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The black gate lood ahead, its surface absorbing what little light the corridor dared to give. It stood like a sentinel from a forgotten age, towering over three ters tall, carved from shadow-dark ore that shimred faintly when struck by the wavering glow of Li Wei’s lantern. Within its colossal fra, dozens of silver gears turned with thodical grace—interlocking, disengaging, realigning—as though possessed of thought, or bound to a will not yet sated.

Each click of the gears echoed like distant thunder through the passage ~klak-klak~ klak~, unsettling the dust from the eaves above. The sound was not deafening, but deliberate—warning.

Li Wei’s steps slowed, his sharp gaze sweeping over the chanical marvel with asured caution. His breath misted slightly in the air, a sign the spiritual tension in the passage was rising. Leng Yue ca to a halt beside him, her cloak whispering against the stone. Her eyes—cool and calculating—locked upon the inscriptions running along the upper rim of the archway.

"This door is built like a barricade," she murmured, stepping forward with one hand extended. Her fingers hovered a hair’s breadth from the surface, where ancient glyphs writhed faintly with a pearlescent sheen. "The runes above it are... hm..."

She narrowed her eyes, focusing on the sequence. Her pupils dilated as she shifted into a subtle ditative state, drawing on a sliver of qi to better perceive the script. "These patterns render this object resistant to most elents. Fire, water, lightning—none shall breach this wall, save perhaps heaven’s own fury."

"A ward against brute force, then," Li Wei said, stroking his chin. His eyes remained on the gate, but his thoughts were already darting elsewhere. If the gate cannot be broken...

"...What about the surroundings?" he finished aloud, turning on his heel. The young master’s voice was calm, but with the undercurrent of sudden insight. "The ancients left few things to chance, but they loved misdirection more than blood."

Without delay, he began retracing his steps, scanning the murals carved into the stone walls that frad this part of the corridor. Each was a tapestry of life and struggle, frozen in pignt and mineral. They had passed these scenes in haste earlier, yet now their secrets whispered louder than ever.

"If I am right," he muttered, drawing close to a mural that depicted a mountain valley soaked in starlight, "then the answer lies within one of these scenes..."

His fingers traced the edge of a painted ridge. The stone was cold to the touch, and smooth—too smooth. The murals had not suffered erosion from ti alone. They had been maintained by intent.

Leng Yue, without needing a command, mirrored his actions on the opposite wall. She moved with the precision of a watchful serpent, her eyes flicking from crack to crevice, her hands brushing lightly against each irregular seam. She tapped several places—listening for hollow echoes—pressed her palm against cold inlays of copper and jade, and even sniffed the air for scents beyond dust.

"I can’t find a passage," she said after a ti, "but sothing strange about these walls. I can feel a pulse beneath my feet—barely."

"No sign of a passage," Li Wei answered, standing before a new mural, "but perhaps there is a path."

He was gazing now at a vivid depiction—two celestial beasts locked in combat. A great eastern dragon, its coils vast and storm-wreathed, clashed in a frozen mont of fury with a primal lion, its mane alight with gold and ash. Claws t fangs, talons struck hide. Yet their battle, fierce as it appeared, bore one unsettling flaw.

"Their eyes..." Li Wei murmured. He stepped closer, squinting, aligning himself to match their angles of gaze. "Neither of them is looking at the other."

Leng Yue turned her head toward him. "What?"

"They’re staring away from each other," he continued, lifting a hand to trace their lines of sight. "Both are fixed... there."

He pointed. And sure enough—farther down the corridor, where the torchlight barely reached—stood a plain slab of wall. Unadorned. Unremarkable. But now, in light of the beasts’ disinterested gazes, deeply suspicious.

He strode toward it, hands behind his back, spine straight. The chill in the air thickened as he drew near the wall. Sothing here had been deliberately hidden—not with illusion, but with attention. The eye was drawn elsewhere by chaos, by fury... but those were feints.

"Interesting..." he said under his breath. "Two beasts clashing, but their war ans nothing. They are pointing the way."

He stopped short. Another mural, near the right corner.

This one showed a tempestuous sea, and a ship caught in its jaws. Sailors fought valiantly against a monstrous crustacean that lood above the deck, pincers snapping like scythes. But amidst the frenzy, one figure stood serene. A lone sailor, untouched by battle, stood on the bow... pointing.

Pointing toward empty air.

"Now this is clever..." Li Wei said, stepping back. He looked up.

There, carved into the ceiling—barely visible save from the exact angle that sailor had gestured—was another set of paintings. The ceiling had been darkened with soot or shadow-wash, hiding it unless one knew to look. Now it caught the flicker of the torch.

He tilted the fla upward. The ceiling mural revealed itself slowly: the sa ship, now safe under a starlit sky. The monstrous crustacean nowhere to be seen. And the sa sailor—now placing a glowing object into the hands of a robed figure.

"They buried truth not beneath stone, but beneath attention," he whispered. "To follow the gaze is to follow the path."

Leng Yue had drawn closer, her gaze scanning ceiling to wall to floor. "So the beasts show where to look. The sailor shows how."

"Aye," Li Wei said. "This gate was never the door. It was the distraction."

He returned to the slab the beasts had been staring toward. With slow, deliberate motion, he pressed his palm flat against the center.

Nothing.

He withdrew, then pressed again—this ti releasing a whisper of qi into the stone.

~thnnnk~

A faint vibration. The stone beneath his hand began to warm.

A rune appeared—a single character, long dormant, now flaring to light.

Insight.

The slab trembled. A seam appeared along its left edge. Then—

~grrrrk~

—stone shifted. A portion of the wall slid inward, revealing a dark corridor veiled by silence and the sll of untouched air.

Li Wei glanced back toward Leng Yue. Her lips quivered faintly in amusent.

"You were right," she said. "As always."

"No. Just curious," he replied. "But let’s not flatter fate."

And with that, they stepped through the hidden passage.

Beyond, the dark awaited.

You are reading Young Master System: My Mother Is the Matriarch Chapter 100: The Gaze Beyond on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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