Chapter 476: Sit Demon
Chapter 476: Sit Demon
The floor was peaceful now, cleared of the creatures that had made it dangerous. Birds sang in the canopy overhead.
A stream burbled somewhere in the distance. It looked like the kind of place adventurers would vacation, not fight for their lives.
But the moment Jack materialized, someone got antsy.
The Deathfrost Demon was twenty feet away near a fallen log, but he crossed the distance in a heartbeat that defied normal physics.
His massive axe materialized in his hands as frost exploded across the ground in branching patterns, the temperature dropping thirty degrees in an instant. His blank white eyes were locked not on death, but on the presence that had arrived with him.
Every survival instinct Pho possessed was screaming that a cosmic-level threat had just entered his vicinity, and his body responded with violence that preceded conscious thought.
"Pho," Jack said, his voice carrying a command that made the demon freeze mid-stride. "Sit."
The Deathfrost Demon’s body went rigid, muscles locking as the Soul Link overrode his instincts with absolute authority.
Pho’s axe trembled in his hands, every part of his being screaming to attack the threat he sensed, to eliminate the entity that represented danger to everything living and dead.
But Jack’s command was absolute. The binding didn’t allow negotiation.
Slowly, Pho lowered the weapon.
His blank eyes never left Jack.
However, he retreated, adopting a defensive posture that indicated his preparedness despite his compelled cooperation.
"SEE?" Death declared, gesturing at Pho with obvious amusement. "Jumpy! Told you! Very ’murder first, apologize never’ energy! Can’t blame him, though. Most beings with functional survival instincts react POORLY when I show up unannounced! It’s like being surprised by your own mortality except the mortality is ME and I’m wearing fabulous armor!"
The deity waved at Pho cheerfully. "Hello, frost demon! Nice axe! Love the ’I’m about to disembowel something’ aesthetic you’ve got going! Really sells the whole ’dangerous creature of winter and death’ vibe!"
Pho didn’t respond, his stance never relaxing.
Rhys stood near a fallen log thirty feet away, Tempest’s Edge drawn, his silver hair damp with sweat despite the forest’s cool temperature.
Brutus stood beside him in perfect guard position, battle axe ready, the minotaur’s red eyes tracking both Jack and Death with obvious wariness.
And hovering near Rhys’s shoulder, Slyph’s green aura pulsed with alarm that made the wind spirit’s normally steady glow flicker like a candle in a storm.
"Jack," Rhys said carefully, his stance was ready to fight or flee depending on what happened next. His eyes were fixed on Jack’s face, on the golden lightning that had replaced his red eyes. "You look... different. Your eyes."
"Gold," Jack confirmed, his tone matter-of-fact. "The contract changed more than just internal structure."
"Contract?" Rhys repeated, confusion evident in his voice despite the exhaustion weighing down his features.
"Jack is a contractor now," Slyph said, her voice carrying through the forest despite her six-inch form. The wind spirit’s black-and-green eyes were fixed on Jack intensely.
She was reading something the others couldn’t perceive. Eergy patterns and power signatures.
"He’s bonded with something powerful. Something that radiates presence strong enough that even approaching him feels like standing near an open flame that could consume you if you get too close."
Her aura pulsed with fear mixed with awe. "Whatever he contracted with, it’s changed him at a level I can barely comprehend. He’s still Jack Kaiser, but there’s something ELSE there now. Something vast."
Rhys’s eyes widened, his grip on Tempest’s Edge tightening unconsciously. "You contracted with a beast? What kind of creature could..."
"A Demi-God dragon," Jack stated flatly, as if he were discussing the weather rather than revealing information that should have been impossible.
"Tharaxis the Stormbreaker. A lightning affinity dragon."
The silence that followed was profound enough that even the birds in the canopy seemed to stop singing.
"A Demi-God," Rhys finally managed, his voice weak. "You contracted with a Demi-God. That’s... that’s supposed to be impossible. Mortals can’t survive forming bonds with entities that powerful. The soul can’t handle the connection. It destroys..."
"It destroys normal mortals," Jack corrected. "I’m not normal anymore. Haven’t been since I started integrating demonic essence. The transformation during the contract nearly killed me, but my body adapted. Became something capable of containing power that would have reduced me to ash a few months ago."
He looked at Rhys directly, his golden eyes gleaming with power that made the forest’s filtered sunlight seem dim by comparison. "In due time, you’ll see what that power means. What it lets me accomplish. For now, we have floors to seal."
Jack’s attention shifted from the shocked group to the new sensory input flooding his perception.
