The labyrinth narrowed into a corridor of polished obsidian—the Hall of Reflective Truth.
"Don't look at the walls, Dver!" Ren hissed, her voice cracking with exhaustion. Her robes were shredded, stained with the blood of the six disciples she had cut down to protect him. "They show your inner demons. If you look, you'll lose your mind!"
Dver stumbled behind her, the purple censer still billowing thick, suffocating smoke. He looked like a wreck. "I'm scared, Sister Ren! The walls... they're whispering!"
They weren't whispering. They were screaming. As Ren passed, her reflection shifted into the mangled, charred corpses of her family, their ghostly hands reaching out to pull her into the glass. She screamed, closing her eyes and swinging her sword blindly to keep the visions at bay.
But Dver looked.
In the obsidian, there was no boy. There was only a towering, infinite tear in reality—a colossal shadow with a thousand unblinking eyes. The mirrors began to crack. The obsidian couldn't contain the image.
"They are fragile things, these memories," the Void God mocked.
Dver "tripped" again, his body slamming into the mirrors. With a calculated burst of Asura strength disguised as a clumsy fall, he shattered the glass before Ren could open her eyes and see the monster standing behind her.
"I broke them! I'm sorry!" Dver wailed.
"It's okay," Ren gasped, grabbing his hand. "We're almost at the Final Gate. Just a little further!"
They burst out of the hall and into the Final Chamber.
The exit was a massive stone archway, but it was blocked by a shimmering Qi barrier. Standing before it were twelve disciples, led by a brute with a heavy mace. They were the "Gatekeepers"—disciples who had already gathered their tokens and were now simply killing anyone else who tried to pass to ensure only the "strong" survived.
"Only two spots left!" the brute roared, his mace glowing with a sickly yellow light. "And look who it is. The girl and her smoking pet."
Ren stepped forward, her legs shaking from blood loss. She raised her sword. "Dver... when I charge, you run. Don't look back. Take my tokens. Get out."
"No! Sister Ren, I can't!" Dver cried, but inside, he was preparing the kill.
The twelve disciples charged. Ren met them with a suicidal bravery that was almost beautiful. She took a spear through the shoulder just to gut the man holding it. She was a whirlwind of desperation.
But there were too many. The brute with the mace swung a crushing blow at her head.
Dver acted. He didn't use a sword. He simply "fell" into the purple smoke.
From within the thick cloud, the Void lunged. It wasn't a technique; it was an erasure. Four disciples were simply gone—no screams, no bodies, just a sudden vacuum in the air. To Ren, it looked like they had vanished in the fog. To the survivors, it was as if the darkness itself had bitten them.
Dver "panicked," swinging the heavy bronze censer wildly. He smashed the brute's knee, then "accidentally" shoved the censer into the man's face, crushing his skull.
When the smoke cleared, Ren was on her knees, coughing blood, surrounded by corpses. Dver was sitting in the corner, shaking, holding a pile of jade tokens he had "found" on the floor.
The Archway.
The Qi barrier flickered. Deacon Shen and the Saintess Lyra stood on the other side, watching.
"Only two spots," Shen's voice boomed. "Who steps through?"
Ren looked at Dver. She was dying. Her meridians were shredded from overexertion. She pushed her tokens toward him with a bloody hand. "Go... you have... a life to live. I'm just... a ghost."
Dver looked at the tokens. Then he looked at the Saintess. He saw her eyes—narrowed, analytical, searching for the lie. If he stepped through now as a hero, she would never stop watching him.
So, Dver did the unthinkable.
He stood up, looked at the tokens, and then "fumbled" them. He tripped over his own feet, sending the jade tokens skittering across the floor—right into the hands of a wounded disciple crawling nearby.
The other disciple grabbed them and lunged through the gate.
"NO!" Ren screamed, her voice a ragged sob.
Dver collapsed, wailing in "despair." He looked like the most pathetic failure in the history of the sect. He had the win in his hands and he tripped. He was a loser. A fluke. A waste of skin.
Deacon Shen's face turned purple with rage. "You... you absolute waste of breath! You survived the Pit, you survived the maze, and you drop the tokens at the feet of a corpse?"
The Saintess Lyra sat back, a look of profound disappointment—or perhaps confusion—crossing her face. The "anomaly" had just proven himself to be a clumsy idiot.
"He failed," Shen spat. "But we can't let him back into the Outer Sect. He's seen too much. And he's Rank 9. He's a defective tool."
