Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 57

With a final, terrible, silent heave, Adam tore the light completely apart.

It didn’t explode. It didn’t fade.

It ceased.

The cage of existence, now empty, dissolved into glittering dust that vanished. Where the presence of God had been, there was only a perfect, cold, and absolute emptiness. A void within the void.

A shockwave of unmaking rippled outwards from that point of nothing. It wasn’t force or fire. It was the absence of divine essence.

Half of Heaven simply... stopped being.

The glorious halls, the shimmering spires, the gardens of light—everything in a vast, expanding radius from the epicenter silently turned to grey, featureless dust and then dissolved into the sterile emptiness Adam had brought with him. The harmony of the spheres cut off mid-note. The ambient glow that was Heaven’s light winked out, leaving only the harsh, military-grade radiance from the cracked sky where the Host had entered, and the spreading grey of Adam’s negation.

Millions of lesser angels, those not already erased in the initial blast, simply vanished as the support structure of their reality crumbled. The sky itself, once a perfect golden dome, now had a massive, dead-grey hole in it, like a rotten patch in fabric.

Silence. Profound, deafening silence.

The fighting had stopped. Michael was on his knees, his sword lying dim on the non-ground, his face a mask of utter, catatonic horror. Gabriel’s horn was silent in his slack hand. Raphael and Uriel simply stared at the empty space where their Father had been, their forms flickering weakly. The remaining archangels and captains were like statues, broken by disbelief.

Adam dropped his hands, breathing heavily. Sweat, blood, and shimmering divine residue coated him. He looked at the ruin he had wrought—the grey, dead half of heaven, the shattered remnants of the other half, the broken angels.

He turned, his movements slow with exhaustion, and walked toward Michael.

The archangel didn’t look up. He was trembling.

Adam stopped in front of him. "Get up."

Michael didn’t move.

"I said," Adam repeated, his voice hoarse but clear, "get up."

Slowly, as if his body weighed a thousand tons, Michael pushed himself to his feet. He would not meet Adam’s eyes.

Adam looked at him, then at the other stunned archangels, then at the few surviving ranks of the Host who hadn’t been unmade.

"You’re in charge now," Adam said, his tone flat, matter-of-fact.

Michael’s head jerked up, his eyes wide. "What?"

"This place is a wreck. Someone’s gotta run it. That’s you." Adam jerked a thumb over his shoulder at the grey, dead zone. "Consider that a lesson. A reminder of what happens when management gets complacent."

He turned to his family. Rebecca had released her death-gaze, looking pale but composed. Kahdijah was wiping her blades clean of luminous blood. Alex looked drained but steady. David and Annabeth stood together, shell-shocked but unharmed. Fatimah was a weeping, crumpled heap on the ground.

"Grab her," Adam said, nodding at Fatimah. "We’re leaving."

David moved, gently but firmly pulling the sobbing angel to her feet.

Adam took one last look around the ruined, silent heaven. He met Michael’s shattered gaze.

"Fix it. Or don’t. I don’t really care. But if any of you ever come near my world, my family, or my people again..." He didn’t finish the threat. He just let the vast, grey silence behind him speak for him.

He turned and started walking away, his boots making no sound on the featureless ground. His family fell in behind him, David supporting a barely-conscious Fatimah.

They walked through the stark, ruined landscape of heaven, past the broken pillars and fading light, toward the crack in reality they had entered through. No one tried to stop them. No one made a sound. The Host simply watched, broken, as the ones who had killed God walked away.

As they reached the tear in the sky, Adam paused. He didn’t look back.

"Let’s go home," he said, and stepped through.

One by one, the others followed—Rebecca, Kahdijah, Alex, Annabeth, David with Fatimah.

The tear sealed behind them, leaving Heaven in its new, half-dead, silent state.

Michael finally moved. He took a stumbling step forward, then another. He walked to the edge of the vast, grey dead zone, the place where the essence of the Father had been unmade. He fell to his knees again, this time not in terror, but in a grief so vast it had no sound.

He was in charge now.

He was the ruler of a broken kingdom, a kingdom whose king had just been murdered by a man who used to be a street thug from Lagos.

Back on Earth, they stepped out into the cool night air of the academy grounds. The sounds of a living world—crickets, distant traffic, the wind—felt bizarrely loud after the absolute silence of heaven.

Fatimah collapsed to her knees on the grass, weeping uncontrollably.

Adam looked up at the normal, star-filled sky. He took a deep breath, smelling dirt, smog, and life.

He looked at his hands, still faintly smeared with glowing residue. He clenched them into fists, then relaxed.

"Alright," he said, his voice tired but firm. "We’re back."

He looked at Annabeth, at David, at his brother, at the others.

Fatimah’s voice broke.

"Why?"

She was shaking now, tears running freely as she stared at Adam. "Why did you do it?" she whispered. "Why did you destroy Father?"

She stepped closer, pain spilling out of her words. "Do you think you could do better? Do you think standing where he stood is easy? Creating a world, shaping people, carrying their sins and hopes at the same time?"

Her chest rose and fell hard.

"Yes, he had flaws," she said, sobbing. "Yes, he made mistakes. But he was still the most perfect being there ever was. And you..." Her eyes burned. "You are worse. Worse for raising your hand against the one who made you."

She spat at his feet, her voice raw. "You’re a disgrace to your own existence."

Adam looked at her.

Really looked.

For a moment, it seemed like he might answer. Like something old and heavy was about to leave his mouth.

Then his phone rang.

The sound was small. Ordinary. Completely out of place.

Adam glanced down, pulled it out, and answered without breaking eye contact.

"Hello."

There was a pause. Everyone waited.

A calm voice spoke through the line.

"Mr. Adam. This call is from the office of the President of the United States of America."

Adam’s expression didn’t change.

"We would like to request an audience with you."

He listened quietly.

Then he exhaled through his nose, half a laugh.

"You people really don’t waste time," he said. "Fine."

He looked back at Fatimah, eyes empty now, whatever answer she wanted already gone.

"We’ll talk later," he said flatly.

He ended the call.

Silence followed.

And for the first time since everything began, Fatimah realized something far worse than anger.

Adam wasn’t trying to justify himself.

He didn’t care to.