Yeliaâs impulsive attackâ
Kanzaki Rei could understand it.
From his perspective, he already knew what was going to happen.
But from Yeliaâs point of view, she knew nothing of the existence of Eighth-Tier monsters, nor of even more powerful angels.
All she saw... was a ritual that might awaken the Ocean Lord.
She wanted to stop it.
What she hadnât expectedâ
Was that what she had witnessed was only a fragment of the whole.
Like discovering someone in a small village attempting to summon an evil entity, and rushing to stop it with everything you haveâ
Only to realize, after taking action,
That it wasnât just a villageâs problem.
But the entire nation.
The entire world.
Everyone was participating.
And with her lone, insignificant strength, there was no way she could shake something of that scale.
Only then would she realizeâ
That she was nothing more than an insignificant weed within the grand scheme.Irrelevant. Inconsequential.
"Kanzaki Rei..."
"Did you... already foresee all of this?"
Kumironiâs voice trembled with unease.
Kanzaki Rei shook his head slightly.
"No. I only just realized it myself..."
"But at the very least, whatâs happening in the Secret Sea is far more complex than we imagined."
"It may even involve all the gods."
He paused briefly before asking:
"Kumironi... if you discover that Sophia isnât what you believed..."
"What will you do?"
Faith, in this world, was an extremely complicated matter.
It wasnât just a spiritual anchorâ
It was also a source of power.
If oneâs faith collapsed,
The consequences wouldnât be limited to the mind...
The most immediate effect would be the loss of the Churchâs support, along with various blessingsâresulting in a direct drop in combat strength.
Beyond that, belief shaped oneâs principles. If faith shattered, those principles would fall out of balance.
It could even cripple oneâs path of advancement.
Kanzaki Rei didnât know how Kumironi would face such a choice.
She hesitated brieflyâ
But answered quickly:
"I..."
"If Sophia truly isnât what I believed..."
"I donât think I could continue to follow her blindly."
That answer left Rhein behind them with his mouth hanging open.
Was that something a believer could just say outright?
To so decisively declare doubt in oneâs own god?
Shouldnât there at least be struggle? Hesitation?
Hearing her response, even Rhein fell into deep thought.
If Lord Yakaticto turned out to be corrupt behind the scenes... would I still follow Him?
Kanzaki Rei smiled lightly.
"Kumironi... hearing you answer without losing yourselfâI feel relieved."
She blinked, then gave a faint, helpless smile.
"Kanzaki Rei... is it just me, or have you matured a lot in just a few days?"
"You feel more like an adult than I do."
An adult...
Wasnât that obvious?
He had already been twenty-eight.
And after countless simulationsâ
After spending over a decade in repetitive timelinesâ
Even if he had arrived in this world as a reckless novice,
He had long since grown.
"But I still want to confirm it myself."
"I want to ask Sophia directly."
"Why sheâs doing this."
Kanzaki Rei nodded, acknowledging her resolve.
At the same time, he glanced in another direction.
A pity... he had still ended up separated from Yelia.
But under those circumstances, there had been no way to snatch the Sword of Purifying Judgment Flame from her right in front of an Eighth-Level angel.
Still...
At least he hadnât lost track of her.
Kanzaki Rei closed his eyes.
He could already sense Yeliaâs presence in the distance.
ăCore of the Wholeă
A single "core" rested within Yeliaâs storage pouch.
Previously, the Core of the Whole couldnât exist too far from himâeven with the assistance of An Zhengâs Origin Magic: Eternal Continuance, that limitation remained.
Origin Magic greatly enhanced ordinary spellsâ
But combining one Origin Magic with another was an entirely different matter.
Some Origin Magics were fundamentally incompatible, even contradictory.
A mageâs greatest strength was imaginationâ
But they could not wield what they didnât understand.
And Origin Magic was precisely the hardest to comprehend.
To merge two Origin Magics often required difficulty comparable to creating a brand-new one.
But fortunately...
Over the long stretch of timeâ
Kanzaki Rei had understood it.
The "Core" now enveloped the Art of Immutable Eternity.
It existed independently.
Permanently.
No longer bound by distance.
For now, it was treated as a separate entity.
Through this Coreâ
Kanzaki Rei could observe Yeliaâs movements.
And because it was also wrapped in the Unsolvable Enigma, even the angel at her side couldnât detect its presence.
The Sea Abyss remained vast and empty.
The atmosphere was suffocatingly tense.
As Kumironi drew closer to the source of the call, Kanzaki Rei began to feel an increasingly dense aura of life emanating from afar.
He raised a hand slightly.
ăEternal Light: Heavenly Day (Tier 6) (LV: 501)ă
In an instantâ
Light exploded outward!
The abyss was illuminated like daylight, allowing their vision to stretch across immense distances.
And what he sawâ
Was a grotesque, deformed creature.
