Font Size
15px

Ren moved deeper into the chamber, his eyes tracing the burned edges of the maps. The silence pressed against him, heavier than the noise of the streets outside. After a while, he stepped back through the doors and returned to the city.

The first day passed in cautious wandering. Verathane unfolded like a maze, its streets curving around the cliffs in patterns that seed designed to confuse outsiders. Vendors called out from stalls built beneath overhanging stone. Their wares were not the simple goods of common markets. He saw cages of winged reptiles no longer than his arm, each scale patterned with shifting colors. He saw roots that glowed faintly, pulsing like a heartbeat when touched. One rchant sold bottled storms, lightning coiled in glass spheres that cracked faintly with each flicker.

Ren watched without speaking, his shadows coiled tight around him. The people noticed him but kept their distance. So whispered. So spat quietly into the ground. Others stared openly before looking away when his gaze t theirs.

On the second day, he walked the outer terraces. From there the land stretched wide, molten rivers cutting lines of fire across the dark ground. The walls of Verathane rose high behind him, the city a lone fortress clinging to the edge of hostility. Guards patrolled the walls, but they were unlike soldiers he had seen before. Their armor shimred faintly, woven through with crystal shards that resonated when struck. They moved with precision, every step in rhythm with the hum of the land.

Nyxa stirred with a teasing murmur. "They watch you as if you are the calamity itself. Do you feel their eyes? The way their hands tighten on their weapons when you pass? You unsettle them more than this land does."

Ren said nothing. He leaned against the cold stone of the terrace and stared at the horizon. The blackened circle in the basin was hidden from sight, but the mory of it remained sharp, carved into his chest like a brand.

The third day took him into the lower quarters. Here the air was warr, thick with steam rising from fissures in the ground. Workshops filled the space, their doors open to reveal craftsn bending tal that glowed without fire. Children darted between stalls, chasing small lizardlike creatures with translucent skin that flickered with trapped light. The sll of unfamiliar spices drifted from open kitchens, sharp and heavy, unlike anything he had tasted before.

He stopped at a stall where a woman sold stone fruits that bled glowing nectar when cut. She looked at him once, her gaze flicking to the shifting shadows at his side, and her smile froze. She said nothing and served the next custor without a word to him.

Nyxa's laughter curled in his thoughts. "You will starve here if you rely on kindness. Best learn what this city respects. It is not trust. It is not rcy. It is only power."

Ren turned from the stall and continued walking. The weight of her words followed him, as constant as the hum of the land beneath his feet.

When the fourth night ca, he returned to the chamber of maps. Alone, he stood before the burned parchnts and the lines that ended in ash. His hand hovered over the marks, tracing the path to the basin in silence.

Nyxa whispered softly, not with mockery but with sothing colder. "One month. That is all you have. And still, you linger."

Ren closed his eyes. The city was alive, but its life was sharpened by fear. The land beyond was waiting. And the shadow of the calamity pressed closer with every breath.

On the following two days Ren drifted further into Verathane's veins, tracing paths through districts layered one atop another. The higher terraces thrumd with wealth, stonework polished smooth and carved with patterns that faintly pulsed in ti with the land's rhythm. Traders here sold rarities in hushed voices. Scales that shimred like molten glass. Powder ground from crystals that, when inhaled, sharpened the senses to painful clarity.

Ren lingered at the edge of a gathering where masked n exchanged such goods. Their words were clipped, their movents precise, and when his shadow brushed the edge of the circle, all conversation halted. A dozen masked eyes turned toward him in silence. He did not stay long.

★★★

Lower quarters revealed another rhythm. Steam rose from cracks in the stone, feeding vast greenhouses built from crystal panes. Strange plants grew within, so coiling up their own glass walls, others swaying faintly though no wind touched them. Ren paused at one enclosure where a flower unfolded slowly. Its petals released a mist that shimred, catching the faint light and scattering it across his hand like falling sparks. A young keeper spotted him and rushed forward, pulling the gate closed with a wary glance. The boy did not speak, but the stiffness in his shoulders carried enough aning.

Nyxa's voice stirred with quiet amusent. "Even children here look at you as if they know what you are. Perhaps they do. Perhaps this land teaches them early."

On another evening Ren followed a stairwell cut deep into the cliffs. The descent carried him into caverns lit not by fla but by rivers of glowing insects. They flowed across the ceilings in restless swarms, their bodies giving off pale blue light. rchants had gathered here too, their tables set along the edges of the cavern lake. They sold bone trinkets carved from beasts of the forbidden wilds, hides tougher than steel, and vials of liquid mana distilled from slain creatures.

Ren watched quietly, his eyes drawn to a single beast hide stretched across a rack. Its surface shifted faintly, as if still alive, as if waiting for the touch of the one who had killed it. He reached toward it, but the vendor slapped his hand away before contact was made. The man's eyes narrowed, his voice low and clipped. "Not for you."

Ren withdrew without answer. The shadows around him shifted uneasily, but he let them settle. He was a stranger here, tolerated but not welcod.

Night after night (8 days passed) he returned to the upper ridges. From there he could see the basin far in the distance, its circle faint but still visible when the air cleared. Smoke continued to rise, unbroken and steady. The city seed to live as if nothing waited beneath the earth, but Ren knew better. He watched the horizon with silence heavy in his chest.

Nyxa broke it only once. "You are waiting as much as they are, though none will admit it. When it stirs, this place will not look the sa. Do you wonder how many of these faces will still be here a month from now?"

Ren did not answer. He turned back toward the city lights, each glow a reminder that Verathane still lived, still breathed, still prepared in its own way. His steps carried him down again into the noise and rhythm, into the city that would soon beco the edge of a storm.

You are reading Reincarnated Ruler: Awakening in a Broken Reality Chapter 123: Exploring The City Near Forbidden Land 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

On the Path to the Great Dao cover
Trending now

On the Path to the Great Dao

Pig Nerd ·Action

【Fromtheauthorof''!】Mygrandfatherisverypeculiar.Everyday,helightsincenseforhimselfandeatscandlesinfrontofhisownancestraltablet.Thevillagersareallte...

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