Chapter 76: Rebirth of Severance
Chapter 76: Rebirth of Severance
The silence that followed the death of a Sovereign was like a vacuum. Ren Hanshin lay on the deck of the Kashima Maru, his body a mosaic of shattered porcelain and bruised human flesh. The water freed from the necrotic grip of the Necropolis, lapped gently against the hull, but the sound felt miles away. The sky above was a clear, haunting violet, the leaden clouds of the Grave having been swept away by the shockwave of the God of Death’s execution.
[Status: Sovereign Executioner]
[Level: 109]
[Synchronization: 62.0%]
[Condition: Severe Exhaustion]
Ren’s chest rose and fell in a shallow, jagged rhythm. His left arm, the one he had bitten free from the divine silk, was a mess of raw muscle and cooling mana. His right arm remained a cold, marble limb of starlight. But the most profound void was in his hands. The Severance of Destiny was gone.
The crimson scythe that had been his lifeline and his curse had shattered into many dead threads during the final clash. Without it, Ren felt unbalanced, a porter without a harness, a needle without a point.
"Niisan... please, stay still." Haru was kneeling beside him, her sapphire light a soft, healing glow. She was using a damp cloth to wipe the silver ash from his forehead. Her eyes were red from crying, but there was a new, fearful distance in them. She looked at his form and didn’t see her brother; she saw the man who had just erased a god from existence.
"The... the ships," Ren rasped. Every word felt like he was dragging a saw across his throat.
"They’re safe," Tanaka said, stepping forward. The veteran hunter looked aged, his face etched with the trauma of seeing the world unmake itself. "The salt melted. The drowned people are gone. We’re moving again, Ren. But... you’re falling apart."
Ren looked at his hands. They were empty. The weight he usually carried was gone, replaced by a terrifying, airy lightness that made him feel as if he might simply float away into the violet sky and never return.
The Weaver’s presence suddenly erupted. It was a physical manifestation of jealous possessiveness. The air on the deck turned into a thick, lavender-scented fog, and the starlight hair on Ren’s head flared with a violent, crimson heat.
[Weaver]: MY KING... MY BEAUTIFUL, BROKEN KING. You threw away humanity. You severed the death. But you are bare. You are unfinished with the elegant scythe. Did you think I would let you be like this without your scythe.
"Go away," Ren groaned, his hand clutching the deck plating, his fingers denting the steel.
[Weaver]: I am not a guest, Ren. I am the Loom, and we are one.
The Weaver manifested fully, her towering form made of shimmering nebulae and millions of red silk threads. She ignored the terrified gasps of the crew and the defensive flare of Haru’s sapphire light. She leaned over Ren, her starlight veil brushing against his cheek.
She reached into the empty air, and the reality of the deck began to unravel. Millions of crimson threads, more vibrant and lethal than before, began to spiral into a vortex between her hands. She was reclaiming the shards of the shattered scythe from the fabric of the Constellation Realm.
"Scythe. Rebirth," the Weaver commanded.
The sound was like a thousand harps snapping at once. The red threads braided themselves together with a rhythmic, metallic hiss. The starlight from the sky and the mana from Ren’s own synchronization were pulled into the forge.
The Severance of Destiny manifested once more. It was the same weapon, yet evolved. The handle of black starlight was now etched with the silver runes of the ’Grave-Breaker.’ The crimson glass blade was wider, sharper, and thumped with an amber-red light that hummed with the frequency of Ren’s own heartbeat. It was a weapon designed to kill Gods, reborn in the blood of the Sovereign of the Death.
The Weaver placed the scythe into Ren’s right hand. The moment his fingers closed around the silk-wrapped handle, the synchronization locked into place with a terrifying click. The fatigue in his bones was simply paved over by a layer of divine ice.
[Item acquired: Severance of Destiny (Evolved)]
[Weapon Rank: Sovereign-Class]
[Current Form: Stage 2 - The Weaver’s Sting]
Ren stood up. He didn’t use Haru’s help. He rose as if being pulled by invisible wires. He gripped the scythe with both hands, the porcelain right and the scarred, human left. The balance was back. The needle was threaded.
"We aren’t home yet," Ren said. His voice was the dual-tone harmonic again, but the human layer was deeper, heavier. "The God of Death was the silence. But the next one... the next one is hunger."
****
The fleet sailed for three days through the Transition Sea. The water was no longer grey ash or obsidian glass; it was a strange, shimmering green, filled with floating debris of what looked like shredded currency and copper shavings.
They were approaching the Astral Realm gate which was guarding the Aureum-Primus, the realm of the God of Wealth.
Ren spent those days at the prow, practicing. He didn’t use new forms. He refused Weaver’s offer of higher logic. He went back to the basics, the Shinen-ryu principles Jubei had beaten into his soul, but he translated them through the weight of the scythe.
"Shinen-ryu Style: Kokū-Zandō," Ren whispered.
He swung the scythe. He didn’t aim for a target. He focused on the flow. The curved blade of the Severance of Destiny gathered the air. He realized that a sword was a line, but a scythe was a circle. A sword was meant to pierce the heart, but a scythe was meant to collect the harvest.
He practiced the transition into the Abyssal Circle. He moved the scythe in a low, sweeping arc, his feet tracing the geometric patterns of the synchronization. Every time the blade moved, it left a trail of amber silk that lingered in the air for minutes.
