Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 53
The crack in the sky wasn’t a tear. It was an opening.
A light poured through, not the gentle glow of the realm, but a hard, military-grade radiance. From it descended figures, landing with impacts that shook the very foundations of the hall.
Michael stood at the forefront, his wings not feathery plumes but vast, articulated structures of blazing light and sharpened force. A sword of pure, crackling white fire burned in his hand. His face was set in lines of ancient, unforgiving authority. To his right, Gabriel, holding a spiraling horn that seemed to twist the air around it. To his left, Raphael, whose presence made the wounded space around them ache with a sudden, painful urge to heal that couldn’t be fulfilled. Uriel stood beside him, a fiery wheel of judgment spinning silently at his back.
Behind them, rank upon rank of the Heavenly Host assembled. Not the silent watchers. These were soldiers. Legions of seraphim with six wings of flame, legions of powers clad in armor of solidified virtue, their spears aimed as one.
The pressure in the hall became crushing.
Michael’s voice was the sound of a mountain breaking. "Desecrators. You tread where only the faithful are called."
Adam’s smile didn’t fade. It just got sharper. He looked at Annabeth and David. "You two. Handle the gatekeeper." He jerked his head toward Fatimah, who was staring at the archangels with a mixture of relief and dread. "Keep her busy. Don’t kill her yet. We need a witness."
He cracked his neck. "Alex, Kahdijah. Let’s go greet the management."
Kahdijah grinned, a flash of white teeth. "I was getting bored."
Alex simply nodded, his silver-white hair seeming to glow in the harsh new light.
Michael raised his sword. "In the name of the Most High, be purged!"
The Host charged. It wasn’t a chaotic rush. It was a wave of disciplined, holy violence.
Adam met them first. He didn’t use cosmic negation. He fought like a street brawler scaled to a god. Michael’s sword came down in an arc meant to cleave a world. Adam sidestepped, grabbed the wrist of a power angel rushing him from the side, and used its own momentum to slam it into Michael’s path. The angel shattered against its commander’s armor in a burst of light and pained sound.
Adam was already moving. He ducked under a spear thrust from a seraph, came up inside its guard, and grabbed two of its six wings. With a brutal, wet tear, he ripped them from its back. The angel screamed, a sound of pure, cosmic agony, and dissolved into fading embers. Adam threw the severed, still-burning wings into the face of another.
Kahdijah was a whirlwind. She moved with a dancer’s grace and a butcher’s efficiency. An angel swung a mace of condensed light at her head. She flowed under it, her hand shooting out. Her fingers didn’t claw or punch—they pierced, sinking into the angel’s chest of light and matter. She pulled, and something vital came free with a sickening pull. The angel crumpled. She tossed the glowing core aside like garbage and spun to meet the next.
She jumped, wrapped her legs around the neck of a flying seraph, and used her weight to twist, bringing them both crashing to the ground. Before it could recover, she was on its back, her hands finding the joints where wing met spine. A sharp, powerful wrench, and another set of wings was torn free amidst a spray of luminous ichor.
Alex fought differently. He was precise, surgical. He didn’t tear. He unmade. An angel lunged at him, and he simply pointed. The space the angel occupied... filled in. It was like reality rejected its specific pattern. The angel compacted, its form flattening into a two-dimensional painting for a second before vanishing. He wasn’t killing them; he was revoking their permission to exist in his vicinity.
But there were too many. A phalanx of powers locked shields, creating a wall of blinding light that advanced, pushing Adam back. Spears of holy energy shot from behind the wall.
Adam grunted as one grazed his arm, leaving a smoking welt. He smirked. "Okay, you can hit. Good."
He planted his feet, clenched his fists, and screamed.
It wasn’t a sound of pain. It was a sound of utter, fundamental NO.
The wave of negation hit the shield wall. The light didn’t shatter. It flickered. The perfect formation stuttered. For a split second, the angels behind it were visible, their certainty broken.
That was all Kahdijah needed. She shot through the gap like a bullet, a dagger of solidified void appearing in each hand. She became a blur of motion, and where she passed, angels fell, not dissolving, but bleeding luminous fluid from clean, fatal cuts.
Michael roared in fury. He broke from the melee, his sword tracing a line of annihilation straight for Adam’s heart.
Adam caught the blade.
Not on a weapon. In his bare hand. The holy fire seared his skin, the sound sizzling, but he held it. He looked Michael in the eyes, his own burning with a colder fire.
"Your boss," Adam grunted, straining against the unimaginable force, "owes me a conversation."
He twisted. The sword of white fire didn’t break, but Michael’s grip faltered. Adam headbutted him, the impact ringing like a gong. Michael staggered back.
Gabriel raised his horn to his lips and blew.
The sound wasn’t music. It was a command for reality to reshape, to bind and imprison. The air solidified into golden chains that shot toward Adam, Alex, and Kahdijah.
Alex sighed. "Tacky." He snapped his fingers. The chains, mid-flight, turned into a shower of harmless, floating golden leaves.
Raphael moved then, not to attack, but to the wounded. He gestured, and the dismembered, bleeding angels on the floor began to knit back together, their light returning.
Adam saw it. "Oh, no you don’t."
He disengaged from Michael, ignored a spear that plunged into his side—he barely flinched—and lunged for Raphael. Uriel moved to intercept, the wheel of fire at his back spinning forward to block the path.
Adam didn’t slow. He ran through the wheel. The flames burned him, but they couldn’t stop the concept of his advance. He emerged on the other side, clothes smoking, skin blistered, and drove his fist into Raphael’s serene face.
The healer archangel flew back, crashing into a pillar. The healing aura around the fallen angels sputtered and died.
Chaos reigned. David, in his light-armor form, was a brutal juggernaut, holding a corridor against a tide of lesser angels, his fists shattering their forms. Annabeth was a zone of quiet calamity around Fatimah; any angel that came near simply failed, its attacks missing, its legs giving out, its weapons turning to dust.
But the Host was endless. For every one felled, two more took its place. Michael recovered, his fury now a cold, focused inferno. He signaled, and the formations changed. They stopped attacking individually. They began to weave a net of light, a collaborative working of divine will meant to slowly compress and annihilate.
Adam, breathing heavily now, covered in burns and luminous blood that wasn’t his, looked at the tightening net of power. He spat a glob of something glowing onto the floor.
He looked at Kahdijah, who was panting, a deep gash on her cheek weeping dark smoke instead of blood. He looked at Alex, who was fending off Uriel’s relentless assault with precise, draining dismissals.
A fierce, wild grin split Adam’s face.
"Alright," he yelled over the din of battle. "Enough warm-up."
He raised both hands toward the cracked sky, not in defense, but in invitation.
"You wanted a show?" he screamed at the unseen presence, at the consciousness of the realm. "HERE IT IS!"