The steel of the Enforcer's saber was freezing against Dver's throat. A single drop of blood welled up from the shallow cut, tracing a warm line down his collarbone.
"I asked you a question, rat," the lead Enforcer repeated, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "What crawled out of the Pit?"
Dver's heart pounded like a frantic war drum. He forced his breathing to become shallow and ragged. Tears streamed down his dirt-streaked face, mixing with the blood. He didn't just look like a terrified sixteen-year-old boy; he became one.
"I—I didn't fall!" Dver choked out, his voice cracking perfectly. He scrambled backward, scraping his palms against the rough stone floor, trying to put distance between himself and the blade. "I swear! I caught the ledge! I was hiding just below the grating!"
The female Enforcer sneered, her lantern casting long, distorted shadows across Dver's pathetic display. "He's lying. Look at the blood on him."
"It's not mine!" Dver shrieked, wrapping his arms around his head in a protective cower. "Someone threw a body down! It hit me on the way! Please, I just want to go back to my quarters! I won't tell anyone I was here!"
Inside Dver's mind, a dark, rumbling laughter echoed. "Look at them," the Void God whispered, its voice dripping with ancient malice. "Three specks of dust, holding a piece of sharp metal to the throat of an abyss. Bite his hand off, Vessel. Let me taste his meridian channels."
Quiet, Dver commanded silently. Patience is how we eat the whole sect.
The lead Enforcer stared at the shivering boy for a long, suffocating moment. He expanded his spiritual sense one last time, probing Dver's internal core.
Dver held his breath. He kept the suffocating mass of the Void compressed so tightly it felt like his internal organs were going to rupture. All the Enforcer felt was the weak, leaky, rank-98,412 cultivation of an untalented Outer Court trash.
The Enforcer scoffed, lowering his saber.
"Pathetic," he spat. "Just another outer court roach. If you had actually fallen into the dark, the miasma would have stripped the flesh from your bones in seconds." He kicked Dver sharply in the ribs. Dver let out a breathless yelp, allowing himself to roll across the stone floor. "Get out of here. If I catch you near the forbidden grounds again, I'll throw you into the Pit myself."
"Y-yes! Thank you, Senior!" Dver scrambled to his feet, bowing so deeply his forehead nearly touched his knees.
He didn't run. Running would show hidden stamina. He stumbled, limping heavily on his left leg, playing the part of a broken dog until he finally rounded the corner and disappeared into the sprawling labyrinth of the Outer Sect.
The moment he was out of sight, the tears stopped.
Dver's posture shifted. The cowering, trembling boy vanished, replaced by a cold, predatory stillness. He wiped the dried tears from his cheeks, his eyes scanning his new hunting ground.
The Outer Sect was a sprawling slum built into the lower slopes of the Blood Lotus Mountain. Row upon row of dilapidated wooden shacks were crammed together beneath the oppressive shadow of the Inner Sect's pristine floating peaks. The air here was thin, smelling of sweat, cheap incense, and desperation. Thousands of low-level cultivators lived here, fighting like stray dogs for scraps of resources.
To anyone else, it was hell. To Dver, it was a buffet.
But as he took his first step toward the disciple barracks, his vision suddenly blurred. A white-hot spike of agony drove itself through his chest. Dver staggered into a dark alleyway, bracing his hand against the damp brick wall as he violently coughed up a mouthful of black blood.
"Your vessel is failing," the Void God noted, sounding entirely unconcerned. "The boy's body you stole is too weak to contain my essence. It is cracking. You need to repair it."
Dver wiped his mouth, his chest heaving. The hunger wasn't just a sensation; it was a physical tearing in his soul. The Void inside him demanded to be fed. He needed Qi. He needed lifeforce. And he needed it tonight, or he would die before the sun came up.
He leaned against the wall, calculating. He couldn't just kill anyone. If he killed a disciple with backing, it would draw an investigation. He needed someone invisible. Someone whose disappearance would be chalked up to the everyday brutality of the Outer Sect.
"Well, well, well..."
A voice drifted from the mouth of the alley.
Dver slowly turned his head.
Blocking the exit were two young men wearing the same grey robes as him, though theirs were clean and pressed. The one in the front, a bulky youth with a cruel sneer and a scar over his left eyebrow, cracked his knuckles.
"I thought I told you to go jump off the Weeping Cliff, Dver," the bulky youth said, stepping into the alley. "I told you that if I saw your face in the barracks again, I'd cripple your cultivation completely. Or did you forget our little arrangement?"
Dver looked at the bulky youth. Then, he looked at his companion.
No witnesses. Low cultivation. Aggressive enough that their disappearance would just look like they picked a fight with the wrong beast in the woods.
"Ah," the Void God purred in his mind. "Delivery."
Dver didn't smile, but a cold, heavy shadow seemed to bleed into the alleyway, dimming the moonlight. He let his shoulders slump, dropping his head as if in complete despair.
"I remember," Dver whispered, his voice trembling perfectly. "Please... just follow me to the back of the alley. I have spirit stones hidden in the loose bricks. I'll give you everything."
The bulky youth laughed, motioning for his friend to follow. "Smart rat. Lead the way."
They walked into the dark.
