My Infinite System.
Chapter 122: "You’re insufferable."
CHAPTER 122: "YOU’RE INSUFFERABLE."
The air was sharp here. Every breath came edged, scraping like cold metal through the lungs.
Lucian and Lucy moved in silence, boots sinking into the gravel-strewn road that cut through the canyon of towers. The fog ahead clung low, pale and heavy, but through it shapes loomed—tents, stakes, a faint orange glow from a fire that didn’t belong to humans.
Lucian crouched near the shadow of a broken pillar. His eyes narrowed. The camp sprawled across the clearing like a military nest. Tents were aligned in rows, rope lattices strung overhead, weapons racked in neat formation. Even the firepit was structured, stones stacked like it had been designed, not stumbled upon.
Lucy leaned beside him, lowering her voice. "This isn’t wild. They built this."
Lucian scanned the ground. No footprints. No scent trails. Nothing careless. "They’re disciplined."
"Disciplined monsters?" she muttered. "That’s new."
Lucian shook his head slowly. "Not new. Just rare." His eyes tracked the racks of blades glinting by the fire. Each was crafted—iron twisted with bone, etched with marks that glowed faint red. "A rank and above, at least. Maybe worse. Beasts don’t do this. Soldiers do."
Lucy’s flames flickered faint at her fingertips, her instincts itching for a fight. But she caught the way Lucian was watching. His silence wasn’t fear—it was calculation.
And then, he tilted his head. "Strange."
"What?"
"No guards." He scanned again. The fire burned steady, the tents held shape, but not a single figure moved. No breathing, no weight shifting. "It’s abandoned. Or... it’s bait."
Lucy’s lips pressed thin. "So which is it?"
Lucian stood from the crouch. His cloak dragged in the dust as he looked up. "Doesn’t matter. We’re not staying."
He lifted his hand. Space bent above the clearing.
A shadow fell across the canyon. The Nova Sanctum appeared—sleek, colossal, black edges glowing faintly blue—its vast form cloaked in sheath mode, a warship folded into silence. It hovered, casting no sound, only a ripple in the fog.
Lucy smirked faintly. "Subtle."
Lucian’s eyes glinted gold. "Always."
The underbelly of the ship split. Thin beams of light carved down, sweeping the ground around them. Both he and Lucy shimmered, their outlines twisting before collapsing into light. In the blink of an eye, they were gone from the canyon.
They reformed inside.
The floor of the Nova Sanctum’s lower deck hummed beneath their boots. The air here was clean, sterile, carrying the faint scent of charged metal. The walls pulsed softly with veins of blue light that traced into the corridors like living nerves.
Lucy rolled her shoulders as the teleport settled. "Every time, it feels like being ripped apart."
Lucian walked without answering. He moved with practiced steps, cloak trailing faintly as the lights responded to his presence, doors opening with a whisper as he passed. Lucy followed close, boots clicking in rhythm.
At the far corridor, Lucian stopped at a sealed door. His palm touched the panel—light recognized him. The lock hissed. The door split.
Inside, Karl sat on the floor. His wrists were bound in glowing restraints, but he didn’t look bothered. In fact, he looked... bored.
He perked up the instant he saw Lucian. "Finally! I thought you forgot about me. Do you know how dull it is in here? No music, no food, no murder. Just silence. It’s criminal."
Lucian’s gaze was flat. "Get up."
Karl raised his bound hands, grinning wide. "Oh, we’re going somewhere? A field trip? I didn’t dress for it." He gestured at his ragged cloak. "Do I get snacks?"
Lucy rolled her eyes. "You never stop talking, do you?"
"Talking keeps me young," Karl shot back, rising to his feet with exaggerated flair. "That, and the occasional genocide."
Lucian turned without replying, leading them back through the corridor. The restraints on Karl clinked with each step, glowing faint with power. Karl hummed as he walked, an off-key tune that didn’t belong to any world Lucy knew.
They reached the Sanctum’s control room.
The chamber was vast, round, with a wide window stretching into the dark. Lines of data floated across transparent screens, the ship’s pulse syncing with faint heartbeats through the floor. A single seat sat in the center—Lucian’s—anchored to the core of the ship.
Karl whistled as he looked around. "Now this... this is taste. Big, ominous, shiny buttons I’m definitely not allowed to press. My kind of place."
Lucian ignored him. He stepped forward, voice low. "Alfred."
The ship responded with a faint chime. The screens flickered. A map bled into the air, drawn in light and shadow. It spread across the window—towers, roads, fog lines, veins of energy running through the stone beneath. The map widened, layering until a vast region formed.
Karl leaned forward, fascinated. "Oooh. Fancy toy. And here I thought you were just some broody swordsman with good hair."
Lucy crossed her arms. "He’s more than that."
Karl raised a brow. "Oh, I know. Trust me, I’ve been in his headspace long enough to smell it. The boy’s complicated. Like soup left out too long."
Lucian didn’t react. His eyes tracked the map, golden irises narrowing. Red markers pulsed across the terrain—heat sources, structures, movement. One of them was the camp they’d just seen, highlighted in faint warning.
He finally turned to Karl. His voice cut steady. "Now explain where we are."
Karl blinked once, then smiled like a man settling into a story. "Ah, geography class. Alright, kiddos, gather round."
Lucy’s eye twitched. "Kiddos?"
"Don’t interrupt the teacher," Karl scolded, wagging a bound finger. Then he grinned. "This, my new friends, is the Outer March. Think of it as... the suburbs of monster-land. Not the core, not the capital. But important. Outposts, supply lines, troops cycling in and out. If the tide is the flood, the March is the dam holding it steady."
Lucian’s eyes flicked back to the camp marker. "And that?"
Karl chuckled. "That’s no picnic spot. That’s a staging ground. Rank A and above. Think officers, hunters, strategists. The kind of folk who like sharpened spears and sharp drinks. If it’s empty..." He tilted his head, grin stretching. "It’s because they already know you’re here."
Lucy frowned. "Already?"
Karl tapped his bound wrist against his chin. "You tore a hole into their backyard, sweetheart. Do you really think no one noticed? This realm breathes with eyes. You step, they watch."
Lucian stayed silent, studying the map.
Karl smirked wider. "But hey, silver lining—you’re in luck. The March is where all the fun people hang out. If you wanted weaklings, you should’ve stayed home. Here, you’ll get champions, commanders, maybe even a warlord or two if they’re feeling spicy."
Lucy’s flames stirred faint along her shoulders. "You sound almost proud."
"Proud? No." Karl’s eyes glinted. "Entertained? Always."
Lucian finally spoke, voice low. "What’s beyond the March?"
Karl tilted his head. "Deeper roads. Cities carved in bone. Thrones that walk. The capital’s still far, but the March is the bridge. Cross it, and you’re in the heart of the storm."
Lucian’s gaze sharpened. The map shifted as Alfred expanded it, showing larger structures deeper beyond the March. Lines of energy ran like veins toward something vast, pulsing at the center.
Karl noticed his stare and laughed. "Ah, you’re looking at the Beacon. The big lightbulb in the middle of this realm. Don’t worry, we’ll get there eventually—assuming you don’t die horribly before then."
Lucy sighed. "You’re insufferable."
Karl bowed as much as his restraints allowed. "I do my best."
Lucian didn’t smile. His eyes stayed fixed on the glowing pulse at the center of the map, his fingers curling faintly at his side.
The March.
The storm.
The heart.
And now, they were in it.