Veil of Aether Chapter 129

Novel: Veil of Aether Author: SpringMist Updated:
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A party of five moved cautiously through the outskirts of a newly discovered phenonon in the Expanse — a fissured clearing crawling with strange goblins.

One mber stepped a foot too far ahead.

“Watch out!” Nox shouted, hand snapping forward.

A strand of silk web shot from his fingertips, wrapping around the man’s torso and yanking him backward just as a Redcap Goblin’s stone axe cleaved the air where his head had been.

The rescued man spun in shock. “Huh—?”

He turned just in ti to see the goblin snarl before he swung, a burst of light flashing from his sword.

A sword beam tore through the Redcap Goblin, slicing it clean in two.

The man swallowed hard, sweat beading on his brow. “Thanks, Nox.”

Nox gave a small nod, resting a hand briefly on the man’s shoulder. “We’re all new to this. Just… be careful.”

“Tsk.” The party’s healer scoffed, arms crossed. “Pathetic. You’ll probably die before this is over. Don’t expect to waste healing on soone like you.”

Nox ignored the comnt and continued forward. The group pressed on, cutting down more goblins of various types — Mudfang Goblins that spat sludge, Thornhide Goblins wielding jagged clubs, and Ashcap Goblins that threw burning stones. Every kill left the air heavier, the stench of aether and decay thickening with each encounter.

As the fighting grew more chaotic, Nox found himself facing a Yellowcap Goblin — a wiry creature with twin daggers and a grin too wide for its face. It lunged at him with rabid speed, its blades flashing in a frenzy.

Steel t steel, again and again. Nox parried each strike, stepping back, redirecting — waiting.

The Yellowcap’s swings grew erratic. Its movents slowed.

Sothing tugged at its hands.

It realized too late — thin, near-invisible strands had attached to its daggers, spreading outward across the ground, tethering to trees, roots, and rocks. Every movent it made now pulled against its own prison.

By the ti it noticed, its range was gone. Its daggers were half-bound.

Nox’s eyes flickered.

He stepped forward and struck — a flurry of clean, efficient blows — cutting deep until the Yellowcap’s health bar dropped to a sliver.

Then—

Slice.

Another blade flashed past Nox’s shoulder, striking the final blow and cutting the goblin down.

The corpse hit the dirt. The loot shimred — coins and a crude dagger.

The one who stole the kill stepped forward, smirking.

“What?” he said, pocketing the loot. “I killed it. You think you deserve the drops? Hmph.”

Nox stared at him blankly, neither angry nor amused.

He simply sheathed his sword and turned away, his silence saying everything.

The party of five trudged onward, facing an endless wave of goblins. Blood and fatigue blended into the rhythm of their struggle — block, strike, dodge, retreat, heal. Their teamwork was ssy, their formation half-forgotten, but sohow they endured.

Each battle left them with fresh cuts and bruises, the healer constantly channeling his Force to patch them up. But his priorities were obvious — two particular mbers received constant attention, their wounds sealed and vitality restored in seconds. The others were left waiting, their injuries lingering until the healer reluctantly tossed a weaker spell their way.

Nox barely glanced his way. He wasn’t expecting help.

During the past few days, his training had given him a deeper grasp of his Force alignnt — and with that understanding ca experintation most would call reckless.

From his inventory, he pulled out a few glass vials. Their contents shimred faintly, a diluted mix of toxins and diluted potion base he’d refined from various venomous creatures. He downed them without hesitation.

As the liquid burned through his throat, he activated the Reversal ridian Sutra.

Instantly, his ridians flared. What should have been poison beca warmth; the pain inverted into rejuvenation. His health surged back, his breathing steadied, and faint threads of aether rippled beneath his skin. The Sutra amplified the effects beyond any normal healing potion — nding tissue, strengthening his channels, and deepening the flow of his Force.

A side effect, he noticed, was even more valuable. His control over his poisonous webs improved. When he had pulled his teammates to safety earlier, none had suffered the usual corrosive burns. The threads had acted like simple silk, harmless to those they touched.

It was progress. Subtle — but real.

When the group resud their march, the difference in attitude was clear. The longer they fought together, the more familiar they beca with each other’s Forces and attack styles. But instead of unity, arrogance took root.

Three mbers grew smug, flaunting their flashy skills and weapons, laughing between fights as if they were invincible. Their synergy revolved only around themselves — a trio basking in their own confidence.

Nox and the other mber stayed behind them, observing without interference. They didn’t argue. They didn’t correct. They just watched, ntally taking note of how easily pride could blind people in this world.

