Font Size
15px

OGE POV...

I still rember the way his words fell, slow and deliberate, like stones dropped one after another into my chest, when my brother calmly asked—almost too calmly—whether I had ever tried cutting myself just to see if my body would heal on its own, and as unsettling as that question was.

It was nothing compared to what followed, because after he finished writing everything down with that focused expression of his, he began explaining each detail out loud, his voice steady as he walked through my abilities and even his own, answering questions I hadn’t yet found the courage to ask, until I realized that compared to him, my existence as a Banshee carried no grotesque distortion of the body, no outward curse, only a terrifying gift hidden beneath the surface.

The ability to glimpse the near future—an ability far more potent than I had imagined, yet one that demanded a price, because such visions would only co through screaming or crying aloud, a revelation that made my heart clench in fear as I wondered what would happen if soone saw like that, if they witnessed breaking down without understanding why.

When I voiced that fear, my brother reassured , telling it would only happen around people I deeply cared about, people who would understand, and yet his tone soon changed, growing heavier, colder, as he told there were two absolute rules I could never forget as a mber of the Wild Hunt, as a Banshee—first, that our secret must never be revealed, because the history of Cursed Child and Banshees had been erased through blood and silence, narrowed down until it beca nothing more than myth, since anyone foolish enough to spread the truth had always ended up missing, dead by accident.

Or erased so completely that not even their mory remained, and when he admitted that even he didn’t know how many of our kind existed, that everything he knew had co from instinct rather than records, my shock deepened when he spoke of the Holy Shrines, because the mont he said their na, I felt an instinctive chill crawl up my spine.

He told , without hesitation, that if I ever tried to reveal the truth, I would be hunted—by my own kind, by his kind, or worse, by the Holy Shrine—and as he said this.

The darkness in his eyes ignited into a nacing crimson glow, his voice dropping into sothing ancient and rciless, like an elder recounting a horror story ant to scar a child for life, and despite my fear, curiosity pushed to ask why, only for him to explain that humans would never accept the truth.

That they would ridicule only , brand insane, or try to exploit , and if the secret spread far enough, it wouldn’t just ruin my life—it would lead to a massacre where every human who learned the truth would either die in an "accident" or vanish from the world entirely.

As he paused between each statent, I felt myself changing, realizing I was no longer the naïve girl I once was, because my illness and everything that had happened recently had already shattered that illusion, forcing to accept that I had only two choices now—to adapt or to die, to summon courage or drown in fear while waiting for the world to strike without warning—and when I finally asked, barely able to et his eyes, whether even our parents and sister were excluded from the truth, his answer hurt more than I expected, because he told that unlike his case, mine was far too dangerous, far too unique, and that only the two of us could know.

Then he spoke of the second truth—that as a Banshee or Cursed child, we were likely to live far longer than humans, aging slowly as transcenders, growing stronger through ditation and sub-techniques that refined the body, filled the Mana core, and eventually reduced our dependence on blood by drawing energy directly from the world itself, yet the cruelest part wasn’t the power.

It was the future, the certainty that I might one day watch my family, my husband, my children grow old, wither, and turn to dust while I remained frozen in the body of a growing teenager, forced to choose between living quietly as a normal Banshee or pursuing strength and slowly drifting away from what it ant to be human.

I told him I needed space, curling into myself beneath the tree as he left alone with my thoughts, and I could feel the weight of the world pressing down on despite the cool night breeze, as if everything I had dread of was collapsing at once.

Only finding a fragile sense of calm when the moonlight brushed my skin and reminded that I was still alive, still here, and when loneliness finally overwheld , I called out to my little brother, asking if we could just walk for a while, because the fear of secrets, death, and a future without the people I loved had beco too much to bear, and as I stared into the darkness where he stood, six crimson points slowly erged, expanding until they beca his glowing eyes, watching over in silence.

[Author Notes: I would like to say a big thank you to everyone for reading this novel, and our top fans,I appreciate every comnt, review, powerstones, golden tickets you guys give the book. But we need more.]

[Our hunger grows!]

[If you want more Chapters, here is a chance to do it, vote, vote and vote for Cursed System, thanks to everyone who voted we were able to get over 34 powerstones this week, hitting two milestones, let’s push even harder this week to hit 50 powerstone milestone, for extra 3 Chapters this week. Thanks once more for voting and comnting, don’t forget to enjoy the Chapters, also, special thanks to marcus_rice for the golden ticket]

You are reading Cursed System Chapter 90: The revelation and realization on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Big Data Cultivation cover
Similar genre

Big Data Cultivation

Chen Fengxiao ·Fantasy

Asagraduatewithadoubledegreefromaprestigiousuniversity,FengJunsomehowremainsunemployedaftergraduation.Hestrugglesinthecity,buthecan’tletgoofhisprid...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.