This is longer than I expected 2.5k. But please - bear with me. If you came here all the way. Thanks. 38k word already mate.
I remember the cold.
Not the kind that bites at your skin but the kind that seeps into your chest and settles there, heavy, unmoving. The kind that makes every breath feel like a mistake.
The apartment was quiet except for the buzzing of the overhead light and the occasional drip from the sink. My fingers hovered over the trackpad of my laptop, the glow of the screen illuminating yet another rejection email.
"We appreciate your interest, but at this time—"
My hands clenched.
It didn't matter how many times I saw these words. It always felt the same. Like a punch to the ribs, like the air was being forced out of my lungs. Like I was standing at the bottom of a pit, clawing at the sides while the dirt kept slipping through my fingers.
The front door opened.
I didn't turn.
She stepped inside, the shuffle of her movements so familiar that I knew exactly what she was doing without looking. Bag on the couch. Jacket slung over the back of the chair. She stretched, rolling her shoulders, letting out a small sigh before walking over.
I kept staring at the screen.
"Bad news?" she asked.
The warmth in her voice made something inside me twist.
"It's nothing."
The chair scraped against the floor as she sat down across from me. I felt her eyes on me, steady and unwavering. I didn't look up.
"You're doing that thing again."
"What thing?" I muttered.
"Where you act like you don't care, but your whole body says otherwise."
I flexed my fingers, realizing they had locked into fists. Slowly, I uncurled them. The laptop screen blurred as I exhaled.
"I'm fucking zero," I said, voice tight. "I have nothing. No money, no job worth a damn, no future. You're still here, but for how long? Until you realize I'm dead weight? Until you wake up and wonder why you stayed with a guy who can't even afford a real goddamn couch?"
Silence.
I expected pity. I expected frustration.
Instead, she smirked.
"You're broke. So what?"
My head snapped up.
"So what?!"
She leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms.
"Yeah. So what?"
The light flickered. Her face was half-shadowed, but her expression was clear. Confident. Amused, even.
"You think I'm with you because of your bank account?"
"That's not the point—"
"No, that is the point." She tapped the table once. "You think being nothing right now means you'll always be nothing. But you're wrong."
My throat felt tight.
"You don't get it," I said. "I—"
"I get it just fine." She didn't sound angry. Just sure. "I see you working seven days a week, taking shifts nobody else wants. I see you up until two in the morning teaching yourself things just so you can apply to jobs that don't even bother to answer. I see you breaking yourself just to claw forward an inch at a time."
Her voice was steady. Like she wasn't just saying it—like she knew it, down to her bones.
"You're not nothing," she said, fingers brushing over my clenched fist. "You're just not there yet."
I swallowed.
I wanted to argue. I wanted to tell her that just because I was trying didn't mean I'd make it. That effort didn't guarantee anything. That I was terrified, exhausted, and barely keeping my head above water.
But I didn't say any of that.
Because if I did, she might start believing it.
And I couldn't have that.
Minus
Fasha
The girl was nothing but skin and
bones.
Thin wasn't right. She was a stick - ribs pushing against pale skin where muscle should've been, arms so skinny they looked ready to snap if you blew on them hard.
Fasha's grip tightened around the small Saiyan child's arms as she lifted her up, expecting some kind of reaction - struggle, defiance,
something. But the girl remained utterly still, like a doll, her limbs limp yet impossibly heavy. For someone so thin, she was denser than a boulder, her weight unnatural in Fasha's hands.
Her eyes narrowed as she studied the child.
Emotionless. Her dark eyes were vacant, like twin voids that reflected nothing - not curiosity, not fear, not even irritation. Saiyan children were supposed to be wild, unruly, snarling little beasts from birth. This girl? She was the opposite. Perfectly symmetrical features, skin so smooth it looked untouched by battle, and those teeth - perfectly aligned, eerily pristine.
Too perfect.
A cold feeling twisted in Fasha's gut. This wasn't right. This wasn't
Saiyan.
Her lip curled. Enough of this.
With a scoff, she
threw the girl, watching as her small body sailed through the air. A normal child would have flailed, tried to break their fall. She did nothing. She hit the ground, skidding across the rough terrain - but not haphazardly, not with the chaotic scrapes and tumbles of an ordinary child.
No, she moved
mechanically. Every roll, every skid executed with an unnatural efficiency, her limbs shifting with precise that absorbed the impact in perfect balance. No wasted movement. No struggle.
She just… stopped.
Fasha's fingers twitched. She had seen elite warriors train for
years to achieve movement that precise. But this was a child. A
Saiyan child.
And yet, as she slowly rose to her feet, not a single muscle in her face moved.
But when she moved - hell, when she moved - the ground didn't just crack, it exploded under her feet, sending chunks flying everywhere. The air around her twisted like heat over fire, making everything behind her look all wavy and wrong.
Fasha spat to the side, her heart pounding against her ribs. The dusty battlefield stank of dirt and something else - something sharp that made her nose wrinkle. Everything had gone quiet, like the whole world was holding its breath.
She had fought plenty of Saiyans before. Big warriors with muscles bulging everywhere, brutes who reeked and snarled, men who thought they could beat her just by being bigger. Their eyes always had that same wild look, their moves always giving away what they'd do next. She had beaten every last one of them, leaving them bloody and broken.
This girl. This girl was wrong. Everything about her felt off.
Fasha sucked in a breath and charged, fist pulled back, knuckles tight. She had enough power in this punch to smash a boulder to dust. The blow whistled as she aimed to crush the girl's skull in one hit.
The girl moved - barely. Just a tiny shift that somehow made Fasha's fist slice through empty air. Not a dodge, not really. More like she'd solved some equation in her head.
The miss sent a jolt up Fasha's arm as she stumbled forward, sweat already beading on her forehead. She caught herself quick, twisting on her heel, the groundbreaking beneath her boot.
Fasha threw a kick, muscles bunching before she changed it mid-attack into a downward smash. The air cracked as her leg switched direction - a move that had fooled plenty of fighters before.
The girl reacted before the attack even happened, twisting her body at an angle that shouldn't work, shifting her stance just right - like she knew what Fasha was going to do before Fasha did. Her movements were smooth but weird, not like the rough, raw way Saiyans usually fought.
Her dark eyes watched Fasha's every move, pupils so wide they swallowed up all color. They weren't just black - they were empty, like staring into a hole with no bottom. No light bounced back, no feeling showed. Just darkness that seemed to take Fasha apart piece by piece.
Fasha's throat tightened as she growled deep and angry. She snarled, spit flying between her teeth as she slammed her knee up hard into the girl's ribs. Bone hit bone with a sound like a cracking whip, sending up dust that caught the dying sunlight.
The hit should've broken her in half. Should've sent bone splinters into all her insides.
But instead of folding like she should've, the girl's body twisted with the hit, like she was bending around it. Fasha felt the weird change halfway through her strike, like punching water instead of something solid - the power just spreading out and disappearing.
Before Fasha could think, the girl's foot shot up - a nasty, fast kick that hit her right under the chin with dead-on aim.
Pain exploded through Fasha's skull like a bomb, her teeth smacking together so hard she felt something chip. Blood filled her mouth as lights danced in her vision. The world tilted and spun around her.
She stumbled back, putting space between them, tasting the copper on her tongue. Her vision cleared after a second, eyes narrowing as she looked harder at the girl. That speed - no, not just speed. Something else. Like every move was perfect.
Saiyans fought like beasts, like storms made of flesh and bone, tearing through everything in their way. This girl fought like...something else. Like a machine - no, worse than that. Like something that wasn't even real.