When the next battle ca, Nox’s eyes were already shifting, tracing disturbances in the air — ready to act, even if the others weren’t.

The party of five pressed deeper into the ruins, cutting down waves of goblins that seed to pour endlessly from the shadows. Blood and dust mixed into the air as their aether reserves ran low and wounds began to mount. When they rested, the healer used his Force to patch them up—but his bias was obvious. Two of the smug, overconfident mbers always received priority, while Nox and another were given the bare minimum of healing, just enough to keep them moving.

Nox didn’t complain. He’d learned long ago not to expect fairness from people.

As they continued forward, a sudden tremor rippled through the webbed network of his vision. The disturbance hit so hard it drained a chunk of his aether instantly, forcing him to one knee. His eyes widened—sothing powerful was near.

Ahead, A party mber, drunk on his earlier victories, charged without waiting for orders.

And standing before them was no ordinary foe.

A towering figure stepped from the fog: an Elite Ravager Goblin. Its body was carved with crude tribal markings that pulsed with dull red light. Muscles bulged under gray-green skin slick with venom. In its hands, it gripped two massive bone cleavers, their edges dripping with acidic sli that hissed when it hit the ground.

“Fall back!” Nox shouted, but the words ca too late.

KRASH!

The Ravager swung in a violent arc, both cleavers colliding with bone-cracking force. He was thrown through the air, rolling hard across the ground. He barely managed to gasp before coughing up blood. The healer scrambled to reach him, his voice cracking as he tried to cast through panic.

The monster advanced, blades raised high, poison dripping. It ant to cleave the man in half where he lay.

Nox didn’t hesitate.

He shot out a strand of silk, the webs latching onto the downed fighter’s armor. With one swift motion, he yanked him backward, dragging him clear of the strike just as the cleavers slamd down, gouging deep trenches in the soil.

CLANG!

A sudden flash of tal intercepted the Ravager’s next swing—

Soone stepped forward, calm and silent amid the chaos.

His stance was relaxed, expression unreadable.

“Phantom Crescent — Unseen Blade.”

There was no flash, no burst of light—only impact.

Invisible blades traced the air, carving shallow cuts across the Ravager’s skin. One on the arm. Three across the chest. A final line at the throat.

The goblin bellowed, thrashing violently, swinging its cleavers at ghosts it couldn’t see. Each movent only deepened its unseen wounds, its flesh peeling open in lines that bled only after the final stroke.

The shortsword flicked free.

Steel t bone-cleaver.

CLANG.

A parry. A pivot.

The blade slid upward—clean, surgical—piercing straight through the goblin’s skull.

The Ravager staggered once, then crumpled into the dirt.

Silence followed.

The fighter Nox had saved sat trembling, sweat and blood streaking his face. The healer swallowed hard, voice barely audible.

“…Thanks. Really.”

Nox crouched beside the injured man. His gaze lingered on the deep gash along the fighter’s arm, where faint traces of violet poison pulsed under the skin. He pressed his hand over the wound and activated theReversal ridian Sutra.

Aether surged through his ridians. The toxins flowed toward him, drawn by invisible channels forming beneath his skin. As the sutra circulated, the poison bled out of the fighter’s system and into Nox’s own ridians, where it was broken down, refined, and assimilated.

Within seconds, the discoloration faded from the man’s veins. His breathing steadied. The healer, snapping back from shock, quickly layered a minor healing spell to seal the injury.

Nox’s own body burned faintly as the venom settled, threading through his Force like molten wire. What should have been harm now strengthened him — his Noxious Webs pulsed with greater density, their aetheric signature subtly deepening.

He exhaled, retracting his hand. “You’ll live,” he said simply.

Nearby, Kaito wiped his shortsword on a patch of grass, flicking off a trail of black blood. His tone was even, quiet, but carried the weight of command.

“Next ti,” he said, glancing at the others, “don’t rush.”

Kaito bent down, unbothered by the others’ frustration, and casually picked up the equipnt dropped by the fallen Ravager. When the healer and the other rescued mber stepped forward—clearly intent on claiming the loot for themselves—the other mber’s gaze flicked toward them. Just a single, sharp glance was enough to make them freeze. Neither dared take another step.

Without another word, he walked past them. Nox followed.

Having learned their lesson from the last encounter, the group advanced with tighter coordination.

They were exploring what the system identified as a Grade F: Easy Dungeon—a low-level anomaly. Because of the unknown risk, most players chose to enter with the maximum party size allowed.

