Chapter 134: The Ability Dampener - My Infinite System. - NovelsTime

My Infinite System.

Chapter 134: The Ability Dampener

Author: Chaosgod24
updatedAt: 2025-09-20

CHAPTER 134: THE ABILITY DAMPENER

The Citadel’s gates sealed shut behind them with a metallic groan. The white hum of its shields rolled outward, washing away the stink of smoke and blood from Sector Eight.

Vyn staggered two steps forward before her knees gave in. The chains that had flared around her were gone now, flickering out like burned wires. She caught herself on the wall, breath ragged, silver eyes dimmed.

Silas dropped to the floor beside her, fists still clenched, veins still glowing faint from the storm of energy he’d swallowed. His jaw was tight, his chest rising and falling heavy.

He spat blood onto the floor, teeth grit. "We should’ve stayed. I had him."

Vyn didn’t look at him. She just sighed, pressing her hand against the wall for balance before pushing herself upright. "You had nothing. If I hadn’t pulled us out, you’d be dead on the ground with him standing over you."

Silas’s head snapped toward her, eyes sharp. "You think I can’t keep going?"

She turned her gaze on him finally, tired but steady. "You can’t beat what you don’t understand."

The hall filled with silence, broken only by their ragged breathing.

Footsteps echoed from the corridor. Reia appeared, her cloak brushing the floor, her dark eyes already fixed on them. She stopped a few paces away, her gaze hard.

"That wasn’t just another enemy," she said flatly. "That... thing. He’s new. And he’s listening to Eron."

Silas scoffed, wiping the blood from his mouth with the back of his hand. "Doesn’t matter who he listens to. I could’ve taken him if you gave me a little more time."

"You would’ve been broken in two," Vyn cut in. Her voice cracked with exhaustion, but the weight in it silenced the room. She moved past him, slow steps carrying her into the infirmary wing.

The doors slid open. The lights inside burned clean and sterile, rows of med-beds humming faint blue. She climbed onto the nearest one and let herself sink back. The AI that ran the ward flickered to life, thin beams of light scanning her bruised body, wrapping silver-gel across the cuts in her arms.

"You don’t get it," Silas muttered, following her in, fists still trembling with energy. "Every strike he landed, I grew stronger. That’s what I do. All I had to do was keep taking his hits until his reality tricks ran out."

Vyn’s eyes closed as the AI stitched her skin. "That would be the death of you. You can’t outlast someone who bends the rules of existence. He isn’t bound by limits. You are."

Silas’s jaw clenched, but he said nothing.

"She’s right," Reia said, stepping further inside. Her voice was low, even, but carried weight. "I watched the data streams. That wasn’t the full extent of his power. If you stayed, you wouldn’t have beaten him. He would’ve buried you under his world until nothing was left."

Silas growled under his breath, turning away, his hand pressed to the wall as if to anchor himself.

Reia didn’t stop. "And the more you fight him, the stronger he’ll get. He’s not like the others. He doesn’t wear down. He adapts. If Evelyn could copy abilities like his, maybe it would be different. But she can’t. Just like she couldn’t copy yours, or Vyn’s, or Lucian’s."

Vyn shifted faintly on the bed, her breath easing as the AI sealed her wounds. "So what then? We just wait until he tears through another sector?"

Reia’s gaze dropped to the floor for a long moment. Then she shook her head. "No. We stop him. But not alone."

Silas turned back, eyes narrowing. "Together?"

"Yes." Reia’s eyes lifted again, sharp as blades. "It’s the only way. If we hit him one at a time, he’ll erase us. But if we coordinate, if we strike as one, we have a chance. That’s the plan I’m working on now."

Silas snorted, pacing the edge of the infirmary. His fists kept flexing, his body still wired from the fight. "I don’t like running. I don’t like waiting."

Reia’s gaze followed him. "Neither do I. But you’ll like dying less."

Silas froze, his back stiff. He didn’t answer.

The room went quiet again, save for the hum of the AI tending to Vyn.

Her silver eyes cracked open, softer now, fixed on the ceiling. "If you’re building a plan... build it fast. He won’t sit still. Eron’s already using him. That means they’re moving."

"I know." Reia’s arms folded, her jaw set. "Give me a little time. I’ll have something ready."

The lights hummed. The Citadel pulsed faintly around them, shields locking the outside chaos away.

Silas exhaled hard through his nose, leaning his head back against the wall. His veins still glowed, his body still pulsing with the storm of power he’d taken in—but none of it made him feel like he’d won.

And Vyn, broken and bruised, closed her eyes as the AI whispered recovery stats over her bed.

For now, the storm outside was paused.

But only for now.

Reia left the infirmary without another word.

The door slid shut behind her, muting the hum of the AI and the tension of Silas’s pacing. Her boots echoed faintly against the steel floors as she walked deeper into Citadel Zero, past hallways few ever stepped into.

The Citadel was more than a fortress. It was a vault. A library. A laboratory. Every room held echoes of knowledge scavenged across decades—hunter archives, confiscated texts, banned research. For most, it was a maze. For her, it was a canvas.

She entered her room. The lights flickered on automatically, bathing shelves of books, stacked notes, and half-finished machines in pale white glow.

Here, the chaos of the outside world didn’t exist. Here, the only sound was the hum of circuits, the scratch of pens, and the slow turn of pages.

Reia shrugged her cloak off and tossed it onto the back of a chair. She moved to the main desk, its surface cluttered with schematics, glass cores, and glowing samples. Her hands brushed over them absently, her mind already sliding back into the rhythm.

For years, she’d trained her mind to move in multiple streams at once. Enhanced intellect wasn’t about memorizing numbers or calculations—it was about weaving connections, threads others never saw.

And now, all her threads pointed to one thing.

She set her hand on the small, unfinished device at the center of her desk.

A disk, no larger than her palm. Its surface shimmered faint blue, etched with runes older than the Association itself, laced with circuits pulled from fallen hunters’ gear. Half-machine, half-magic. A contradiction that shouldn’t work. But she would make it work.

Her eyes lingered on it. The words came quietly.

"Ability Dampener."

It wasn’t a weapon—not in the way Silas swung his fists, or Vyn bent her chains. It was a tool. A way to level the board. Against enemies who rewrote reality, brute force was nothing. Against someone like Marc... it was less than nothing.

She flicked her fingers, and a holo-panel bloomed above the desk, filled with calculations and tests. Lines of code and arcane symbols overlapped. Each adjustment she made shifted a dozen variables, but she never faltered. Her mind split into tasks, calculating failures, correcting paths, mapping theories.

Hours blurred into minutes. Minutes stretched into seconds.

Her voice broke the silence once, low and firm. "He adapts. He bends rules. So we break the source."

The dampener wasn’t designed to erase power completely—that was impossible. What it could do, in theory, was suppress. Weaken. Force overwhelming abilities into silence long enough for the rest of them to strike.

Reia’s jaw tightened. She remembered the data from Sector Eight. Marc bending reality like it was paper. Vyn broken and bleeding. Silas nearly torn apart despite his strength.

No amount of brute force would save them next time.

This had to work.

She leaned back finally, eyes burning from the hours. The disk sat quiet in her hands, faint blue glow pulsing like a heartbeat. Still incomplete, still unstable—but closer.

She whispered to herself, as if the Citadel itself needed to hear. "A little more time."

Her gaze hardened.

"And then we fight on our terms."

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