Chapter 83: Patterns That Shouldn’t Exist - The Lazy Genius With 999x System - NovelsTime

The Lazy Genius With 999x System

Chapter 83: Patterns That Shouldn’t Exist

Author: zeroShunya
updatedAt: 2025-08-16

CHAPTER 83: PATTERNS THAT SHOULDN’T EXIST

Location: Eastern Wing – Reconstructed Library, Fractured Simulation Core

Jay stared blankly at the rows of books that shouldn’t have existed.

The library was intact— far too intact.

Most of the simulation had crumbled or glitched beyond recognition, yet here, amidst flickering anomalies and suspended motes of unreal light, the Eastern Wing stood polished and pristine, its marble tiles uncracked and its golden chandeliers glowing warmly.

His fingers brushed a bookshelf, half-expecting his hand to phase through it. Instead, it met solid wood. Cold, real, and old.

"This is wrong," Jay muttered.

The words echoed around him. He hated when echoes replied before he could finish thinking.

Books lined the walls, thousands of them. But when he pulled one off the shelf, the title blurred in his vision. It refused to settle into any readable language, flickering between glyphs and systemscript.

[SYSTEM ERROR: UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS TO RESTRICTED NEXUS KNOWLEDGE]

"Yeah, I figured," Jay mumbled, sliding it back.

He moved deeper into the room, weaving between narrow aisles and overgrown ivy sprouting from the cracks in reality. Occasionally, a shard of blue code glitched into visibility like shattered glass, frozen mid-fall.

And then he heard footsteps. Light. Hesitant.

He turned.

Alicia.

Her silhouette stood framed in the doorway. Her usual elegance had dulled, her armor scratched, her braid slightly undone. She blinked as if adjusting to the light inside the surreal chamber.

"You’re here," she said, softly. "I thought I’d find you near the Collapse Point."

"I was," Jay replied. "Then I took a wrong turn and found... whatever this is."

She stepped closer, glancing around.

"Is it supposed to be the Academy’s east library?"

"I think it’s something older. Or... maybe deeper."

Jay paused.

"I think we’re standing in a forgotten version of our world."

Alicia stiffened. "A version?"

Jay nodded slowly, lifting his hand and motioning at the floating code shards.

"This place isn’t reconstructed like the rest. It feels... remembered. Preserved. The system didn’t build this, something else did. Or someone."

A silence passed between them.

Then—

A low hum vibrated through the floor.

Both turned to the center of the room.

A circle, previously hidden beneath dust began to glow. Pale, ancient light pulsed in rhythm, forming a ring of glowing runes neither could read.

Jay stepped forward first. His boots made no sound. The circle didn’t resist him, nor did it acknowledge Alicia’s presence.

And then the moment he crossed the center—

[Fragment Detected. System Signature Match: NULL-JAY.]

Alicia gasped. "That name again, Null-Jay. Why does it keep showing up?!"

Jay didn’t answer.

Instead, memories not his own surged.

Visions, brief and overwhelming, flooded his mind:

A boy who looked exactly like him, standing on a scorched battlefield.

A shattered sword clutched in one hand.

A tower falling behind him.

A voice, a voice like his own, whispering:

"Reset it all."

Then darkness.

Jay staggered backward, clutching his head.

"Jay!" Alicia caught him. Her fingers, cool and steady, held him upright.

He gasped for breath, vision still spinning.

"That wasn’t me... but it was me," he said, voice trembling.

Alicia’s expression hardened.

"I think we need to stop pretending this world is fixable."

Jay met her gaze.

And for the first time, he saw it, the resolve in her. Not royal duty. Not protective instinct. But truth. Alicia had seen enough. Lost enough.

She wasn’t chasing safety anymore.

She wanted understanding. Even if it meant burning the lies.

"We’re not in a simulation anymore," Alicia whispered. "We’re in a cage made out of echoes."

Jay didn’t deny it.

Before they could speak again, the lights dimmed.

Another presence entered the room.

Rei.

Or... what was left of him.

His appearance shimmered between forms, cloaked in glitching memory and unstable reality. His eyes were cold. Focused. The same, yet vastly different.

Alicia stepped in front of Jay.

"Rei?" she asked cautiously.

He blinked, then spoke in a voice layered with echoes.

"I am Rei Kazuma. And I am not."

Jay felt it instantly.

This was the Rei who had activated the Reset.

And something... something had come back with him.

Rei stepped into the glowing circle. It didn’t react this time. As if it had recognized its master.

Jay took a cautious step forward.

"You remember everything now, don’t you?"

Rei nodded. "I do."

He glanced at Alicia.

"And so will you. Soon."

Jay narrowed his eyes.

"What does that mean?"

Rei looked skyward. Through the ceiling.

As if seeing far beyond.

"I found the truth in the core archive," Rei said slowly. "About what this world was supposed to be. About the System... the Observer... the original split."

Jay froze.

"You mean..."

Rei raised a hand.

A glowing projection unfolded from his palm, a rotating cube of data, showing multiple timelines overlaying each other. All of them glitched. All of them cracked.

"This world was an attempt. A containment. A dream built to delay a collapse that had already begun."

Alicia looked around, stunned.

"But then why us? Why make us remember any of it?"

Rei’s expression softened.

"Because someone, something, wants us to finish what they couldn’t."

Jay felt the weight of those words press down on him.

He glanced at the bookcase.

The unreadable tomes.

The flickering memories.

Then at Rei.

"So what now?"

Rei turned to them both.

"The world is fracturing again. We have maybe hours left before the next collapse. If we’re going to fix anything, we need to reach the Heart."

Jay frowned. "The Heart?"

Alicia stepped forward.

"The Observer’s chamber."

Rei nodded.

Jay looked from Alicia to Rei and then back at the room, this impossible, timeless place.

Then, he sighed.

"I miss being lazy."

Alicia smiled faintly. "I don’t think that version of you is coming back."

Jay adjusted his wrinkled collar, sighed dramatically, and grinned.

"Well, someone’s got to be the chaotic genius."

The three of them stood in silence as the circle pulsed one final time and then disintegrated into light.

And far, far away, in a space beyond all echoes.

The Observer opened his remaining eye.

And smiled.

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