Alex was stunned at his own inability to lie. What had needed a dozen different people to use a specific array to make him do was now being done by a woman who made it look effortless.
Bladedance’s eyes narrowed for a moment. She found it a little difficult to believe that the Storm God couldn’t kill him. Ignoring Godslayer, who perhaps was the one actually impossible to kill, the body he currently held could easily be killed.
Even if he held the power of the Undying God, should the Storm God choose to, he could kill him.
That was what it meant to be a Half-God, a stage she could never reach.
"Do not lie to me," Bladedance said. "The Storm God would have no issue getting rid of this young man’s body to get to you. How did you get away from the Sky God in the first place?"
"I’m not Godslayer!" Alex had to shout to get his words out under the pressure. "He’s in me, but I’m not him. The Storm God sent me to Hell, not Godslayer."
Bladedance froze. "You are not Godslayer?" she asked, her blade digging deeper into his flesh. There were questions in her mind that she couldn’t latch on to. She was still very weak.
"Explain clearly. Who are you, and what are you doing with my sword?"
"My name is Alex. I’m a human and an alchemist from the 3rd Major Spirit World. One of the Sky God’s disciples stole her treasures and flew down to that world, and I found Godslayer among those treasures. I have tamed him, returning him to his former self, the Artifact God. Godslayer now lives in my Spiritual Sea, while the sword was empty, which I returned to you."
Bladedance narrowed her eyes, taking in that information. "You are a human? Why do you have the Undying God’s physique?"
"I inherited it. The Undying God lived in my world," Alex said.
Bladedance pushed her Intent upon him even further. She was starting to feel a burden on herself. She had spent too long without her sword, nearly a hundred thousand years easily, so her spirit wasn’t as strong as it used to be.
"Why are you in Hell?" she asked.
"The gods, they sent me here," Alex said. "Because of some prophecy."
He had wanted to keep out that last part, but it slipped right through with Death forcing him to answer her questions.
"That’s not... that’s not possible. It is forbidden for anyone to be sent to Hell," Bladedance said. "The gods came together to make that decision a long time ago."
"Then... then why did the Sword God have a talisman to send me to Hell?" Alex asked.
Bladedance’s eyes narrowed. "The Sword God?" she asked. "I am—has someone else become a Sword God?"
"You have been absent for far too long, Senior Bladedance," Alex said. "They already have a new Sword God. Purplerain."
"Purple... rain..."
The words were like a key to a chest, releasing a vast array of memories that Bladedance had forgotten about.
She remembered Purplerain from when he became her subordinate, how he became her Revenant. She also remembered his strength and his ambition. She remembered the grin on his face when he had managed to trap her—he and his friends.
She remembered there had been many that day, and she remembered the talisman.
"Purplerain..." Bladedance said his name with killing Intent flowing out of her like a broken dam.
She remembered now. She remembered what had happened.
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