A blur - no warning signs, no wasted movement, nothing held back. The girl's fist came up, aimed right at Fasha's throat. Fasha barely blocked it, her arm screaming as the force sent her skidding backward, her boots carving lines in the dirt. The hit rattled her bones all the way to her shoulder.
A rough laugh bubbled up from Fasha's throat, sounding half-amused, half-pissed off.
"You're fast, I'll give you that." She rolled her shoulders, muscles rippling as she cracked her neck with a series of pops. "But you're still
outmatched."
The girl didn't flinch. Didn't get mad at the taunt. Didn't narrow her eyes or clench her jaw or show any of the little signs that would show she was feeling anything. She just stood there, breathing steady, those empty eyes watching, calculating.
That should've made Fasha's blood boil, should've stoked her pride. But instead, something cold crawled up her spine, making the hair on her neck stand up. The taste in her mouth went sour.
Because Saiyans always react. They growl, they rage, they fight harder when pushed into a corner. It's in their blood, woven into what they are.
This girl? She just watched.
Like she was taking Fasha apart one piece at a time. Studying her. Learning. Changing. Not like a fighter learning a new move, but like something cold and empty.
Fasha blew out a breath, tasting blood mixed with the sharp tang of her own sweat. Fine. If this girl wanted to act like a machine, she'd break her like one. Piece by piece.
No more testing.
She planted her feet wide, digging deep inside herself. Power surged through her, ki flaring around her in blue waves that kicked up rocks and sent electricity crackling over her skin. The air got hotter, the battlefield lighting up blue as her muscles tensed, veins standing out, ready to crush this weird little thing with raw power.
The girl blinked - the first normal thing she'd done.
Her own energy shifted - just a little. Nothing flashy. No big light show, no ground-shaking power move.
But Fasha felt it. A weird ripple in the air around the girl, like reality itself, didn't want to touch her.
Fasha's lips pulled back in a fierce grin, teeth shining in the blue light of her power. This fight wasn't over.
Fasha was winning.
Her knuckles smashed against the brat's guard, the hit sending shock waves through the air. The clash made a high-pitched noise that hurt the ears, vibrations running up Fasha's arm to her shoulder. The hit made her bones ring - but it was her attack that landed. Not the brat's.
That meant she was ahead. That meant she was stronger.
But that gut feeling at the back of her head - that survival sense all Saiyans had - was screaming at her, sending chills down her back.
Because the brat wasn't slowing down.
Every blow she took, she adjusted to. Little changes to her stance, tiny shifts in how she blocked. Every fake-out, every mix-up, every change in rhythm - she figured it out too damn quick. Like a machine that kept getting better and better in a rapid pace.
Fasha clenched her teeth till her jaw hurt, feeling hot sweat running down her face, soaking the band across her forehead. Her muscles burned, aching with each explosive move. Her lungs worked hard, sucking in dusty air that tasted of dirt and that weird sharp smell.
She'd thought she could outlast her. Crush her before she learned too much.
The truth hit her like a punch to the gut. Her eyes went wide for a split second.
Dammit. No choice.
Her master's words echoed in her head, so clear she could almost feel his rough hand on her shoulder, smell the herbs he always stank of.
Only when it's absolutely necessary, Fasha. You know what happens if you can't control it.
This was necessary. This was surviving.
Her tail went stiff behind her, muscles tightening along it. Her heart hammered in her chest like a drum - and then she gave in to the oldest, deepest part of being Saiyan.
Power roared through her body, a flood of raw, wild fury tearing through every nerve. Her muscles swelled visibly, getting thicker, veins bulging under skin that suddenly felt too tight. Her senses sharpened till it hurt - smells too strong, colors too bright, sounds too clear. Her veins burned like fire as the Ikari State took over, turning controlled power into something old and terrible.
And damn, it felt good. Like drinking lightning.
The brat moved - but Fasha was faster now, way faster.
Her elbow cracked against the girl's ribs hard, the sound like a gunshot. The hit sent the girl skidding backward, feet digging twin tracks through solid rock. Before she could adjust, before her freaky mind could learn, Fasha was already there, knee driving into the girl's stomach with bone-crushing force.
The brat coughed - a surprisingly normal sound - her small body folding around the hit. For the first time, something like pain showed in those bottomless eyes. But Fasha didn't stop.
She couldn't. A savage grin spread across her face, teeth bared as she pressed her advantage. Every strike hit with thunderous force, each blow faster, harder, heavier than the last. The air cracked around them, ki flashes lighting up the battlefield in bursts of blue-white light. The air reeked of that burning smell, the taste of victory sweet in her mouth.
The brat wasn't keeping up anymore.
For the first time since the fight started, Fasha wasn't just fighting - she was dominating. Crushing. Breaking.
And yet, underneath all that wild satisfaction, all that rush - she sensed something off.
The brat was still watching.
Still figuring things out.
Still learning.
Fasha snarled, a sound more beast than person, and threw her hardest punch yet - a blow that could shatter mountains - and the brat dodged.
Not like before. Not just barely getting out of the way.
It was smoother. Cleaner. Better. She'd already adjusted to the Ikari State.
"Tch - !" Fasha clicked her tongue in frustration. She slammed a knee into the girl again, not giving her time to settle. She couldn't let her adapt. Couldn't give her time to figure things out.
She had to finish this before -
It hit her, the realization striking hard.
She wasn't just holding the Ikari State anymore.
She was mastering it.
Every second she fought, every moment she kept her head instead of letting the rage take over - she was controlling it. Using it. Making it work for her instead of it consuming her.
Her master had warned her, his old face serious with worry.
You're strong, Fasha, but the form isn't stable. If you can't control it, you'll burn out faster than a match in a storm.
But here, now, in the middle of this crazy battle - she wasn't burning out.
She was getting stronger.
Fasha knew in her gut that the brat was going to counter. She always did.
Every time Fasha landed a solid hit, every time she got the upper hand - the brat adjusted, recalculated, changed her defense. She should've been fighting back now. Should've been learning how to counter this new state, like she'd done methodically since the first exchange.
But she didn't.
She stopped.
Her movements - suddenly slow, like moving through mud. Her reactions - delayed by precious moments. The perfect precision of her defense - suddenly off.
Fasha saw something impossible.
The brat's eyes. Those empty, bottomless pits - they changed.
Confusion filled them - confusion and something deeper. More normal.
Her mouth opened, lips parting, but no sound came out. Her hands shook, fingers twitching like they were getting mixed-up signals. The perfect machine was breaking down.
Tears. Clear drops welling up and spilling over, catching the light as they ran down her hollow cheeks.
It wasn't pain. It wasn't fear. It was
confusion - like the girl's body suddenly had no idea what was happening to it. Like the perfect machine had hit an error it couldn't fix.
"The hell - ?"
She didn't get an answer.
The brat was suddenly gone from in front of her, thrown backward like something had grabbed her from inside and violently yanked her away. The impact when she hit the ground shook the whole battlefield, sending cracks racing outward. The crater forming beneath her wasn't just a dent - it was an ugly, gaping hole in the earth, stone melting at its edges from the heat.
Fasha narrowed her eyes, vision sharper in the Ikari State. She had hit her hard, sure - but not hard enough for that. Not hard enough to cause that kind of destruction.
Then she heard it.
Thump.
A deep, sick thump that wasn't quite sound, wasn't quite vibration, but something in-between - something that went through the air itself, through the ground under her feet, through her own body down to her bones.
Thump.
Fasha's tail bristled behind her, every hair standing straight up. Her instincts screamed a warning that bypassed thinking.
Not from battle excitement. Not from thrill. From pure terror. The brat - her chest was moving. Not the steady rise and fall of breathing. Not the shaking of a fighter trying to push through pain.
It was expanding. Swelling. Pulsing with a weird rhythm.
