The Divination God floated high in the sky, watching down as Alex was teleported away. Once again, he had to watch the young man leave for another world.
Unlike last time, however, things weren't as simple as the ascendance of a new Immortal.
The path before the Divination God seemed so clear now. He could see how the future was going to proceed and how he could make the smallest changes to affect something big far in the future.
Once again, he was cursed with the knowledge of everything that was going to happen.
'Both of them are gone,' the Divination God thought.
Alex had gone to a place where he couldn't follow. And soon, Shumi would go to a place where he had difficulty following as well. And without either of the two present, the Divination God simply couldn't hide the futures from himself.
There was but a single thing he could do to maintain his curse. He could go into outer space, where the visions of the futures wouldn't be as harsh. But he couldn't leave just yet.
There were two that would come to meet him any moment now.
The Divination God turned as the Winter God and the Storm God arrived in the sky before him.
"It's been a long time, friends," the Divination God said.
"You've finally decided to show yourself," the Winter God said. "How long were you intending to hide?"
"I didn't hide," the Divination God said. "I was merely busy with some other things."
"Screw that," the Storm God said angrily. "Tell us if the future has changed or not. Did anything we do matter in the end or not, or is our doom inevitable?"
The Divination God thought for a moment. "You did the best you could, given what little knowledge you had. I expected nothing less of you in this matter."
"And? What about the future?"
"The future… has not happened yet. When it does, you will know whether you failed or succeeded here today," the Divination God said.
"You… bastard!" the Storm God said angrily. The sky shook around him, with dark clouds gathering all around. His two axioms covered the entire 100-kilometer area around him.
In the presence of the Storm God, no other thing in nature held as much power as a bolt of lightning, and only light was faster than a lightning bolt. Great power surged in the Storm God's palm, something not meant to be used as an attack but merely as a form of intimidation.
The Winter God frowned. She did not want any conflict here.
The Divination God simply watched, his expression unamused. At this moment, the Storm God was stronger than him—far stronger since he had more than just the power of his cultivation base on his side.
"Do you wish to strike me, Half-God?" the Divination God asked.
The Storm God's power raged for a good few seconds before it died down. The storm cleared, and the energy dissipated.
It had been a while, so he had forgotten just how useless it was to threaten the Divination God. He saw through every fake threat and knew every real attack that was coming.
The fact that he had waited for them here meant that he knew he wasn't in danger. There truly had been no point.
The Divination God looked at the two of them and said, "My job here is done. I have done what I needed to do, and you have done what you needed to do. Rest assured that with your actions today, you have saved our existence."
"So we are no longer doomed?" the Winter God asked.
The Divination God didn't answer. The middle-aged man simply bowed and flew away, leaving the two by themselves. He flew up into the sky, outside of the heavens, where knowledge of the future would be ever present in him.
As for where he would have to go next, the Divination God sadly already knew. There was nothing about his future he didn't know.
How many more years before this curse of his would be lifted?
"There's still some time for me to suffer," he thought to himself. "But I will get there. I will be free."
Thinking as much, he flew into space, making his way to a destination that would hold no surprises for him at all.
* * * * * * *
A middle-aged man with brown hair, longer on one side and shorter on the other, sat in a tea shop, sipping on his tea. The tournament on the screen had ended a while ago, and people were beginning to leave the place.
Since the tournament wasn't the reason why he had come to the Medicine World, he had reasons to stay behind, unlike others. He brought out a small bundle of white cloth, which he unwrapped to reveal a bunch of red text written on the inside.
Each of the texts was only a few lines long. The man scoured through the texts, coming down to the one he brought the cloth out for.
Now that the tournament was over, the billions of people would finally be free to pay attention to something else. Because of that, they would be there to witness him when he finally did it in this world.
'I hope most of them haven't forgotten the words to it,' the man thought. He had prepared just the right items for it, after all.
To stir the heavens, he could just do it himself. To give birth to one that didn't exist—that had been slightly difficult—but he had managed to get two different beasts of very different species to have a child, a combination that likely had never existed in nature before.
