The crowd's collective gasp was audible as he stepped down from the platform and approached the blind demon.
His movements were deliberate. Measured. Every eye in the chamber followed him.
He reached her. Stood close enough to feel her trembling. Close enough to see that her milk-white eyes held no pupils, no iris, nothing except opaque damage that spoke of injury or disease that had stolen her sight completely.
His hand rose. Gently. Carefully. As if approaching something precious and fragile.
He cupped her face, his pale-skinned hand against her own pale flesh, and raised her head slightly so her blind eyes would have met his if she could see.
"So look," he said.
His voice was soft. But it carried. Six hundred thirty-seven demons heard. The System heard. Reality itself seemed to hear.
And Liam commanded.
"See."
[Primordial Authority - Activated]
The air around them rippled. Not visibly—deeper than that. Reality adjusting to accommodate a command that shouldn't be possible.
The blind demon's milk-white eyes flickered.
The opaque white began to fade. Like clouds dispersing. Like light breaking through darkness. Color bleeding back into emptiness that had known only absence.
She blinked. Once. Twice. Her hands came up to her face, touching her own eyes as if confirming they still existed.
Then focused.
On him.
On grey eyes that flickered crimson. On a face that looked human except for everything that wasn't. On the Primordial Demon who'd just commanded reality itself to obey.
"I..." Her voice broke. "I can see."
The words came out as a sob. As laughter. As something between prayer and scream.
"I can see. I can see. I CAN SEE!"
She fell to her knees, hands covering her face, body shaking with sobs so intense they seemed to tear her apart from the inside.
And the crowd erupted.
Six hundred thirty-seven demons screaming, crying, praying, their voices rising in a cacophony of devotion so intense it made the chamber's crystals vibrate in resonance.
"MIRACLE!"
"THE PRIMORDIAL SEES US!"
"OUR GOD IS REAL!"
Their faith crashed over Liam like a physical wave. He felt it in ways that transcended the System's numbers. Felt their absolute belief, their overwhelming joy, their vindication that many years of prayers had been answered.
And felt something else.
Not human. He'd burned that away. But not empty either.
Something deeper. Harder to name. A warmth in his chest that had nothing to do with demonic heat and everything to do with making someone's impossible wish become real.
He'd given hope where none existed.
He'd been worthy of faith that transcended calculation.
He'd performed divinity—and for once, the performance felt genuine.
The blind demon—no longer blind—remained on her knees, weeping, worshipping, her restored eyes never leaving his face.
And the crowd's fervor was still building when another demon pushed through.
A woman. Older. Carrying a child who couldn't have been more than thirteen.
The boy's legs hung useless beneath him. Twisted. Broken in ways that spoke of injury or birth defect that had stolen his ability to walk.
The mother laid her child before Liam. Then pressed her forehead to the stone floor so hard it split skin. Blood welled immediately, running down her face, but she didn't stop.
Didn't raise her head.
Just bowed with intensity that bordered on violence.
"I beg to be worthy of your salvation," she sobbed. Blood mixing with tears. "I ask that my child may walk again. Please. Please, my lord. Please."
The boy looked at Liam with eyes that held devotion and pain in equal measure. He didn't speak. Didn't beg. Just watched with the kind of hope that children reserve for impossible things.
For miracles.
For gods.
Liam's chest tightened with that strange not-human warmth.
He knelt beside the crippled child. Reached out. Took the boy's hand in his own.
The mother's sobs intensified.
The crowd fell silent again.
Six hundred thirty-seven demons watching a god decide if faith would be rewarded or crushed.
Liam's grey eyes met the boy's brown ones. Saw courage there. Saw acceptance of whatever came next. Saw faith that transcended his young years because suffering had aged him beyond his body.
"Stand," Liam said.
Simple. Direct. A command that contained multitudes.
He pulled. Gently. Guiding the boy to his feet.
"Stand."
[Primordial Authority - Activated]
[Command Issued: Restore Function]
[Essence Cost: 800 EP]
[Biological reconfiguration in progress]
The boy's twisted legs straightened. Not violently. Just... corrected. Bones aligning. Muscles strengthening. Damage that had existed for thirteen years unraveling like it had never been.
The boy stood.
Shakily. Uncertainly. His legs remembering what they'd never known—how to bear weight. How to balance. How to function as they were designed to.
He took a step.
The mother's head snapped up, blood and tears streaming, eyes wide with disbelief and hope warring on her face.
The boy took another step.
Then another.
Walking slowly, carefully, toward his mother like a man crossing holy ground.
The crowd erupted again. Louder than before. Six hundred thirty-seven voices screaming devotion, faith, absolute worship.
Mother and son collapsed together, weeping, holding each other, both of them staring at Liam like he'd hung the stars just for them.
And Liam stood in the center of it all, feeling that strange warmth intensify. Feeling something that wasn't human but also wasn't the cold emptiness of the last weeks.
Something that might have been purpose.
Might have been meaning.
Might have been the recognition that two percent humanity and ninety-eight percent unknown could create something new. Something that transcended both categories.
The mother looked at him through her tears, blood still running down her face from where she'd bowed too hard.
"Am I worthy?" she whispered. "Is my faith enough?"
Liam's grey eyes, fully crimson now, swept across the chamber.
Across six hundred thirty-seven demons who'd given everything to believe. Who'd severed horns and abandoned former lives. Who'd built a Cathedral stone by stone over eighty years just hoping their god would someday walk among them.
And he spoke.
Not as Liam Cross, the failed actor.
Not as Lord Azra, the performed demon god.
But as something between and beyond both.
"You are all worthy."
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