Every beat of her heart was like a massive drum hitting against reality itself, sending visible ripples through the dust floating in the air. The crater around her got wider with each pulse - not from her moving, but from the sheer force coming from her changing body.
What Fasha saw wasn't just disturbing - it was wrong. The gross, unnatural stretching of flesh and bone, muscle fibers growing and expanding under skin that should have torn but instead stretched like rubber. Limbs stretched with wet, cracking sounds, joints popping out and reforming in impossible ways. Her fingers grew longer, curved claws bursting from the tips with the sound of tearing cloth, black and sharp as obsidian.
Her spine twisted, vertebrae audibly snapping and resetting, each crack louder than thunder in the suddenly still air. The sound of wet meat being rearranged burned itself into Fasha's memory.
Her face - it didn't just change, it came apart.
No, not cracked. Split. Torn. Rebuilt.
Her jaw widened with a sickening crunch, unhinging like a snake's, stretching way beyond what should be possible. Teeth multiplied in rows, no longer person-like, but serrated fangs that dripped with something that hissed when it hit the ground.
Her eyes - Fasha froze, muscles locking up as primal fear overrode even her battle instincts. Those black, empty voids transformed, turning into nothing but blood-red hunger, pulsing with evil light. Not the fiery red of Saiyan battle rage, not the controlled fury of a warrior.
This was something else. Something ancient. Something wrong.
*Something's really, really wrong here.*
The brat let out a breath - a single exhale that carried the stench of rot and emptiness, so cold it froze the moisture in the air.
A twitch. The world broke.
Fasha's ears rang with pain so bad it was almost religious as the scream hit her like a physical wall, her body locking up like gravity itself had flipped, multiplied, broken into opposing forces. The sound wasn't normal - it was inside her head and everywhere all at once.
It wasn't just a roar. It wasn't just a sound. It was the universe itself saying NO, a disaster given voice.
And before Fasha's mind could process the sheer wrongness of what she was seeing - before her brain could make sense of the horror in front of her -
The
monster looked at her.
Her breath hitched as she staggered back a single step. The thing looming before her wasn't the Oozaru of childhood legends - the one whispered about in hushed voices around low-burning fires. This… this was something else. Something raw, unhinged. Its eyes burned with an eerie, pleading glow, and the way it moved - jerky, unbalanced - sent a spike of dread down her spine.
She swallowed hard, fingers twitching over the hilt of her dagger.
This isn't the monster they warned us about. What is it now? Her grip was unsteady, her pulse hammering against her skull as the ground beneath her trembled in protest.
Then she saw its fur. Not the deep brown but of black - a pulsating hue laced with veins of molten gold and green. This wasn't just ki. It was something…
wrong. It slithered through the creature's massive form like a living, sentient force. Unlike the usual wild mane of its kind, every bristled tuft of its fur stood sharp, jagged, vibrating under the weight of its own existence. And those golden eyes - not wild with instinct or battle-rage, but hollow,
soulless..
The creature took a step. The earth buckled under its weight. Cracks splintered outward. Fasha barely had time to shield her face as a shockwave slammed into her chest, nearly knocking the air from her lungs.
Nothing.
Then it growled. A deep, rumbling sound that didn't just come from its throat - it seeped from the very air around her. Fasha tensed, her entire body locking up as the Oozaru bared its fangs.
Saliva dripped like molten metal from the edges of its mouth.
"This isn't possible," she muttered under her breath, voice barely above a whisper. Her heart pounded so hard she thought it might tear from her chest. "I've never seen anything like this..."
The ground groaned.
A twitch. Just a twitch of the creature's massive arm - and the sky split apart.
Fasha's pupils shrank.
BOOM!
She barely had time to process the horror before a second wave of force slammed into her. This wasn't a ki blast. It wasn't even an attack. It was
something else. Something
primal, something that didn't just destroy matter - it annihilated it.
Fasha was airborne before she even realized she'd been hit.
The impact when she landed sent cracks splintering through her armor. A sharp, burning pain flared across her ribs, her vision blurred, and for a terrifying moment, she wasn't sure if she could move. Her skin sizzled where the blast had touched, the heat searing deep into her bones.
Above her, the Oozaru lifted its massive hands to the heavens.
The sky convulsed. Clouds churned, dark and violent, coiling as an eerie green lightning spiraled through the storm. Then, without warning, hundreds of emerald orbs flickered into existence - floating, twisting,
watching.
Fasha's breath hitched.
They weren't just forming. They were hunting.
Her body screamed at her to move, to run, but something deeper, more instinctual, rooted her in place. The air thickened, vibrating with an energy so oppressive it made her stomach churn.
The first orb lurched. Fasha's mind snapped.
With a guttural cry, she flung herself into motion - just as the first wave ripped through where she'd been standing. The ground detonated, chunks of molten rock sent flying as she threw herself into a desperate roll. She hit the ground hard, barely catching herself before scrambling to her feet.
The orbs weren't missing. They were
toying with her.
A blast shrieked past her head, exploding into the ruins behind her. Another - so close she felt the heat sear her cheek.
I can't dodge forever!
The earth beneath her feet groaned.
it collapsed.
Fasha barely had time to scream before the ground caved in, swallowing her whole. The last thing she saw before the darkness consumed her was the Oozaru above, towering, massive - raising a hand wreathed in sickly green devastation.
Then, silence.
Fasha gasped, choking as she hit the crumbling depths below. The underground trembled around her, molten slag dripping from above, rock splintering under its own weight. The force of the explosion had created a void, and she was trapped inside its dying breath.
Her breathing came fast, panicked.
Move. Move. MOVE!
With gritted teeth, she clawed forward, dragging herself through the debris. Every inch burned. Her muscles screamed. The heat, the suffocating dust - it was
too much. But the moment she hesitated, the rubble above shifted.
Falling.
With a strangled cry, she pushed off, launching herself through the collapsing debris just as jagged rock came crashing down behind her. The ground trembled violently, a final aftershock of the devastation above.
A breath. Another.
light.
A single sliver of light breaking through the chaos.
With one last, desperate push, Fasha lunged toward it, ignoring the searing pain in her limbs. And finally - she broke through.
Gasping, bleeding, shaking.
But alive.
Her trembling hands dug into the dirt as she pulled herself free, coughing through the thick smoke. The battlefield was unrecognizable. A wasteland of melted stone, burning wreckage, and distant, unnatural green fire.
And above it all…
The Oozaru stood.
Waiting. Watching. A predator that hadn't yet finished playing with its prey.
Fasha clenched her fists.
Fasha ran.
Her lungs burned. Her vision blurred from the sheer pressure of the detonations swallowing the space around her. She wasn't dodging anymore - she was surviving.
The Blasts weren't just energy. They weren't just simple Ki.
They were detonations of reality itself.
She couldn't even call them explosions - explosions obeyed physics. These didn't just break apart rock; they tore through it, carving deep, glowing trenches into the bedrock,
then igniting in an eruption of green fire that scorched through the very veins of the planet.
The attacks chased her. Twisting as if they had their own will.
She dove forward, rolling hard as another one detonated just behind her, the force ripping at her leather armor, sending her sprawling across molten rock.
Fasha hissed in pain, but there was no time to stop. The air was thick - too thick. It clung to her like static before a lightning strike, making her skin prickle.
She kicked off the ground, burning her last reserves of stamina, shooting upward at a sharp angle and and broke through the surface in a shockwave of debris.
What awaited her was not the same world she had left.
It wasn't even a battlefield.
It was a graveyard.
The land - what little remained - was nothing but charred trenches and smoking pits, each crater layered atop the last like scars on scorched flesh. The green fire refused to die, still licking at the air, twisting and curling in ways that fire shouldn't move.
