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The floor was cold.

That was Jin’s first thought—bone-deep, polished stone cold, like the room itself had never seen warmth. The second thought ca sharper: he was lying down. Not in a cube. Not in so suspended pod or glass-walled prison. Just stone beneath his back and stale air in his lungs.

His eyes opened slowly.

The ceiling above him stretched endlessly—a vast do of engraved obsidian, lit by faint pulses of white-blue light that flickered like veins. Murmured whispers of power ran along the cracks between tiles, humming gently, almost alive.

He sat up.

Others were doing the sa.

Not everyone, though. Not the full arena of hundreds. Just twenty.

A circle.

All of them had been arranged equidistant from each other—placed, not dropped. No chains. No binds. But the tension? Thick enough to cut with a blade.

Jin’s eyes moved across the circle.

So faces he recognized. Jisoo, standing off to one side, her hand resting on her hip. Yujin crouched beside her, tail flicking, gaze narrowed. Hanuel—limping slightly from his last fight—was closer to the far edge, silently flexing his grip.

But others? Unknown.

Tall ones. Armored ones. A woman with pale blue skin and glowing pupils. A man in priest’s robes with blood drying across the hems. A teenager who couldn’t have been more than sixteen but radiated more pressure than the Minotaur had.

No one spoke.

Until the center shimred.

The floor itself warped. Like water rippling upward, it ford a shape—a man, but not. Not a dokkaebi. Not even System-aligned. He stood too still, too controlled. Like gravity responded to him differently.

He wore black and gold. Not a robe. Not armor. Sothing regal, but modern. He was tall—unnaturally so. And his presence didn’t fill the room with sound.

It filled it with stillness.

And when he finally opened his eyes, it was like every single person in the room forgot how to breathe.

"I welco you," he said simply. His voice didn’t echo—but sohow it reached everyone. Crisp. asured. Not bored. Not amused. "The twenty who remain."

One of the dokkaebi floated behind him, far smaller than before. Quiet. Reverent. It didn’t dare speak.

The man continued.

"You have endured three trials. Faced death. Killed. Survived. So of you grew. So of you clung to what you already were. But all of you stand here because the system saw sothing in you."

He took a slow step forward.

No one moved.

"This is not a reward," he said. "This is not the end."

A pause.

"This is the beginning."

Jin’s eyes narrowed. He didn’t like the weight in those words.

"I am the Arbiter," the man said, as if the na itself needed no explanation. "And I have been tasked with the burden of setting the first pillar of your age."

He gestured slightly. From the air, small fragnts shimred—tallic shards, each no larger than a coin. Twenty in total. They hovered above him like silent stars.

"This is the Crown of the Next Era," he said.

Or rather—its pieces.

"You each will carry one. You cannot lose it unless defeated. You cannot trade it unless willing. When assembled... it shall guide its bearer to the Throne of Korea."

Jin’s stomach tightened.

That wasn’t taphor.

The Arbiter ant it literally.

"You will return ho," the man continued. "To your lands. Your cities. The broken remnants of what once was. And from there, you will rise. Or fall. That is the nature of kingship."

A quiet breath. asured.

"The system will no longer guide your hand directly. It has set the board. Now... you will play."

He raised a hand—and the coins began to descend, one by one, toward the chosen.

And that’s when the mistake happened.

One man stepped forward.

He was large—broad-shouldered, thick-muscled, bare arms crisscrossed with ritual tattoos. Jin didn’t recognize him, but the tension in the air said soone did. Soone dangerous.

"You talk too much," the man said, voice rough and deep.

The Arbiter turned slightly. Not startled. Not offended.

But acknowledging him.

The challenger raised a hand—and pointed at one of the girls across the circle. "I don’t need a quest. If I kill her, I take her fragnt now, right?"

The Arbiter didn’t answer.

He just watched.

The man began to move—faster than his bulk suggested. Energy flickered around his fists, and before anyone could process it—

He vanished.

No flash. No bang.

Just an explosion of gore.

The scream ca first—a guttural, animalistic shriek. The kind of sound that didn’t belong in a human throat. Blood painted the stone. Bones shattered in mid-air. The man’s body didn’t collapse.

It ruptured.

An instant later, a wet heap of tissue and cracking sinew slumped onto the ground, twitching once before going still.

The room was silent.

Until the Arbiter raised one hand again—and the gore pulled back.

Jin’s eyes widened.

He wasn’t reversing ti. He was... rebuilding him.

Piece by piece. Muscle reknit. Bone ford. Eyes returned. The man scread again as the nerves fired back to life—but within seconds, he stood whole.

Shaking.

Collapsed to his knees.

And gasping.

"I’ve... never... felt that," he breathed.

The Arbiter’s tone was mild.

"You attacked before the quest began. That was your lesson."

The man didn’t look up.

"I don’t need to kill you to make you learn," the Arbiter said. "I only needed to show you what rules an in a world with none."

Jin swallowed hard.

So did several others.

The Arbiter’s gaze turned again—this ti not on the broken man, but on the entire circle.

"You may fight each other when you return. Or not. You may ally. Betray. Steal. Build. That is your domain now."

He gestured once more—and each person’s inventory flickered, a new icon pulsing softly.

Their fragnt.

"Only one crown exists. Only one throne. But how you reach it... is entirely yours to decide."

