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
chap 21 - The Devil’s Own Luck
The Whispering Woods, the designated hunting ground for the Heavenly Ascendance preliminaries, was a sprawling canopy of suffocating green and grey. Every tree was thick with spiritual moss, and the air was heavy with the scent of damp earth and predatory beasts.High above, floating outside the barrier, a massive array of scrying mirrors projected the hunt to the Grand Elder and the observing Peak Masters."Look at the Saintess's dog," one of the Peak Masters chuckled, pointing at a specific mirror. "He's carrying a pack the size of a boulder, and he looks like he's going to faint from the ambient Qi alone."On the ground, Dver was putting on an Oscar-winning performance. He trudged ten paces behind Lyra, hunched over beneath a massive, iron-reinforced wooden backpack. His knees knocked together with every step. He flinched violently every time a bird took flight.Lyra walked ahead of him, her silver rapier drawn. Her face was pale, her jaw locked. She wasn't scanning the trees for b
The Proxy of the Abyss
The disappearance of Deacon Varg was barely a ripple in the ocean of the Blood Lotus Sect.In a place where murder was just an aggressive form of negotiation, an Outer Court bully vanishing in the night was usually chalked up to a beast attack or a gambling debt. Dver, of course, played his part flawlessly. He spent three days loudly weeping in the courtyards, crying about how much he missed Master Varg's "strict but fair guidance."The other disciples threw mud at him in disgust. The Elders ignored him. He was completely, perfectly invisible.Until the Golden Bell of the Peak rang.BONG. BONG. BONG.The heavy, resonant chime shook the dust from the rafters of the Outer Court slums. It was a sound that only echoed once every decade.High above, a massive projection of Grand Elder Vane appeared in the clouds, his voice rolling over the mountain like thunder."The celestial alignment is upon us! The Ancestral Blood-Pool opens in one month! All Inner Disciples at the peak of Foundation E
chap 19 - The Weight of the Shadows
For six months, the dead willow tree behind the Outer Court latrines became the most expensive piece of real estate in the Blood Lotus Sect.Every Friday at midnight, the Saintess Lyra—adorned in her pristine white silks, radiating purity and grace—would slip through the shadows like a common thief. She would kneel in the mud, her hands trembling, and place a spatial pouch inside the hollow trunk.Inside those pouches were fortunes that could start wars: Heaven-Grade Marrow Pills, Abyssal Lotus Roots, jars of condensed Beast-King blood. The Grand Elder gave her everything she asked for, believing he was cultivating the ultimate weapon for the Sect.He was. Just not for himself.As soon as Lyra dropped the pouch, a pale hand would reach out from the absolute darkness of the trunk and take it. She never saw him. She only felt the crushing, suffocating drop in temperature and heard the low, vibrating whisper that made her soul want to flee her body."Good girl," the Void would whisper.L
chap 18 - The Leash of a Saint
The gates of the Blood Lotus Sect opened not to the sound of triumphant war horns, but to a heavy, suffocating silence.The "Retribution Army" that had marched out thousands strong returned as a battered, blood-soaked fraction. Limbs were missing. Cultivation bases were shattered. But to Grand Elder Vane, who stood atop the grand obsidian staircase of the Inner Court, they were political capital."Behold our heroes!" Vane's voice boomed, his Qi amplifying the sound across the peaks. "They marched into the Weeping Gorge and broke the spine of the Black Heaven Pavilion! We mourn the loss of Elder Kaelen and the brave Deacon Shen, but their sacrifice has secured our mountain for a thousand years!"At the front of the surviving procession stood the Saintess, Lyra.The crowd of disciples cheered her name, throwing crushed lotus petals at her feet. She wore a fresh set of pristine white silks, her silver armor replaced by the elegant robes of her station. To the Sect, she looked like a trag
chap 17 - The Anatomy of a Second Death
The Weeping Gorge at midnight was a silent, viscous hell.The retreat of both sects had left the valley a still life of carnage. The residual toxic green mists of the Black Heaven Pavilion clung to the mud, illuminated only by the faint, eerie glow of fading spiritual cores. Thousands lay in their own gore, staring blankly at the ash-filled sky.In the center of this rot stood Dver. He had long since folded the umbrella. He stood with his arms spread wide, his white silks now stained black by the atmosphere, a terrifying, ecstatic expression twisting his pale features.Those dead, empty eyes were no longer human or hollow. They were two infinite, swirling vortexes.He wasn't fighting. He was harvesting.From beneath his boots, his shadow had grown into an eldritch, black-tar lake that covered half the valley floor. Wherever the shadow touched, the bodies didn't just decompose; they were violently unthreaded. The residual Qi was ripped from their meridians, the lifeforce was drained fr
chap 16 - The Strings of the Abyss
The Weeping Gorge was no longer a battlefield; it was a mass grave that hadn't been filled in yet.The sky rained ash and boiling blood. A few hundred yards away, the shockwaves of fighting Elders leveled entire ridges, sending jagged boulders crashing into the throngs of dying disciples. The mud was so thick with gore it sucked at the boots like hungry mouths.Deacon Shen's heavy iron broadsword hung loosely in his grip. His armor was dented, his breath coming in ragged, bloody gasps. He had just decapitated a Foundation Establishment cultivator from the Black Heaven Pavilion, but it had cost him nearly all his Qi. His meridians burned like dry paper.He looked behind him.Dver was there. Standing perfectly still in the chaotic slurry, holding the black silk umbrella. Not a single drop of blood or mud had touched his stolen white robes.While Shen was fighting for his life, coughing up black phlegm, Dver was just... breathing. Shen could see the microscopic ripples in the air around
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