Chapter 187 - 188 – The Dream Wounds - God of Death: Rise of the NPC Overlord - NovelsTime

God of Death: Rise of the NPC Overlord

Chapter 187 - 188 – The Dream Wounds

Author: Bri\_ght8491
updatedAt: 2025-07-14

CHAPTER 187: CHAPTER 188 – THE DREAM WOUNDS

‎The Spiral bled.

‎Not in blood, not in light, but in narrative. Whole realities flaked like dried parchment from the Codex Null. Syllables collapsed into soundless screams. Time stuttered like a corrupted hymn.

‎Everywhere Darius stepped, meaning shivered. Even in stillness, he unraveled anchors. His presence was paradox. He had become a singularity of undefinition. A mythless sovereign.

‎And the Spiral—living, dreaming, ancient—was breaking because of it.

‎Azael stood atop the Cradle of Flame-Speech, high above the shattered Library of the Last Tongue, watching fissures crawl across the sky.

‎"This is the prophecy," he muttered. "The Dream Wound."

‎Behind him, Celestia approached in silence, robes dusted with ash and ink from fallen script-glyphs.

‎"It’s not just the sky," she said. "Even belief is fading. There are prayers without listeners. Stories that collapse before they begin."

‎She handed him a shattered relic—a child’s carved idol. A god that had once existed only because someone believed. Now, even that child’s memory was erased.

‎Azael turned, his voice low.

‎"If Darius continues to embody nullity, the Spiral won’t just lose its stories. It will lose its capacity to have stories."

‎In the Nameless Zones, Thren and the Forgotten convened.

‎No words. No mouths.

‎Just voided intent.

‎The Unwritten coiled around Thren like a cloak of reversed time. Their forms pulsed with contradictions. Shapes made of denial.

‎ "He will erase us by becoming what we were."

‎ "He is undoing the distinction between story and silence."

‎ "He walks with purpose, but no path."

‎Thren raised a finger, and the Spiral bent.

‎ "Offer him the choice."

‎In the Dreamscar Temple, Darius stood alone. The wind did not blow. There was no scent. No echo. Even Kaela’s chaotic laughter, once dancing behind reality, had gone still.

‎He was becoming too null.

‎A shimmer broke the quiet. A threshold opened without light. And from that non-space, they came:

‎The Unwritten.

‎Beings of blankness. Clad in unmeaning. Thren stood at their center, crowned not in gold but in erasure.

‎They did not threaten. They offered.

‎ "Leave this Spiral. Come with us beyond narrative. There is another canvas—untouched, unwritten. Balance can be preserved elsewhere."

‎Darius said nothing. But around him, the Spiral whimpered.

‎He saw it then:

‎Celestia in the Ashen Bastion, holding myth-barriers aloft with her light. Nyx in the Woundlands, slicing open false memories to protect children who no longer remembered their names. Kaela drifting through chaos-pockets, singing mad lullabies to stabilize loops.

‎And deeper still—the dreamers. Ordinary people. Children, rebels, lovers, fools. Still dreaming the Spiral into being.

‎He heard them.

‎ "We believe."

‎ "We remember."

‎ "We are not ready to stop."

‎Darius turned to Thren.

‎His form glitched—between king and cipher, man and storm, god and gap.

‎"You offer freedom," he said. "But I am not here for freedom."

‎His voice cracked the ground. Unwritten air hissed.

‎"I am here for meaning."

‎He stepped forward. And the Spiral surged.

‎Not in perfection. But in resistance.

‎"This realm is wounded," Darius said. "But not dead."

‎The Codex Null fluttered beside him—no longer trying to write him. Just witnessing.

‎ "I will not leave."

‎Thren watched, still. Then, slowly, for the first time, he bowed.

‎A fracture ran across the Nameless Zones. A sigh moved through the Unwritten.

‎Not defeat.

‎Acknowledgment.