The light around the Arbiter grew brighter now—pale blue and white-gold, like the dying sun.

Jin braced himself.

Because he knew what ca next.

"Return," the Arbiter said.

"To your world."

The floor dropped.

And the twenty chosen fell into the dark once more—this ti, not as survivors.

But as contenders.

For the future.

The light vanished.

So did the arena.

Jin didn’t rember the mont he landed. Just the weight of silence and a cool breeze threading through the back of his jacket.

He blinked.

The sky above was pale blue, streaked with the remnants of dawn. Clouds drifted lazily, unconcerned with what the system had just put them through. Insects buzzed in lazy spirals around the grass, and the world slled... fresh.

Real.

Alive.

They were back.

He staggered forward a step, catching himself before he fell flat. His knees were shaky. His body ached. But his sword was still in his inventory. And the ssage floating in his vision confird it:

[Main System Trial Completed.]

[You have survived the Threefold Reckoning.]

[Your achievents will be catalogued. Your records, preserved.]

[Await further instruction.]

His cube faded behind him with a quiet chi, dissolving into nothingness. Around him, others were landing too—echoes of light bursting across the open field near their base. Glass remnants. Warped energy. Exhausted silhouettes stumbling forward in disbelief.

The school-turned-sanctuary lood ahead. The trees at its back swayed in the breeze.

Jin exhaled sharply, brushing a hand through his hair.

They were really back.

And the first thing he saw was Echo sprinting toward him, voice cutting through the morning stillness.

"Jin!"

He barely had ti to react before Echo grabbed him by the shoulder and gave him a solid shake. "You’re alive, man. For a second I thought Seo really—"

"He didn’t," Jin said flatly.

Echo blinked. "Okay. Not dead. Good. Great. But also, he said he’s gonna hunt you down once this is all over? So maybe, like, not great?"

Jin gave him a dry look. "I’m aware."

From behind, Joon and Seul approached at a slower pace. Joon looked mostly unchanged, except for the faint crackling static in his palms he hadn’t fully put away. Seul’s posture was tighter, like she hadn’t quite let her adrenaline fade yet.

"You really lost to Mr. Top Ten, huh?" Joon grinned, folding his arms. "Did he hit you with a top-ten-tier insult too, or just the threat of violence?"

"Both," Jin muttered.

Seul glanced him over, the concern flickering briefly in her eyes before she nodded. "You good?"

"Good enough." He glanced toward the main hall. "Everyone else back?"

"Yeah. Most are celebrating or collapsing. You know. Normal stuff after a near-death ga show."

Echo leaned in, voice quieter now. "You really alright?"

Jin didn’t answer right away. His eyes had shifted to the far end of the courtyard—where the stone figure still sat.

Aesteros.

Motionless.

Unmoving.

A faint sheen of moss had started to form over parts of the massive stone limbs, like nature was trying to decide whether or not to reclaim him.

"Yeah," Jin finally said. "But I need to talk to soone."

Echo followed his gaze. "You’re not serious."

Jin was already walking.

Joon frowned. "What, you and statue-man have a lunch date?"

"Sothing like that."

Seul stepped forward. "You want us to co?"

Jin paused. Looked over his shoulder.

"No. Just... hold down the base. I’ll be back."

He offered a small nod to each of them. And for just a mont, they saw it—the flicker of sothing heavier behind his eyes. Not fear. Not exhaustion.

Intent.

The kind of intent that usually ca right before soone made a decision they couldn’t take back.

Seul didn’t push. Echo gave a two-fingered salute. Joon shrugged, turning toward the main hall.

And Jin kept walking.

Aesteros was still crouched in the garden edge, hands resting over his knees like a monk locked in permanent contemplation. But as Jin approached, sothing in the air shifted.

The closer he got, the more he could feel it.

Power.

Like the weight of an entire mountain coiled up in silence, waiting for a single breath to uncoil it.

He stopped a few feet away.

"I know you’re still in there," he said quietly. "Get up."

No response.

Jin exhaled. "We need to talk. Now."

Still nothing.

He glanced around once, then reached into his inventory and pulled out Muramasa—not to threaten, but because it grounded him. The familiar hum of the blade brought clarity.

Finally, a sound.

Stone shifting.

A crack ran down Aesteros’s shoulder, thin but glowing faintly with internal energy.

The head turned.

Not fully.

Just enough.

Jin t the stone gaze without flinching. "The trials are over. We survived. Barely. But sothing’s coming next—and I think you already knew that."

Silence.

Then a voice like distant boulders grinding against one another.

"...Where?"

"I want to walk," Jin said. "Just outside the walls. The city edge."

A long pause. A breeze stirred the grass.

Then Aesteros rose.

Not quickly. Not dramatically. Just... stood. The weight of his movent cracked the nearby flagstones, and for a second, the birds in the trees went silent.

Together, without another word, they started walking.

Past the others.

Past the threshold.

Into the woods beyond the school’s edge.

Where nobody else could hear what ca next.

And behind them, from the top of the school building, the system chid once more.

[Notice: The Threefold Reckoning has concluded.]

[New Questlines Unlocked.]

[Contenders: Prepare for what cos next.]

You are reading The Weapon Genius: Anything I Hold Can Kill Chapter 164: The Fragmented Crown on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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