Chapter 321 - 321: Court of the Final Toll
The transition from the Crystal City didn't feel like movement, teleportation, or any other displacement method using mana or Essence. It felt like the universe had simply decided that Crysanthe and I were no longer compatible with Syntheia's estate. One moment I was inhaling the crisp, ozone-scented air of the lavender terraces, and the next, the very concept of "place" dissolved into a blinding, featureless white.
When the weight of reality slammed back into my bones, I didn't wait to see where we were. I didn't look around. I didn't even breathe.
I hit the switch on the [Nullifying Veil] and [Void Emperor's Omnipresence] simultaneously. I wrapped the Void around myself and Crys before the first photon of this new reality could bounce off our skin. We sank into the sub-layers of the Lattice, becoming ghosts before we even touched the floor.
"If you need anything, use our mental link, just like we planned, we are currently being actively observed," I projected into her mind, my mental voice as sharp as a razor.
I finally let myself look.
We stood on a platform of milky, veinless white marble that stretched so far in every direction it threatened to break the horizon. It wasn't just a massive, opulent room; it was a geographical anomaly. The "ceiling" was a hazy, endless expanse of muted grey that sat high enough to hold clouds, but the air was perfectly, terrifyingly still.
Dotted around the perimeter of this infinite plaza were archways. Each one was the size of a mountain, carved from polished obsidian and trimmed in a pale gold that didn't reflect light so much as it seemed to consume it. But the arches didn't hold doors. Within each one, a literal, swirling nebula was trapped in a state of perpetual, slow-motion explosion. Deep purples, violent crimsons, and cold blues churned within those mountain-sized frames, serving as nothing more than extravagant, cosmic light fixtures.
The scale of the waste was staggering. Someone had harvested dying star-clusters just to provide mood lighting for a lobby.
A series of sharp, metallic cracks echoed across the marble as other participants began to arrive. Blinding flashes of blue System-mana deposited figures across the plaza. It wasn't a graceful process. A massive, six-legged entity composed of emerald-green chitin slammed into the floor twenty yards away, retching a glowing, viscous fluid as its internal organs struggled to normalize against the sudden, crushing atmospheric pressure.
Further down, a woman draped in living, liquid silver stood trembling, her eyes wide with a primal, naked terror as she looked at the mountain-sized doors.
There were about fifty of us in total. Fifty "Aspirants" who had all reached the same apex on their respective worlds. The combined aura of fifty Tier 7 entities with five Mythic skills each should have been enough to crack the planet we were standing on. Instead, our collective presence felt like a single candle flickering in a hurricane. This place was designed to make the powerful feel small.
Then, the air in the center of the plaza simply stopped existing.
A circular section of reality was deleted, and a being drifted downward through the hole. It was composed entirely of interlocking geometric planes of pale, shimmering gold light. As it descended, the planes shifted and clicked into place, organizing themselves into the nine-foot-tall outline of a humanoid draped in robes that looked like they were woven from distilled sunlight.
Six wings of blinding, conceptual radiance flared from its back. Although they appeared avian, they weren't made of feathers; they were composed of thousands of tiny, vibrating strings of causality. As the wings unfurled, they shed motes of white fire that drifted to the marble, leaving tiny, scorched holes in the fabric of reality that hissed before sewing themselves shut.
The being was followed by three attendants. They wore featureless masks of polished platinum and robes of deep, light-eating violet. I swept my [Void-Lattice Perception] across them and felt a jolt of genuine alarm. These weren't System constructs or illusions. They were real, low to mid Tier 9 Ascendants. They were entities that could level continents, and they were following this winged judge like obedient pets.
The winged figure landed without a sound. It didn't have a face — just a smooth, glowing plane of gold.
"Silence your minds, Aspirants," it projected.
The voice didn't travel through the air. It was a mandate engraved directly into our souls. The sheer, overwhelming Authority behind the command was so heavy that half the contestants were driven to their knees instantly. Several began to bleed from their eyes, their mental defenses simply vaporizing under the Judge's casual "greeting."
I didn't kneel. I directed a fraction of my inner [Domain] to resonate against the base of my skull, creating a counter-vibration that let the command slide off my mind and into the empty void of my internal continent. Beside me, Crys was vibrating, her crystalline skin flashing a dangerous, erratic violet, but she kept her feet.
"You stand within the Domain of His Magnificence, the Adjudicator of the Silver Horizon," one of the platinum-masked attendants announced. "Viceroy to the Prime. Warden of the Local Expanse."
The Adjudicator turned its faceless head, sweeping its gaze over the gathered crowd. When that golden gaze turned toward our hidden corner, I felt a heavy, scraping sensation pull across the exterior of my Veil — like a rusted hook dragging across silk. This entity wasn't looking for light; it was reading the "weight" of existence.
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I immediately commanded the [Void-Star] to cycle into a defensive loop. The moment the Judge's scan touched the space we occupied, I utilized the [Omnipresence] to delete the interaction echo. To the Judge, we were a couple of perfect, unremarkably average Ascendance aspirants.
The golden geometry of its "face" shifted slightly, a miniature tilt of confusion. It lingered on our empty patch of marble for a second too long, its six wings twitching with a faint, crystalline chime. Then, it dismissed the anomaly and looked toward a massive, reptilian warrior clutching a star-iron mace.
