The journey back to the Blood Lotus Sect was different. Dver wasn't just walking; he was containing.
Inside his core, the lifeforce of three high-level Enforcers was swirling like a trapped hurricane. The Void had digested their flesh, but the raw, spiritual energy was too much for a Rank-98,412 Outer Court vessel to hold quietly. Every step Dver took left a faint, frost-bitten footprint in the mud. His skin felt unnaturally cold, his pulse slow and heavy as a mountain's heartbeat.
"You are overflowing, Vessel," the Void God rumbled, its voice vibrating in Dver's very marrow. "If you do not break the seal, your stolen heart will burst. Give in. Let the world see what you are."
"Not yet," Dver whispered, his jaw locked. "If I break through now, the tremors will reach the Inner Peaks. I need to be inside the Sect's defensive array. The ambient Qi there will mask the surge."
He arrived at the Sect gates just as the morning mist began to lift. He looked like a wreck—his robes were torn by briars, his face was smeared with dried mud, and he walked with a pronounced, pathetic limp.
As he crossed the threshold into the Outer Court, he didn't head for his shack. He headed straight for the Discipline Hall.
He didn't have to wait long. Deacon Shen was standing on the stone balcony, his eyes bloodshot, staring toward the Blackwood Forest. He had been waiting all night for his men to return with the broken bodies of Dver's family.
Dver stumbled into the courtyard, falling to his knees with a wet thud.
"Deacon... Deacon Shen!" Dver wailed, his voice cracking with a pitch-perfect imitation of exhausted relief.
Shen's head snapped down. His eyes widened as he saw the boy. "You... how are you here?"
Dver crawled forward, his fingers clawing at the dirt. "I... I heard! The rumors in the barracks! They said you sent men to Ash-Ridge to... to bring my parents for a visit!" Dver looked up, his eyes wide, watery, and filled with a nauseatingly fake hope. "Are they here yet, Senior? I haven't seen them in two years! Did the Enforcers find them? Is my mother okay?"
The silence that followed was deafening.
Shen's face went from confusion to a sickly, pale shade of grey. He looked at the boy—this weak, shivering piece of trash—and then back toward the forest. His three best Enforcers. His terror-horses. All gone. And here was the target, alive and smiling like an idiot, asking about the people Shen had ordered murdered.
"They... they haven't returned," Shen stammered, his voice losing its usual iron edge.
"Oh." Dver's face fell into a mask of tragic disappointment. He let out a shaky sigh. "Maybe the forest was too dangerous? I heard there are monsters... I hope nothing happened to them. They were such brave men, the Enforcers."
Dver stood up slowly, wiping his eyes with a dirty sleeve. "I'll wait in my shack, Senior! Please tell me the moment they arrive! I want to give my mother a hug!"
As Dver turned and limped away, Shen felt a cold shiver crawl up his spine that had nothing to do with the mountain air. He watched the boy's retreating back, a seed of genuine, primal terror taking root in his gut. Who is this boy? What did my men run into out there?
The moment Dver stepped inside his shack and barred the door, the act vanished.
He collapsed into the center of the room. He couldn't hold it anymore. The stolen energy was screaming to be released.
"Now," Dver gasped.
He stopped suppressing the Void.
BOOM.
An invisible shockwave erupted from his body, blowing the dust from the floorboards and cracking the wooden walls of the shack. The black, abyssal Qi surged through his meridians like molten lead.
The 7th Level of Qi Condensation... shattered in seconds. The 8th Level... bypassed instantly. The 9th Level...
Dver's body arched, his eyes turning entirely black as the Asura's Iron-Blood Mantra forced his
blood to boil. His bones clicked and ground against each other, fusing into a structure stronger than spirit-iron.
In the center of the Outer Sect, a pillar of dark pressure spiked into the sky, muffled only by the Sect's grand defensive formation.
High above, on the floating bridge of the Inner Sect, a woman stopped mid-step.
The Saintess, Lyra, turned her head. Her eyes, clear as mountain springs, narrowed as she looked down toward the slums. She didn't see the shack, but she felt it—a sudden, violent vacuum in the spiritual air. Like something had just opened its mouth and swallowed the light.