The Crimson Sight earrings had activated the moment he’d entered an area with living beings, and now his vision had gained layers that normal sight couldn’t provide.
He could see Rhys standing thirty feet away.
Not just the physical form, but the heat signature of blood pumping through his body, the faint glow of his soul visible through flesh and bone.
The young tempest mage was a brilliant beacon of life energy, his contracted wind spirit adding layers of elemental power that created complex patterns around his form.
But what caught Jack’s attention was the cross.
A glowing red cross had appeared over Rhys’s chest. The Sanguine Cross that marked enemies below thirty percent health. The symbol pulsed in rhythm with Rhys’s heartbeat, clearly visible even when Jack wasn’t looking directly at him.
Rhys was exhausted. Depleted. His health had dropped below the threshold that triggered the marking.
"Rhys," Jack said, his tone carrying observation rather than concern. "You’re at twenty-eight percent health. The earrings are marking you as a viable target."
Rhys blinked, confusion replacing some of the shock. "What?"
Jack gestured vaguely at his own chest, indicating where the cross appeared on Rhys. "The Crimson Sight. They highlight living entities and mark those with less than 30% health with a cross. You’re exhausted enough that the artifact thinks you’re prey."
He shifted his focus, testing the vision’s range and capabilities. Brutus appeared as another beacon of life.
Stronger than Rhys, the minotaur’s constitution leaving him at seventy percent health.
Slyph was different. The wind spirit registered not as blood and heat, but as pure elemental energy.
Green and black swirls that marked her as something not quite living in the traditional sense. The Crimson Sight recognized her presence but didn’t mark her with standard life-detection patterns.
The God of Death appeared as an absolute void in Jack’s enhanced vision.
Neither darkness nor shadow, but an authentic void. A space where the Crimson Sight’s detection stopped working, as if the artifact recognized that trying to analyze a deity of death itself would be pointless.
"Neat trick!" Death declared, clearly aware he was being observed despite having no physical form, the earrings could detect.
"The Crimson Sight is one of the Vampire Queen’s finest creations! Very useful for combat! Very helpful for identifying which enemies are almost dead and which ones still need stabbing! Takes all the guesswork out of murder!"
The deity gestured at Rhys. "Though marking your own allies as targets is a bit awkward! Maybe feed the kid a healing potion before the earrings convince you to finish him off! Just a thought! Customer service suggestion from your friendly neighborhood God of Death!"
Jack dismissed the enhanced vision with a thought, his perception returning to normal.
The information had been useful. He could see through walls, detect invisible enemies, and mark wounded targets for execution. The Crimson Sight was exactly what its description promised.
A tool for hunting.
He turned toward the portal that had appeared after Rhys cleared the Ancient Guardian. The gateway that led to Floor Five. The shimmering surface pulsed with white light, waiting for someone with authority to claim what had been conquered.
Death materialized the sealing interface with a gesture that made reality ripple:
[Floor 4: Ancient Forest - Seal Available]
[Cost: 150,000 Death Tokens]
[Warning: Sealing is irreversible]
[YES] or [NO]
Jack selected yes without hesitation.
[Purchase confirmed: 150,000 Death Tokens spent]
[Current Death Tokens: 39,692,250]
[Floor 4: SEALED]
The forest responded immediately to the sealing.
Trees that had been growing wild for centuries suddenly aligned into intentional patterns, as if the floor itself were reorganizing according to new management.
The ambient temperature stabilized to exactly seventy-two degrees. Water sources that had been scattered randomly now flowed in efficient patterns that would sustain life indefinitely.
And at the floor’s entrance, the invisible barrier formed.
"Excellent! MAGNIFICENT! SPECTACULAR!" Death declared, each word more theatrical than the last.
"Two floors sealed in one day! You’re efficient, I’ll give you that! I respect that!"
The deity began to fade, reality pulling him back to whatever cosmic office he maintained to manage mortality across infinite worlds.
"Keep up the good work, little Soul Warden! And remember. Repair those items before asking for more shinies! I’m not running a charity here! Well, I AM technically running a charity in the sense that I don’t charge for dying, but that’s beside the point!"
His voice carried even as his form became translucent. "Also, try not to traumatize the tempest mage too badly! He’s already got enough issues! The blood contract! The brutal training! The existential horror of realizing his mentor is becoming something inhuman! Poor kid’s going to need therapy! So much therapy! Centuries of therapy!"
Then Death was gone completely, leaving only the echo of theatrical laughter.
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