Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered-Chapter 67: The Council Of Deviation

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Chapter 67: The Council Of Deviation

The stars hadn’t stopped moving since the Loop Eater died.

They rearranged faster now—like they were being rewritten mid-thought. Every constellation shimmered with purpose, each light pulsing in sync with something vast and intelligent beyond the veil of known creation.

Valerian stood alone on the cliff overlooking the newly forming valley below. It hadn’t existed a day ago, but now it pulsed with rivers of light—anomalous terrain formed from the death of the Loop Eater. Wild data flooded the soil, rewriting the physical laws of the space it occupied. Nothing was stable. And yet, it breathed.

He could feel it again.

Another presence.

Not a monster this time.

Worse.

Intention.

Behind him, the others approached.

Kael was grumbling. "You sure you felt something this time? Because the last ’presence’ threw me into a dimension made of teeth and childhood trauma."

"You’re back, aren’t you?" Selene replied, walking beside Seraphina with her hands already alight with a cold blue glow.

Kael waved that off. "Barely. My soul still itches."

Valerian didn’t turn. "This one’s not like the others. It’s not hunting us."

Lira emerged from the shadows, brushing glass-dust from her shoulders. "Then what is it doing?"

He turned to face them. "It’s watching."

And then the air ruptured.

Not shattered.

Not broken.

Peeled.

As if reality had been just a thin veneer—and something far more ancient now stepped through it like a man stepping through a curtain of mist.

Six figures stood where the veil had split. They weren’t dramatic. No thunder. No flashing light. They simply were.

Each radiated a calm authority. No chaos, no aggression. But every instinct in Valerian screamed.

Selene’s eyes widened. "No way..."

Seraphina’s wings flared. "I know those auras."

Kael raised a single eyebrow. "Okay. So am I crazy, or do all six of those bastards look a little too familiar?"

They did.

Each one bore resemblance—sometimes vague, sometimes uncanny—to Valerian.

Not clones.

Variants.

One wore armor formed of gold-threaded bone, a crown of broken promises resting over a scorched face. Another carried no weapon, just a scroll with writing that flickered between languages. One sat floating in lotus, eyes glowing with equations. The fourth shimmered with demonic flames. The fifth stood draped in black, faceless and silent.

But it was the sixth that stepped forward.

Clean-cut. Hands behind his back. No armor. No theatrics. Only certainty in every step.

He looked just like Valerian.

Almost identical.

But his eyes were colder. Older. Empty.

"I am Prime," he said.

Kael frowned. "Prime what?"

"Prime Valerian," Selene whispered. "He’s... the original?"

"No," Prime corrected softly. "I am the first successful recursion. Cycle Twelve. The one that was never broken."

Valerian narrowed his eyes. "Successful?"

"Yes." Prime’s voice was low, deliberate. "A recursion where the system didn’t fail. Where the Architect’s plan ran perfectly. Where order triumphed over chaos. The Others were purged. The Godless sealed. Balance, restored."

"Sounds like hell," Kael muttered.

Prime didn’t blink. "You broke the chain, anomaly. And now reality must decide whether to adopt your deviation—or remove it."

Valerian felt it like a punch in the gut.

"You’re here to stop me."

"No," Prime said. "We are the Council of Deviation. We are every version of you that didn’t fall to madness, failure, or erasure. We are the safeguards. And we are here to judge you."

The bone-armored Valerian stepped forward. "You are dangerous."

The demonic one crackled with infernal fire. "But fascinating."

The monk nodded. "Your existence ripples into realms untouched. It is... destabilizing."

The silent one tilted his head. Even without a voice, his aura screamed disapproval.

Valerian squared his shoulders. "Then get to it. You’re not the first gods or ghosts or twisted futures to try and measure me."

"We don’t want to kill you," Prime said. "We want to assimilate you."

Selene moved beside Valerian, hands raised. "Define that."

"You join us," the one with the scroll said. "Share your memories. Your experience. Help guide the next deviations. Help preserve order."