'Pain is all that showers… is that blood or scream?' the man wondered. 'I should do both. As for seeing stars, I should get the clouds out tonight so no one sees the stars. Will they be haunted by it?'
Everything was ready, more or less, but there was one part of the text that did not fit for now.
'The day is his…' the man thought. 'With that new alchemist, it's more like I will have to share the day. It might be better to do it tomorrow morning when the sun rises.'
Today wasn't for him. It was the Alchemist's day, after all.
As the man thought that, he frowned a little. 'He did stir the heavens,' he thought. 'And the Heavenly Principle, his axiom might count for…'
As the man began thinking along that line, he began to worry.
Had someone done it before him? Surely not. Why would they do it? But then… what if it wasn't intentional?
'No, that can't be it,' the man thought, placing the cup back down. He looked at the text on the cloth once again, reading the two halves once more. The first half matched with what he saw today.
As for the second half, could it have matched?
'I need to find out.'
The man stood up from his seat and quickly paid some spirit stones to the owner before rushing outside. He needed to find out what else had happened with the alchemist after the tournament was over.
It was crucial that he find out the truth right now.
* * * * * * *
The Interrealm Teleportation Receiving Formation in the Threeflower continent came alive as it accepted a group of newcomers. Among them, one of the men, wearing sky-blue armor, made his way past the others and immediately headed for the other teleportation formation.
Anyone who recognized the armor did not dare stop the man at all. The man sped through the streets of the city, making his way to the other teleportation formation that would take him to God's Domain.
Upon reaching there, he found the courtyard where the representative of the Sky God was staying.
The representative was an outer disciple of the Sky God, who immediately welcomed the guard upon realizing they had come there in a hurry.
"Come on in, you have come with quite a hurry," the man said.
The guard walked in and greeted the man. "Her Brilliance has sent an urgent message for you, senior. She says that it needs to be read by you." He pulled out a talisman and handed it over to the man.
The Sky God's disciple became curious why his master would send an urgent notice. Had something bad happened perchance? Had his senior disciple escaped the prison?
He hurriedly opened the letter and read it. After reading just a few sentences, the man's face paled. "No… this can't be…"
"Senior?"
The Sky God's disciple grabbed his head as he realized what they had done.
"Master is going to kill me now."
* * * * * *
The Alchemy God wasn't sure how to react to all of what had happened today. His tournament had ended in a spectacular fashion, and somehow, everything had been turned on its head at the end.
The one alchemist that had the talent and drive to surpass him had been taken away from him so suddenly. He had so many plans for him, so many ideas on how he could help him improve.
Alex would've been an incredible aid for the humans during the upcoming days of war. And yet… he was sent to hell, a realm where no one returned from—at least not without them reaching the Celestial realm beforehand.
He looked to the side where Starsight and Sword God conversed among themselves. He regretted ever asking for their help on this matter. Had she not been here, everything would've been so much different.
In the end, the fault lay on him for Alex being sent to hell. Had he not been so desperate for those books, so greedy, Alex would not have been discovered as the one to lead them to ruin.
'Whether he lives or he dies, it all ends the same,' he thought. 'And yet we sent him to a place where we will never know what would happen to him.'
It wasn't necessarily a bad plan. If one wanted to cut off someone's influence from every other realm, the only place to send a person was hell. Its unique situation made it impossible for people to escape.
'And still… for a simple divination, we so easily threw away the best alchemist to perhaps exist since before the start of the Eternal War,' he thought. 'All for a simple…'
His eyes narrowed. 'Divination?'
He remembered something, something from the past. The divination left behind by the Divination God so long ago. Its words were vague, hardly something that made sense on its own.
And yet, as the Alchemy God began going through each part of the prophecy, his heart beat faster and faster as he found each one coming true.
'How… how is this possible?' he thought. 'He fits every single one!'
The Alchemy God was stunned at the revelation. Starsight had called him the Destroyer, but the Divination God had called him something entirely different in his prophecy.
He had called him the Savior.
And these people had just made the decision to send their Savior to hell.
The Alchemy God couldn't help but laugh half-heartedly at that thought. 'At this point, if doom is to come, then we surely do deserve it.'
