The seven-day holding period was less of a reprieve and more of a protracted, agonizing psychological siege designed to break the spirits of the unsupported before the physical harvesting even began.
We were confined to a series of sprawling, hanging gardens suspended like silver webs between the mountain-sized archways of the arrival hall. The architecture here took opulence to a sickening, conceptual extre. Trees with translucent, shimring leaves of hamred starlight grew from pots carved out of concentrated essence-blocks — material that back on Ferra would have fueled a city's defense grid for a year. Here, they were rely patio decor ant to sll like morning dew and unearned luxury.
Fountains spilled liquid quintessence that tasted of aged wine and calm, while the furniture was upholstered in the tanned hides of Mythic-tier beasts, their souls likely preserved just enough to keep the leather soft and eternally warm.
Despite the blinding radiance and the comfort, I never once reduced my [Veil]. I occupied a small alcove of jagged obsidian rock on the absolute edge of a garden terrace, a shadow within a golden paradise. Crysanthe sat beside , her face reflecting the Bruised purple of a trapped nebula churning inside the archway behind us.
"Don't use the standard telepathy," I projected into our private Void-link. It was a rhythmic vibration of our shared affinity that bypassed the atmosphere of the gardens entirely, echoing in the sub-space between us. "They are tracing the mana-streams in the air. They want to hear our private conversations. They're recording our psychological profiles too."
"Let them record," Crys projected back, her ntal voice sharp and jagged. "Most of these fools have spent their week bragging about their planet's military budgets. They haven't realized that the room is actively eating their leaked essence just to keep the lights on. But look at the Scions from the core sectors, Eren. They aren't even pretending this is a challenge."
I scanned the groups scattered across the hanging paradise. The hundred aspirants had sorted themselves into a rigid, visible class hierarchy. On the northernmost terraces, where the ambient mana density was highest, the richest Heirs held court. One human boy — the lead Scion of so Noble House called Remora, draped in robes made of living sun-fire — held a heavy golden goblet. Beside him sat a woman in iridescent scale-armor that shimred with the souls of sea-serpents.
They weren't just powerful; they were the collective investnt of entire galactic economies. I watched an attendant, a five mythic peak-Tier 7 in his own right, kneel before the boy to peel a fruit that glowed with enough potency to trigger an accidental epiphany in a new Sovereign. The Remoran heir wore Tier 10 artifacts with specialized power nodes to be used by lower Tiers. I was able to Perceive bracelets of causal-flecked jewels and a Levin-Spine blade resting against his thigh that could likely rewrite the local gravity field if he rely sneezed.
"He is the expected favorite," I muttered quietly, observing the heir through my [Lattice Perception]. "His aura is tuned precisely to the Viceroy who received us. These families treat the Mythic Five like a grand debutante ball for gods. Syntheia told once that the Fourth — Tier 14 and Fifth — Tier 15 — stages of cultivation are essentially erased from history books, but the legends are true."
"You think he's one of them?" Crys asked.
"Not yet. But he must be from a branch of at least a Twelfth Tier," I replied, letting the logic Syntheia provided settle into focus. "At Tier 10 and 11, you are a powerful judge. At Tier 12, you have a relatively local Authority of the System itself. A Tier 12 can Author reality within entire sectors, creating local Laws that superimpose upon the Pri System's code itself. This Viceroy is just his mid-Tier 11 lackey. He's running this trial as a filtration chanism to make sure nobody from, whatever area he rules, can challenge the hierarchy of the heirs. It's an illegal bypass masked as an official tournant."
I leaned my head back against the jagged rock, looking up at the grey, stagnant ceiling that likely hid the observation suites of entities far beyond my current capability to kill.
"If the local Judge can tweak the Pri System's laws in this region... then the Pri System isn't an unfeeling nature god," I projected, a dark realization pulsing in my core. "The Pri was likely just one of the most powerful cultivators who have ever existed —Tier 14, 15, who knows? Soone who built a machine to govern and assist with Essence and evolution of our connection to Essence. Is the Pri alive…? Either way, this Viceroy and his Tier 12 masters are just middle-managent with enough tenure to play god with the settings. That is why the goal isn't just winning, Crys. If we want peace for Ferra, we need our own subsystem. A localized domain that makes it impossible for these Viceroy's laws to take root. Hell, maybe we need our own system…"
"Establish a border and shoot the surveyors," Crys humd in agreent. "I like that plan. But we have nearly ninety competitors who believe they're destined for that sa throne. Look at those broody looking ones over there. They aren't Heirs, but they seem strong."
I looked toward a lower terrace. Unlike the demons of Ignis-7, these demonkin were of a Frost-Hearth lineage — pale, gaunt things with skin like blue-tinted ice and horns that smoked with cold fire. They moved with a singular, icy grace, standing in a perfect triangle. There were no argunts, no prideful boasts, just one cohesive squad.
As I observed the room, the opulence began to grate. Heirs used 'Aegis-Type Wards' worth millions of QS simply to block the morning mist from touching their skin. They flaunted weapons that humd with enough Authority to make the atmosphere vibrate. It was a grand show of wealth intended to convince the unsupported they had already lost.
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The tension finally peaked on the sixth evening.