Kael barked a laugh. "You mean neuter him."

"We mean unify the strands," Prime said. "You are a chaotic thread. But you are strong. Join the weave. Help maintain balance before this spiral collapses."

"And if he refuses?" Seraphina asked.

The silent one raised a hand.

Reality around them twisted.

Mountains bent. The sky wept flame. Gravity reversed. And all six of the Council remained untouched, standing on a disc of stable space that refused to obey the natural world.

Valerian drew his breath—and his stance.

"I didn’t tear down the system just to kneel to its echo."

Prime’s face was unreadable. "You would sacrifice all reality for your autonomy?"

"No," Valerian said.

"I’d die for their freedom."

Kael stepped beside him, fire dancing across his palms. "You’ve got one chance to walk away."

Lira materialized, both blades out. "And you won’t hear the second."

Selene began tracing runes in the air, her eyes locked on the monk.

Seraphina’s wings spread wide. "Your judgment isn’t welcome here."

For the first time, Prime blinked.

"So be it."

The world exploded.

The monk launched first, warping time with every motion—punches moving backward and forward simultaneously. Selene met him head-on, binding his momentum with anti-time sigils. When his strike finally landed, it fractured air but not flesh—Selene had already rewritten the physics in her space.

The demon Valerian clashed with Kael, fire meeting fire in a supernova of chaos and destruction. But Kael laughed the whole time, matching fury with fury, trading burns and scars like trophies.

Seraphina soared into the sky to intercept the bone-armored warrior. Their blades met midair, arcs of light clashing with screams of the damned. Seraphina’s blade glowed with self-forged divinity. His blade? With grief. The cries of all those he killed in his perfect world echoed with every strike.

Lira darted between shadows, engaging the scroll-bearing version. But he wasn’t reading the scroll—he was rewriting it as she attacked. Changing reality line by line. Lira fought not just him—but the world as he edited it. But still she advanced. She wasn’t a fixed point. She was unpredictability made flesh.

Valerian faced Prime.

Blow for blow.

Sword versus hand.

Steel against purpose.

"You think you’re order," Valerian said through clenched teeth, their blades locked.

"I am purpose," Prime replied. "I gave up self to become structure."

Valerian’s blade blazed. "Then you lost the war the moment you stopped feeling."

He drove forward.

Prime blocked.

Countered.

But Valerian twisted—not physically, but conceptually.

He struck with the part of him that had refused the path.

The system had raised a villain.

And he had rejected it.

The blow connected.

Prime staggered.

A fracture formed across his cheek—thin, small, but visible.

The fight raged on.

Time lost meaning.

Spells shattered mountains. Fire devoured light. Blood fell in stars.

But finally—one by one—the Council faltered.

Selene bound the monk in paradox chains.

Kael laughed as the demon consumed himself in uncontrolled fury.

Seraphina disarmed the bone warlord and shattered his helm.

Lira cut the scroll mid-sentence, stopping its influence.

And Valerian?

He faced Prime.

Alone.

No more speeches.

No more philosophy.

Only silence.

One cut.

Fast. Clean.

Prime fell to his knees, touching his cracked chest.

"You’ve... shown us something," he said quietly. "Something outside the recursion. Not deviation. Not madness."

Valerian stepped forward. "Choice."

Prime looked up. "Then lead, Valerian. But know this... the multiverse watches."

And then he vanished—folding inwards, becoming light.

The remaining council followed.

And the world—righted itself.

Silence.

Kael collapsed on a stone. "Next time you say ’I sense something,’ I’m punching you."

Selene fell to one knee, sweat on her brow. "They’ll send more."

Lira sheathed her blades. "Let them."

Seraphina helped Valerian stand. "You’re a flame now. One that can’t be extinguished."

Valerian stared at the sky.

The constellations pulsed again.

Brighter.

Stronger.

Not with fate.

But with possibility.

"Then we burn," he whispered.

This chapt𝓮r is updat𝒆d by (f)reew𝒆b(n)ov𝒆l.com

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