The sky -
That's not a sky.
There was no atmosphere left, only a shimmering abyss, colors bleeding into each other like an oil-slicked void. The air wavered, distorting between hues of orange and green, space itself blistering from the heat.
And at the center of it all -
The Oozaru stood.
It didn't move. It didn't breathe heavy. It simply existed.
Steam coiled off its massive frame, the green Ki wrapping around its body like an extension of itself.
Its golden eyes - burning, ancient, unblinking - locked onto her.
Fasha's fingers twitched. Her mind screamed at her to find the pattern, the logic, the fight in its movements.
There was none.
No stance. No bloodlust. No instinct.
Just detached, suffocating presence.
She swallowed hard. It wasn't fighting her. It was undoing her.
Fasha's heart lurched.
The Oozaru raised its hand.
No wind-up. No preparation. Just a slow, absent movement, like it was reaching for something unseen.
The detonations returned.
But this time, they didn't rain down in an arc. They didn't follow a trajectory.
They formed - right there, in the air, a dozen feet from her.
Fasha's breath hitched.
The light flickered, pulsing, unstable - each one like a star trapped in the throes of implosion, shuddering, twisting, before -
BOOM.
The first one detonated. She barely threw herself back in time - too close, too late. The force ripped through her, her ears ringing as the world snapped into white-hot pain.
Another - closer.
She rolled, the second blast igniting the ground itself, sending spirals of fire shrieking into the sky.
A third -
She couldn't dodge in time. The explosion hit the edge of her vision, and then she was airborne, hurtling backward, her body twisting violently in the wake of the force.
She crashed hard, bouncing off the ruined earth before slamming against a jagged rock outcrop.
Her vision blurred.
Her armor - cracked.
Her limbs - numb.
And above her -
The Oozaru.
Still waiting.
Still watching.
Fasha forced herself up, gasping, smoke curling from her skin. She had no strategy. No plan.
She just had this moment.
Her fingers curled into fists.
A shuddering breath.
The last flicker of golden energy crackled at her fingertips.
"Fine," she rasped, voice hoarse.
The sky trembled.
"If you're not done…"
She lit up, the last of her power surging around her battered frame. Fasha didn't breathe.
The air around her had stopped being air. It pressed against her skin like liquid lead, too dense, too wrong. Every inhale burned, dragging the taste of charred rock, scorched ozone, and something acrid deep into her lungs.
She exhaled through her teeth, spitting to the side. "Tch. Smells like something crawled out of hell and took a piss."
Above her, the Oozaru shifted.
Its massive frame radiated an unbearable heat, steam rising from its fur like it was boiling from the inside out. The green glow crawled up its arm, slow and steady, wrapping its thick fingers like sickly fire. Faint flickers of gold and white danced along its knuckles, its own energy too dense to contain itself.
It raised its hand.
The world groaned.
Fasha felt it more than heard it. The sky - what was left of it - folded in on itself, twisting like it was being wrung out by something unseen. Gravity itself bent under the sheer force gathering in the Oozaru's palm.
She squinted up at it, eyes flicking over the shifting mass of energy taking shape.
Not just one blast.
Dozens.
Each orb shuddered, pulsing violently, like they were barely restrained, twisting and coiling in unnatural directions, hungry for something to consume.
Oh, is that all?
Fasha cracked her neck, rolling her shoulders despite the burning ache in her bones. She stood tall, ignoring the way her body screamed at her to run.
She spat blood onto the cracked ground and smirked.
"Wow. So this is what happens when an overgrown flea gets too much power, huh?" She wiped her mouth. "Gotta say - I expected more."
The Oozaru's golden gaze locked onto her. No response. No rage. Just that blank, crushing stare.
It released its hand.
The air twisted.. The first orb detonated before it even hit the ground.
A wall of green fire erupted outward, the shockwave alone splintering the horizon like a shattered mirror. The second and third struck an instant later, gouging through the planet's crust like a god's careless swipe, vaporizing rock, sand - everything.
Fasha moved.
The instant the explosions went off, she vanished, the force of her speed sending cracks racing across the ruined ground. The maelstrom chased her, stalking her, the air itself peeling apart in her wake.
The ground flipped and rolled, slabs of molten rock spinning into the air like the pages of a burning book.
Dodge. Move. Keep running.
Another blast shrieked past, missing her by inches. The heat bit into her skin, peeling armor away like paper.
The attacks were adjusting.
Oh, you've gotta be kidding me.
They weren't random anymore. They were tracking her.
Fasha gritted her teeth, throwing herself into a sharp aerial turn, her body twisting mid-air as another detonation erased the space where she'd been a heartbeat before.
She was running out of options.
Fasha wasn't sure if she was even flying anymore.
The sky and ground had blurred together, a spiraling maelstrom of emerald and gold where gravity seemed to exist only when it felt like it. The heat pressed against her back in waves, searing her lungs with every breath, thick and acrid with the taste of scorched ozone and boiling rock.
She twisted mid-flight - just in time.
A shadow loomed overhead, massive, fast -
Fasha veered hard, feeling the pull of its gravity as a meteor the size of a warship tore past her, splitting the sky apart. It hit the ruined ground with a force that sent columns of green fire clawing upward, reaching for her, hungry for anything still alive.
Another blast screamed past, too close.
The heat burned deep, searing straight through the shattered plates of her armor, cutting fresh lines of agony across her exposed skin.
She didn't wince. No time.
Instead, she descended hard, skimming just above the melted surface of what used to be the planet's crust. Her boots scraped, kicking up glowing embers, her mind racing ahead of her body, assessing, recalculating, searching.
But there was nowhere left to go.
This wasn't a battlefield anymore. It was a graveyard.
Craters stretched for miles in every direction. Fissures split the earth, spewing plumes of toxic smoke that coiled into the warped, bleeding sky. Entire sections of the planet's crust had peeled away, exposing veins of liquid fire that pulsed and churned like an open wound.
And above it all -
The Oozaru stood.
Fasha's breath caught. Her hands twitched at her sides. The Blasts still chased her, circling like starving beasts, closing in from every direction.
Outrun them? Face them?
There was no decision to make.
She wasn't going to outrun anything. She was running out of space to run.
Fasha exhaled sharply, rolling her shoulders, ignoring the sting of fresh burns and broken armor.
Her lips curled into a smirk.
"Oh, I get it now," she muttered, lifting her chin toward the towering monster.
"You're just playing with your food."
The sky rumbled.
Fasha let out a breath, steadying her stance. She planted her feet, flexing her fingers as the storm of death closed in
Her lungs wouldn't work. No - they worked too much. Ragged, frantic gasps clawed up her throat, ribs rattling with each desperate inhale. Her muscles were on fire, but the pain was nothing compared to the sheer terror curling, twisting inside her gut like a parasite burrowing deep.
She couldn't move.
Not really.
Her body was locked - stiff, trembling - her tail curled so tightly around her waist it ached. She tried to convince herself she could run if she had to, that she could dodge, fight, survive - but the monster before her made every thought feel like a lie.
The Oozaru lifted its hand.
No, no, no, NO.
A sickly green glow flickered to life in its massive palm, weak at first - like a candle sputtering against the wind. But it wasn't weak. She knew it wasn't weak. The way it
felt - wrong, unnatural, like something that shouldn't exist - made every nerve in her body scream.
The glow slithered across the beast's fur, pulsing, spreading, swallowing the battlefield in its deathly radiance. Fasha's breath caught, a new, sharper panic latching onto her bones. It was growing.
Not like a blast, not like an attack.
Like waking up.
Like something that didn't belong in this world and was forcing its way in anyway.
And it swelled.
