The Heavenly Menace: My System Won't Stop Making Me a Legend

The Heavenly Menace: My System Won't Stop Making Me a Legend

last updateآخر تحديث : 2026-06-01
بواسطة:  H. C. LUNAمستمر
لغة: English
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He was supposed to be nobody. Born with crippled spiritual roots in the weakest corner of the Mortal Heaven Continent, he spent his early years mocked by peers, dismissed by elders, and written off as a waste of a bloodline. The world had a plan for people like him — obscurity, mediocrity, a quiet death at the bottom of the cultivation ladder. Then the System arrived. Rude, chaotic, and absolutely unhinged, the Infinite Chaos System begins issuing missions so absurd they border on cosmic comedy — slap an arrogant Young Master, steal from a forbidden ruin, insult a Heavenly Lord to his face. And somehow, at the end of every ridiculous task, he walks away stronger than before. What begins as a shameless scramble for survival slowly reveals something far more terrifying. His talent isn't crippled. It was sealed. His bloodline isn't ordinary. It was buried. And the System that appears to be helping him? It was never designed to help anyone. As he rises from a forgotten boy in a forgotten kingdom to a figure that shakes the foundations of all Nine Realms — and the ancient dimensions lurking beyond them — the truth peels back in layers. The history of the cosmos is a lie. The gods who rule from their thrones are terrified. The first user of his System already conquered everything and nearly destroyed it all. And somewhere at the end of every road, a question waits: what do you do when you've beaten every enemy, unraveled every secret, and the universe itself asks you to become its next ruler? He laughs, pockets another ancient treasure, and causes more problems.

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PROLOGUE: The Last Memory

I am standing on the corpse of a god.

Not metaphorically. Not poetically. There is an actual god beneath my feet — or what used to be one — and the stone of its shattered throne has crumbled into dust fine enough to drift through the space where gravity stopped working three hours ago. The dust floats upward. Everything floats upward here. The stars broke a while back and nobody fixed them, so they just hang at wrong angles like decorations some drunk celestial being threw at a wall and forgot to take down.

I look at my hands.

White hair falls across my vision. I push it back. My fingers are steady. That surprises me, considering everything they've done today.

Around me, the dead.

Not soldiers. Not cultivators in the ordinary sense. Gods. Actual gods — beings who existed before the concept of counting was invented, who watched civilizations bloom and collapse like seasonal flowers, who had names in languages that haven't been spoken for a billion years. They are very thoroughly dead now. Their divine cores, those brilliant crystalline structures that each took a geological age to form, are dark. Cold. Scattered across the ruins like broken jewelry nobody wants to pick up.

The silence is the strangest part.

I've been in silent places before. Deep ruins. The space between realms. The hour before a battle when everyone is too afraid to breathe loudly. But this silence is different. This silence feels like the universe exhaled and forgot to inhale again. Like reality itself is sitting very still, waiting to find out what happens next.

I know what happens next.

I've been here before. Not this exact moment — I would remember the floating god-dust, I think — but close enough. The exhaustion in my bones has a specific flavor, like recognition. Like something in me has stood at the end of everything so many times that the ending has started to feel familiar.

Took you long enough.

The voice comes from in front of me.

I raise my eyes.

He is standing on the other side of the shattered throne, in the space where the seat of reality used to be before I took it apart. He is tall. White hair. Violet eyes. A face that is mine in every technical detail — same jaw, same shape to the mouth, same way the brow sits — but wearing something my face has never quite learned to wear.

Acceptance.

He looks at me the way a man looks at a journey he has already completed, standing at the end of it, watching someone else finish. There is no malice in his expression. No hatred. No fear. Just that terrible, bottomless tiredness — the kind that goes down past the body, past the soul, all the way to whatever part of a person actually experiences the weight of living.

His violet eyes are tired.

Not angry. Not grieving. Just tired in the way that only comes from being right about something horrible for a very long time.

I don't say anything yet. I study him instead. Force of habit. In my experience, the most dangerous enemies are the ones who've already stopped wanting something. Want is predictable. Want can be negotiated with, threatened, redirected. But someone who has moved past wanting into something colder — that's a different problem entirely.