When dungeons were first discovered, chaos broke out. People scrambled to form groups, not knowing what lay inside or what rewards awaited. Nox and Kaito, who had crossed paths during the recruitnt frenzy, had been left with few options. The three mbers they ended up with were the last of the unclaid.

“So this is what you ant by a dungeon,” Nox said as they moved cautiously through the torch-lit tunnel. “To think sothing like this really exists here. How did you even learn about it?”

Kaito grinned. “Earlier, I ca across soone setting up a small stall to sell gear. One of the items was a pendant that perfectly complents my Lunar Edge Force. When I asked where she got it, she said she’d entered so strange rift in the air—a disturbance she found by chance. After clearing it, she got the pendant as a reward.”

Nox raised a brow. “So she basically found the first dungeon. Impressive.”

“Yeah,” Kaito replied with a light chuckle. “But speaking of impressive… I noticed your webs isn’t lting everything anymore. You really managed to control that poison?”

Nox gave a small, satisfied smile. “Got lucky and figured sothing out. Don’t worry—if I need to, I can make them venomous again. Even stronger this ti.”

“Good,” Kaito said, his tone half-teasing, half-genuine. “Would’ve been a sha if you couldn’t keep up. Those webs might actually co in handy when we reach the boss.”

This story is posted elsewhere by the author. Help them out by reading the authentic version.

Their banter faded as the path opened into a broad chamber.

Waiting for them was a goblin unlike any they had faced before—taller, leaner, and dressed in full lacquered samurai armor. A crimson sash hung around its waist, and in its hands glead a curved katana, polished and deliberate.

Its stance was calm, composed. Not savage like the others.

The system identified it instantly.

[Boss Monster: Goblin Sword-Saint]

Level 5 — Force Alignnt: Cutting Wind

A faint gust swirled around the creature as it drew its blade, the edge whispering against the scabbard.

Kaito exhaled, eyes sharpening. “Well,” he muttered, “looks like this one’s not going down easy.”

Nox tightened his grip on Webcutter, the faint shimr of silk threads forming around his fingertips.

“Good,” he said quietly. “I was getting bored.”

The clash between both sides erupted instantly.

It was a long and grueling battle—each exchange echoing through the dungeon’s tallic corridors. Webs spread across the walls like veins of silver, shimring in the flickering dungeon light. Nox fought as both support and striker, weaving between offense and defense. His sword skills weren’t sharp enough to cut through the boss’s armor, but he adapted quickly.

Covering his fists in layers of hardened web, Nox dove in close, striking repeatedly. Each punch hissed as the webs’ corrosive threads ate through the goblin’s tal plates, softening and breaking chunks of armor until raw flesh glead beneath.

“Pale Hand!”

A skeletal hand burst from the ground, spectral and sickly pale, seizing one of the exposed weak points. The Goblin Sword-Saint recoiled, letting out a guttural snarl as its armor cracked further.

The boss turned, swinging both axes at Orin—its strikes sharp enough to split the air. Orin crossed his blade, bracing for impact.

“Gravebind!”

Chains of gray aether lashed out, tethering the goblin’s movents and aura to his own. The air warped around them, every step the boss took now mirrored by Orin’s defiant stance.

The Goblin Sword-Saint struggled, its movents sluggish under the combined strain of poison, web corrosion, and Orin’s binding. That opening was all Kaito needed.

He leapt.

For a heartbeat, the moonlight from his Lunar Edge Force reflected behind him—calm, pure, lethal.

Then, with one blink, he was gone.

The next instant, Kaito stood in front of the boss, his sword dripping faint lunar light. Behind him, the goblin fell to its knees, its body carved through in clean, seamless lines.

He exhaled, sheathing his blade, and patted Nox on the shoulder as the poison steam rose from the lting corpse. “Thanks for the hard work. If you hadn’t lted off that armor, this fight would’ve been a nightmare.”

A faint chi echoed through the chamber.

[System Notice: Grade F Dungeon Completion Achieved.]

[Evaluating Performance…]

[Individual Performance Grading Initiated.]

[Assessing: Combat Contribution, Damage Dealt, Damage Received, Tactics, and Adaptability.]