Its chest cavity was torn open, like a corpse split apart, exposing a visibly beating heart within.
Its face was hideousâcovered in writhing flesh buds, twitching and pulsing.
With his knowledge from Human Anatomy, it wasnât hard to recognizeâ
This was a "human."
At least, it possessed the basic traits of one.
And yetâ
From its appearance, it was almost impossible to accept that it truly was human.
It had no eyesâ
And yet, one could still feel its "gaze" falling upon them.
Upon Kumironi.
Its lips curled upward into a delighted smile.
"Youâve finally arrived."
Kumironi met its gaze.
From this grotesque beingâ
She felt a strangely familiar aura.
After a brief moment of stunned silence, she spoke in disbelief:
"...Is it... Sophia...?"
"...My Lady?"
She couldnât reconcile the hideous entity before herâ
With the gentle, compassionate Sophia she knew.
And yetâ
The creature answered in a soft, tender voice:
"Yes."
"Thatâs right..."
"I am SophiaâSophia of Life and Growth."
"It seems the plan has changed somewhat. The awakening of the Ocean Lord wasnât meant to begin this early."
"But that doesnât matter anymore."
She continued gently:
"As long as youâre here... thatâs enough."
Kumironi clenched her fists.
"What... do you mean?"
"Everything Iâve seenâfrom before until now... I donât understand."
"Why would you use a forbidden ritual to awaken something that will destroy the Secret Sea?"
"Life must not be trampled. We must cherish every life worth cherishingâthatâs the doctrine you taught us, isnât it?"
"Even if compassion shouldnât be excessive..."
"Most lives still deserve the right to exist."
"And as followers of Life, we should never take that right away."
Survival of the fittest was also a law of this world.
But that was conflict between individuals.
Struggle.
Competition.
Izparut could kill.
Akasei could kill.
Even Kanzaki Rei could kill.
They werenât bound by the doctrine of Life.
Conflict between livesâfor survival, for power, for desireâwas part of nature.
But followers of Lifeâ
Should not kill.
Let alone kill the innocent.
To awaken the Ocean Lord like this...
Was no different from deliberately destroying the entire Secret Sea.
"...Arenât these your teachings?" Kumironi demanded.
Sophia, however, merely smiled faintly.
A soft, bell-like laugh escaped her lips.
"But I didnât kill those people."
"In fact, what Iâve done is... save them, isnât it?"
"I saved the Ocean Lordâgave it new life."
"As for what it does with that life... thatâs its own matter."
"Kumironi, my dearest, most beloved Kumironi..."
"Would you blame the one who saves a life... for the sins that life commits afterward?"
"If someone you saved goes on to kill others... would you blame yourself for saving them?"
As Sophia spokeâ
Kanzaki Rei stood silently behind Kumironi, like a background presence.
The being before themâ
Was definitely not the true body of a god.
It didnât even possess a complete physical form.
If she could act freely within the Sea Abyss, she wouldnât have merely called out to Kumironi last time instead of coming to her directly.
Her ability to act was severely limited.
And yet...
Why did he feel such an uneasy premonition?
Kanzaki Rei had the urge to pull Kumironi awayâ
To stop her from continuing this conversation.
But that wasnât why he had come.
He wasnât here to avoid danger.
He was here to uncover the truth.
If he pulled her away now, he might lose the chance to learn something crucial.
...Better to act directly.
To touch Sophiaâ
And extract information from her.
Kumironi faced Sophiaâs question.
Her eyes remained unwavering.
No hesitation.
She answered firmly:
"Lady Sophia."
"Youâre twisting the meaning."
"Please donât distort my wordsâor my intent."
"When I save someone, itâs to truly save them."
"I donât know what theyâll becomeâgood or evil."
"But if someone I saved goes on to harm others..."
"I will stop them."
"Lady Sophiaâ"
"When you awaken the Ocean Lord, you must know the consequences, donât you?"
"Do you intend to stop it before it causes harm?"
"Or... do you intend to let it run rampant, fully aware of the destruction it will bring?"
After hearing her, Sophiaâs smile slowly faded.
Irritation filled the space.
"Kumironi... my dearest Kumironi."
"You think too much."
"For a perfect vessel... having so many thoughts is rather meaningless."
...
"Enough."
"Donât ask so many questions."
The moment those words were spokenâ
Kanzaki Reiâs entire body tensed.
That voiceâ
Was identical to Sophiaâs.
But it hadnât come from her.
It came fromâ
Right beside him.
From Kumironi.
"A vessel... should fulfill the role of a vessel."
"How could a mere insect possibly comprehend the ultimate meaning of life?"
Kumironi slowly turned her head.
Her eyes were filled with boundless compassionâ
And overwhelming divinity.
She looked at Kanzaki Reiâ
As though gazing down upon a trivial insect.
"You agree... donât you?"