The tiny ember exploded outward, stretching higher, wider, warping the very air around it. The pressure changed. She could
feel it, like a storm before the first crack of thunder, like the whole planet was suddenly holding its breath. The Oozaru's creation wasn't just big. It wasn't just powerful.
It was
too much.
This wasn't an attack. This was an execution.
The Oozaru's golden eyes locked onto hers, massive fingers flexing, steadying the monstrous sphere as it churned in its palm. Her brain screamed at her to
move, move, MOVE -
Then, its arm shifted.
Not toward her. Toward the horizon.
No.
No, no, no,
NO.
Her stomach flipped, the world tilting violently beneath her feet. The Kesha Tribe. Her dear place. She couldn't see them from here - not really. But she knew they were there. Thousand Saiyans, standing in that valley, completely unaware.
Completely
doomed.
A sound tore from her throat - some half-choked cry, some useless, broken thing that didn't even matter because the Oozaru was already throwing it.
The
blaster ignited the sky, a streak of burning emerald death carving through the air. A shockwave detonated outward, flattening the wasteland beneath it, stealing the ground from under her feet. She barely stayed standing. Her hands trembled, fists clenched, helpless.
She had no time.
No chance.
No way to stop it.
It was going to hit. It was going to -
A
miss.
Her breath hitched, her mind struggling to keep up, to process the sheer impossibility of it. The Blaster sailed past the valley, grazing the edges of the Kesha Tribe's land, and disappeared into the horizon.
But it
landed somewhere.
She didn't see where.
Didn't know
what it destroyed.
The entire world
shook.
The sheer force of the explosion sent a
wall of green fire tearing across the wasteland. Rock shattered. The air
cracked. Debris howled as it was ripped into the sky, a second, unnatural wind screaming against her armor, burning her exposed skin
even through the plating.
Her legs buckled. For a second - just a second - she almost collapsed.
But she forced herself to stay standing. Because it wasn't over.
The Oozaru still stood.
Still breathing. Still watched her. And in those golden, unblinking eyes, she saw it.
It
could do it again.
Colonel Nappa
The wastelands stretched endlessly before him - barren, lifeless, worthless. Just like the damn village that had cost him Spinsh.
Nappa's boots struck hard against the brittle ground, each step kicking up dust that clung to his skin, mixed with the sweat and blood already staining his leather armor. His pelts swayed with his movements, reeking of old kills, but the only kill that mattered had slipped through his fingers.
Spinsh was dead. His sworn brother. His best friend. The only bastard in this gods-forsaken world who had fought beside him like it meant something.
And how had he died? Not in the war against the Tuffles. Not on some glorious battlefield with his fists buried in the throat of his enemies. But in the dirt of a nameless, backwater village, murdered by some coward who didn't even have the spine to face him head-on.
Nappa's fists clenched, his nails biting into his palms. The Tribal Leader had been useless.
A sniveling, gutless waste of air, standing there with his tail tucked tight around his waist, blubbering about how they'd found Spinsh's body too late, how there was nothing to be done.
Nothing to be done. Nappa should have killed him.
His rage curled deep in his chest, a seething, boiling thing with no outlet. There was no trail to follow. No suspect. No damn answers.
Just a corpse in the dirt and a village full of cowards.
He should have ripped that leader apart.
Should have torn his damn head off his shoulders and made an example of him. You lose a warrior - one of your own - you don't just stand there like a weak little shit and call it fate. You burn the world until you find who did it.
But he hadn't.
Because Spinsh would have wanted him to be smart about it.
Spinsh, who always kept his temper in check - who knew when to hold back, when to bide his time.
Damn him. Damn his patience.
The war against the Tuffles was waiting. The King was waiting.
But Nappa wasn't done.
Not with this. Not with whoever had taken his brother from him.
His lips curled back into a snarl, voice low and venomous.
"You'll die screaming for this."
And this time, it wasn't a threat.
It was a promise -
Huh!?
Then the sky cracked apart.
Not like thunder. Not like anything natural. It was light - no, a force. Emerald. Blinding. Alive. It didn't just illuminate; it devoured. The air shook, the atmosphere bending under its weight, something too massive, too unnatural to belong in this world.
Nappa barely had time to register it before something slammed into him from behind.
"What - ?"
No warning. No chance to react. One second, he was standing - the next, he wasn't anywhere at all. His body was ripped from the ground like it was nothing. No, less than nothing. Not even an afterthought. He wasn't flying. He wasn't falling. He was flung.
The force swallowed him whole, an emerald blaze turning the night into a boiling storm of color and fire and annihilation.
"No! DAMN IT - !"
Pain - if it could even be called that - detonated through him. His back - gone. His ribs - collapsing. His lungs - vanishing. The world below blurred into a smear of black and red, stretching so far and fast it stopped looking real. He was being carried - no, hurled, erased, rewritten through the sky by something too vast to be understood.
He tried to move, to brace, to scream - his body refused. His neck wouldn't turn, his mouth opened, but the sound was stolen.
"No, no,
NO!"
He wasn't in control anymore. The wastelands, the cliffs, the rivers - all gone. Devoured in green fire. He wasn't inside the air - he was inside something bigger than battle, bigger than war, bigger than the planet beneath him. A new sun had been born, and he was trapped inside its inferno.
"This - this can't - !!"
His hide pelts burned first, fusing into his flesh, then peeling away in smoking shreds of agony. His armor followed, cracking, melting, vanishing into the storm of energy. Then his skin. The heat ate through it like an animal, peeling it in screaming layers, tearing him down one inch at a time. His spine - Saiyan-tough, unbreakable - began to give. Vertebrae snapped like dry wood in a wildfire. His arms twitched, still trying to brace, still trying to fight.
"I… I won't - !"
But this wasn't a battle. This was something else. His fingers melted next, then his arms, the bones inside them softening, bending, breaking. He would have roared. Would have cursed. Would have done anything to prove he was still there.
"I WON'T DIE LIKE THIS!"
But his voice was gone.
His thoughts drowned beneath the suffering.
He wasn't Nappa. He wasn't a Saiyan. He was just something suffering.
"This isn't real. It isn't - !!"
And the worst part?
It wasn't stopping.
This wasn't a ki blast that struck and faded - it was a force beyond him, beyond his kind, beyond anything he understood. A planet-killer. A god's wrath. A cosmic judgment.
His instincts told him to fight, adapt, endure.
"I can't - "
But his arms were melting. His bones were boiling. His mind was unraveling.
"Please - "
But the Saiyan body fought on. Because that's what they did. Because Saiyans were built for war, for destruction, for impossible endurance.
And so -
He endured.
Even as the light grew. Even as his nerves failed. Even as he felt himself breaking apart.
He endured.
And the emerald sun of fire kept pushing him into oblivion.
Great King Vegeta III
The meeting should have been routine.
The royal war tent was filled with Saiyan warlords - scarred, hardened men draped in furred pelts and stitched leather armor, their bodies a tapestry of old wounds and victories. Primitives, outsiders might have called them. But what did it matter? Saiyans had no need for the coward's armor, for the weakling's technology. Their strength was their shield, their rage, their weapon.
They were conquerors.
And now, for the first time in Saiyan history, they were becoming one.
Under
him.
King Vegeta stood at the center of the war council, arms crossed over his chest, his presence alone enough to demand silence. He wore no crown - what king needed one when his power was enough? But his cloak, dark and lined with the fur of slain beasts, was a mark of who he was. The first and only ruler of the Saiyan tribes.
Toma stood at the map-covered table, laying out strategies for the war ahead.
"The Tuffles have their cities. Their high walls, their steel towers. It makes them bold. But they are few, and we are many." His voice was sharp, certain. His finger dragged across the crude map drawn onto stretched leather. "Their lands are fertile. Their rivers untainted. Their fortresses are built to withstand time, not war."