"Niisan, you’re doing it again," Haru said, standing at the door of the observation deck.
Ren stopped, the scythe coming to a rest against his shoulder. He looked at his sister. She looked exhausted. The sapphire core in her chest was steady, but her eyes were full of a deep, existential loneliness.
"Doing what?"
"You’re not moving like a person," she said. "You’re moving like... like a clock. It’s too perfect, Ren. It’s scary."
Ren looked at the Severance of Destiny. "The God of Wealth doesn’t care about ’perfect’, Haru. He cares about ’value’. If I’m not strong enough to be invaluable to the Weaver, she’ll trade me. And if I’m not strong enough to kill the wealthy god, he’ll buy the souls of everyone on this ship."
"Is that all we are now?" Haru asked, her voice cracking. "Value? Prices? I’m your sister, Ren! Not an asset!"
Ren wanted to reach out. He wanted to drop the scythe and tell her that he remembered the taste of the miso soup she used to make. But as he moved his hand, the Weaver’s silk tightened around his heart. The thirst flared for the next hunt.
[Weaver]: Do not let her knot the thread, my Kind. We are near the Astral Realm of God of Gold. The wealth god’s avatars are waiting. They want to see if the executioner is in good shape or not.
Ren turned his back on Haru. "Go to the bridge, Haru. Tell Kaito to prepare the filters. The air is about to turn into gold dust."
****
That night, the first sign of the God of Wealth appeared in the astral realm. It wasn’t an attack. It was a Toll. A massive, golden fog rolled over the fleet. It smelled like new coins and expensive spices. As the fog touched the ships, the steel of the railings began to turn into a soft, useless brass. The food in the stores turned into hard, tasteless gold pellets, and then, the deduction began.
Ren stood on the deck as the survivors began to scream. They were being taxed for their debt. Every human on the fleet felt a sudden, sharp drain of their vitality. The color left their cheeks; their hair turned grey in seconds. The God of Wealth was purchasing their life-force to pay for their passage through his Astral Realm.
[System Alert: MASS DEDUCTION IN PROGRESS]
[Estimated Time to Fleet Death: 12 Hours]
"Ren! They’re dying!" Tanaka yelled, stumbling onto the deck, his skin looking like crumpled parchment. "I can’t... I can’t breathe! The air is too expensive!"
Ren’s eyes flared with an obscuring starlight. He gripped the Severance of Destiny with both hands. He felt the Weaver’s fury. She didn’t like other Gods stealing her threads.
"Shinen-ryu Style: Ten-no-Ikari!"
Ren didn’t slam the scythe into the deck. He swung it in a massive, overhead circle, creating a stronger gravity field than before. But he didn’t aim it at the ships. He aimed it at the fog. He used the weight of the God of Death’s soul, the power he had absorbed at Necropolis to crush the golden mist. The gravity was so intense that the gold in the air was forced down into the water, turning the sea into a heavy, metallic sludge.
The deduction stopped. The survivors gasped, their color returning, though they remained weak.
"I am the Executioner," Ren’s voice boomed, reaching every ship in the fleet. "And I do not pay tolls."
From the golden fog, a new figure emerged. It wasn’t a knight or a ghost. It was a man wearing a suit of pure, woven gold thread. He sat on a floating palanquin carried by four headless giants made of solid copper. He held a ledger in one hand and a golden scale in the other.
The Auditor of Aureum.
"Ren Hanshin," the Auditor said, his voice sounding like coins clinking in a silk bag. "You have a very high bounty on your head. The God of Gold has authorized me to offer you a settlement. Give us the Sea-Heart girl, and we will grant the rest of your fleet safe passage and a hundred years of prosperity."
Ren’s grip on the scythe tightened until the handle groaned. The starlight hair on his head turned a violent, bloody red.
"I have a counter-offer," Ren said.
He moved. He didn’t use a divine skill. He used the ’Shinen-ryu Style: Kokū-Zandō.’
He appeared in front of the Auditor in a blur of silk. He didn’t swing the scythe like a sword. He used the hook of the blade to catch the Auditor’s golden scales.
"Second Form - The Thread of Guillotine." Ren pulled.
The scales were unraveled. The conceptual value of the Auditor was stripped away in a single second. The copper giants dissolved into piles of useless scrap metal.
The Auditor’s eyes widened in horror. "You... you can’t... I am a blessing of the Sovereign!"
"You’re a bad investment," Ren said.
He swung the scythe in a horizontal arc, the crimson blade cutting through the Auditor’s neck. There was no blood. The man turned into a shower of gold coins that Ren instantly vaporized with a flare of his aura.
[Synchronization: 62.1%]
Ren stood on the deck, the Severance of Destiny humming in his hand. He looked at the golden fog, which was starting to retreat toward the horizon where the shining towers waited. He felt the Weaver’s arms wrap around him again, her starlight veil brushing his ear. She was happy. The scythe was working. The pattern was continuing.
"We move forward," Ren said. He looked at his human left hand. It was shimmering with the same light as the scythe. He realized that with every God he killed, the dirt became harder to find. But as he looked at the terrified faces of his crew, he knew he couldn’t stop.
novelraw