[Participant: Kaito Ren]

[Combat Contribution: A ]

[Damage Dealt: A]

[Damage Received: B]

[Tactics & Adaptability: A ]

[Overall Grade: A-]

[Participant: Orin Graves]

[Combat Contribution: B ]

[Damage Dealt: B]

[Damage Received: B ]

[Tactics & Adaptability: A-]

[Overall Grade: B ]

[Participant: Nox]

[Combat Contribution: B]

[Damage Dealt: B-]

[Damage Received: A]

[Tactics & Adaptability: A]

[Overall Grade: B]

[Participant: Seth]

[Combat Contribution: C]

[Damage Dealt: D ]

[Damage Received: B]

[Tactics & Adaptability: C]

[Overall Grade: C]

[Participant: Paul]

[Combat Contribution: C ]

[Damage Dealt: C]

[Damage Received: C-]

[Tactics & Adaptability: B-]

[Overall Grade: C ]

[Grading Complete.]

[Reward Calculation Based on Individual Performance…]

[Base Rewards for Dungeon Completion:]

[Low-Grade Aether Crystals x10]

[Bonus Rewards Based on Grade:]

Grade C : 1 Lesser Aether Potion

Grade B: 1 Reinforced Equipnt Core (Common)

Grade B : 1 Aether-Infused Longtblade (Common)

Grade A-: 1 Skill Scroll – Lunar Mirage Step

[Skill Awakening Chance Based on Grade…]

[Calculating…]

[Skill Awakening Successful!]

[Kaito Ren has unlocked the Skill: Lunar Mirage Step – Allows the user to blur their movent between fras, appearing to phase through attacks for a brief instant. The effect strengthens with Aether infusion.]

[System Notice: Dungeon Completed.]

[Teleporting Participants to Expanse…]

Kaito bade farewell to Nox, giving him a small nod before turning to the others. “Good work.”

“Tsk,” Paul scoffed as Kaito walked off. “You’re not much without your friend, are you?”

Nox blinked, caught off guard by the remark. Even Seth looked confused.

“Don’t be ungrateful,” Orin’s voice cut in sharply. His tone carried a weight that silenced the room. “That man saved your life. Learn to appreciate favors instead of spitting on them. Let arrogance rule you long enough, and you’ll find out what kind of fate waits for fools.”

Paul would not heed that advice.

Paul would get stabbed in his eye, then his neck.

Then his temple by Kei.

Seth, on the other hand, would slowly adhere to those words; he got stronger because of it.

Be like Seth.

Nox returned to the settlent, finding it far more developed than before. Rows of small, neatly arranged houses now filled the once-empty clearing, smoke rising from communal kitchens where teams cooked and distributed als. A research area had sprung up near the center, filled with improvised worktables and crude instrunts.

But it was theBlacksmith Hall that caught his eye.

The forge blazed brighter than ever, the rhythmic clang of hamrs echoing like a heartbeat through the settlent. The sight made him pause, a faint smile forming. It was pride in the building itself.

He’d spent days in that forge, learning the craft with blistered hands and sore muscles. What started as simple curiosity had grown into genuine respect. He’d co to understand the care behind each strike, the flow between heat, tal, and intent.

Still, sothing about it bothered him.

His ti in the Expanse had been harsh but productive—countless battles, long treks, and near-death encounters had sharpened his instincts. He’d leveled up several tis since arriving and distributed his stats more thoughtfully, no longer dumping points at random. His Strength, Dexterity, and Constitution were balanced, and the improvent was tangible. Every movent felt cleaner, every strike more stable.

But even outside of combat, there was a strange developnt.

Whenever he worked at the forge, he felt himself growing stronger too—just… differently. The soreness from swinging a hamr for hours should’ve left him drained, yet instead, he felt invigorated. The exhaustion burned out of him like impurities from tal, replaced by a subtle sense of renewal.

It didn’t make sense. He wasn’t fighting, wasn’t training, wasn’t using skills. He was simply blacksmithing—heating, shaping, striking. But with every swing, his body seed to change, the ache in his muscles fading faster each ti.

He frowned, flexing his hand after another session at the anvil. The rough skin along his palm had thickened; the faint tremor in his arms had disappeared. He wasn’t just getting better at the craft. He was physically adapting—growing stronger, steadier, more refined.

Activating his ocular skill, he watched the world through the web-like threads of perception once more. Every vibration, every imperfection, every ripple of heat ca alive before him. As expected, the disturbances within his work were countless.

What wasn’t expected were the disturbances in his own body.

Faint threads of distortion pulsed beneath his skin—shifting whenever he adjusted his posture, his grip, his breathing. It was as though the craft itself reflected back into him, revealing inefficiencies he hadn’t noticed.

The longer he forged, the clearer they beca.