A rumble of approval spread through the gathered warlords. Some bared their teeth, already envisioning the slaughter to come.
"They have technology." A gruffer voice, this one from Paragus, one of the older warriors in the tent. "Strange weapons. Metal beasts that spit fire and thunder. You've seen the reports, Toma. Can raw power break steel?"
Toma snorted. "It doesn't need to. Steel bends. It crumbles. It melts. Our fists will
rip through their walls, just as we crushed the last city that stood in our way."
More murmurs of agreement. A few warlords laughed, rough and eager.
But King Vegeta remained silent.
His gaze burned into the map, into the crude drawings of Tuffle fortresses, their so-called defenses. He had no doubts about victory. The Tuffles were soft. Clever, but weak. Hiding behind their machines, their tricks, their illusions of safety.
He would burn it all.
Still, something gnawed at him.
Spinsh.
A warrior without equal. A brother to Nappa.
Dead.
And the way he had died - it bothered him.
"Tell me again," King Vegeta's voice cut through the discussion, deep and firm. The tent hushed in an instant. Every warrior there listened when he spoke.
Toma hesitated. "Sire?"
"The one called Spinsh. Tell me again how he died."
For the first time in the meeting, the bloodthirst dimmed. A shadow passed over the warlords' faces, brief but noticeable. It was not a warrior's death.
Toma shifted, clearly reluctant to repeat it. "He was… living peacefully in a small village. Killed in his sleep. A blade through his throat."
A coward's kill.
The war tent was silent.
It wasn't the death that made them uneasy. It was the implication.
Saiyans did not kill like that. Saiyans fought with honor, with fury. They tore their enemies apart with their bare hands, leaving their bodies in the dirt for all to see. Not like this.
And worse - no one had seen who did it.
King Vegeta's jaw clenched. His fingers curled into his arms, leather creaking beneath his grip. A ghost in the night. A faceless killer.
That wasn't a
Saiyan.
"And the tribal leader?" His tone was low, dangerous.
Toma exhaled through his nose. "Useless. He mumbled about the attack happening 'too fast,' about there being 'nothing to be done.'"
Lies. Or weakness. Both deserved death.
Vegeta's fingers twitched at his side. He should have killed him.
"Weakness disgusts me," he said flatly.
Paragus nodded, the old warrior spitting to the side. "The tribe should be burned for their failure. If they cannot defend a warrior of our own, what use are they?"
Another voice chimed in. "Or they are hiding something. You think it was an outsider?"
King Vegeta exhaled slowly. His tail flicked behind him, betraying his growing agitation.
"No outsider would dare." His voice was absolute.
And yet - someone had.
The Tuffles were a problem. Their machines. Their numbers. But they weren't ghosts. They weren't cowards in the dark.
This - this was something else.
His gaze flickered toward the entrance of the tent, toward the wastelands beyond.
The war against the Tuffles was waiting. His kingdom's future was waiting.
But something else was moving in the dark.
Something that didn't fear Saiyans.
It was true.
The Tuffles were clever, but small. Their kind lacked the raw power of Saiyans, their weapons and steel towers mere delaying tactics in the face of inevitable destruction. Their walls would crumble, their cities would burn, and their history would be erased by his hand.
But still - something gnawed at him.
Not fear.
Never fear.
Doubt.
Not in the war. Not in his people. In the whispers.
The Legendary Super Saiyan. Someone who has the power of the Gods.
A myth. A curse. A challenge to his rule.
One that had to die.
"Sire?"
Toma's voice pulled him back to the moment. The war chiefs were watching him now, waiting. The fire pit at the center of the tent crackled, casting flickering shadows on their hardened faces. These men - killers, conquerors, warriors - looked to him for leadership, for strength. They had seen him crush clans beneath his heel. They had followed him from bloodstained battlefield to battlefield.
And yet - even they, the strongest among the strong, spoke of ghosts.
King Vegeta exhaled slowly, before speaking.
"The war against the Tuffles will be won." His voice carried, deep and sure, filling the tent with the weight of absolute certainty. "But the Tuffles are not our only enemy."
Silence.
A shift in posture. Some warriors stiffened. Others exchanged glances, uncertain. They were used to hearing about Tuffle war machines, enemy fortifications, traitors among the lesser tribes. But this?
Only one man was bold enough to name it.
Paragus.
"You speak of… the legend?" His voice was careful.
Vegeta's jaw tightened.
He hated hearing the name of it. Of him.
"I speak of the lies that weaken us." His gaze swept the gathered warriors, his black eyes burning. "Every time a warrior rises stronger than the last, the whispers start again. 'Perhaps he is the one.'
'Perhaps he is the warrior of legend.' 'Perhaps he will be the one to lead us to conquest.'"
His lips curled into a sneer.
"I will hear no more of it."
The tent fell into stillness. No one spoke, not even Paragus. No one dared.
King Vegeta stepped forward, the leather bindings of his boots creaking against the hardened earth. The warriors parted for him instinctively, making way for their king.
"The Super Saiyan does not exist. And if it does - " He let the words hang in the air, heavy with meaning. With a warning.
Then I will kill him myself.
They shifted, but did not object. Others looked uneasy.
They knew what he meant. What he intended.
For years, the tale had passed through the tribes like a sickness. An ancient warrior of gold and fury, rising once every thousand years to wield power beyond imagination. Some called it a savior, the one who would lead their race to conquest.
King Vegeta knew better.
It was a pretender. A
false king. A blight that had to be stamped out.
"The legend is not weakness, sire," Toma spoke at last, cautiously. "It speaks of strength. Of a warrior beyond all others. One who will lead our race to - "
Vegeta's eyes snapped to him.
"I am
beyond all others."
Silence.
A moment stretched too thin.
No one dared to disagree.
Of course they wouldn't.
Because it was true.
Vegeta's power was
unmatched. None had ever risen beyond him. His strength, his will, his vision for their race - it was absolute. He had bent the clans to his rule. He had crushed chieftains beneath his heel, forced warlords to kneel, and built the Saiyan Kingdom from the bones of the old ways.
And yet - the whispers persisted.
A warrior beyond all Saiyans. A force of pure destruction. A being of gold and fury.
A lie.
"Let them believe in fairy tales
," Vegeta thought, his fists tightening.
"And I
will show them reality.
"
Because Saiyans did not follow ghosts. They followed power.
And his power was the greatest.
"Sire." Paragus again. The old warrior's voice was measured, careful. "There are some who believe that a little girl from unknown had the power of the Legendary Super Saiyan."
The words struck something deep.
Vegeta's expression didn't change.
A
girl?
Vegeta's fingers curled into a fist.
"Then they are fools." His voice was sharp, final. "No girl will be shackled to an old prophecy. And if fate is foolish enough to believe otherwise - "
His eyes narrowed.
"Then I will carve my name into its bones."
The tent remained deathly silent.
Even Paragus - who rarely looked shaken - had nothing to say.
Good.
Let them doubt the legend. Let them fear it.
He would hunt this false warrior. He would find this so-called prophecy.
And he would break it. The war against the Tuffles was waiting. His kingdom's future was waiting.
But first - he would prove, once and for all, that there was only one Saiyan worthy of ruling.
And his name was
King Vegeta.
W-what is that!?
The scream came first.
It didn't belong to any man. Any Saiyan. It didn't belong to anything that should exist. It was guttural, raw, something primal that clawed through the heavens like a wounded god crying out in rage and agony.
The warlords turned. Toma's mouth hung slightly open. The murmur of conversation died. The only sound was the crackle of the fire pit, the embers shifting, burning low beneath the weight of something much worse than the war they had been discussing.
Then the sky turned green.