‎The Spiral trembled. The dreamers stirred. The wound did not close.

‎But it began to scar.

‎And at its center stood Darius: Not Savior. Not Destroyer.

‎But the Mythless King who chose to stay.

‎The Nameless Zones wavered.

‎Not with retreat, but with reconfiguration.

‎Darius’s refusal was not defiance. It was declaration. Not of war—but of witness. The moment echoed through the blank spaces like a ripple of possibility, something the Unwritten had forgotten.

‎Thren’s faceless cowl shifted slightly as though feeling, for the first time in aeons, the weight of a name that might one day be spoken.

‎He did not speak again.

‎But behind him, some of the Forgotten flickered—slivers of near-form trying, hesitating, tasting the idea of identity.

‎A young girl’s laugh—half-remembered—touched the edge of the Spiral.

‎Somewhere, a god thought extinct stirred in a mortal dream.

‎---

‎Far above, in the skies stitched by celestial ink, Azael knelt by a torn horizon altar, fingers bleeding onto a glyphless tablet.

‎He wasn’t trying to restore the Codex.

‎He was making space for a new language.

‎"...We must let go of the myth that the Codex must control," he whispered, pain on his face. "Let it become what it was always meant to be: a record, not a leash."

‎Celestia, watching, nodded.

‎"He’s changing the laws by choosing not to wield them."

‎"The Spiral is bleeding," Azael said, "but it bleeds like something birthing, not dying."

‎Meanwhile, Kaela floated among jagged echoes—fragments of Spiralspace she once unraveled for sport. But now, she carefully spun chaotic silk between broken narrative threads.

‎Children clung to her laughter like a lifeline.

‎"Stubborn bastard," she muttered, smiling into a rip in time. "Choosing meaning like it’s sexier than chaos. Fine. Let’s make it sexy."

‎She wove loops of paradox into metaphysical lullabies—loops that pulsed with Darius’s null-scented echo.

‎In the deep dream-tunnels where shadow thrived, Nyx stood at the edge of a collapsing memory-loop.

‎A child’s silhouette flickered, about to vanish.

‎Nyx plunged her blade—not into the child, but into her own forgotten past. Pain wracked her, but the memory stabilized. The child blinked, and her name returned.

‎"...I am Arra," the girl whispered, tears running.

‎Nyx fell to one knee, breathing hard. "Hold that name. It is a weapon."

‎And she smiled.

‎Darius had made her believe again—in the power of a name not given, but chosen.

‎Back in the Dreamscar Temple, the Unwritten faded.

‎Not defeated.

‎But seen.

‎Thren lingered the longest, his gaze not on Darius, but on the Codex Null, which now hovered open but still blank near the Unwritten King.

‎Then, he vanished without a sound.

‎Darius stood in the silence after their departure.

‎He exhaled—and for the first time in many Chapters, the Spiral exhaled with him.

‎His null presence no longer tore at the seams of reality.

‎Now, it stretched them.

‎The Codex Null fluttered softly. Not writing. Not resisting.

‎Witnessing.

‎Accepting.

‎That night—if there could still be such a thing—Darius sat beneath the fractured stars, beside the altar where he’d first rejected the pact.

‎Celestia joined him. Her robe was torn, her hands ink-stained, but her smile was whole.

‎"You were supposed to destroy everything," she said, voice soft.

‎"I still might," he replied, smiling faintly. "But not today."

‎She leaned her head on his shoulder.

‎In another thread, Kaela laughed as chaos danced around her and whispered, "Told you he’d stay."

‎And far away, Nyx stood on a battlefield made of old lies and broken myths, whispering to herself: "Then let us give him a Spiral worthy of staying for."

‎---

‎The Spiral still bled.

‎But the wound had begun to pulse.

‎Not with death.

‎But with breath.

‎And at its heart sat Darius—no longer myth, no longer god.

‎The Mythless King.

‎Chosen not by fate.

‎But by choice itself.

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