And he is wearing my face.

"You've been watching," I say. My voice comes out level. Good. I was not certain it would.

"For a long time," he agrees. His tone is not unfriendly. That, somehow, is worse than if he'd come at me screaming. "Every life. Every attempt. I watched all of them end. I watched you fail, over and over, in ways you won't remember until the right moment."

I glance down at the dead gods. "Doesn't look like failing from where I'm standing."

"You haven't heard the question yet."

Something in the air changes. Not physically — I'm long past being impressed by atmospheric effects — but in a deeper register, the kind of change you feel in your cultivation core before you can name it. The shattered throne's ruins begin to glow faintly. Not with power. With memory. Accumulated history pressing against the present like floodwater against a cracked wall.

All around us, the silence deepens.

The being wearing my face opens his mouth.

And in the moment before he speaks—

I wake up.

The ceiling of my room is made of cheap wood. There is a water stain in the corner that looks vaguely like a crouching rabbit. I have spent seventeen mornings staring at it while the sounds of Stonewillow Village drift in through the window — chickens, cart wheels on packed dirt, someone's grandmother shouting about vegetables.

I lie very still.

The dream is already dissolving at the edges, the way visions do when they don't want to be held. I don't chase it. I never chase it. In my experience, the things that run from you are either cowards or problems, and neither one is worth your first energy of the morning.

But my hands are shaking.

Not from fear. From something older than fear. Something that lives below thought, in the part of me that occasionally seems to remember things I've never experienced in this life.

I press both palms flat against the rough blanket and feel the texture until the shaking stops.

Outside, a rooster decides the world needs to know it exists.

Stonewillow Village. Eastern border of the Azure Dragon Empire. Population: four hundred and twelve people, approximately three hundred of whom have at some point expressed concern about my future, my prospects, or my general attitude. I am sixteen years old. I have crippled spiritual roots, according to every cultivation elder who has ever tested me, which is an assessment I find neither devastating nor particularly interesting.

I have never told anyone about the dreams.

The white-haired man. The shattered throne. The battlefield of broken gods and wrong-angled stars. The figure wearing my face with tired violet eyes, always just about to say something before I wake up.

I've had the dream for as long as I can remember.

I sit up. The floorboards creak. Through the window, pale morning light falls across the room's single table, the single chair, the single shelf holding three books and a clay cup with a chip in the rim. Everything I own fits in this room comfortably, with space left over. I have never found this depressing. Things can only be taken from you if you're attached to them.

A philosophy my uncle would call a rationalization.

An assessment I find neither devastating nor particularly interesting.

I reach for my boots.

Today is the Azure Dragon Empire's annual Talent Assessment Day.

I am going to fail it. This is not pessimism. It is basic data processing. I have crippled spiritual roots. The Assessment tests spiritual roots. Logic proceeds from there without requiring much assistance.

What I find interesting is the voice in my head — not the System, not yet, that particular headache is still three days in the future — but my own, the quiet persistent one that has been with me since childhood, that occasionally whispers things like: Are you certain they're crippled? Or are you certain that's what everyone has decided to believe?

I pull on my boots.

Outside, the village is waking up. Cultivator children walking toward the assessment grounds in their new robes, some nervous, some performing confidence they don't entirely feel. Families standing at doorways. The smell of breakfast fires. The normal morning architecture of a normal world that has no idea anything is wrong with it.

I step outside into the early sun.

Stretch.

The dream is mostly gone now. Just an aftertaste. The shattered stars. The figure with my face.

Took you long enough.

I roll my neck until it cracks and walk toward the assessment grounds with my hands in my pockets, comfortable with the kind of absolute certainty I've only found in people who have been at the bottom so long they stopped looking up.

Whatever today decides about my destiny—

I have an excellent roasted pheasant waiting at home for after.

Some things are worth caring about.

The rest is just noise.

Somewhere far above the Mortal Heaven Continent, beyond the Nine Realms, in a silence that predated sound itself — a sealed dimension breathed. Ancient records shifted. A counter that had stopped moving millions of years ago flickered, once, and was still again.

The same soul. Again. In the flesh.

The universe, collectively, had no idea what was coming.

It never did.

~~~

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