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Leon stepped over the apartnt's threshold slowly, almost noiselessly. He closed the door behind him and stood still for several long seconds, listening, sword angled slightly upward, ready to react to the smallest sound.

The silence was thick. Broken only by the soft hum of a refrigerator and the distant noise of the city, muffled through concrete walls.

He moved.

thodical now, room by room, step by step. He checked behind doors, in alcoves, under the table, in the bathroom, then the small bedroom. Everywhere looked the sa: clutter, clothes tossed aside, a chair knocked over, cabinets left open, as if soone had been desperately searching for sothing, or fleeing in a hurry.

Nothing moved.

No breathing. No shadows shifting. No silhouettes.

Only then did sothing click, and his gaze stalled on the front door.

"So…" he murmured. "It was them."

The two zombies on the stairwell. The residents of this apartnt. People who'd sat here not long ago, eating dinner, talking about sothing painfully unimportant, then ran out into the hallway and never ca back.

The thought didn't shock him anymore. It settled into him as a quiet, heavy sadness, deep enough that it didn't even demand an imdiate reaction.

Once he was sure he hadn't missed anything, Leon locked the front door and scanned the entryway for sothing to barricade it. He ended up at a narrow wardrobe pressed against the wall. With effort, he dragged it across the floor until the wood creaked softly, wedging it against the door and sealing the entrance.

Only then did he let himself really look around.

The apartnt was small, ordinary, living room with a kitchenette, a tiny bedroom, a bathroom. Simple furniture, no particular personality. The kind of quiet normality that had been standard a few hours ago.

Now it felt almost alien.

Leon walked into the living room and finally dropped onto the couch, heavy, as if his bones had decided they were done. He set his backpack on the floor. A long breath poured out of him, slow and ragged, like his body was only now allowing itself to understand how exhausted it was.

Everything hit him at once: the bus, blood, zombies, screaming, the woman in the pharmacy, the dog, the fights, the choices.

He leaned his head back and stared at the ceiling, at a small water stain near the corner, breathing slowly, trying not to think.

And failing.

He sighed again, deeper this ti, then forced himself up, as if sitting still was suddenly too dangerous. He rested both hands on the sword, its tip lightly denting the floor panels, and lowered his head.

He rembered the first system ssage.

The one that had started it all.

"Status?" he said aloud, uncertain, but clear enough that the world could answer.

The air in front of him trembled, as if it thickened for a heartbeat. Then a familiar, semi-transparent window unfolded in midair, perfectly aligned with his gaze.

There was nothing fairy-tale "magical" about it.

It looked like a ga interface.

Leon read slowly, line by line.

[STATUS WINDOW]

Na: Leon

Level: 3

Race: Human

Age: 21

Class: None

Title: None

Mana: 100 / 100

Strength (STR): 16 ( 3)

Agility (AGI): 20 ( 2)

Vitality (VIT): 17 ( 1)

Intelligence (INT): 10

Free Stat Points: 8

[Equipnt]

• Iron Short Sword (Normal Grade)

• Adaptive Combat Gloves (Normal Grade)

[Skills]

Active Skills:

• Darkness Manipulation (Phase One Skill) – Tier: Novice

Passive Skills:

• Cold Mind (Unclassified Skill) – Tier: Novice

Leon stared at the status window for a long mont, until the numbers stopped being abstract symbols and started to an sothing. His eyes latched onto the three lines that mattered most.

Agility: 20.

Strength: 16.

Vitality: 17.

"Twenty…" he murmured.

Images from the past few hours replayed instantly: stepping ahead of a zombie's reaction on the stairs, slipping into their blind spots, landing clean head strikes, the lack of real danger where he'd expected desperate struggle.

"So…" he said under his breath.

He rembered those first system pop-ups, back on the bus, then the later kill notifications, the numbers climbing by one, sotis several at a ti.

A healthy, average twenty-one-year-old guy.

Soone like him, before today.

"Ten," he said out loud, like it was obvious. "I must've started with ten in everything."

He looked back at Agility.

Twenty.

"So I'm… twice as fast as the average person." His voice held no disbelief now, only cold calculation. "That explains why they looked like they were moving in slow motion."

His gaze dropped to Strength.

Sixteen.

"And that…" he added after a beat, "is like… one and a half people."

That fit too. The force of his blows. How easily the sword sank into skull. The fact he'd nearly split the mutant in half, sothing that would've sounded insane yesterday.

Only then did the parentheses catch his attention.

( 3) on Strength.

( 2) on Agility.

( 1) on Vitality.

"Wait…" he murmured, leaning closer.

He'd gotten so caught up in analysis that he forgot his own body, and the sword he'd been leaning on slipped from his hands. It hit the floor with a loud clack, louder than he wanted.

Leon crouched instinctively to grab it,

And froze mid-motion when he caught sothing in the corner of his eye.

Strength: 13.

The parentheses were gone.

"What the, " he whispered.

He straightened fast, locking onto the status window. His heart jumped, not from panic, but from sudden understanding still forming in his mind.

His Strength had dropped by exactly three points.

Exactly what the parentheses had shown.

He glanced down at the [Equipnt] section.

The sword was still listed.

"So…" His brows drew together. "It's not enough that I own it."