He devoted himself fully to studying the disturbances—those subtle imperfections in his movents that his ocular skill revealed. Every session at the forge beca an experint. Each swing of the hamr was asured, each breath deliberate. His goal was simple: reduce the disturbances, refine the motion.

The results were startling.

He soon realized that the more effort he poured into minimizing those distortions within his body—steadying his breathing, aligning his muscles, perfecting his rhythm—the more his stats began to rise naturally. No system notifications, no skill points spent. His strength, dexterity, and constitution all climbed slowly but steadily, responding to his body’s internal refinent rather than artificial allocation.

It was as if the world rewarded his discipline directly.

And the deeper he delved into this practice, the more he understood himself. The disturbances beca a mirror—showing where his tendons strained, how his ligants stretched, and where his aether flow stuttered. With every session, he learned to feel every fiber of his being, every subtle shift in his form, until he could sense the workings of his body as clearly as the tal he forged.

That awareness bled into battle.

When he faced the dungeon boss, his sword strikes might have lacked the finesse to pierce armor, but his fists told a different story. The improvents he’d made in controlling his body turned every punch into a focused burst of power. Combined with the corrosive webs lting through the boss’s armor, each blow struck with unexpected force—enough to dent the plates of an Elite Goblin’s armor through sheer precision and control.

He felt that blacksmithing would play a vital role in his growth — a foundation for both his physical strength and his understanding of aether flow. Every strike of the hamr resonated through him, sharpening not just his skill but the structure of his body itself.

As ti passed, the settlent changed. What was once a rough camp of survivors had evolved into sothing resembling a living town. More buildings rose — houses, crafting stations, communal halls. The once-silent clearings now echoed with chatter, trade.

The Blacksmith Hall beca one of the busiest places in the settlent. With weapons breaking and armor wearing down from constant battles in the Expanse, requests poured in for repairs and commissions. Nox often found himself working late into the night, soot clinging to his hands, the forge’s heat mixing with the cool evening air.

Elsewhere, stalls began to form as people turned to trading their spoils — weapons, materials, herbs, and monster parts. Alchemists sold freshly brewed potions, while cooks experinted with monster at to create als that replenished both health and stamina. Bit by bit, a semblance of society began to erge.

For many, that small taste of normalcy brought comfort. Laughter returned to the nights; the fear of dying alone in the wilderness began to fade.

But just as quickly, the darker parts of society began to surface.

Theft. Broken deals. Dine-and-dash. People refused to pay for commissions or stole goods outright from unattended stalls. And why wouldn’t they? In this world, strength decided who was right. Power brought entitlent. Talent brought arrogance.

For a while, chaos brewed beneath the surface.

That changed when the newly ford guilds and factions stepped in — groups of the more disciplined and organized participants who had fought and bled together since arrival. They enforced order not out of moral duty, but out of necessity. Without structure, the settlent would collapse, and everything they had risked their lives to build would crumble.

Disputes were settled, thieves punished, and trust began to form once again. It wasn’t perfect, but it was progress — the first fragile glimpse of civilization returning to a world that had started from nothing.

And through it all, Nox continued his work at the forge, quietly hamring out his path toward sothing greater.

Even without the guilds and groups helping with the issues, Nox didn't mind when his crafts were stolen

Like many of the thieves believed, they now had the power to do whatever they wished.

Nox simply followed their mantra.

He had discovered a fascinating quirk in the Reversal ridian Sutra—while it allowed him to absorb poisons, it also granted him the ability to release them freely, without needing his webs as a dium. The Sutra refined his control over toxins, letting him dictate their qualities as his understanding deepened.

So, when chaos spread through the settlent, Nox acted quietly.

A few of the offenders—those who stole, cheated, or harassed others—found themselves growing mysteriously ill. Most symptoms were mild enough to dismiss as fatigue or bad food. But others… weren’t so lucky. A handful of thieves began seeing [Poisoned] status effects flash across their system screens, forcing them into panic as they rushed to find healers or alchemists for help.

The settlent grew uneasy. Rumors spread of insects or venomous creatures sneaking into hos at night. So perceptive individuals even claid to spot faint, silvery threads near the victims’ stalls and beds—thin as air, glinting only when light caught them just right.

No one knew who was responsible.

Most called it karma.

And Nox? He just kept hamring away at the forge, whistling softly while the fires burned. When his shift ended, he’d venture into the nearby forest as if none of it concerned him.

Still, he kept watch.