Shen looked at the Enforcers. "The boy is a failure. He has no spine, no talent, and no luck left. We don't need another disciple. We need more 'fuel' for the lower rituals."
The Enforcers grabbed Dver. Ren tried to scream, but she was dragged away to the infirmary as the 5th winner.
Deacon Shen descended from the balcony, his heavy boots crunching on the obsidian shards. He looked down at Dver. The fury from earlier had cooled into something much more dangerous: a sadistic, calculating greed.
An Enforcer raised a black-steel executioner's blade. "He failed the trial, Deacon. The law says he becomes fertilizer."
"Wait," Shen said, raising a hand.
He leaned down, grabbing a handful of Dver's matted hair and forcing his head up. He stared into Dver's watery, trembling eyes.
"The law says he cannot be an Inner Disciple," Shen murmured, a cruel smile twitching at the corner of his mouth. "But look at him. He's Rank 9. His body has been tempered by that suicidal Asura manual. It would be a waste to just kill him. I need someone to carry my palanquin. Someone to taste my wine for poison. Someone to scrub the blood off the Discipline Hall floors."
Shen's grip tightened. "He isn't a disciple anymore. He is private property. My property."
The Saintess Lyra, still watching from above, tilted her head. "A Rank 9 slave, Deacon? Isn't that... dangerous? A dog with teeth that sharp might bite."
"Not when I clip the teeth, Saintess," Shen laughed.
He pulled a heavy, blackened iron collar from his sleeve—the Soul-Binding Shackle. It was etched with jagged crimson runes that pulsed like a heartbeat. With a swift, violent motion, he snapped it around Dver's neck.
TSHHH—
The smell of burning flesh filled the air. Dver let out a guttural, agonizing scream—half-fake, half-real—as the collar's needles sank into his carotid artery and his meridian points.
The collar was designed to suppress Qi. To a normal Rank 9, it would feel like their soul was being crushed under a mountain.
Inside Dver's mind, the Void God roared in fury. "TEAR HIS HANDS OFF! RIP HIS THROAT OUT! HE DARES PUT A LEASH ON US?!"
Be still, Dver commanded, his internal voice cold and sharp as a razor. Let him lock the cage. He's handing us the keys to his house.
Dver slumped forward, his forehead hitting Shen's boots. He gasped for air, his voice a broken whimper. "P-please... Master Shen... it hurts... make it stop..."
"It will stop when you learn to sit, dog," Shen spat. He kicked Dver in the chest, sending him rolling across the dirt. "Follow me. You're going to clean the blood off the interrogation racks. There's a lot of it today."
The Discipline Hall of the Inner Sect was a cathedral of pain.
While the rest of the Inner Court was filled with beautiful gardens and flowing waterfalls, this place was a fortress of cold stone and iron. As Shen's slave, Dver was stripped of his grey disciple robes and forced into a thin, black tunic marked with the character for 'Servant.'
For the next six hours, Dver was forced to scrub.
He scrubbed the floors. He polished the spiked chairs. He emptied buckets of bile and salt. Shen watched him from his desk, sipping tea, occasionally flicking a drop of burning-hot Qi at Dver's back just to hear him yelp.
To everyone else, Dver was a broken man. A Rank 9 powerhouse reduced to a janitor.
But as Dver scrubbed the stone beneath Shen's feet, he was listening.
He listened to the reports brought in by the Enforcers. He listened to the whispers of the other slaves. Most importantly, he felt the resonance of the Sect's internal Qi veins through the floor.
"This room," the Void God whispered, its anger subsiding into a dark, predatory focus. "The wall behind the Deacon's chair. I can smell it. A treasury. High-grade spirit stones. Cultivation pills. Blood-essences."
Dver didn't look up. He kept scrubbing, his movements slow and "clumsy."
"Master Shen?" Dver whispered, looking up with a fearful, submissive expression. "I... I finished the racks. Should I... should I clean the private vault behind the screen?"
Shen paused, his tea cup halfway to his lips. He sneered. "You can't even stand up straight without shaking, dog. You think I'd let a clumsy idiot like you near my treasures? Get out. Sleep in the kennel with the other hounds."
Dver bowed so low his nose touched the floor. "Yes, Master. Thank you for your mercy, Master."
As Dver walked out, his head bowed, he passed a mirror in the hallway.
For a split second, his reflection didn't show a cowering slave. It showed a monster with a black iron collar around its neck, smiling.
The collar was supposed to suppress his Qi. But the Void didn't use normal Qi. The Shackle was trying to "bind" an ocean with a piece of string.
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
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