Not a flicker. Not the dancing auroras of a dying star.
A vast, luminous orb - so bright it turned the very air into molten emerald.
And within it - something small, writhing, screaming.
At first, King Vegeta didn't recognize him.
It took him a second. It took the warlords less than that.
"By the stars… that's Nappa!" one of the elites gasped, stepping back.
No. It wasn't just Nappa. It was what remained of him.
His body - charred beyond recognition. His cape, his favorite one - fused to his blackened flesh. His mouth - locked in a soundless howl. But worst of all was the way he moved.
Or rather - how he didn't.
He wasn't flying. He wasn't falling.
He was being dragged.
Shoved.
By a force so large, so monstrous, that it dwarfed even their largest mountains.
A single ki blast but this was no mere attack.
This was
apocalyptic.
The Saiyan tribal capital had already begun to react. Thousands were pouring from their huts, pointing, shouting. Some tried to flee. Others were too paralyzed to move, their animal instincts locking them in place.
Toma was already moving. "We have to stop it!"
"Stop THAT?!" Another elite barked, stepping back. "That's not a ki blast - that's a damn planet crashing down!"
King Vegeta didn't hesitate. His hands shot up, energy coiling between his fingers like writhing serpents.
"All of you - fire!
NOW!"
The air exploded with golden light as every elite warrior fired at once. Their combined blasts slammed into the monstrous orb, a clash of emerald and gold that sent shockwaves tearing through the sky.
It tilted.
Slightly.
Barely.
Then it swallowed them whole.
Agony.
It struck before King Vegeta could even comprehend it. A force beyond reason, beyond measure - beyond anything he had ever encountered.
It wasn't just pain.
It was erasure.
Like being shoved through a star, every inch of his body unraveled, devoured, rewritten in an instant. His nerves shrieked. His muscles convulsed. His blood - if he still had any - boiled.
His ki shield - shredded. His armor - gone. His skin - flayed raw and remade, only to be burned away again.
The world had become heat, pressure, annihilation.
And he was still alive.
A roar tore from his throat - or at least, he thought it did. There was no sound. Nothing but the deafening roar of the storm swallowing them whole.
Beside him - Toma, Paragus, the other elites. They fared no better.
They were not warriors here. Not conquerors. Not warlords.
They were debris.
Their bodies twisted, crushed, pulled apart by the sheer force of what they had failed to stop. Toma's armor - splintered, disintegrating piece by piece. Paragus - his cloak torn to cinders, his hands reaching, fingers curling around nothing.
And Nappa - Nappa was screaming. Or at least, his mouth was open.
King Vegeta tried to look, tried to force his neck to turn. But he couldn't.
He wasn't moving. None of them were. They were being moved.
Dragged. Hauled. Hurled. Through atmosphere, through existence, through something that should not be.
Faster.
Faster.
The air itself was stripped away. The wind, the sky, the sound - devoured by the unstoppable force.
Below them, the Saiyan city - once a sprawling capital of warlords and warriors - was now a vanishing speck.
The mountains blurred, stretched, smeared across the horizon like wet paint.
They were beyond speed. Beyond flight. Beyond falling. They were being taken.
Agony. It hit before King Vegeta could even register what was happening.
It was like being shoved through a star. Like the universe itself was trying to erase him.
The force slammed into him, wrapped around him, consumed him in an instant. His ki shield - ripped away as if it had never existed. His armor - disintegrating, torn apart molecule by molecule before he could even think to reinforce it. His flesh - boiling, regrowing, boiling again.
And he was still alive.
Beside him - Toma, Paragus, and the others fared no better.
They weren't warriors anymore.
They were debris.
Bodies twisted, contorted, dragged like ragdolls by the sheer force of what they had failed to stop.
Toma thrashed, snarled, convulsed. His teeth gnashed together so hard they cracked. His armor - shredded, melted, gone. His fur pelt - already incinerated.
Paragus tried to grab onto something - but there was nothing. His hands curled into empty air, fingers grasping for anything, for a hold that didn't exist.
And Nappa - Nappa was still screaming.
Or at least, his mouth was open.
King Vegeta tried to look at him.
Tried to force his head to turn.
He barely managed.
But he saw him.
What remained of him.
His body - a ruin. His skin - charred, peeling, raw. His ribs - exposed, shifting with every strangled breath.
But his eyes -
They were still there.
Wide.
Bloodshot.
Bulging with unfiltered terror.
His mouth moved.
"K-Ka…King…Vegeta…"
It wasn't a voice anymore.
It was a whisper.
A ragged, gasping plea.
And King Vegeta could do nothing.
None of them could.
Because the emerald force surrounding them was alive.
It wasn't just a ki blast. It wasn't just an attack. It was a monster.
And it was growing.
Larger.
Brighter.
Bigger than the mountains. Bigger than the storm clouds.
Bigger than anything a Saiyan should ever be able to conjure.
And they were still moving. The entire sky blurred past them, the ground a distant, vanishing streak.
The wastelands. The rivers. The mountains.
All of it fading, consumed by the sheer speed and power of this impossible force.
"Damn it! DAMN IT!" One of the elites thrashed, his hands trying - failing - to push against the sphere. His own ki disintegrated before it could even form.
"HOW THE
HELL IS THIS EVEN REAL?!"
Toma snarled, his body convulsing against the force, his teeth grinding so hard they cracked.
"WHO - WHAT - DID THIS?!"
No answer.
Because what answer could there be?
King Vegeta's mind raced. No Tuffle technology could make this. No Saiyan had this kind of power.
So where - where did this come from? Then - another shudder. Another pulse.
The energy swelled. The sphere expanded again.
Nappa screamed.
Not a roar. Not a battle cry.
A pure, unfiltered sound of suffering.
In the distance.
A mountain rose to meet them.
No. They were racing toward it.At horrifying, unstoppable speed. And there was no way to stop it.
The world was a vortex of blinding agony - an endless descent into an emerald sun.
King Vegeta's very existence fractured beneath the crushing weight of it all. Heat unlike anything he had ever known licked at his skin, seared into his flesh, melted the very essence of his being - only for his Saiyan resilience forcing him mid-torture, forcing him to endure the cycle over and over again.
No air. No sky. No sense of direction.
Only momentum.
Only suffering.
Somewhere beyond the infernal blaze, he heard Nappa's screams - thick, guttural, raw. A warrior's voice reduced to nothing more than primal agony. His battle-hardened lungs failed him, his roars of defiance warping into fading, gurgling howls as his body was shredded, reformed, and shredded again.
The others? Toma? Paragus? The rest of his elite?
Their voices were lost in the whirlwind of destruction.
Through the blinding green chaos - King Vegeta saw it.
A city.
Not ruins. Not primitive fortresses of rock and crude steel like the Saiyans' war camps.
No.
This was Neo-Plantis's heart - the Tuffle Capital, Erydion Prime.
A monument of cold brilliance, standing in defiance of nature itself.
Towering spires stretched into the heavens, their neon-drenched exteriors gleaming in the night, so impossibly vast they dwarfed even the mountains themselves. The skyline was alive with hovering transport spheres, blinking signals, a world of perfect order, its streets lined with glimmering energy conduits weaving like electric veins. A utopia of steel and precision, the last bastion of the Tuffle race.
And they were barreling straight toward it.
Through the thick layers of reinforced glass and titanium, the Tuffles saw them coming.
And panic took hold.
A citywide pulse rang out - a deafening wail of sirens, a warning that something unnatural was descending upon them.
"IMPACT VELOCITY IS OFF THE CHARTS!"
A voice - mechanical, clipped, filled with the sharp edge of fear - echoed through the airwaves.
Within moments, Erydion Prime mobilized.
