Font Size
15px

Diala’s question did not fade into silence.

It lingered in the chamber like a blade suspended in midair, drawing every eye toward Kiaria. The tension that had loosened when the concealnt fell into place slowly coiled again.

"That’s right," Princess Lainsa said, her voice thoughtful rather than suspicious. "Patron... how did you do that?"

Even Mu Long, who had already relaxed his grip on his axe, straightened slightly. Ru and Yi turned their gazes toward Kiaria. Chief Azriel folded his arms. Aizrel’s eyes narrowed, not in doubt, but in anticipation.

Kiaria smiled faintly.

All of them were watching him now.

"The mont my toe touched the ground," Kiaria said calmly.

Princess Lainsa tilted her head. "Brief it."

"Alright."

Kiaria’s smile faded into sothing quieter, more inward. He closed his eyes for a mont, as though replaying the exact sensation.

"I used pressure for two purposes," he began. "The first was obvious–to infuse the feeling of divine wrath and authority into their perception. Pressure isn’t just physical force. It reshapes how a mind recognizes hierarchy."

He lifted his hand slightly, tracing an invisible line in the air.

"The second purpose was concealed. While they felt the external suppression, I transferred Earth Core Green Fire into the land itself."

Mu Long frowned. "Into the ground?"

"Yes," Kiaria replied. "Not ordinary fire. This one rges with the terrain. It becos part of the land’s spiritual layer."

His gaze sharpened.

"As long as this land remains spatially connected to , I can ignite it at will. Anywhere. Anyti."

Diala’s eyes widened slightly. "Can you execute it now?"

Kiaria shook his head.

"If we were still outside, yes," he said. "But here... no."

"Why?" Mu Long asked bluntly.

Before Kiaria could answer, Chief Azriel let out a low breath.

"Don’t be a fool, Mu Long," he said evenly. "What did you expect? You think they wouldn’t plot against us just because we played Gods for an hour?"

Ru nodded. "We checked this place the mont we entered."

Mu Long turned toward her. "Checked what?"

"This entire chamber is spatially isolated," Yi said quietly. "Cut off from the external land-layer. If you don’t believe it–try leaving."

Mu Long’s jaw tightened. He took one step toward the portal wall, then stopped.

"...Damn it," he muttered. "How dare they."

"Ahem."

Diala cleared her throat.

"Now answer the second question," she said, bringing the focus back.

Kiaria glanced at her. "Which way do you want the answer?"

"The way that stops from being confused," Diala replied flatly.

Kiaria chuckled softly.

"Fine. Then let ask you first."

He turned fully toward her.

"Shade, from your perspective–what did you find in the three answers the rchants gave us?"

Diala fell silent.

Her brow furrowed as she replayed the explanations in her mind, step by step. The market. The fear. The logic. The weight of each argunt.

"...The depth increased each ti," she said slowly. "Each answer felt more refined than the last. But none of them were perfect."

Kiaria nodded.

"You’re right," he said. "That’s the power of wise words when they’re executed properly."

He walked a few steps forward, hands clasped behind his back.

"The deeper you go into a philosophical explanation, the more clarity you feel you’re gaining. But in reality–"

He turned back to her.

"–you’re sinking."

Diala frowned. "I don’t get it."

Kiaria smiled again, this ti faintly amused.

"Wise words, when constructed perfectly, can always give you another layer of aning. Another answer. Another justification. The deeper you cut into them, the more they seem to reward you."

He lifted two fingers.

"But perspective is the blade. Your incision only goes as deep as your viewpoint allows. For soone else, the sa words might barely leave a scar."

He paused.

"There will always be another perspective that counters your conclusion. Another logic that destabilizes your certainty. That’s why none of their answers could satisfy."

Princess Lainsa exhaled softly.

"So what you’re really saying," she said, "is that there is no perfect explanation for wise words. Why complicating?"

"Probably," Kiaria replied.

Then he looked at Diala.

"But not for her."

Aizrel stepped forward slightly.

"Patron," he said, his tone quiet but firm, "after everything we’ve been through... I don’t believe you did all that just to save those tribes."

Kiaria’s lips curved.

Not into a warm smile.

Not into a cruel one.

But into sothing sharp.

Sothing calculating.

"Indeed," Kiaria said quietly.

Then he fell silent, deliberately.

The pause stretched long enough to make the air feel heavier than before.

"...Secret reinforcent."

Aizrel’s brows drew together.

"Reinforcent?" he asked.

Diala’s eyes narrowed.

"I understand," she said softly.

Princess Lainsa let out a slow breath.

"So do I."

The others turned toward them.

Kiaria resud speaking.

"The question I asked the rchants," he said evenly, "was never ant to be answered correctly."

He turned his gaze toward the false sky above the chamber.

"It was a hook."

He lowered his eyes back to them.

"A psychological snare."

"For them, stability is slavery," Kiaria continued. "Their entire economy, their hierarchy, their sense of safety–all of it runs on the existence of chains. Remove that, and both the rich and the struggling poor collapse together."

He lifted a finger.

"I destabilized it deliberately. For two purposes."

A faint ripple of anticipation moved through the group.

"The first was deploynt," Kiaria said. "The second was distribution."

He gestured subtly downward.

"While they were engaged about salvation... I released my spiderlings into the ground."

"They are soul-type entities," Kiaria said calmly. "Small. Undetectable to ordinary perception. Difficult to trace even with spiritual power."

He turned slightly toward Princess Lainsa.

"Whatever answer they gave could always be countered. That ant the outco was guaranteed."

He paused.

"The release of the slaves."

Aizrel’s eyes widened slightly.

"So that was the point all along..."

"Yes," Kiaria replied. "Chaos creates movent. Movent creates access."

