like Reyna's journal described.

It was a graveyard on a scale I had never witnessed.

The sky above was an inverted ocean of churning, viscous black fluid that rained heavy drops of what looked like solidified ash. The terrain outside the dome stretched to the horizon, but it was nothing but jagged, pulverized gray rock and twisted, obsidian metallic spires protruding like broken ribs. Everything was dead. It was an anarchic wasteland entirely stripped of color, moisture, and discernible geography. Colossal skeletal remains, significantly larger than Borvo's resting frame, littered the cracked landscape.

It wasn't just a world outside the System's control. It was a world that had been successfully consumed by something far worse than I could imagine. It looked like an entire reality had been run through a localized meat grinder and left to rot.

Next to me in the simulation, a sound shattered the quiet.

It was a high-pitched, pitiful, heart-wrenching whine.

I turned.

The massive, powerful Glimmerfox, usually vibrating with a fierce predator's confidence, had collapsed onto his stomach. He was pressing his snout tight against the pale stone floor of the safety dome, his paws covering his ears. He was shivering violently, shaking from head to bushy tail, staring out through the transparent dome into the apocalyptic gray nightmare.

Tears, glowing like liquid starlight, were streaming rapidly down his snout, sizzling softly as they hit the stone.

A deep, echoing wail tore from his throat — the purest sound of profound, catastrophic grief and overwhelming terror I had ever heard an animal make.

"Kaelen…" I whispered, stunned by the sheer emotional impact of his reaction.

I dropped to one knee beside the massive beast in the simulation, pulling his shaking, heavy head into my lap. He pressed hard against my armor, hiding his eyes from the horror outside the dome, letting out rapid, frantic whines that squeezed tightly at my chest.

Bennu fluttered down, distressed and confused, landing awkwardly on Kaelen's shaking shoulder. The tiny phoenix chirped soft, soothing trills, nudging his glowing, warm head against Kaelen's starry mane in an attempt to comfort his larger friend.

He remembers.

Kaelen remembered this place.

The pristine, magical world of fairies, pixies and Centaurs… this was what it had become. The assassins, the strange magic, the devastation... it all led back to this ruined universe.

This was his home.

And that home was now a wasteland.

The simulation shattered around me as my concentration broke, dragged entirely back to the emotional weight of my companion's tragedy rather than the tactical implications of the world outside.

I snapped my eyes open, gasping a shallow breath in the underground cavern of Wahash. The golden portal hummed invitingly before me, ignorant of the absolute horror waiting just one step past its threshold.

I sat on the cold floor, running a hand gently over the real Kaelen's starry fur as he napped beside me, blissfully unaware of the Glimpse I had just undertaken.

I had promised him vengeance. But seeing what waited beyond that gate, the sheer scale of the devastation... it wasn't just vengeance he needed. It was an explanation.

"I think," I murmured quietly into the quiet of the dark, ancient room, gripping my sword a little tighter, "we might need to rethink our itinerary."

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