Dome-shaped barriers, crackling with untamed energy, snapped into place. Tower-mounted railguns shifted in unison, their cannons humming as they locked onto the incoming sphere of destruction. Plasma turrets whirred to life, their barrels gleaming with charged energy, primed to incinerate whatever this was before it reached them.
The Tuffles did not hesitate.
"FIRE THE DEFENSE ARRAY!"
A synchronized pulse rippled across the skyline.
The night itself ignited.
Hundreds - thousands - of energy turrets lit up in unison, unleashing a barrage of hyper-focused beams that should have been instantaneous death for any invader. The kind of technology that had wiped out Saiyan forces before they ever touched the city walls.
But this?
This wasn't a Saiyan invasion. This was something else.
The first blast collided with the emerald sphere. Then the second.
Then all of them hit at once.
And for a moment, there was hope. For a moment, the entire capital believed they had stopped it.
It absorbed them.
Not deflected. Not repelled. It devoured the attacks, consuming them like oxygen feeding a wildfire. The energy waves meant to neutralize it became its fuel.
The sphere GREW.
"Energy dispersal is ineffective! IT'S ABSORBING OUR FIRE!"
The Tuffle engineer's voice cracked over the comms, shrill with disbelief.
"Cease fire! Redirect all energy barriers - "
Too late.
Far too late.
The sphere pulsed, contracting inward - then detonated outward.
The shockwave tore the sky apart.
The barrier domes - unbreakable shields designed to withstand planetary bombardments - shattered like brittle glass.
The capital's once-impenetrable defenses crumbled before the apocalyptic force of the emerald blast.
The impact.
King Vegeta felt his body collapse inward, his very skeleton compressing under the sheer gravitational force before he was slammed into the first metallic spire.
It was not like breaking through a wall.
It was not like crashing into the side of a mountain.
It was worse.
His body was liquefied on impact, vaporized into pure energy, only for his Saiyan genetics to force him back in resilience
And again. Toma was next - his body slammed into a sky-transport, the hovercraft imploding, sending a firestorm of debris scattering into the streets.
Paragus crashed through the central tower, the tallest structure in the city, his impact so powerful that the entire skyscraper buckled inward, its support beams snapping with a thunderous groan before the monolithic structure caved in on itself.
And Nappa -
There was nothing left of Nappa.
King Vegeta barely registered it.
He had no time to.
The ground came.
Too fast.
Too hard.
His body slammed into the steel-plated streets of Erydion Prime, burrowing into the surface like a meteor strike. The sheer force annihilated everything around him, the explosion of fire and rubble swallowing the city blocks in its wake.
The pain was indescribable.
His bones were dust.
His muscles torn apart like wet paper.
His vision flickered - his eyes swollen, blood trickling down his forehead, pooling into the wreckage beneath him.
His ears rang - so loud it drowned out the screams of the dying.
And yet -
He was still alive.
Saiyan tenacity was both a blessing and a curse.
Above him - the city burned.
Erydion Prime, the pinnacle of Tuffle civilization, reduced to a war-torn graveyard.
Figures moved through the smoke. Tuffle soldiers.
They were still standing.
Their sleek armor was stained with dust and ash, their energy rifles humming with lethal precision.
One of them stepped forward.
A woman - helmeted, visor gleaming in the ember-lit ruins. In her left hand, she held a scanning device, its bright blue interface flickering with data.
She stared down at him.
"They survived," she murmured into her comm, her voice detached, clinical. "Unbelievable."
A pause.
Then - without hesitation - she raised her gauntlet.
And fired. A bolt of searing blue plasma struck King Vegeta in the chest.
His vision collapsed inward, swallowed by darkness.
The last thing he saw -
Was Erydion Prime, standing above him.
The world he had vowed to conquer. And a Tuffle - unshaken, unafraid - watching him fall.
Dr. Myuu
High above the war-torn skies of Neo-Plantis, inside the cold steel halls of the Tuffle Armada's Mothership, the
Cerebellum, the atmosphere was tense, electric with resentment. At the center of the command chamber, beneath the pale glow of holographic battle maps, Dr. Myuu, the infamous Tuffle scientist, stood surrounded by his elite war council - General Jagra, Strategist Klyx, and High Marshal Revok - all of them clad in sleek, form-fitting combat uniforms lined with energy-enhancing circuits.
The room reeked of synthetic oils, burned wires, and the faint metallic tang of artificial oxygen being filtered through the ship's vents. But none of that mattered. Not when the Saiyans, the brutish, barbaric warriors, had brought their empire to the brink of destruction.
"They're nothing but mindless animals," Jagra spat, slamming his fist against the table, his red cybernetic eye flickering with malice. "They fight like rabid dogs. Unrefined, reckless - yet somehow, they still win!"
Strategist Klyx, a wiry figure with an elongated skull and four luminescent fingers, scoffed. "It's the sheer numbers. They breed like parasites. They don't strategize - they overwhelm." His voice dripped with venomous disdain, fingers tightening around the edge of the table. "And yet, we are the superior species."
Dr. Myuu, standing at the head of the table, folded his hands behind his back, his long, silver hair draping over his hunched shoulders. He wasn't one for petty outbursts, but he seethed with barely-contained fury.
"They mock us," he muttered, his voice cold, almost mechanical. "Those filthy apes revel in destruction. They destroy our cities, laugh at our fallen, and defile our legacy. We are the architects of civilization, and yet they - " His gloved fingers curled into a trembling fist. "They think they can outlast us."
High Marshal Revok, the most battle-hardened among them, let out a guttural snarl. His artificial arm whirred as he crossed his arms, his crimson pupils burning like embers. "Then let us burn them first."
For a moment, silence hung heavy in the room, save for the distant hum of the ship's reactors. A slow, eerie grin spread across Myuu's face.
"Yes… Burn them first."
The alarms blared.
A sudden flash of
emerald light flooded the chamber, drowning out the cool blues of the holograms. A searing heat - so intense that even through the reinforced walls of the mothership, it felt as though the world itself was about to rupture - pulsed through the ship. The Tuffles snapped their heads towards the panoramic window, and what they saw froze them in place.
A colossal, emerald orb - blazing like a miniature sun, easily the size of four mountains - plummeted through the sky.
But that wasn't what made their blood run cold.
Within the globe of superheated destruction, figures writhed - dozens, maybe hundreds - their silhouettes twisting, contorted in agony, their bodies engulfed in flames as they were dragged mercilessly at unimaginable speed. Tuffle soldiers, scientists, innocent civilians - their own people - were inside that searing mass of death.
"No…" Klyx whispered, his luminescent eyes wide with horror.
Dr. Myuu stumbled back, his usually composed face contorted in sheer terror. "What… what is that?!" His voice cracked - a sound none of them had ever heard from him before.
The sphere descended upon Neo-Plantis's capital -
Erydion Prime - with an earth-shattering impact.
It erupted.
A blinding, emerald inferno engulfed everything.
The explosion was not merely an explosion. It was a cosmic annihilation, a force so devastating that the very air ignited, turning the atmosphere into a raging superheated storm of plasma. Mountains crumbled to dust in an instant. Oceans evaporated into nothingness. The earth split apart as if the planet itself were rejecting its own existence.
The shockwave that followed was not one of mere destruction - it was erasure.
The Cerebellum, their mighty mothership, was instantly obliterated, its metal frame vaporized before Myuu or his generals could even scream.
The city of Erydion Prime - the last
beacon of Tuffle civilization - was no more.
And with it, the continent itself ceased to exist.
Now choose: A. Continue this plotline. VB. Stitch this line with some of your ideas. And please if you choose to alter - this you may suggest - and could deviate the story in my mind. My ideas is insanely fun to write though - kinda insane but welp I made this to build story with you mate.