He continued.

"The mont I declared freedom, thousands of people began relocating. Returning to tribes. Reopening sealed tunnels. Unlocking forgotten chambers."

His lips curved faintly.

"My spiderlings rode with them."

Diala folded her arms slowly.

"The rule you declared about peace..." she said.

"...was not rcy," Princess Lainsa finished. "It was camouflage."

Kiaria inclined his head.

"Correct."

"The new law allowing them to remain here," he said, "wasn’t for stability. It was for concealnt."

He walked a slow circle, hands behind his back.

"My spiderlings are already embedded across the fortress. rchant halls. Prisoner hideouts. Formation maintenance tunnels. Tribal enclaves. Smuggling routes. Black chambers and those prisons."

Ru inhaled sharply.

"They’re acting as–"

"Spies," Kiaria finished. "Listeners. Trackers. mory-recorders."

"They’re capturing conversations. Movent patterns. Authority chains. Command structures. Hidden nas."

He stopped.

"By now, most of them have already reached safe nodes."

Silence followed.

Azriel exhaled slowly.

"But what’s the use of that," he asked, "when we’re spatially locked inside this palace?"

Aizrel nodded.

"Yeah. We can’t even leave this floor right now."

Kiaria smiled.

Not wide or playful.

Just... knowing.

"Haha," he said softly.

"That part is a secret."

He turned his head slightly.

"I can’t tell you yet."

Diala’s lips curved faintly.

She already understood.

Then Azriel asked,

"So... what’s the next move?"

Kiaria didn’t answer.

Princess Lainsa did.

"Simple," she said. "We rest."

She looked around the extravagant chamber.

"And we behave like Gods."

Aizrel blinked.

"...You an cultivate?"

"Yes," Princess Lainsa replied calmly.

Kiaria nodded once.

"But Ru. Yi."

Both of them straightened instantly.

"The task," Kiaria said quietly. "You must finish it on ti."

They bowed.

"Yes, Patron."

And in the silence that followed–

The spiderlings continued to listen.

anwhile–

Deep within the fourth floor’s concealed chamber, far from the market’s false peace, the ritualist sat alone.

He was positioned at the center of a vast cyan formation, its lines carved directly into the stone floor in concentric, interlocking rings. Symbols pulsed faintly with cold light, and pale blue smoke drifted upward from the formation’s edges, coiling like spectral mist toward his shattered ridians.

Beneath him lay a ritual cushion.

He sat rigidly upon it. Eyes were closed, hands were pressed flat against his thighs and breathing was uneven.

The formation was not ant for comfort.

It was ant for recovery.

At least, that had been the intention.

Around him, a thirteen-ter-wide surveillance array had been activated–layered formations designed to intercept sound, pressure distortions, spatial ripples, and spiritual resonance from the isolated palace chamber above.

He had positioned it perfectly.

Calibrated it flawlessly.

Fed it with his remaining spiritual energy.

And yet–

Nothing.

No echo.

No vibration.

No trace.

No whisper of sound.

The spatial formation returned only void.

The ritualist’s jaw tightened.

The cyan smoke thickened, surging into his ridians in repeated waves, trying to repair what Diala’s soul-blades had annihilated.

But the damage was not superficial.

It was foundational.

His ridian cores refused to reconnect.

Spiritual circulation collapsed again and again, scattering into useless fragnts of broken energy.

His breath hitched.

Then broke.

He slamd his palm into the stone floor.

The impact sent a tremor through the formation.

Blood leaked from the corner of his mouth.

"...Three days," he whispered hoarsely.

His teeth ground together.

"Gods..."

His fingers curled into a fist so tight that his knuckles cracked.

His voice dropped into a venomous murmur.

"This debt... I will repay you a thousandfold."

He forced himself upright, staggering off the ritual cushion.

His legs trembled as he stood.

He grabbed his bone staff from the wall and used it to steady himself.

His breathing ca ragged now.

"I will drown this place in blood and tears again," he snarled.

"Wait and see."

He limped toward the narrow window slit carved into the chamber wall.

With a shaking hand, he reached into his Qiankun bag and withdrew a blank talisman paper.

His fingers moved quickly despite his pain.

Symbols were etched onto the paper in flowing, crooked lines.

Not formation script.

But sothing older and forbidden.

He pinched the talisman between his forefinger and middle finger and murmured a low chant under his breath.

The paper began to rot.

Its edges blackened.

Its surface cracked.

Then–

It shattered.

The fragnts lifted into the air and twisted together, reforming into a triangular-winged ssenger bird made of ashen light and cursed script.

The ritualist’s eyes glead with hatred.

"Go," he whispered.

The bird flapped once–

And shot through the window slit, vanishing into the storming sky beyond the fortress.

Far away–

Hidden within the relics bound to Kiaria’s soul–

The Evil Spider watched everything.

Through a thousand scattered eyes.

Through soul-skull spiderlings embedded in walls, tunnels, and shadows.

Through the Skull Spider perched invisibly above the ritualist’s chamber ceiling.

Every word.

Every motion.

Every pulse of rage.

Every act of treachery.

All of it flowed into Kiaria’s awareness like threads being woven into a web.

Within the false palace chamber, Kiaria’s gaze sharpened faintly.

A quiet smile curved his lips.

"The prey has taken the bait," he murmured.

And the trap closed another inch tighter.

You are reading ERA OF DESTINY Chapter 124: DAY 1: EXECUTION– I 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

Warlock Apprentice cover
Similar genre

Warlock Apprentice

牧狐 ·Fantasy

Thestatusofawizardistranscendentinallcontinentsandintheuniversalplane. Mysterious,wise,cruelandbloodthirstyaresynonymouswithwizards.Butwhatdoesarea...

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