The Bloodline System

Chapter 1681: The Deities Will Never Return



Chapter 1681: The Deities Will Never Return

Silence fell where a universe once roared.

Not the gentle silence of a peaceful night... but a hollow, cosmic quiet born from extinction itself. The vastness around them was nothing but an endless graveyard.

Shattered worlds drifted as chunks of molten debris... stars collapsed into bleeding singularities and the skeletal remains of nebulae stretched thin like dying smoke.

Space itself was cracked, leaking prismatic fractures like wounds refusing to close.

Into this ruin, a single star materialized into view. The concealed pocket-star sanctuary, summoned by Gustav with nothing more than a weary wave of his hand.

When it fully materialized, its protective shell peeled open, and the refugees stepped out.

They were humanoids, insectoids, crystalline-bodied beings, scaled folk, energy-based species, children clutching parental appendages, elders leaning on friends. Over a hundred were creatures who had survived only because Endric, E.E., and the others risked everything to evacuate them.

The moment they saw Gustav standinc there with his body still steaming with leftover energy from the impossible battle, the refugees fell silent.

It was over.

He had done it.

They didn’t need words to understand that.

But when they turned and truly saw what remained of the universe... their fleeting relief collapsed into horrified awe.

A red-skinned mother covered her child’s eyes.

A serpentine elder hissed quietly: "All... gone... the cosmos is gone..."

A crystalline being’s facets dimmed like fading stars.

Others simply sank to their knees, unable to speak.

Around them, reality was a broken mirror.

Massive spatial fissures cut through the galaxy like floating scars. Spirals of debris formed ghostly rings around newborn micro–black holes. Entire planetary systems had been folded into cosmic origami—compressed, shredded, or erased entirely.

There was no night, no day, no horizon. Just ruin.

Yet among the despair, Gustav’s friends surrounded him with relieved looks. E.E, Aildris, Falco, Elevora, Sersi, Ria, Xanatus, and Endric formed a quiet circle around him. They were alive only because Gustav had shielded them within a cocoon of Outworldly force.

Gustav himself sat on a large fragment of a shattered moon with elbows on his knees, staring blankly into the cosmic void. His aura had calmed, no longer raging with pinkish-red chaos. But there was something else in his eyes now... something older, deeper, almost unfathomable.

Endric took a step forward.

"Gus..." his voice trembled, not from fear, but from everything he had held inside for what felt like centuries. "Angy... she planned it all. Everything that brought you back."

The others nodded.

"She never gave up," E.E. added softly. "She refused to let you stay dead. Without her... none of us would’ve made it."

Gustav let out a heavy exhale that echoed faintly through the empty cosmos.

"...I know."

They blinked and Endric looked confused.

Gustav lifted his chin slowly, staring into nothing.

"I know everything that happened while I was gone," he murmured. "Every sacrifice. Every tear. Every battle. Every moment she held onto hope."

His lips curved as a sad smile appeared on his face.

"I saw it all after I returned... like echoes."

He turned toward the refugees. Toward his friends. "I know what everyone lost."

Every being present, both earthling and alien, fell silent.

He continued.

"Families. Homes. Species. Entire histories. Erased."

His fingers curled slightly. "Because the deities chose madness."

No one spoke.

Some refugees lowered their heads, others trembled. A child asked in a tiny voice, "Can we ever go home again...?"

The question stabbed everyone. With everything destroyed, they knew the answer to that but how could they tell the child?

For nearly a minute silence reigned until Gustav rose to his feet.

"Don’t worry..." he said softly.

Golden energy flickered around his skin.

"...I was merely resting for a moment."

Everyone stared.

"I shall rebuild everything," he breathed. "And bring it back."

E.E’s jaw dropped.

Sersi gasped and cupped her mouth.

Falco stumbled backward.

Aildris whispered, "You... you can do that?"

Elevora’s eyes watered.

A few refugees burst into hopeful sobs.

Gustav stepped forward with his eyes glowing brighter.

"The deities will never return..."

His voice echoed like a decree across time.

"But everything else will."

He raised his hand.

The golden glow intensified and then the space above his palm warped.

Reality twisted.

And then... a massive, ethereal hourglass materialized overhead. It was much larger than planets and its frame was made of starlight and divine script.

It’s interior was filled with shimmering cosmic sand.

The crowd stared, unable to breathe.

Gustav spoke a single word:

"Return."

The hourglass slowly rotated and flipped, turning upside down.

And the universe went still.

Then everything changed.

A deep tremor rippled through reality and across the ruined darkness as the hourglass released a cascading wave of shimmering golden threads. They flowed outward in all directions like rivers of time itself.

The threads curved, split, wove, and rewrote.

Planets reappeared in bursts of brilliant light... forming, stitching, growing, reshaping.

Destroyed worlds reassembled piece by piece, from core to mantle to surface. Cities reignited. Rivers reflowed. Mountains rebuilt themselves from dust. Forests sprouted in seconds, oceans filled from the void, skies repainted themselves in layers of atmosphere.

On far-off stars, nuclear fusion restarted like reigniting engines.

Entire galaxies rewove themselves like fabric being unspooled and resewn.

One by one, constellations flickered back into existence. Nebulae blossomed like reborn flowers. The cosmic background healed. Spatial cracks fused. The laws of physics restabilized, smoothing out the wrinkles of war.

Life returned too.

Billions of living sparks—souls, memories, genetic blueprints—flowed from the golden threads and shot toward their rightful homes.

Entire species blinked back into existence.

Civilizations reignited mid-motion as though waking from a dream.

Families reunited without ever realizing they had died.

Every being restored.

Every world restored.

Everything...

Except the deities.

Their essence was permanently erased, their existence swallowed by the Outworldly.

But the universe itself... lived again.

As the hourglass completed its restoration cycle, the last grain of cosmic sand fell and it dissolved into a burst of golden vapor.

The wave receded.

Silence returned.

But not the empty silence from before.

This time, it was the silence of a universe breathing again.

Gustav exhaled and let his hand drop.

His knees nearly buckled from the sheer magnitude of what he had done.

Aildris caught his shoulder.

"You alright?"


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