Divine law did not destroy. It governed.
Standing at the edge of the ravine, the four remaining Executors did not draw
weapons. They did not chant incantations or form intricate mana diagrams. They
simply raised their hands, palms facing the jagged trench where Cain stood.
The air stopped.
It wasn't a metaphor. The wind sweeping through the ruined mana zone ceased
entirely. The dust kicked up from Cain's previous fight froze, suspended in
mid-air like insects trapped in amber.
Then, the weight descended.
It hit Cain not as a physical blow, but as an absolute, undeniable command from
the world itself.
Stay down.
Cain's knees buckled. He slammed his left hand into the dirt to keep his face
from smashing into the stone. The sheer atmospheric pressure multiplied
instantly, but it wasn't just gravity. It was a spatial lock. The space around
him was being compressed, hardened, and sealed.
He tried to draw a breath. His ribs, already bruised and aching from the
internal hemorrhage of his Blood Manipulation, groaned under the strain. The
blood he had spat onto the ground was pressed completely flat against the rock,
sinking into the pores of the stone.
"Target secured," one of the Executors droned from above.
"Initiating absolute containment," another added. "Mana suppression at maximum
threshold."
Cain closed his bloodshot eyes.
He reached inward, attempting to route mana to his legs for a Quick Step. He
accounted for the half-second lag, pushing the intent through the hollow
friction in his core.
The mana sparked, traveled down his channels—
And died.
The moment the mana tried to manifest outside his body, the synchronized divine
law snuffed it out. The environment was completely sterile. The Executors had
overwritten the natural physics of the ravine, making it impossible for foreign
mana to exist in the open air.
He opened his eyes, looking at a small, jagged rock resting near the top of the
ravine wall.
Exchange.
He tried to link his spatial coordinates with the stone.
The connection formed in his mind, but the space between them felt like a solid
wall of iron. The spatial lock was absolute. He couldn't swap places because the
coordinates themselves were frozen.
He was pinned.
A rat caught in a divine trap.
"Four laws acting as one," Elios's voice drifted through his mind. The shadow
cat was nowhere to be seen, its form suppressed by the sheer density of the
light pouring into the ravine, but the telepathic link remained. "They have
woven a perfect structure. You cannot cut a cage that has no physical bars."
Cain's jaw tightened.
His muscles trembled violently as he forced his head up, looking toward the top
of the ravine. The four Executors stood evenly spaced, their hands extended,
their gray cloaks perfectly still in the frozen air.
They weren't going to come down and fight him. They were just going to increase
the pressure until his organs ruptured and his bones turned to dust. It was
clean. Efficient.
Deep at the base of his spine, the dense, heavy reservoir of the Black Veil sat
in the dark.
It was the only thing inside him that wasn't being suppressed by the divine law.
Because it didn't belong to the gods' system. If he opened the vault, the dark,
unstable mana would violently reject the spatial lock. It would tear the
pressure apart and give him the strength to jump the fifty feet to the top of
the ravine in a single bound.
Cain tasted copper in his mouth.
He kept the vault locked.
If he used it now, against four synchronized Executors, he would have to draw
too much. The cost to his soul would be catastrophic. He had to save it.
He looked away from the Executors, his gaze dropping to the ground beneath him.
"You cannot cut the cage," Elios had said.
Cain's eyes narrowed.
Then I break the floor.
Han Jae-Won's military mind processed the variables. The Executors were
suppressing the air. They were locking the space. But they were standing on the
edge of a ravine that had already been structurally compromised by decades of
mana decay and the explosive kinetic force of Cain's fight with the first
Executor.
Perfect structures were brittle.
Cain shifted his grip on his right long blade. His arm shook violently against
the crushing pressure as he dragged the tip of the sword across the dirt,
positioning it directly over a deep, jagged fault line in the stone.
He couldn't project mana outward. The suppression would kill it.
But he didn't need to project it into the air.
He needed to project it into the steel.
Cain took a shallow, ragged breath. He routed every ounce of remaining mana in
his core down his right arm. He felt the agonizing delay, the friction burning
through his damaged channels, but he held the flow steady. He didn't let it
leak. He compressed it entirely within his own flesh.
Resonance Null.
Normally, the skill was used to absorb kinetic vibration. To take the shock of
an enemy's blow and disperse it harmlessly.
Cain inverted the math.
He wasn't going to absorb a vibration. He was going to create one.
He channeled the heavily compressed mana directly into the steel of his blade.
The sword began to hum. A low, terrifying vibration that didn't emit light, but
carried immense, localized kinetic force. Because the mana was contained
entirely within the physical structure of the weapon, the Executors' atmospheric
suppression couldn't snuff it out.
"Anomaly is attempting internal mana condensation," one of the Executors stated.
"Irrelevant," the leader replied. "He cannot breach the spatial lock. Increase
pressure to lethal threshold."
The weight on Cain's back doubled.
A sickening crack echoed from his chest as one of his ribs fractured under the
strain.
Cain didn't scream.
He gripped the hilt of his vibrating sword with both hands, his knuckles turning
white.
He looked up at the four Executors standing proudly on the edge of the ravine.
They believed their law was absolute. They believed they controlled the
battlefield.
They had forgotten they were standing on a cliff.
With a final, agonizing surge of strength, Cain drove the vibrating steel
straight down into the fault line beneath his boots.
Release.
