©WebNovelPlus
Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered-Chapter 37: The Girl Who Remembers the End
Chapter 37: The Girl Who Remembers the End
Valerian’s heart stilled.
"What?"
> > "The game began long before you were born. And the one who wrote it... knows every ending."
Then the Herald’s arms split open, revealing writhing glyphs like veins.
It charged.
---
The impact drove Valerian back into the canyon wall.
Stone shattered.
Blood ran from his lips.
But he didn’t fall.
Because something inside him refused to break anymore.
He whispered:
"Synchronize."
> [Command Accepted.]
> [Umbra Evolution: Initiated.]
The sword screamed in his hand.
It unfolded—blades upon blades forming a skeletal greatsword with a glowing central eye.
Valerian struck.
This time, the Herald shattered completely—splitting into data and smoke.
> [Herald-Class: Destroyed]
> [Stabilization: 46%]
> [Time Remaining: 02:07]
But another rose.
And another.
And behind them—
The sky split open.
A rift. Pale light. And a silhouette watching from beyond.
Selene gasped. "That’s—!"
"I know," Valerian said. "The Architect."
He stood in the fracture like a god wearing a human’s skin.
Younger. Smiling.
Alex.
But... not.
His voice came through the rift like oil across silk.
> > "I must say, I’m impressed. You survived this long. She was never supposed to be yours, Valerian."
Valerian gritted his teeth. "She’s not a piece. She’s a person."
"Funny. That’s what you said... before I split you."
Everyone froze.
Selene’s mouth parted.
Lira blinked. "What did he just say?"
Valerian stepped forward, voice calm but thunderous.
"You’re lying."
"Am I?" the Architect said. "Think back. The day you died. The moment before the Rebirth."
Valerian’s system pulsed.
A memory flickered—
He had reached out. A light. A voice whispering:
> > "Split the soul. Save the world. Or rule it."
Then blackness.
Then rebirth.
---
> [Stabilization: 49%]
> [Time Remaining: 00:51]
---
Back in the cavern, Aerin stirred.
Her fingers glowed.
She opened her eyes—and whispered,
"Stop hurting him."
A blast of crimson light burst from the cavern mouth.
The Heralds shrieked and turned—but were consumed.
She floated now—chains broken, eyes glowing molten gold.
> [Stabilization: 50% Achieved.]
> [Synchronization Complete.]
> [Second Key Unlocked.]
Valerian’s system surged.
New interface. New tree. New bond.
> [Shared Ability Unlocked: "Convergence Gate"]
> [Convergence Gate: Merges system functions temporarily between First and Second Key for 45 seconds. Cooldown: 6 hours.]
The Architect’s voice faltered.
"Hmph. You’re accelerating. That wasn’t supposed to happen yet."
Valerian stepped forward, weapon gleaming.
"Your mistake."
He raised his sword.
"Was giving me someone to protect."
And slashed—
The gate closed.
The Architect vanished.
The silence afterward was deafening.
---
Later, inside the cavern
Aerin leaned against a stone, wrapped in a cloak, exhausted.
"I didn’t ask for any of this," she said. "I was just a girl. I didn’t even have mana."
Valerian sat across from her. "Neither did I. Until I died."
She smiled faintly. "So we’re both accidents?"
He chuckled. "No. We’re corrections."
Selene stepped in with hot tea. "You’ve both got time to figure out what that means. For now, rest. We’ll move again soon."
Kael and Ilya stood guard.
Lira walked in last, arms crossed.
"So," she said. "Two keys down."
Everyone looked at her.
She grinned.
"Anyone wanna guess how many are left?"
The sky screamed.
Not thunder. Not magic. Something older.
A vibration in the bones of the world, deep and relentless, as if the planet itself was remembering something it had buried long ago.
Valerian stood at the heart of the Conclave’s inner sanctum, the shattered Grand Hall echoing with the fallout from the Second Key’s awakening. Even now, the residual light from the monument in the old ruins—where the Veiled Spire once stood—burned like a second sun on the distant eastern horizon.
"Report," he barked.
A soldier, barely standing and singed from the last quake, knelt. "Massive surge in ambient aether, my lord. Across all known ley points. It’s not centralized like the first anchor. It’s... global."
Selene arrived next, robes scorched at the edges, her silver hair wind-swept and tangled. "We have a name."
Valerian turned. "For what?"
"For the Second Key. It’s not an object. It’s a person."
Silence.
He stepped closer. "Explain."
Selene handed him a scroll, still warm with divine heat. The runes etched across it were not from their language—not even the old world’s—but from the Architect’s hidden lexicon. Valerian’s vision shimmered as he read, the words sinking into him like teeth.
> The Second Key is breath and blood. Not forged, but born. A soul displaced. A heart divided. She remembers what the world forgot.
"She?" Valerian asked. "We’re sure?"
Selene nodded. "All evidence points to her identity. Cross-referenced aether resonance with the pulse that shattered the ley barrier. It matches... Lady Seraphine."
Valerian’s heart stopped.
"Seraphine? She’s still recovering from the last incident," he said slowly. "She hasn’t even awakened fully since—"
"She’s not just recovering," Selene interrupted. "She’s changing."
Lira entered the chamber next, dragging a dead wraith behind her. Its body still steamed, not from magic—but from aether exposure.
"Another one tried to breach the outer wards," she reported. "They’re not coming for conquest. They’re drawn to the Key. Like insects to flame."
Valerian ran a hand through his hair. "She needs to be moved. Protected. Sealed, if necessary."
"No," Selene said firmly. "She needs to remember."
Valerian turned to her, surprised. "You want to awaken her completely? You saw what happened when I rewrote the System’s anchor—this could be worse."
"She’s not a weapon," Selene said. "She’s the Second Key. That means she’s part of what unchained the world. And we don’t get to decide what she becomes. She already is."
For a long moment, no one spoke.
Then Valerian exhaled, shoulders dropping.
"Bring her here. Now."
They found Seraphine in the Temple of Echoes, beneath layers of divine sleep. Priestesses tended to her in shifts, as if afraid the world would crack again if they looked away.
She lay on obsidian silk, her skin glowing faintly, as if backlit by starlight. Her silver hair had begun to thread with strands of gold, and her heartbeat was no longer entirely... mortal.
"She’s not conscious," one priestess said, bowing low. "But she speaks in tongues when the moon rises. Old tongues. Words I don’t think the world’s spoken since before the collapse."
Valerian stepped beside her bed, his expression unreadable.
He remembered Seraphine’s fire. Her cruelty, once. Her redemption later. The moments where she’d tried to push him away to protect herself—and the moments she failed.
Now, she lay still as the world moved around her.
"She always said she was born to rule," Lira whispered, standing at his side.
"She may have been born to remember," Selene added.