Urban Plundering: I Corrupted The System! -
Chapter 438 - 438: Unending Canvas
The painted hyenas launched themselves through the air toward Ma'at while she was still grappling with the remaining crows in their aerial dogfight. They bounded through empty sky in graceful arcs, their forms silhouetted against the smoky atmosphere as they closed the distance with predatory determination.
The lead hyena reached her first, its jaws clamping down on her shoulder while they both hung suspended hundreds of feet above the city. Its weight threatened to drag them both earthward, but Ma'at maintained her divine flight even as she felt celestial bone crack under painted pressure.
Ma'at released the dissolving crow and spoke a word that transformed her pain into weapon. The golden blood flowing from her aerial wounds suddenly ignited, becoming burning projectiles that erupted outward through the open sky like a spherical explosion of divine fury.
The hyena on her shoulder burst into flames that burned away its painted existence, its form unraveling as they both tumbled through the air.
But the other hyenas had positioned themselves at different altitudes around her floating form. One dove from above while another approached from below, their aerial coordination suggesting intelligence far beyond mere painted beasts. The lower hyena's jaws snapped at her legs as it passed beneath her in a diving run, while the upper one dropped down from overhead like a furry missile.
Ma'at twisted in mid-air, her form spinning through three-dimensional space as she fought off attacks from multiple vectors. She caught the diving hyena by its snout, her grip blazing with divine authority as they both plummeted through the sky.
But the maneuver left her open to the third hyena, which bounded through the air from her left flank and sank its teeth into her floating form.
The Painter watched the aerial melee with growing excitement, his brush already moving in a new pattern across the vast canvas of sky. This time he painted something that made the very atmosphere recoil—long, sinuous curves that flowed from his bristles like liquid nightmare.
The painted lines took shape in the open air as something serpentine, but impossibly large.
A serpent the size of a subway train materialized in the sky again, its massive coils hanging suspended in the atmosphere through painted impossibility this time erupting with impossible energy. The creature's body moved with fluid grace that defied both anatomy and physics, existing simultaneously in multiple dimensions while remaining anchored to this specific point in the aerial battlefield.
Ma'at saw it forming and launched herself through the air toward the Painter, desperate to interrupt the creature before it could fully manifest. Her fist blazed with concentrated divine justice as she flew toward him like a golden comet, trailing light through the open sky.
But the serpent was already moving. It struck through the air like a living whip, its massive coils catching Ma'at mid-flight and wrapping around her suspended form.
The impact sent them both careening through the sky in a spiral of scales and divine light, before the serpent's momentum slammed her through the air into the side of a partially-standing skyscraper.
The collision sent debris cascading down hundreds of feet to the streets below, but the serpent's coils kept them both airborne even as they crashed through concrete and steel.
Ma'at found herself suspended in the creature's grip high above the city, the painted serpent's body defying gravity as it squeezed with pressure that operated according to artistic rather than physical laws.
She spoke words of cutting that blazed through the open air around them, trying to sever the serpent's connection to painted reality.
But each time she cut through one layer of its aerial existence, another layer beneath proved even more real, more solid, more impossible to unmake.
The serpent's head reared back through the empty sky, positioning itself for a killing strike while they both hung suspended in the atmosphere.
Its fangs dripped with venom that fell in impossible drops toward the city far below.
Ma'at's response was to temporarily access her full divine authority, her teenage form exploding with golden light that turned the entire sky into a second sun. Her fist, blazing with fundamental cosmic force, punched through the serpent's head in an explosion that sent shockwaves rippling through the atmosphere in all directions.
The creature's painted existence shattered like stained glass scattered across the sky, each fragment cutting through empty air as it fell in a cascade of impossible colors that rained down over Manhattan like deadly confetti.
The Painter applauded as he danced through the air on his platform, more energized than ever.
"Magnificent! But can you keep that up forever while flying, little goddess? Because I'm just getting started, and the sky is such a wonderful unending and vast canvas!"
His brush was already moving again, painting new horrors that would soon fill the empty air around them with fresh impossibilities designed to tear a flying goddess from the sky.
Golden blood still dripped from her wounds, but now each drop ignited before hitting the ground far below, creating tiny explosions that lit up the ruins like falling stars. Her eyes no longer held the warm brown of mortal vision—they blazed with the accumulated authority of cosmic law itself, twin suns that made the air around her head shimmer with heat that could melt reality.
"Enough games," she whispered, her voice carrying harmonics that made every remaining structure in Manhattan vibrate at its resonant frequency. "You want to see what divine justice looks like when it stops pretending to be merciful?"
She raised both hands toward the heavens, and the very concept of order began to manifest around her floating form. The air crystallized into perfect geometric patterns that extended outward in fractal formations, each one containing enough concentrated law to rewrite the fundamental constants governing local spacetime.
Her scales of justice multiplied exponentially, hundreds of them materializing in the sky around her, each one the size of a building and blazing with golden fire that could judge entire realities.
The atmosphere itself began to sing—a sound like mathematical equations given voice, like the music of spheres compressed into a weapon of pure cosmic authority. Birds fell from the sky as their ability to fly was briefly deemed insufficient by proximity to absolute justice.
The ruins below began to straighten and rebuild themselves, reality desperately trying to conform to her vision of perfect order.
Across from her, the Painter had stopped laughing. His brush hung motionless in his grip as he stared at the goddess preparing to unmake his very concept of existence. But then his grin returned—wider, more manic, infinitely more dangerous.
"Oh, you beautiful fool," he breathed, raising his brush like a conductor's baton before an orchestra of chaos. "You think order can beat imagination? Let me paint you something special."
His brush began to move in patterns that hurt to perceive directly, strokes that carved through dimensions rather than mere air. He wasn't painting creatures anymore—he was painting concepts that had never existed, possibilities that violated the basic structure of reality itself.
Colors that had no names flowed from his bristles, forming shapes that existed in negative space, that were defined by what they weren't rather than what they were.
The sky around him began to crack like broken glass, revealing glimpses of realms where madness was mathematics and insanity was science. His platform of crystallized imagination expanded into a vast canvas that stretched across the entire horizon, giving him infinite space to paint the end of everything Ma'at represented.
"Let's see whose vision wins," he declared, and both combatants began to gather power that would reshape Manhattan—or erase it entirely.
The air between them started to burn.
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