Chapter 433: The Undying Shadow Ascendant
The Street Rat's form began to pulse with power that transcended mere physical manifestation, his Immortal-tier essence reaching a crescendo that made reality itself recoil in recognition of something that should not exist.
His body expanded not in size but in presence, becoming a conduit for forces that operated beyond the boundaries of normal spacetime.
The shadows beneath Manhattan's ruins responded to his call like iron filings drawn to a cosmic magnet.
"ENOUGH," he spoke for the first time, his voice carrying harmonics that existed in frequencies below human hearing but above mortal comprehension. The single word rippled through dimensions, causing the fabric of local reality to shudder.
Every shadow across Manhattan—from the smallest crack between debris to the vast darkness cast by the skeletal remains of skyscrapers—suddenly surged upward like a black ocean defying gravity.
The darkness flowed together into a singular mass that rose from the ruined city like a tide of liquid night, consuming what little light remained in the devastated landscape. Within seconds, the entire borough was swallowed by an ocean of writhing shadow that pulsed with malevolent intelligence.
The darkness wasn't static—it breathed. Each pulse sent waves of shadow rolling across the ruined terrain, and with every exhalation, the black mass grew denser, more substantial, more real. Street lights that had somehow survived the initial destruction flickered once and died, their bulbs not breaking but simply refusing to produce illumination in the presence of such absolute negation of light.
Hercules found himself floating not above a city but above an abyss that stretched from horizon to horizon, its surface rippling with patterns that suggested vast intelligence awakening in the depths below.
The hero's golden radiance, which had blazed like a miniature sun throughout their battle, now seemed like a candle flame in a hurricane—still burning, but pitifully small against the cosmic darkness surrounding him.
"You want to see the power of shadow, champion of light?" The Street Rat's voice now came from everywhere and nowhere, the darkness itself speaking with malevolent joy. "Let me show you what your stupid gods gave me before they sent me to this world, stupid fools don't know what they did!"
The ocean of shadow beneath them began to churn, and from its depths rose constructs that defied description.
Massive hands the size of city blocks reached upward, their fingers closing around the skeletal remains of buildings and crushing them to powder. Serpentine forms with scales of crystallized darkness wound through the air, each one longer than subway trains and moving with predatory grace that made physics weep.
But it was the legion that truly announced the Street Rat's ascension to cosmic relevance. From every shadow across Manhattan, figures began to rise—not mere clones, but perfect duplicates sharing his full power. They emerged by the hundreds, then thousands, each one possessing independent thought yet connected to the original through bonds that transcended space and time.
They moved in perfect coordination while maintaining individual tactical awareness, creating a three-dimensional web of death that filled the air above the shadow ocean.
Hercules gripped his divinely enhanced club tighter, but even as he prepared for the onslaught, he felt the weight of cosmic destiny settling around him like familiar armor. His divine heritage, earned through trials that had broken lesser gods, began to manifest with authority that made the air itself sing hymns of victory.
"You think darkness can overwhelm the light of Olympus?" Hercules declared, his voice carrying harmonics that caused the shadow ocean to recoil slightly. "Then face me as the Champion of Heaven itself!"
Golden energy erupted from his form in a sphere that expanded outward at lightspeed, pushing back the encroaching darkness for several city blocks.
But more than mere illumination flowed from him—this was the accumulated glory of every impossible task completed, every monster slain, every act of heroism that had elevated him from mortal strength to divine legend.
He raised his left hand toward the heavens, and reality bent to accommodate his need. Light coalesced in his grip, taking the form of the Aegis—the shield of Zeus himself, crafted by Hephaestus in the fires of creation. Its surface bore the head of Medusa, but rendered in divine gold that turned the monster's curse into protective blessing.
The shield's rim was inscribed with scenes of cosmic battles, each etching moving and shifting to reflect the current conflict.
In his right hand, the club transformed once more. Divine essence flowed like molten gold, reshaping the steel into Harpe—the sword that had slain the Gorgon, its edge sharp enough to cut through the bonds between soul and flesh, its balance perfect enough to strike down titans.
The blade hummed with accumulated victory, eager to add this shadow entity to its tally of impossible foes defeated.
"I am Hercules!" he roared, his declaration creating shockwaves that rippled through both physical and metaphysical dimensions. "Son of Zeus! Slayer of the Hydra! Cleanser of the Augean Stables! And I will not be undone by stolen darkness!"
The first wave of shadow clones reached him like a tsunami of liquid malice. There were so many that they blotted out what little light remained, their forms creating a solid wall of darkness that stretched beyond the horizon.
Each clone moved with Immortal-tier speed and strength, their combined assault generating enough kinetic energy to shatter planets.
Hercules met them with the fury of righteousness given form. His shield intercepted the first dozen attacks, the Aegis not merely deflecting but absorbing their shadow essence and converting it to golden light that blazed outward in protective arcs.
Harpe swept in perfect circles around him, each cut severing the connection between shadow and void, causing clones to disperse into harmless darkness that his divine radiance immediately purified.
But for every clone destroyed, three more rose from the ocean below. The Street Rat's power had transcended individual manifestation—he had become the darkness itself, infinite and self-regenerating, feeding on the very concept of shadow to fuel endless multiplication. His laugh echoed from ten thousand throats as his legion swarmed the solitary hero.
"You cannot kill what has already embraced death!" the voices chorused in perfect unison. "You cannot illuminate what devours light itself!"
Massive shadow constructs began rising from the ocean—titans of living darkness that dwarfed skyscrapers, their forms constantly shifting between geometric impossibilities and organic nightmares.
One resembled a spider with legs that stretched between dimensions, its steps creating tears in spacetime that revealed glimpses of realms where shadow was the only reality. Another took the form of a serpent whose scales were miniature black holes, each one capable of devouring matter at the atomic level.
Hercules spun to face the closest titan, his shield raised as tentacles of crystallized void lashed toward him. The Aegis met the attack with a sound like thunder being born, the impact creating a spherical shockwave that turned the air itself into plasma.
But the tentacles wrapped around the shield's edges, their touch causing even divine metal to frost and crack.
The hero responded by driving Harpe directly into the titan's center mass, the blade penetrating shadow substance that had been compressed into something denser than neutron stars.
The sword's edge, sharp enough to cut concepts rather than mere matter, began carving through the creature's essence, but the wound closed as quickly as it opened, shadow flowing like liquid to repair any damage inflicted.
Above, below, and around him, the battle raged on a scale that reduced Manhattan's destruction to a footnote in cosmic history.
This was no longer merely a fight between champion and entity—it had become a war between fundamental forces, with light and darkness contesting for dominion over reality itself while the ruins of human civilization served as their arena.
The Street Rat's power continued to grow with each passing second, fed by the very shadows he commanded, while Hercules drew upon reserves of divine strength that had been earned through trials that would have broken gods.
Both combatants had transcended their original limitations, becoming avatars of forces that predated the universe itself.
The ultimate question was not who was stronger, but which fundamental principle would prove more enduring—the light that illuminated truth, or the darkness that embraced the void between stars.
Below them though, even a higher force was fuming in anger!