My Living Shadow System Devours To Make Me Stronger

Chapter 1070 - 1072: Truth And Doom



Chapter 1070: Chapter 1072: Truth And Doom



"Only after facing truth shall you stand before Doom."


Damon’s mind drifted back to a passage he had once seen in a half-burned religious text. He never truly understood it, but in this moment, it felt like something he should have. The idea that they had already failed the Unknown God’s trial lingered in his thoughts. If that was true, then what truth had they failed to grasp?


He stood before her.


The Goddess of Doom.


Ashcroft had forced him down at first, a firm hand pressing against his shoulder and the back of his neck, trying to keep him lowered. But Damon did not resist. Instead, he slowly lifted his head anyway, not with defiance, but with confusion so deep it bordered on emptiness. His brows were slightly furrowed, his mouth parted just enough as if he was trying to form a question that refused to exist.


For a moment, he simply stared.


Not at her face.


At her existence.


His gaze felt distant, unfocused, like he was trying to process something too large for thought itself. The weight of the trial, the collapse of Lysithara, the meaning behind all of it, it all clashed inside him at once. Yet his expression remained strangely still, almost blank, like a man watching a storm without understanding what rain was.


The truth of the trial, he realized, had nothing to do with Lysithara.


Lysithara was just the stage.


The truth belonged to the Unknown God’s philosophy.


Doom narrowed her eyes slightly.


It was not a human gesture. It was vast. Absolute. Her gaze tightened like the sky itself compressing. Those eyes burned brighter than suns suspended in impossible distance, so large that the concept of "looking at her" felt incorrect. It felt more like standing inside her awareness.


Damon felt it immediately.


Not pressure.


Exposure.


As if every thought he had ever held was being held between invisible fingers and turned slowly for inspection.


She already knew.


Everything.


Damon swallowed once, his throat tightening slightly, then spoke in a low voice.


"The truth we faced... is that life is fundamentally unfair."


His head tilted a fraction to the side as he spoke, like he was testing the shape of the idea as it left his mouth.


"Not occasionally unfair. Not because of bad people. Not because society failed."


His fingers flexed once at his side, then relaxed again.


"Just... fundamentally unfair."


As he spoke, his eyes drifted briefly across the broken horizon of the trial space, as if recalling everything at once.


Children collapsing from diseases they never chose to carry.


Bel, born into rejection before she could even speak.


Sander, treated like a curse as though fate itself had decided his worth.


Medical salvation existing in theory, but never reaching the ones who needed it.


Civilizations collapsing under weight they never agreed to bear.


People turned into Rotfolk without consent.


Lives rewritten into vessels, stripped of ownership.


His jaw tightened slightly as he continued.


"Some suffering isn’t earned," he said quietly.


His eyes lowered for a moment as the weight of that truth settled fully in his expression.


That realization lingered.


Heavy.


Unavoidable.


Then he continued.


The second truth followed, and with it, his posture subtly shifted. His shoulders angled forward slightly, as if he was leaning into something he did not want to see clearly.


"Power decides who matters."


He lifted his hand slightly, then let it fall again.


"When you are weak, no one listens. No one cares. No one helps."


His gaze sharpened briefly, not in anger, but in recognition.


"When I approached the tower, they shot me. When I lost my leg, no one healed me. When I was accused, no one asked for proof."


A short pause.


His lips pressed together.


"Intentions don’t matter. Only position. Only birth."


Ashcroft, still bowed beside him, shifted slightly at that, his horns angling downward further as if even he felt the weight of the statement.


Then Damon exhaled slowly and continued.


The third truth was quieter when it came.


Almost softer.


But it struck deeper.


His eyes lowered fully for a moment, and when he spoke again, his voice was less certain.


"Sometimes you cannot save people."


A faint clench of his fist followed.


"That’s not weakness. That’s just life."


Silence followed.


In that silence, his gaze flickered through memories he could not change.


The sick children.


Bel.


Sander.


Lysithara itself.


Even Lilith.


All of them.


All still fell.


All still vanished into the same ending.


His fingers loosened again, as if letting go of something invisible.


"This is where most people break," he muttered.


And indeed, somewhere deeper in the trial, he understood why.


Others had broken here.


The Keeper of False Truths had failed here.


Mugu had failed here too.


Damon’s eyes narrowed slightly as he recalled it, as if he could see the moment of collapse.


Mugu had looked at everything and reached only one conclusion.


If suffering is inevitable, then existence itself is wrong.


A conclusion so clean it felt like surrender disguised as logic.


Damon’s gaze drifted downward for a moment.


He understood the logic.


That was the problem.


The trial did not punish ignorance.


It rewarded clarity.


Then destroyed you with it.


His head lifted again slightly.


The realization sharpened.


The trial was not about saving Lysithara.


Not Bel.


Not stopping corruption.


Not even preventing the Outsiders.


All of that had already been set to fail.


Impossible from the start.


Unknown was not testing strength.


He was testing belief.


Damon’s eyes slowly returned to Doom.


"So that’s it," he murmured.


Not disbelief.


Just understanding settling into place.


The real pass condition was simple.


After seeing all of this.


Do you still choose life?


Time felt like it stopped thinking.


Damon had already passed.


Not through victory.


Not through survival.


But through contradiction.


He had admitted everything the trial wanted him to admit.


Then rejected its conclusion.


His voice echoed again in memory.


"No one in this world, not even a literal god, can tell me my Ranar’s birth is wrong."


That was the moment.


Not resistance.


Not denial.


Choice.



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