* * * * * * *
Starsight and Sword God spoke with their Divine Sense, letting no one else intrude on their conversation.
"You should have let me kill him," the Sword God said. "That damn Godslayer remembers me being there with the other Slayers. He might even remember you being the one who sent one of us there to keep an eye on him."
"I… I didn't realize he knew that," Starsight replied. "I was merely focused on the images of what I saw."
"Good thing I managed to stray these gods our way and have them send the alchemist to a realm they will never visit. Godslayer will die with him, and so will the knowledge of the Slayers."
Starsight nodded simply.
"Speaking of which, can you divine now?" he asked. "I need you to see if I will have any trouble in the future. See if anyone caught onto the Slayers."
"I was aided earlier by the Divination God. It wasn't my own divination that—" Starsight paused. "Wait, I can divine now. The veil is lifted. I can see things clearly."
The Sword God nodded. "Alright, divine for me then."
Starsight closed her eyes and tapped into the heaven, which let her see the future it held. She touched onto the essence of Purplerain, tugging on it to see the future.
What she saw was unclear, as if looking through water. This used to appear so clear to her in the past, and just after two instances of seeing through the Divination God's eyes, she realized just how vastly inferior she was to him.
It was clear before that she did not deserve the title of the Divination God, but now, even Divination Sage was something she didn't dare feel worthy of anymore.
Still, she went through the vision, searching for the threads linking to the Sword God, seeing what came up in his future. His immediate future was simple and straightforward.
He would leave this world soon, along with her, to go to the homeworld of the Fatekeepers, where he would lull around for many years, waiting for the war to begin.
However, long before the war started, he would leave her side to go and hide.
She tried to reach for more information, but the further into the future she went, the more difficult it became to see what the issue was. She tried and tried and tried and finally saw an image of something.
Next to a mountain-sized humanoid body of a dead Primordial, she saw the Sword God standing with his purple sword in his hand. And before him stood another cultivator.
Starsight tried to get a closer look at the figure, piercing through the veil of blurriness that surrounded her vision. She cursed her own inability to see anything as clearly as the Divination God did.
As she continued pushing herself to the limit, she finally saw the figure.
Her senses snapped back as the heaven retracted from her, leaving her with the final image. Seeing the image, she went pale with fear as she realized who it was.
Her lips quivered as she told the Sword God.
The Sword God shook with fear too.
* * * * * * * *
Silvermist held onto the crying Momo, who wept into his embrace. With Alex gone, likely to die, she could not control her tears.
His final words to the world still rang in his ears, something he was unable to believe. His daring disciple had cursed the Storm God himself. Somehow, in the mountain of sorrow and anger he felt pressing against his chest, a spark of pride lit brighter than a thousand suns.
Grimsight came limping next to him, watching the two of them. He was held up by Killshot, who was helping him.
"You need to rest. You are hurt, and pills don't work on you," she said.
"I'm fine," Grimsight said, but it was clear he was still hurt. It would take many days before he was fully healed.
"What do we do, brother Grimsight?" Silvermist asked. "Is there a way to save him?"
Grimsight shook his head. "I am afraid there is no way to get someone out of that place. And we never know just what is happening in that place."
"Then what do we do? Just leave him be?" Silvermist asked.
Grimsight nodded. "There is nothing we can do that can help him now," he said. "But… he is a talented young man, far more talented than anyone else realizes. Trust in your disciple. He will definitely make it out of hell."
Silvermist took a deep breath and nodded.
Even though hundreds of emotions ran rampant in his heart, he knew this much at that very moment. No matter what, he would trust his disciple.
"Brother Silvermist, I… I have made a decision," Grimsight said. "I want to leave with Killshot."
"Leave… leave for where?" Silvermist asked.
"I'm not certain just yet," Grimsight said. "I have planned this for a while now, and… I felt this was the right time to…"
"The right time to tell me?" Silvermist asked. "When my disciple was just taken away from me?"
"Not tell, ask," Grimsight said. "Will you come with me too?"
Silvermist frowned. "Where exactly are you going to go?" he asked.
Grimsight looked toward Killshot, who nodded. He turned back toward Silvermist then.
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