The silence in the shack didn't last.
Dver had barely finished stabilizing his new, 9th-level Qi Condensation core when the door didn't just open—it was turned into splinters.
Two Enforcers, their faces hidden behind demonic iron masks, stormed into the cramped space. They didn't speak. They didn't read a scroll. One of them lashed out with a heavy manacle made of black, Qi-suppressing iron, aiming to pin Dver to the floor.
Dver didn't fight back. He collapsed into his usual, pathetic heap, shielding his head with his arms. "P-please! I didn't do anything! The air just got heavy, I swear!"
"Shut up, trash," the lead Enforcer growled, his voice muffled by the iron mask. He grabbed Dver by the scruff of his neck, hoisting him into the air. "Deacon Shen reported a forbidden energy spike from this hut. You're coming to the Discipline Hall. If you've been using demonic pills to fake a breakthrough, we're going to peel the skin off your back."
Dver let himself be dragged through the mud of the Outer Sect. Thousands of disciples watched, whispering and mocking as the "lucky survivor" was hauled away like a common thief.
Inside his mind, the Void God was snarling. "Let me snap their wrists, Vessel. They touch us with such filth."
Wait, Dver commanded. They are carrying us exactly where we need to go. Why walk when you can be carried to the Inner Gate?
Dver wasn't taken to a cell. He was thrown into the center of the Blood-Pit Arena, a massive, circular stone theater carved into the very base of the Inner Mountain.
The air here was thick with the scent of old copper and ozone. High above, on the obsidian balconies, sat the Inner Court disciples—the elite, the beautiful, and the cruel. They looked down at the fifty "candidates" gathered in the pit like they were watching insects in a jar.
Deacon Shen stood on a raised platform, his eyes burning with a mix of fury and genuine fear as he stared at Dver. Beside him sat a woman draped in silks so white they seemed to glow.
The Saintess, Lyra. She didn't look at the other forty-nine disciples. Her gaze was fixed entirely on Dver, her chin resting on a pale, elegant hand.
"The rules are simple," Shen shouted, his voice echoing off the obsidian walls. "The Inner Court has no room for cowards or flukes. You fifty have reached the 9th Level. Only five will leave this pit as Inner Disciples. The rest will remain here as fertilizer for the mountain."
The crowd above roared with laughter.
"The trial is the Labyrinth of the Flayed," Shen continued, a sadistic smirk returning to his face. "In ten seconds, the floor will drop. You will be in the tunnels beneath the mountain. Kill each other. Harvest the jade tokens from your peers. The first five to reach the surface with ten tokens each... survive."
The other disciples immediately began drawing weapons, their eyes turning murderous as they eyed the people standing next to them.
Dver, however, remained slumped, his bottom lip trembling as he looked at the stone floor. He looked like a lamb in a slaughterhouse.
"Wait," a melodic, crystal-clear voice rang out.
The arena went silent. The Saintess, Lyra, stood up. She walked to the edge of the balcony, looking down into the pit.
"That one," she said, pointing a slender finger directly at Dver. "The one who looks like he's about to faint. I want him to carry a Scent-Cloud Censer."
The crowd gasped. A Scent-Cloud Censer was a ritual tool that emitted a thick, pungent smoke that could be smelled for miles. In a labyrinth where stealth was survival, it was a death sentence. It turned the carrier into a beacon for every killer in the tunnels.
"He seems so... fragile," Lyra said, her voice dripping with a terrifying, artificial sweetness. "I want to see if his luck holds out when everyone can find him."
Dver looked up at her, his eyes wide and "terrified." But deep in his soul, he felt a spark of genuine interest. She wasn't just suspicious; she was trying to force him to stop pretending. She wanted to see the monster.
"She's giving us a buffet," the Void God hissed, delighted. "She's calling every sheep in the maze to come to the wolf."
A guard tossed a heavy, smoking bronze burner at Dver's feet. Dver picked it up with shaking hands, the thick purple smoke instantly swirling around him.
"Go," Shen barked.
The floor beneath them vanished.
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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