Absolute Being: I Am Nothing Chapter 76
The throne room doors swung open, pulled by servants who kept their eyes fixed on the floor. Bolt stepped through first, his messenger’s uniform suddenly feeling inadequate against the weight of the space. Kahdijah followed, her posture relaxed, her expression curious.
The room stretched long and dark, lit by floating orbs of pale violet flame. Pillars of obsidian lined the walls, carved with scenes of conquest and submission. At the far end, on a raised dais of black stone, sat the Dark Lord.
He was not what Kahdijah expected.
No hulking monster. No twisted demon. The figure on the throne was tall, slender, dressed in robes of deep crimson and black. His skin was pale, almost translucent, and his hair fell in silver waves past his shoulders. His face was young—deceptively young—with high cheekbones and a mouth that seemed designed for subtle smiles. But his eyes gave him away. They were old. Ancient. They held centuries of calculation, patience, and cruelty.
He watched them approach with the stillness of a predator sizing up unfamiliar prey.
Behind him, flanking the throne, stood his inner circle. Warriors in enchanted armor. Mages whose staffs hummed with contained power. Advisors in dark robes, their faces hidden. None of them moved. None of them spoke.
Kahdijah walked the length of the room like she owned it. Her footsteps echoed, but she didn’t hurry. She took in the tapestries, the pillars, the floating flames, and finally, the Dark Lord himself. When she reached the base of the dais, she stopped. Bolt positioned himself slightly behind and to the side, the perfect picture of a loyal messenger.
The Dark Lord spoke first. His voice was soft, musical almost, carrying easily in the silent hall.
"Kahdijah." He said her name as if tasting it. "I’ve heard much about you."
Kahdijah tilted her head. "Have you now? From who?"
A slight gesture of his hand toward Bolt. "Our mutual friend has been... forthcoming. He speaks highly of your capabilities. Your, shall we say, unique approach to existence."
Bolt’s expression didn’t change, but Kahdijah caught the slight tension in his shoulders. She filed it away for later.
"Well," she said, spreading her hands, "I’m flattered. Truly. It’s not every day a backwater dimension’s local tyrant knows my name."
The Dark Lord’s smile didn’t waver, but something flickered in those ancient eyes. "Backwater. An interesting choice of words for someone who traveled here specifically to meet me."
"Who said I came to meet you?" Kahdijah waved a dismissive hand. "I came because I was bored. This whole ’prophecy child’ situation sounded entertaining. You just happen to be in the way."
One of the advisors shifted, a hand moving toward a weapon. The Dark Lord raised a single finger, and the advisor froze.
"You’re direct," the Dark Lord said. "I appreciate that. Most who stand before me spend their first moments trembling or begging. You do neither."
"Trembling’s a waste of energy. Begging’s beneath me." Kahdijah stepped closer to the dais, completely ignoring the guards who tensed. "Let me ask you something, Lord of Darkness, Ruler of Everything You Can See, Scourge of the Weak—do you know who I am? Not my name. Not my reputation. Who I actually am?"
The Dark Lord’s eyes narrowed slightly. "You’re an anomaly. A being of considerable power whose origins defy my seers’ investigations. You appeared in this world without triggering any of my wards, which should be impossible. My sources indicate you associate with the prophecy child’s companions, yet here you stand before me, unarmed and unafraid."
Kahdijah grinned. "Good answer. Incomplete, but good." She began to pace slowly, her voice taking on a storytelling cadence. "Let me fill in the blanks for you. I am Kahdijah. Absolute Being of Chaos. Not a wielder of chaos magic, not a servant of chaotic forces. I am chaos. The concept. The foundation. Every unexpected outcome, every plan that falls apart, every moment of beautiful, terrible unpredictability in any reality anywhere? That’s me. I’m not powerful because I learned to be. I’m powerful because I exist. And existence, by its nature, is chaotic."
She stopped pacing and faced him directly. "You’ve spent centuries building order. Control. Predictability. Laws that cannot be broken, soldiers who cannot disobey, a system so rigid that nothing unexpected ever happens in your domain." She smiled, wide and sharp. "And I just walked through your front door. Uninvited. Unannounced. And your guards tried to kill me. Then your messenger called me a guest. Then I walked in here. How’s that control feeling right now?"
The room was dead silent. The advisors exchanged glances. The mages’ staffs flickered uncertainly. Even the floating flames seemed to dim.
The Dark Lord leaned forward slightly, his expression unreadable. "You’re saying you’re not just powerful. You’re fundamental."
"I’m saying," Kahdijah replied, "that you can’t kill me. You can’t imprison me. You can’t even truly inconvenience me. Because I’m not a thing you can destroy. I’m a law of reality. And laws don’t break. They just are."
She stepped onto the first step of the dais. Guards moved, but the Dark Lord waved them back.
"So here’s the situation you find yourself in," Kahdijah continued, her voice light, conversational. "There’s a prophecy child in your backyard. He’s not just some farm boy with a birthmark. He’s an Absolute too. Energy and Matter. Which means he’s also fundamental. Also unkillable. Also a law of reality wearing a human face."
She took another step up. "And he’s got friends. The ones who wiped out a quarter of your army tonight without breaking a sweat. You heard about that, right? Woman with a scythe? Two guys watching? Yeah. Those are also Absolutes. Death and Existence, if I’m not mistaken. Plus whatever the tall one is. He’s weird."
Another step. She was now level with the throne, looking down at the Dark Lord from the step below his seat.
"So your choices are limited. You can fight, and lose, because you cannot kill what cannot die. You can run, but where would you go? I’d find you. We’d all find you. Chaos has a way of tracking down those who try to escape." She paused, letting the weight settle. "Or you can talk. Negotiate. Find a way to coexist that doesn’t end with your very concept being erased from this reality."
The Dark Lord stared at her for a long, breathless moment.
Then he laughed.
It was a quiet sound, almost gentle, but it carried genuine amusement. "You’re magnificent," he said. "Absolutely magnificent. Do you know how long it’s been since someone threatened me and I actually believed they could do it?"
Kahdijah blinked. That wasn’t the reaction she expected. "You’re... enjoying this?"
"I’m appreciating it." He leaned back in his throne, his posture relaxing. "You’re right, of course. I can’t kill you. I probably can’t even slow you down. My armies, my mages, my centuries of planning—all useless against someone like you." He smiled, and there was something almost respectful in it. "But here’s the thing about being a tyrant for five hundred years. You learn to recognize when you’re outmatched. And you learn to adapt."
He rose from his throne. The advisors gasped. Guards reached for weapons, but he waved them off again. He descended the steps until he stood face to face with Kahdijah, close enough to touch.
"I don’t want to fight you," he said quietly. "I never did. The prophecy child—I don’t want to fight him either. I want to understand him. Understand all of you." His ancient eyes held hers. "Because I’ve been watching the stars for a very long time. And I know what’s coming. Something worse than me. Something worse than all of you combined. And when it arrives, this world—your new friends’ world—will need every Absolute it can get."
Kahdijah’s grin faded into something more thoughtful. "What do you know that I don’t?"
"Enough to be afraid." The Dark Lord’s voice dropped even lower. "And I haven’t been afraid in four centuries. That should terrify you too."