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Chapter 2 - CHAPTER 2

The world moved on.

Like nothing had happened.

---

Kael Veyron sat in his classroom, staring out the window.

The sky was clear.

Too clear.

Not a single crack.

Not a single flaw.

"…So it resets," he muttered.

---

"Kael!"

A piece of chalk hit his head.

He didn't flinch.

"…Yes?"

The teacher glared at him. "If you're so lost in thought, maybe you'd like to explain what I just said?"

Kael paused.

"…It didn't matter."

The class went silent.

---

"…Excuse me?" the teacher snapped.

Kael leaned back in his chair.

"Whatever you said. It doesn't matter."

Not rude.

Not emotional.

Just a statement.

---

Murmurs spread across the room.

"Is he serious?"

"He's gonna get kicked out…"

"Has he always been like this?"

---

The teacher's face turned red.

"Get out."

"…Alright."

Kael stood up and walked out without resistance.

---

The hallway was empty.

Quiet.

Normal.

---

"…Too normal."

Kael touched the wall.

Solid.

Stable.

Real.

---

"…Then what was that?"

The frozen world.

The cracked sky.

The whisper.

«Candidate identified.»

---

"…Candidate for what?"

---

"Ah, so you remember."

---

Kael didn't turn around immediately.

"…You again."

---

The smiling man stood at the end of the hallway.

Same posture.

Same unnatural grin.

---

"You shouldn't exist," Kael said.

"Correct."

"Then why do you?"

The man chuckled.

"That's a very good question."

---

Kael finally turned.

"…Answer it."

---

The man walked closer.

This time—

The world didn't freeze.

---

Students passed by.

Teachers talked.

Life continued.

---

But something was wrong.

---

Every person who walked past them—

Ignored the man completely.

---

"…They can't see you," Kael said.

"Of course not."

"Why?"

"Because I don't belong to this layer."

---

Kael's eyes narrowed.

"…Layer."

---

The man snapped his fingers.

---

For a split second—

Reality peeled back.

---

The hallway vanished.

---

In its place—

A vast, endless space filled with shifting symbols, broken shapes, and flowing concepts.

Like reality had a skeleton—

And Kael just saw it.

---

Then—

It snapped back.

---

Kael grabbed his head.

"…Tch."

---

"Careful," the man said lightly. "You're not used to perceiving the Conceptual Layer yet."

---

"…So it's real."

"Very."

---

Kael steadied himself.

"…Start talking."

---

The man smiled wider.

"Gladly."

---

He raised a finger.

---

"This world you see… is just the lowest layer."

---

Another finger.

---

"Above it exists the Conceptual Layer—where ideas like time, death, and causality take form."

---

Another.

---

"Above that… the Axiom Layer."

---

Kael felt something react inside him.

---

"…Axiom," he repeated.

---

The man's eyes gleamed.

"Yes."

---

He leaned closer.

---

"Your power."

---

Silence.

---

"…I don't have power."

---

The man laughed.

Not loudly.

But genuinely amused.

---

"Oh, but you do."

---

He pointed at Kael's chest.

---

"You almost erased reality yesterday."

---

Kael didn't react.

"…And yet, it's still here."

---

"Barely."

---

The man's smile faded slightly.

---

"You're unstable."

---

"…Explain."

---

"You don't understand your own Axiom."

---

Kael's gaze sharpened.

"…Then explain it to me."

---

The man paused.

For the first time—

He hesitated.

---

"…You won't like it."

---

"I don't need to."

---

Silence.

---

Then—

The man spoke.

---

"Your Axiom is… Null."

---

The air felt heavier.

---

"Not destruction."

"Not erasure."

"Not void."

---

"Null."

---

Kael frowned.

"…Difference?"

---

The man's voice dropped.

---

"Destruction removes things."

"Void empties things."

---

"But Null…"

---

He looked directly into Kael's eyes.

---

"…denies that anything ever had meaning to begin with."

---

Something inside Kael shifted.

---

"…So?"

---

"So," the man said quietly, "everything your Axiom touches…"

---

"It doesn't just disappear."

---

"It becomes unnecessary."

---

Silence.

---

"…That sounds efficient," Kael said.

---

The man stared at him.

---

"…You really don't feel anything, do you?"

---

"No."

---

"…Not even now?"

---

Kael thought for a moment.

---

"…No."

---

The man exhaled slowly.

---

"…That's why you're dangerous."

---

Kael didn't respond.

---

Instead—

He asked:

---

"…What about you?"

---

The man blinked.

"…Me?"

---

"Yes. Your Axiom."

---

For the first time—

The man smiled differently.

---

Not playful.

Not mocking.

---

Proud.

---

"…Very well."

---

He stepped back.

---

The air around him distorted.

---

Reality bent.

---

And then—

---

It started.

---

A clock appeared behind him.

Massive.

Endless.

Its hands spinning uncontrollably.

---

Tick.

---

The hallway flickered.

---

Tick.

---

A student walking past them suddenly reset to a previous step.

---

Tick.

---

Another student froze mid-motion.

---

Tick.

---

Time itself—

Broke.

---

"…My Axiom," the man said softly, "is Chrono Dominion."

---

Kael watched silently.

---

"Time belongs to me."

---

The clock behind him shattered—

---

And reassembled.

---

Over.

And over.

And over again.

---

"…You're causing the repetition," Kael said.

---

"Partially."

---

The man tilted his head.

---

"But the real problem…"

---

He pointed upward.

---

"…is above us."

---

Kael looked up.

---

Nothing.

---

"…I don't see anything."

---

"You will."

---

Silence.

---

Then—

---

The man smiled again.

---

"…Soon."

---

The clock vanished.

---

Time stabilized.

---

The hallway returned to normal.

---

Students walked normally.

Voices returned.

Everything continued.

---

The man turned away.

---

"…Wait," Kael said.

---

He stopped.

---

"…What am I a candidate for?"

---

A pause.

---

Then—

Without turning—

The man answered:

---

"…Godhood."

---

Silence.

---

"…Or the end of everything."

---

And then—

---

He disappeared.

---

Kael stood alone.

---

The word echoed in his mind.

---

«Godhood.»

---

"…I see."

---

He looked at his hand.

---

For a split second—

It flickered.

---

Like it wasn't necessary.

---

"…This might get interesting."

---

Far above—

Beyond time—

Beyond concepts—

---

Something moved.

---

The cracks had returned.

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And this time—

---

They were spreading faster.

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