Sensing disturbances had beco second nature to him, so he made it a habit to monitor the settlent through the subtle tremors of his perception. Each faint vibration told a story—a scuffle here, an argunt there. But one particular kind of disturbance stood out: the quiet, creeping kind that followed theft.

One afternoon, wearing a plain coat with his hands buried in his pockets, Nox felt it. The faint ripple of aether distortion brushed past his senses as shouts echoed nearby—soone yelling about stolen items. He followed the trail, tracing the disturbances from one complaining rchant to the next. The pattern was consistent. Every theft, every disappearance, left behind that sa subtle signature.

Even the Blacksmith Hall wasn’t spared. His fellow workers grumbled about missing tools, cursing under their breath as Nox stood to the side, studying the invisible tremor lingering in the air.

“Hm. Interesting,” he muttered.

Days passed before it returned. Nox was out again, strolling lazily through the market with his hood up, when that familiar flicker brushed against his perception—this ti moving closer, almost casual, as if strolling past him in plain sight.

Yet there was no one there.

The disturbance drifted right toward him, bold and unhurried.

Nox smiled faintly beneath his hood. “So it’s you.”

Without breaking stride, he activated the Reversal ridian Sutra. A new poison he’d been experinting with—odorless, invisible, and subtle—flowed from his body in controlled wisps, diffusing just far enough to envelop the unseen presence.

Then he saw it.

A faint shimr appeared in the air, flickering in and out like heat distortion. Slowly, it took form—a small figure cloaked in partial invisibility, a child dressed in ninja-like clothes.

Nox turned to face the kid, amused. The boy froze as their eyes t, panic flashing across his face.

Nox snickered lightly, his tone playfully mocking. “Cute.”

He walked past without another word, leaving the trembling thief to stare in silence as the poison began its slow, harmless lesson—just enough to keep him from trying it again.

Ti passed, and soon, the settlent was buzzing with new rumors — an Apex Boss had appeared.

Plans to challenge it spread fast. Guild leaders gathered, strategies were drafted, and alliances were ford. It was supposed to be a chance for glory — the kind of event that could change the balance of power within the Expanse. But what Nox heard in those discussions left him cold.

People weren’t talking about teamwork or survival.

They were talking about loot.

Exclusive rights. Division of spoils. Threats disguised as promises. So claid the boss’s drops were “rightfully theirs” before even seeing it, while others plotted to ambush whoever survived long enough to earn the reward. The greed was tangible — thicker than the smoke from the forges.

Nox wanted nothing to do with it.

Kaito had asked him to join. But Nox refused. The idea of fighting beside people already preparing to betray each other made his skin crawl.

So while they gathered for the raid, Nox stayed behind — alone, hamring away in the forge before heading into the wild.

He spent so ti deep in the forest, continuing his strange path of refinent. His body had changed. The balance he’d gained from the forge and the discipline he’d learned from controlling the disturbances in his body had elevated him far beyond what his level suggested. His combat ability had soared. Creatures that once posed a threat now fell in seconds.

And with the Reversal ridian Sutra, he had learned sothing new — by refining and circulating toxins through his body, he could strengthen both his physique and the potency of his venom. The Sutra wasn’t just a technique anymore; it had beco a living cycle of adaptation.

He proved it with a single motion.

A snake-like creature lunged at him from the undergrowth. Nox’s blade flashed once. The serpent split apart before it even hit the ground, its body twitching as its life drained away.

The mont it fell — halfway across the Expanse — Kaito and the others were standing before the Ironsworn Ravager, preparing for their own Apex Boss battle.

And in that sa mont, Nox’s shadow stretched beneath him, warping under a new, oppressive presence.

The trees trembled. The ground shifted. tal screeched as if the earth itself were grinding teeth.

Then it appeared — scales glimring like steel, eyes burning with an ancient, tallic glow. The creature’s breath hissed through the clearing like steam from a forge.

[Apex Boss: Vipersteel Basilisk — The Master of Steel]

It towered over him, its body a colossal coil of living, breathing tal. Each movent sang like the strike of a hamr on an anvil.

For a brief mont, they simply stared at each other — predator and predator, both forged through struggle.

Nox exhaled slowly, his pulse steady, his gaze unwavering. The Sutra flared to life, his veins glowing faintly beneath his skin as poisonous aether surged through his body.

"That voice called little spider, correct?" he murmured, lips curling into a thin smile. “Let’s see who wins — the overgrown garden snake, or the little spider.”

The air thickened as two Apex Bosses — one of poison and steel, one of earth and fury — were challenged in the sa instant.

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