A small, quiet entity approached our shadowed alcove. It was a Gnoll-like creature — a four-limbed being with short, silver fur and wide, obsidian eyes that lacked pupils. It looked like a cross between a red panda and a gargoyle, dressed in tattered leathers that had been patched a dozen tis. Its weaponry consisted of two jagged, low-tier daggers made from the teeth of a common Shadow Beast and a rucksack that looked entirely too heavy for its slight fra.
The creature didn't speak initially. It simply sat ten feet away on the cold edge of our terrace and began ticulously applying a dark, dull poison to its teeth-daggers with a tiny, vibrating needle. Its hands were rough, covered in thick rough leather, lacking any of the expensive gear the Heirs wore.
"The Gilded Heirs keep sending their invisible scouts toward you," the creature whispered in a shy, squeaky, but steady voice. Its obsidian eyes never left its blades. "They think you are hiding because you are afraid. They cannot see your true shape, so they assu your mask is your only shield."
I dropped a microscopic sliver of my [Veil], just enough to let him sense the deep, black vacuum swirling behind my eyes. Crysanthe remained a silent sentinel of athyst frost beside .
"We prefer to watch from the back," I noted neutrally. "Who are you?"
"I am Forn," the creature replied, bowing his head slightly, a humble but not subservient movent. "I am from the Murk-Lanes of Node Decima. My world was strip-mined before my birth. I reached the fifth node by stealing essence from the pockets of those who had too much. The Empire that rules did not send with ships or armies. They sent with a soul-contract. Clear the throne or die as a Soul Cracked."
Forn looked at his jagged daggers, his bioluminescent whiskers twitching with a strange, nervous pride.
"The Scions of the Silver Horizon believe this tournant is about performance," Forn continued, looking back toward the Gilded terrace. "They do not see that the Judges are simply checking to see which of us has the strongest tether to our sponsors. Those of us without fathers on the tribunal... we are ant to be the fodder to prove the Heirs' greatness. I don't like being a performance piece."
I found a kindred spirit in the scrappy scavenger. He had ground his way through the universe with grit and taken essence, reaching the peak while being actively mocked by the System's favorites.
"Crysanthe and I have similar feelings about the performance," I said, extending a ntal hand — a simple invitation to a ntal communication link. "There are 100 entries. Only 32 make it through. The Heirs will spend the first hour of the battle royale forming a circle around the central tower to secure the Judge's Artifacts. They'll expect everyone to fight over the scraps."
"I've seen the Heirs' formation," Crys projected into the tripartite link we were now forming. "They've already mapped out who stays and who gets deleted based on political importance."
"Then we rewrite the itinerary," I told Forn. "If you want a seat among the 32, you walk with the shadows. We don't need an army. We need a pair of eyes that know how to find the rot in their armor."
Forn looked from to Crys, then back to the obsidian abyss of my gaze. A soft, amber glow flared in his whiskers — a shy display of genuine gratitude. "This scavenger agrees. I shall show you where their hinges are weak."
The dawn of the eighth day did not arrive with a sun. Instead, the twelve trapped nebulas within the mountain-arches violently contracted, releasing a shockwave of cold, prismatic light that vibrated in our very atoms.
"THE APPOINTED CYCLE IS VALIDATED," the Adjudicator's golden voice thundered, sounding more like an engine than a person. "THE PROJECTED WORLD IS ANCHORED. COMNCE THE PIT OF EVALUATION."
The marble plaza beneath our boots abruptly ceased to be solid. The hanging gardens dissolved into raw, humming pixels of System-code.
One hundred souls plunged.
We were falling into a vertical shaft of absolute silence that seed to drop through the heart of the galaxy itself. Far below us, the Arena materialized — a masterpiece of non-Euclidean landscape architecture. It was the "Desolation Grid."
It was an inner realm, around ten million miles across, partitioned into lethal bios that shifted and groaned against each other. There were floating obsidian clusters tethered by chains of blue fire; frozen jungles where the trees were sentient shards of ice; and vast geyser-plains of molten silver. The entire world was contained within a shimring, semi-opaque golden do that scread with the Authority of the Tier 11 Viceroy.
And in twenty five geographical centers, each standing atop a mountain of broken glass, was an Armory Spire.
Even from this height, my [Void-Lattice Perception] caught the flare of impossible wealth housed within the spires. Racks of weapons that glead with planetary radiance — the 'Charity' items provided for those who were ant to have no equipnt.
I saw the Remoran heir — now flying atop a chariot made of liquid starlight, escorted by six of his armored attendants — angling his flight path directly for that spire. They weren't just going to take a weapon; they were going to gate-keep the entire center of the map. The demon cadres were banking their descent toward the lava-fields, roaring in unison as they prepared for a unified scorched-earth push.
The air around scread as my descent accelerated.
"Frozen Delta, Western Quadrant," I commanded the link, my voice booming in the ntal void of Crys and Forn. "Hide the mont you hit the fog. I want them to think we are already dead."
I watched the distant ground rushing up to et us. My [Void Emperor's Omnipresence] throbbed inside my ribs, a cold, hungry heartbeat that seed to relish the chaos. The paranoia was no longer a weight; it was a sensory organ.
I hit the switch on the Veil.
My descent trajectory didn't stop, but I vanished. I was a sovereign shadow plumting toward a golden stage.
We weren't just aspirants anymore. We were the wrench about to be thrown into the middle of their gilded clockwork.
The white fog of the frozen delta rushed up, and I hit the ground with the soundless, absolute grace of a falling star. The battle for Ferra's future — and for the throne of this corrupted court — had officially begun.
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