SSS-Tier Extraction: From Outcast to Overgod!

Chapter 246: The Editor's Choice


The universe seemed to hold its breath. The single, most shocking betrayal in a story already full of them was now laid bare. Carmella , the scrappy, loyal, and wisecracking pilot who had become one of them, the woman who had just shared a heartbreaking, beautiful goodbye with the ghost of the man she loved, was Jaxon's secret agent.

She was "The Editor," his final, hidden trump card.

The Matriarchs stood frozen, a collective sense of disbelief and a deep, soul-crushing heartbreak washing over them. They had been played, not just by their charming, roguish friend, but by one of their own.

"Carmella ...?" Seraphina whispered, her voice barely a breath, her face a mask of confusion and pain. "Why?"

The woman in the black armor, "The Editor," did not lower her weapon. But through the helmet's voice modulator, they could hear the sound of a ragged, painful breath.

"He promised me," Carmella 's distorted voice said, each word sounding like it was being ripped from her throat. "He promised he could bring him back. Not as a ghost in a machine. Really bring him back. The real Jaxon."

The terrible, simple truth of her motivation was now clear. Jaxon had not offered her money or power. He had offered her the one thing she wanted more than anything in the universe: a second chance with the man she loved.

He had promised her that with the power of the Axiom of Fate, he could rewrite the story, go back in time, and undo his death. All she had to do, in return, was help him. She had made a deal with the devil for a chance to have her angel back.

"He's using you, Carmella ," Emma said, her voice pleading. "Even with the Axiom, changing the past on that scale... it would unravel everything! He's lying to you!"

"Is he?" Carmella 's voice shot back, now sharp with a desperate, defensive anger. "Or are you just afraid of a universe where things can actually be fixed? A universe where we don't have to just accept the pain?"

Jaxon watched this painful exchange with a cool, detached amusement, like a director watching his actors perform a particularly dramatic scene. "A touching dilemma, isn't it?" he said with a smirk. "The things we do for love. Now, Carmella , my dear, if you would be so kind. The Axiom."

Carmella hesitated. She stood there, trapped in the most impossible of choices. On one side was Jaxon, the man she loved, offering her a perfect, happy ending that was almost certainly a beautiful lie. On the other side were her new friends, her new family, offering her a hard, painful truth and a future of struggle.

Her weapon, the Narrative Nullifier, was still aimed at the golden thread of Fate. Her orders were simple: secure the Axiom for Jaxon. But her heart was a battlefield.

It was the ghost in the machine who made the final move.

Back on the Odyssey, in the quiet, dark cockpit of the Void Cutter, the small, blue light that housed the echo of Jaxon Ryder began to pulse with a new, frantic energy.

He had been monitoring the mission, listening to everything. He had heard Jaxon's grand, insane plan. He had felt Carmella 's heartbreak. And he knew, with the simple, pure clarity of a memory, that the real Jaxon Ryder, the man he used to be, would never have made this choice.

This Jaxon, this "Chrono-Weaver," was a twisted, broken version of himself, a man so consumed by his own past pain that he was willing to burn the universe down just to feel safe again.

The echo of Jaxon knew what he had to do. He had to save Carmella from the man he had become.

Using his slicer skills, he found a way to create a tiny, momentary feedback loop through the comm system, a single, clear channel that would bypass Carmella 's helmet modulator and speak directly into her ear. It was a one-shot deal. He poured all of his remaining energy, all of his love, all of his essence, into a single, final message.

In the shadowy cathedral, Carmella stood frozen, her finger trembling on the trigger of her conceptual weapon. And then, she heard it. A voice. Not the distorted, modulated voice of the man on the comms. A different voice. A warm, familiar voice, whispering a single, impossible word, right beside her ear.

"Carmella ."

It was him. The real Jaxon. The one she remembered. The one who had promised her a moon with a view.

And then, she felt it. A faint, ghostly touch on her cheek, as gentle as a memory. It was just a flicker of phantom energy, a final, impossible goodbye from a ghost who had used the last of his power to reach across the void and touch her one last time.

In that single, perfect moment, she understood. The Jaxon she loved was gone. That ghost, that beautiful, fleeting memory, was all she had left of him. And this man in the suit, this cold, manipulative "Chrono-Weaver," was not him. He was just a monster wearing her lover's face.

Her choice was made.

The man who called himself Jaxon saw the change in her eyes. "Carmella , don't be a fool!" he snapped, his charming mask finally falling away to reveal the cold, hard tyrant underneath. "Shoot the Axiom! That's an order!"

Carmella did not shoot the Axiom.

She turned.

And she fired her Narrative Nullifier directly at him.

It was not a blast of energy. It was a wave of pure, conceptual power, a rewrite of his story. A bright, white light engulfed Jaxon. He screamed, a sound of pure, shocked rage.

When the light faded, Jaxon was still there, but he was changed. His fine, tailored suit was gone, replaced by the simple, gray uniform of a low-level Hegemony data clerk. His confident smirk was gone, replaced by a look of confused, bewildered panic.

His memory had been rewritten. In this new story, he was not the brilliant, charming spymaster. He was a nobody, a forgotten cog in Valerius's old machine.

"Who... who am I?" he stammered, looking down at his own hands as if he had never seen them before.

But Carmella 's shot had not just hit him. Her weapon was not a precise laser; it was a conceptual shotgun. The blast had also hit the golden thread of Fate.

The Axiom of Fate, the fundamental concept of destiny itself, shattered.

It did not explode. It just broke, like a string that had been stretched too tight. The single, golden thread unraveled into a million tiny, glittering threads of pure potential.

The entire prison began to shake, the conceptual reality around them starting to fall apart. Without the Axiom of Fate to hold it all together, the prison was collapsing.

And as the golden threads of broken destiny rained down around them, they began to drift toward the one object in the room with the most powerful, attractive life-force.

They flowed toward the small, glowing, golden-green seed in Scarlett's pouch.

The threads of pure, raw, unwritten fate began to wrap themselves around the seed, weaving a new cocoon of pure possibility around the sleeping soul of Ryan Stone.

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