I Died and Became a Noble's Heir

Chapter 579: I’ve invested too much



Chapter 579: I’ve invested too much



Deep within the lightless foundation of the Hollow of the Sunless Tide, where the dungeon’s inverted structure pressed against reality’s boundaries, the air carried a resonance that the lower floors couldn’t perceive.


A thrumming that existed below sound and sensation, registering only to entities whose existence transcended normal physical limitation.


The Seven Moonveil Serpents stirred in the gloom, their massive forms uncoiling like shifting mountain ranges.


Each creature measured comparable to the Disaster-class threat Jack had killed and bound, but these were different.


Their scales glowed with ethereal light that had given their species its name, pale luminescence that absorbed darkness.


The glow pulsed in rhythmic warning, synchronized heartbeat across seven massive forms that dominated the tenth floor’s vast chamber.


"He’s returned," the second largest hissed, the sound scraping against stone walls like a rusted blade dragged across granite.


Its tongue flicked out, tasting mana drifting down from floors above with supernatural precision that let it identify specific magical signatures across vast distances.


"I smell the King," another added, its wedge-shaped head swaying as it processed information carried on currents imperceptible to lesser beings.


"The one who fell before the world began. Sarin’s essence, corrupted and fragmented but unmistakable in its divine origin."


The third serpent’s laugh was low and vibrating, sending tremors through the dungeon’s inverted structure that made stone groan in protest. "And the Traitor’s stain... the one who knelt to Sarin while his brothers burned. That particular bloodline carries weight that centuries cannot diminish."


The fourth serpent uncoiled slightly, its scales catching the pale light as it contributed its own assessment.


"Three bloods converging in a single vessel. The mathematics alone should have destroyed him before birth, yet he walks our halls with purpose that ignores what he carries."


"Ignorance is mercy," the fifth observed. "Knowing the weight would crush him before he could learn to bear it."


The sixth serpent’s response was cut short as the seventh, the largest of their number, raised its massive head toward the chamber’s center, where reality bent around a figure that hadn’t been present moments before.


The Echo remained static, its form exhibiting a subtle translucence, indicative of an existence poised between states.


Silver veins crossed his face, pulsing with the same rhythm as the serpents’ glowing scales, marking him as something that belonged to this place in ways that transcended a simple presence.


The Echo didn’t turn toward the serpents despite their obvious attention.


His gaze remained fixed downward, peering through stone and space toward the deeper floors where Jack was currently navigating challenges designed to break lesser warriors.


"Enough," the Echo commanded, his voice cutting through the chamber with force that made seven ancient serpents fall silent immediately.


"You speak of stains and ghosts and bloodlines as if those details matter. You cannot see the anchor holding them together, cannot perceive what makes him more than a simple sum of inherited essences."


He stepped forward, his form flickering with silver light that created afterimages through dimensions normal perception couldn’t track.


"He is a convergence. The shell of a King, the spark of a Sovereign, and the soul of a Monolith. Three legacies that should annihilate each other instead of creating something unprecedented in this world’s long history."


The largest serpent’s tongue flicked out again, processing this information with genuine curiosity.


"Then why test him? Why construct trials that could destroy what took cosmic coincidence to create? He is the Soul Warden. He’s lasted longer than any who came before, bound creatures that should have consumed lesser wielders, survived challenges that killed those with a single divine bloodline, let alone three."


His smile was cold and thin, knowledge spanning far beyond the serpents’ considerable experience. "Because surviving is not the same as understanding. Power without control is a catastrophe waiting to manifest. He carries tools he doesn’t know how to use, walks paths he cannot see, holds keys to doors he doesn’t know exist."


The Echo looked into the dark pits beneath the tenth floor, his silver-veined features showing satisfaction bordering on anticipation.


"The First once helped shape Erbeon with his own claws, carving reality according to specifications that would support what Sarin envisioned. Now, a piece of that creation is descending toward us, carrying fragments of the original architect’s design without recognizing what they represent."


He gestured toward where his awareness tracked Jack’s progress through the fourth floor’s graveyard of Earth soldiers.


"Let us see if the boy knows how to use the tools he was born with, or if the weight of three worlds will crush him before he reaches the gate. Either outcome provides valuable data about whether this convergence represents evolution or simply a cosmic accident waiting to collapse under its own impossibility."


The serpents exchanged glances that conveyed communication beyond verbal language, their ancient awareness processing implications that would have overwhelmed normal comprehension.


Then the largest spoke again, acknowledging despite lingering uncertainty.


"And if he fails? If the trials break him before he reaches this chamber?"


His laugh echoed across the tenth floor with a sound that made reality shiver.


"Then he was never worthy of what he carries, and the cosmic coincidence that created him becomes nothing more than a footnote in this world’s history. But I don’t believe he’ll fail. I’ve watched him too long, invested too much in ensuring his survival, to doubt now when he stands at the threshold of understanding what he truly is."


The Echo’s form began to fade, reverting to whatever state allowed him to exist simultaneously across multiple locations and timelines.


His final words carried across the chamber with certainty that brooked no argument.


"Watch carefully. What descends toward us is either salvation or catastrophe for everything Sarin built. And we’ll know which before the Blood Moon rises again." A smile played on his lips as Malakai disappeared.


Then he was gone, leaving seven ancient serpents to coil in darkness and wait for the convergence that carried three impossible bloodlines to reach their domain.


------


Jack stepped through the archway leading from the fourth floor’s graveyard, his mind still processing implications of hundreds of dead Earth soldiers as the transition completed and a new environment materialized around him.


The change was disorienting.


Instead of an inverted forest or a corrupted landscape, he found himself standing on a floating island thirty feet across.


The stone platform that hovered in a void so vast it made the third floor’s sensory deprivation seem mild by comparison.


The island’s edges dropped off into nothing.


Not darkness exactly, but absence so complete that looking over the side provided no visual feedback about depth or distance.


Above, below, all around, the background resembled outer space more than a dungeon’s interior. Points of light that could have been distant galaxies or reflections of something Jack’s enhanced perception couldn’t properly categorize.


The effect was simultaneously beautiful and deeply unsettling, creating a sensation of floating in a cosmic void rather than progressing through a structured dungeon floor.


Father Caelen materialized beside him as the transition completed, the old priest’s weathered features showing a brief moment of disorientation before professional composure reasserted itself. "This is unlike any dungeon floor I’ve..."


Then the island they were standing on exploded.



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