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Absolute Cheater-Chapter 296: last key III
With every step forward, something was stolen.
A face forgotten.
A name misremembered.
A reason to keep going, fading like breath on glass.
Valeris staggered for half a moment, blinking as the name of her first blade slipped from her mind. She grit her teeth and pressed forward, eyes locked on the tower's distant center—a pulsing throat in the shape of a spire, drinking in their resolve with every heartbeat.
The air itself conspired to devour them. Each inhalation came with cost. Each exhalation returned less than it gave.
It was not an illusion.
It was Sovereign design.
This place was not meant to test them. It was meant to erase them.
But Asher stood still.
And bled.
Not from wounds. Not from weakness.
He bled on purpose.
He extended one arm, palm open to the sky. A long, slow cut across his wrist. The blood didn't fall; it rose, steaming with lightless energy, glistening crimson-black under the gnashing sky.
Bloodlit Dominion.
The Second Vein of the Sanguine Supreme awakened in full.
His blood ignited with arcane logic, glowing with symbols far older than the tongue of Sovereigns. Glyphs spiraled from his flesh, burning into the air, etching themselves across the nearest mouths. They shrieked—but it wasn't pain. It was confusion.
Asher didn't retreat from the hunger.
He fed it.
Poured himself into the mouths—not as prey, but as poison. His essence flooded the devouring field, not resisting the consumption, but rewriting it.
"You feed only on despair," he whispered, his voice echoing with blood-forged will.
"I have none left." fгeewёbnoѵel.cσm
The glyphs flared. A thousand mouths bit down on his soul—and recoiled, gagging, unable to digest what no longer fit their design.
One by one, the teeth turned grey.
Stone replaced hunger.
Silence replaced gnashing.
Valeris stared, the tips of her hair lifting in the residual energy of his rite. Her voice came soft, almost reverent.
"He's learning," she said, "to rewrite Sovereign logic."
And the tower, sensing this, grew afraid.
Final Threshold: Self.
A single chamber.
No sky.
No light.
No sound.
Only a mirror.
It waited in the void like a wound in reality—tall, obsidian, rippling with quiet malice. The glass did not reflect his body. It reflected his path.
And there, inside the mirror—Asher.
But not the one who stood before it.
This version had taken the Soul Heart by force. Had consumed every ounce of forbidden power the moment it became available. Had walked the Crimson Path without hesitation, without mercy, without pause. No questions. No doubts. No restraints.
Not broken.
Perfect.
Cold.
The ideal culmination of the Sanguine Supreme.
It didn't need to step out of the mirror.
It was already inside him.
Valeris was gone. Not taken—removed. The tower knew this trial was his alone. No blade. No command. No shared burden. Only self.
The dark version of him did not speak. It simply existed—still and patient. Waiting not to be defeated, but understood.
Asher didn't draw a weapon.
He approached the mirror and stared deep—not into the other Asher, but into the places where his reflection and his memory blurred. The choices he might have made. The temptations he had nearly surrendered to. The power that still called to him with whispers of simplicity and dominance.
He didn't argue with it.
He didn't deny it.
He acknowledged it.
"I know what you are," he said. "What I could be, if I stopped caring. If I let the blood decide instead of the heart."
The mirrored version tilted its head—no menace, only curiosity. Waiting.
"But I chose something harder," Asher whispered. "To bleed and feel. To kill and remember. To walk forward without losing what makes me human."
The mirror shuddered.
Cracks raced across the glass—fracturing not the image, but the certainty of it. The perfection began to dissolve, unraveling like shadow in morning light.
The dark version of him smiled—not in defeat, but in relief.
Because it, too, had been waiting to be seen and released.
When the mirror shattered, no shards fell.
Just silence.
But silence did not remain for long.
From the mirror's hollow frame—now an empty arch in the void—something stirred.
Light bled through.
Not the warm radiance of hope, nor the searing blaze of conquest, but a deep, pulsing glow—crimson edged with gold, slow and deliberate, like a heartbeat remembered by the world itself.
It hovered where his reflection had once stood.
A Key.
But not like the others.
This was no ornate artifact, no piece of metal shaped by artisans or Sovereigns. It was alive. Pulsating, like a heart sculpted from starlight and blood. It radiated paradox—finality and beginning, surrender and sovereignty.
The last Sovereign Key.
Asher reached forward, not in hunger, not in triumph, but with something closer to reverence. His fingers brushed the edges of its glow—and it trembled, not resisting him, but recognizing him.
He didn't seize it.
He accepted it.
And then—
A ripple.
A breath.
The void screamed.
Reality twisted—and Valeris reappeared, hurled backward through the air as if spat from the Threshold itself. Her boots scraped sparks on the glasslike ground. She landed in a crouch, blade half-drawn, eyes flashing with the heat of battle.
"Asher!" she barked, scanning the chamber. "I—what just—"
Then she saw it.
The Key, still suspended.
The mirror, shattered.
He turned to her slowly, holding the Sovereign Key not like a weapon, but like a memory made solid. The light of it pulsed through his veins, visible beneath his skin in veins of molten red.
His voice, when he spoke, was calm.
"It wasn't a fight," he said. "It was a choice."
Valeris stepped forward, gaze sharp but softening. "And you made it."
He nodded.
Then, from somewhere high above them, the tower groaned—no longer resisting, but yielding. The trial was over.
The ground trembled beneath them—not with violence, but with release.
The tower—ancient, immense, and once defiant—shuddered from its foundation to its peak. The air rippled, shedding the last remnants of Sovereign resistance. Walls began to unweave into radiant threads of logic and stone, unraveling like the final stanza of an ancient hymn.
The mirror-frame dissolved behind them.
Before them, a passage appeared.