"Welcome to your Culling," the Adjudicator intoned.
The voice was hollow, stripped of any emotion except a cold, bureaucratic finality.
"The Prime System provides the framework, but we provide the Local Laws. You have accumulated an anomaly of power too rapidly. You seek to cross the threshold into Ascendancy while possessing Authority that threatens the local stability of the Silver Horizon."
The Judge spread its golden hands. "I do not believe in unvetted growth. The Prime System's 'Trial' is a lie you were told to keep you compliant. This is not a test of your worthiness. This is a prune. I am the gardener of this sector, and in this sector, we do not like weeds that grow too tall."
My blood turned to ice. It was a filter to ensure their grip on power. This was a hijacking of what was supposed to be a System sanctioned challenge.
This Viceroy — this Tier 10 or 11 monster, I couldn't fully see through his Veil even with my [Omnipresence] — had a boss with enough Authority to hijack the Ascension process for this entire sector of the universe. He was intentionally creating a bottleneck to ensure that no one from the "infant" worlds became a threat to his own hierarchy. The Mythic Five wasn't a test filled with rewards; it was a trap designed to identify and eliminate the outliers.
"To determine which of you are permitted to exist further, I mandate a week of contemplation," the Adjudicator continued. "You shall remain within these holding wards. You may strategize. You may forge your pathetic alliances. And on the eighth day, you shall enter the Projection."
He gestured to the center of the hall, where a massive, glowing golden sphere began to rotate.
"A large-scale open battle," he declared. "The simulation is absolute. Within its boundaries, you may unleash every forbidden art you possess. There is no death within the Projection, for I do not wish to waste the Essence you have gathered."
A few of the contestants looked relieved. Most didn't. We knew there was a "but" coming.
"However," the Judge's wings flared, casting long, distorted shadows across the marble. "Should you fall within the simulation, your Soul shall pay the toll. Your acquired Mythic skills will be violently fractured, regressing into Legendary status permanently. Your pathways to Ascension will be severed. You will be returned to your worlds as husks — powerful enough to serve as my planetary governors, but too broken to ever challenge the heavens again."
The Adjudicator and his attendants faded into motes of light, leaving the fifty of us in a silence so heavy it felt like it had mass.
I looked at the others. Near the golden weapons rack in the center, a group of four armored demons with the familiar, ashen auras of Ignis-7 moved together instantly. They didn't speak. They didn't need to. They had clearly timed their progress together, arriving as a pre-built squad.
My anger, which had been a low, controlled simmer for years, suddenly found its fuel.
It wasn't just that the game was rigged. It was the sheer, staggering arrogance of it. The System was supposed to be an indifferent machine, a law of nature we had to navigate. But it wasn't infallible, and the people living under it weren't interested in maintaining the status quo. It was just another ladder controlled by the same flavor of petty, power-hungry tyrants I'd been fighting ever since I picked up a rusty bar in the first days of the Confluence.
The Viceroy was using the "Law" to keep us in our place. He was protecting his own job security by breaking the legs of anyone who ran too fast, ensuring whoever he works for is left unchallenged. And he was doing it while standing in a room lit by the corpses of stars.
A sudden, violent heat erupted in the center of my chest. It wasn't the steady warmth of my mana core. It was the Flame.
The [Domain of the Ashen Phoenix] didn't just want to heal or create. It wanted to burn away the old to make room for the new. And right now, the Judge and his entire opulent courthouse felt like a rot that needed to be cauterized.
The white-gold fire inside my soul roared, its intensity slamming into the back of my throat like a physical weight. For the first time, the Void didn't even try to dampen or consume the fire. The absolute nothingness of my internal continent seemed to open its maw, inviting the heat to grow, to expand, to fill the silence with ash.
I felt a resonance I'd never experienced before. The Flame and the Void weren't just orbiting; they were aligning. They both agreed on one thing: this place shouldn't be allowed to exist.
"Eren," Crys' voice whispered in my mind, sharp with concern. "Your signature… Control yourself… The floor is... look at the floor."
I looked down. Beneath my boots, the indestructible white marble was turning grey. A web of microscopic cracks, glowing with a faint, malevolent white light, was spreading outward from where I stood. I was conceptually eating the ground just by standing on it.
"I'm fine," I hissed back, though my teeth were bared in a feral, unconscious snarl.
I looked up at the grey, endless ceiling, visualizing the golden angel sitting in some high office, watching us on a screen.
"They want to see the extent of our powers?" I muttered, my voice a low, vibrating rumble that shook the air inside our Veil. "They want to map out any anomalies?"
I felt the Phoenix flame lick at the edges of my vision. The rage was cold, sharp, and absolute.
"I'm going to give them exactly what they want," I whispered. "They will learn of a chaos that can never be controlled. I'm going to burn this entire theater to the ground."
Crysanthe stepped back a half-inch, her amethyst eyes wide as she stared at me. She didn't say anything, but her crystalline body shifted into a jagged, defensive obsidian. She had seen me fight, but she had never seen the thing that was currently looking out of my eyes.
The week-long timer began to tick in the corner of my vision. Seven days of silence. Seven days to sit in this opulent tomb and think about the "Soul Crack."
I sat down on the vibrating marble, closing my eyes.
I had a week to learn how to consume their gold, while also maintaining the Veil to hide my true nature.