Latest Chapter
Shadows in Golden Shells
The silence in the Grand Banquet Hall was absolute, save for the horrifying, rhythmic sound of Dver’s body digesting the laws of reality.He stood perfectly still, his eyes closed. Beneath his pale skin, veins of liquid black and blinding gold warred for dominance. The Genesis-light of a hundred holy warriors fought bitterly against the suffocating gravity of his Void core. But it was a slaughtered army fighting a black hole; resistance was mathematically impossible."Yes," the Void God purred, its voice echoing from the deepest chasms of Dver’s mind. A billion crimson eyes blinked in unison within the dark of his Dantian, gorging on the feast. "Their light is arrogant. But it crushes so beautifully. The marrow of their faith... it tastes like despair."Dver exhaled. The breath emerged not as air, but as a cloud of freezing, violet-black ash."Their faith is a utility," Dver replied aloud, his voice regaining its smooth, sociopathic cadence. "And now, it is my camouflage."He opened hi
The Holy Communion
The Grand Banquet Hall was a monument to stolen light.Thousands of Genesis-crystals lined the vaulted ceilings, casting a warm, flawless illumination over the long jade tables. The hundred Paladins of the Sun-Forged Dynasty sat comfortably, their heavy golden armor left in the guest quarters just as the Sovereign had requested. Clad only in their pristine white tunics, they drank deep from cups of spirit-wine, laughing and exchanging tales of the holy wars they had fought in the Emperor’s name.They felt entirely secure. The overwhelming, ancient holy resonance radiating from the figure seated at the head table was thicker than any warding array. To them, the Blood Lotus Sect was not a den of monsters; it was a sanctuary of the Architects.Only Lord Ignis did not drink.The Emissary sat to the immediate right of the Sovereign. He stared at his silver goblet, his jaw tight. Every time he glanced at Dver’s serene, flawless face, his mind flashed back to that microsecond of contact on t
The Diplomatic Feast
The grand courtyard of the Blood Lotus Sect was entirely bathed in white and gold. The obsidian statues of the past had been pulverized, replaced by towering pillars of pristine marble.Dver sat on a throne carved from solid, radiant Genesis-crystal at the peak of the grand staircase. He wore his immaculate white silks, his posture relaxed, his face a mask of absolute, serene holy authority. The liquid-gold ring swirled flawlessly around the infinite black of his pupils.To the thousands of disciples kneeling below, he was the Sovereign.To Grand Elder Vane, standing stiffly at the foot of the throne, he was the apocalypse wearing a halo."They have crossed the outer wards, Sovereign," Vane reported, his voice tight, the invisible Void-tether vibrating threateningly around his soul. "The envoy of the Sun-Forged Dynasty.""Let them in, Vane," Dver commanded, his voice projecting a melodic, celestial calm. "We must welcome our brothers in the light."The massive, iron-wrought gates of t
The Crucible of Genesis
For two weeks, the Blood Lotus Sect had never been more devout.The fear of the Devourer was gone, replaced by the absolute, blinding zeal of serving the Sovereign of Light. Under the command of the newly arrived "prophet," the disciples trained harder, chanted louder, and purged any lingering demonic texts from their archives.They thought they were preparing for a holy crusade. They didn't realize they were just marinating.Grand Elder Vane stood before the ten thousand disciples in the grand courtyard. His golden aura pulsed brightly, but his face was gaunt, his eyes hollow. Every time he spoke, he felt the microscopic, hyper-dense thread of the Void wrapped tightly around his soul, vibrating with cold amusement."The Architects demand perfection!" Vane’s voice boomed, artificially loud. "The Stain still hides in the Veridian Wilds! To lead the hunt, the Sovereign has decreed the opening of the Crucible of Genesis!"A murmur of absolute reverence swept through the white-clad ranks.
chap 43 - The False Light
Dver's pale fingers were wrapped tightly around Grand Elder Vane's pulsing, liquid-gold core.Vane was completely paralyzed, his eyes wide with a terror that transcended physical pain. The colossal, infinitely expanding Void God loomed behind Dver, its billions of burning, red eyes illuminating the master suite in a hellish, cosmic glow. It waited for the Vessel to pull the golden fruit from the meat's chest.But Dver didn't pull."You have spent three years building an army of ten thousand Genesis-wielding swords," Dver whispered, his dead, black-hole eyes inches from Vane's face. "If I eat you now, they will scatter. They will become unpredictable. A messy hunt."Dver's sociopathic mind analyzed the Grand Elder not as a threat, but as a logistical asset."An apex predator does not chase the herd," Dver said smoothly. "He builds a fence. And he makes the lead sheep walk them right into the slaughterhouse."Instead of crushing the core, Dver extended a microscopic, hyper-dense thread
chap 42 - Predator of the Heavens
The Veridian Wilds were suffocatingly dense, choked with toxic vines and the rotting stench of the deep swamp.Dver stopped walking. He dropped the thousand-pound Void-crystal coffin into the ankle-deep muck. It landed with a heavy, wet thud, sinking slightly into the mud.He looked down through the pitch-black crystal at Ren's perfectly preserved, sleeping face.Inside his Dantian, the Void God watched him, its billions of burning, red eyes waiting in the dark to see if the vessel would succumb to the human rot again.Dver touched the healing scar on his shoulder where the holy light had burned him. He calculated the variables. He had run from a fight. He had bled. He had compromised his absolute superiority because he was dragging a piece of dead meat across a holy chessboard."Attachment is a glitch," Dver whispered, his voice completely devoid of the tremor it held on the bell tower. It was flat, clinical, and absolute. "A predator does not drag a corpse to a hunt."Dver didn't di
You may also like

The Lost God of War Returned
WestReversed569 views
ELARION : The Echo Breaker
Melonmen480 views
The Return Of the God Of War
Shonowo Adeniyi Moses2.7K views
Irregulaire
Tom Gretchen3.5K views
Elios : Rebirth Of The Dragon Lord
Si Mendhut 979 views
THE LEGEND OF THE FOREST
Megastar Jioke793 views
THE UNYIELDING GENERAL SU YU'S CROWN
pinky grip 1.3K views