He picked the sword up.

Instantly, a familiar ssage appeared.

[Equipnt Equipped: Iron Short Sword]

[Strength 3]

The numbers returned.

Strength: 16 ( 3)

Leon stood in absolute silence for several seconds. Then he exhaled slowly, feeling the puzzle pieces finally click into place.

"Ah," he said quietly. "So bonuses only work when the item is actually equipped."

Not just possessed.

"That makes sense," he added, weighing the sword in his hand. "Otherwise soone could carry a hundred items and stack bonuses from all of them."

He looked at the gloves on his hands, then back at the equipnt list, then at his free stat points. He pulled the gloves off and checked again, watching Agility and Vitality drop, confirming his theory about the numbers in parentheses.

He nodded once, as if closing the case with himself.

"So the parentheses," he muttered, "are exactly how many stats I'm getting from equipped gear."

Simple. Logical. You just had to know where to look.

His eyes moved down to [Skills] and stopped at the clean split, active and passive, like the system assud the user would understand it instinctively.

"Passive…" he thought. So they probably work all the ti. No need to toggle them.

That tracked, especially with how Cold Mind had already saved him from falling apart more than once.

Then his eyes drifted up to his only active skill.

Darkness Manipulation.

Leon narrowed his eyes.

"…Shit." He smacked his forehead with an open palm. "I completely forgot about that."

He focused on the na, and after a second the description expanded automatically, letters sliding into place like the system had been waiting for the right amount of attention.

[Description: You can manipulate the basic form of darkness, an energy existing between light and absence. Allows limited shaping, suppression, and redirection of shadows and low-density dark energy. Effectiveness scales with Intelligence, Mana, and user imagination.]

Leon read it once. Then again.

"…between light and the lack of it," he repeated under his breath. "Yeah. Super helpful."

He scratched the back of his head, frustration mixing with genuine confusion.

"So what, I'm supposed to mold shadow like clay?" he muttered. "And what the hell does 'low-density' even an?"

He didn't get to settle on any real conclusion before sothing else hit him, a sour, unpleasant sll that seed to register only now. Leon wrinkled his nose and glanced around the room.

"What reeks in here…?"

He stopped mid-thought.

Looked down.

At his clothes, stiff with dried blood. Human blood. Zombie blood. That purple gunk from the wasp. The darker, almost black stuff from the mutant. His gloves, pants, shoes, everything soaked in the stink of fighting and death.

"…Oh," he said after a beat, grimacing. "That's probably ."

For a brief second, he found it absurd that in the middle of the apocalypse, his biggest problem in this exact mont was the fact that he slled horrible.

Then his gaze drifted toward the bathroom door.

"Water," he muttered. "It's still running."

That was enough.

He grabbed the sword and headed for the bathroom, closing the apartnt door behind him again on the way, like it would sohow make a difference. He set the weapon carefully against the wall within arm's reach, then started undressing, slowly, with a sigh of relief, like every piece of clothing he removed peeled off a layer of the day's weight.

He stepped into the shower and turned the water on.

Cold at first.

He twisted the knob further.

Warm water flowed.

Leon blinked, and a sincere, almost childlike, smile of relief broke across his face.

"…It works."

He stepped under the stream and let the hot water wash blood, sweat, and fear off his skin. Red and brown streaks swirled into the drain, and the tension in his muscles gradually began to loosen. He rested his forehead against cool tile and closed his eyes.

This might be one of the last showers like this, he thought, not panicked, just quietly realistic. Power, water… it'll probably be gone in a few days.

But as long as it lasted, he let himself have the luxury.

In a world that had just collapsed, a hot shower was a small, ridiculous victory.

After thirty minutes, the hot water finally died.

Leon stayed under the dwindling stream for a little longer anyway, palms pressed to the tile, exhaling with deep relief, like it was only now sinking in that, for a brief stretch of ti, nothing was attacking him, nothing was screaming, nothing was trying to kill him.

He shut the water off, grabbed a towel, dried his hair and shoulders, pulled on boxers, and draped a second towel around his neck. For a mont he felt absurdly… normal. Like it was just an ordinary evening after a hard day, not the end of the world.

He stepped out into the kitchenette, adjusting the towel with one hand. And he even let out a soft, unconscious whistle, because his mind held one simple thought:

Food. Sothing warm. Sothing that could trick his brain for a minute and let him forget blood, swords, and system windows.

He took two steps.

Then stopped so abruptly it felt like he'd slamd into an invisible wall.

The sound died in his throat.

His eyes widened in pure, disbelieving shock as he looked toward the living room, right there beside the couch where he'd been sitting earlier.

A u nconscious woman lay on the floor.

And spread behind her across the apartnt panels were long, black, feathered wings, so wide they nearly brushed the walls, so impossibly large they didn't belong in a cramped, ordinary apartnt where silence had ruled only monts ago.

Leon didn't move.

His heart hit his ribs a beat late, and his mind scrambled for anything logical, hallucination, exhaustion, so effect of a skill, anything, but none of it held, because the wings were too real.

"What the fuck…?!" he blurted, his voice thick with sheer disbelief.

You are reading Void Reaper: The Essence Apocalypse Chapter 11 11: This might be one of the last showers like th on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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