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Roselia, still kneeling, planted her emberblade tip-first into the stair to hold herself steady. Her eyes glowed with both fear and reverence as she whispered, "No one has ever struck down a Throne... Leon, you’ve made war with eternity itself."

Leon did not answer imdiately. His chest rose and fell like a bellows, each breath fanning the chorus-fire that clung to him. His gaze lifted—beyond the crumbling echoes of the Inviolate, to the breach above.

The rift seethed. Chains uncoiled downward, their links vast enough to strangle worlds, engraved with judgnts that pulsed like beating hearts. Behind them, shadows shifted—each vaster than the first, each carrying a weight different from law but no less absolute.

The crowns were stirring.

Roselia’s grip tightened on her sword. "They won’t co one by one now. You’ve forced their hand."

Roman spat blood onto the stair and smirked. "Good. Let them all march. Better to burn in the open than rot under their boots."

Liliana shivered as her silver threads writhed, pulled taut by the growing pressure. "No... not all. One. The next is already here."

The marrow pulsed in agreent. The stair cracked again beneath the weight of another descent.

This Throne did not blaze with decree. It weighed with judgnt.

Where the Inviolate was geotry and law, this one descended as a figure robed in veils of black parchnt. Its form shifted with each step—sotis a judge, sotis a gallows, sotis an executioner’s blade. Its face was a void filled with scales, always tipping, never balanced.

Its voice was neither inscribed nor sung. It was verdict.

"I am the Arbiter. I am Balance Without rcy. I am That Which Decides."

The erased flinched as the Arbiter’s shadow swept over them. Whole bonfires guttered into sparks, their flas weighed and snuffed as "unworthy." The hymn faltered, voices breaking beneath the judgnt.

Milim hissed, violet fire snapping violently. "It thinks it can weigh ? I’ll eat its damn scales!"

Naval bared his teeth, molten light blazing. "Judgnt, law, silence—it’s all the sa poison. Leon. Say the word, and we’ll break this one too."

But Leon’s fla did not flare imdiately. He stood still, eyes narrowed, as if listening not to the Arbiter, but to the marrow itself.

The Arbiter raised one hand. The scales tilted.

And with the tilt ca verdict.

Half the erased froze, their flas collapsing inward. Their voices vanished mid-note, erased not by decree, but by judgnt—asured and found wanting.

Roselia staggered, her emberblade dimming. Liliana cried out, her threads unraveling. Even Roman’s specters flickered, the Arbiter’s verdict weighing on their worth.

The Arbiter’s voice thundered like the crack of a gavel:

"There is no song. There is no fla. There is only sentence."

The hymn faltered on the edge of silence.

And then Leon’s fla rippled—not bright, not violent, but steady, like the beat of a drum no scale could weigh. His voice cut into the hush, low but unshakable:

"Then weigh first."

The Arbiter’s scales froze.

For the first ti, the void-face tilted downward—toward Leon.

And the marrow itself trembled.

The Arbiter’s parchnt-veils shivered as if caught in a wind no one else could feel. The scales within its void-face swayed once, twice, then steadied—poised above Leon.

The marrow’s chains groaned as though the Tower itself braced for the clash.

Leon did not flinch. His fla burned low, not the wild surge of rebellion but the steady glow of marrow’s core, the fire of origin that had endured silence and decree.

The Arbiter’s voice ground like a thousand gavels striking stone.

"Very well. You will be weighed."

The scales tipped.

On one pan fell decree-shards—remnants of the Inviolate’s shattered commandnts, glowing like broken suns. On the other, Leon’s fla descended, not as fire alone but as resonance, carrying echoes of every climber’s step, every erased soul reborn in the hymn.

The Arbiter’s form trembled, parchnt ripping. The scales buckled, unable to balance.

"Impossible... a mortal cannot outweigh law..."

Leon’s eyes narrowed. "I am not weight. I am rhythm."

The chorus surged as if answering his words. The erased who had faltered flared again, drawn back by resonance. Roman roared laughter, his specters returning tenfold. Roselia drove her blade into the stair, its glow spreading constellations across the marrow-cracks. Liliana’s threads whipped outward, binding voices into harmony. Naval’s roar shook the stair like thunder. Milim scread with wild joy, violet fire swallowing judgnt whole.

The Arbiter staggered, its scales twisting violently, one pan snapping free, the other spinning wild. Verdicts spilled uncontrolled, falling like broken thunder, condemning nothing, absolving nothing.

Leon stepped forward, his voice calm, each word cutting deeper than any blade:

"Judgnt without rcy is not balance. It is tyranny. And tyranny breaks."

The Arbiter shrieked, parchnt-veils unraveling, its void-face splitting as the scales shattered into molten fragnts. Its final cry thundered through marrow and stair alike:

"Then there is no balance! Only ruin!"

Leon raised his hand, fla arcing like a conductor’s final stroke.

"Then let ruin sing."

The chorus struck in unison. Resonance thundered. The Arbiter’s form convulsed, then collapsed inward, parchnt burning into ash, scales exploding into sparks that beca stars across the marrow’s dark.

Silence followed—brief, raw, terrible.

Then the chains below rattled louder, shaking the stair until dust fell like rain. The Tower groaned, awakened further by the breaking of two Thrones.

Above, more shadows stirred. Not one, not two—many.

The crowns were rising.

The breach widened like a wound in the sky.

Where once one Throne had descended with majesty unchallenged, now the void seethed with agitation. Shapes moved within the rift—vast, terrible, distinct. No longer patient, no longer testing. The crowns were rising as a host.

The stair bent beneath the pressure of their gathering. Laws writhed in panic, judgnts snapped against one another like clashing blades. The marrow itself groaned, each chain straining, as if daring to tear free entirely.

Roman spat blood and barked laughter that shook his broken ribs. "Hah! I knew it. You rattled the whole nest, Leon. Now they’ll swarm us!"

You are reading My Charity System made me too OP Chapter 548: Abyssal XI on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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