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Now reading: Chapter 482 - Truth of the Battle from 100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?, a Fantasy novel by Meagerton.

Everyone reacted at once.

Relief, disbelief, joy, grief, gratitude, laughter, tears... everything struck at the sa ti and broke across the gathering like a wave that had waited too long behind a dam.

Vivian was the first to move.

She ran to him and threw her arms around him so hard that Lucien nearly rocked back a step.

Lucien laughed softly and held her.

"Sis," he said, voice warm and unmistakably his, "I’m back."

That only made her cry harder.

"I know," Vivian said through tears. "I knew you would."

Behind her, Sebas lowered his head and wept openly without caring who saw it.

"Young Lord..." he said, and the title ca out like prayer, oath, and relief all at once.

Cielius laughed like a man who had just been handed back years he had already mourned. His old shoulders shook with the force of it.

Clara fell to her knees imdiately. Her hands clasped themselves so hard her knuckles whitened, and as she began another of her absurdly sincere prayers under her breath.

"My lord has returned. Naturally. Death was clearly overconfident."

Marie swore and scrubbed furiously at her eyes. Marina made one broken sound, then another. Kaia turned away for a second too long. Sylra did not even try to hide it. She smiled. Even Eirene’s familiar trembled once in visible relief before floating a little closer, the small fairy’s eyes shining.

Luke and Cienna did not move at first.

They only looked at him.

Then Cienna stepped forward and placed a trembling hand against Lucien’s cheek.

She touched him with the care of soone still asking reality for one final confirmation.

The skin was warm.

He was there.

Luke let out one short laugh.

"You ridiculous boy," he said.

Lucien’s grin widened.

Around them, the entire territory erupted.

Those gathered nearby could no longer hold themselves back. Shouts rose. Cries answered them. So laughed, so wept, so dropped to one knee, so raised their hands to the sky. Others simply stared, overwheld by the fact that they had just witnessed sothing impossible and had been forced to accept that impossible things apparently still obeyed Lucien better than ordinary ones obeyed everyone else.

He was patient with all of it.

It was as though he had fully expected that if he made it this far, the first thing waiting for him would be too many emotions at once and people who deserved answers before calm.

So he greeted them one by one.

He held Vivian until she could breathe properly again. He reached over and rested a hand on Sebas’s shoulder long enough that the older man had to shut his eyes. He inclined his head to Cielius with all the affection a grandson could place into a single gesture. He smiled at Clara, which nearly caused her faith to ascend into a new and even more dangerous form on the spot.

Then he looked farther.

Across the territory.

The place where he had been born and once ruled in smaller ways than the world now knew.

Lootwell had changed.

The people had changed too. They had matured. The old division representatives stood among the others with expressions he knew imdiately. Pride.

Lucien nodded to them.

Then Lucien’s eyes moved farther still.

The five beacons of light were there too, no longer the sa figures they had been in his mory. They had grown. Their bearing had sharpened. Yet standing behind Elunara as though so habits had simply beco sacred, they still felt familiar.

Lucien smiled at them too.

His subjects, his allies, his people.

The reason he still lived.

He closed his eyes for one brief mont.

And for a few heartbeats, he let himself feel it.

The old sensation of standing in Lootwell as its lord.

It ca back quietly.

When he opened his eyes again, his smile had deepened.

•••

Soon after, they gathered in the city hall.

They sat around the large round table, and Lucien was now surrounded by the people he considered closest to family.

At first, the questions ca gently.

How did he feel? Was the vessel stable? Did anything hurt? Did he rember everything?

Then ca the apologies.

For forgetting him. For not reaching him sooner. For being absent when he was alone. For failing him in ways they still could not forgive in themselves.

Lucien answered each one patiently.

He did not dismiss their feelings, but he did not let them drown in them either.

"It happened," he told them. "The enemy we were facing was built exactly for that kind of horror. If I bla everyone for being hit by sothing designed to erase from relation itself, then I’d have to start blaming the universe for functioning badly too."

"That sounds like sothing you would do," Marie muttered.

Lucien smiled.

"Yes. But only on tiring days."

That earned the room its first real breath of laughter.

Then, after a while, Cecil asked the question no one else had quite dared to speak aloud yet.

"My Lord! How... exactly did you die?"

Silence followed.

Lucien did not answer imdiately.

That made the room tighten.

They thought, for one brief mont, that perhaps the battle had left a scar too deep to revisit.

Cecil realized it too and imdiately looked horrified.

"Young Lord, I didn’t an— I just— I was not trying to dig at anything—"

Lucien raised a hand slightly, stopping him.

"It’s fine."

He exhaled through his nose and leaned back.

Then he smiled, but this ti with a trace of helplessness.

"It isn’t that I mind telling you," he said. "It’s that if I explain it normally, it will sound like a lie halfway through."

That confused them just enough to ease the tension.

Lucien lifted one hand.

"Fortunately," he said, "Marina gave a useful trick."

Marina blinked.

Then her eyes widened.

"You an... the mory bubbles?"

Lucien nodded.

A cluster of shimring spheres blood into the air above the center of the table. At first they looked like transparent pearls hanging in the light, but then they deepened, widened, and began replaying events with perfect fidelity.

The room fell silent at once.

Starting from the beginning, Lucien let them see it.

Oblivion. The first death. The sudden blackness. The horrifying instant of being erased before reaction even mattered.

Then the forgetting.

The world losing him. People passing him as though he had never been part of their lives. The unbearable cut of seeing Morveth and Aerolith fail to recognize him. The wrongness of absence entering every connection at once.

No one in the room breathed loudly after that.

Luke and Cienna sat utterly still, their eyes fixed on the mory bubbles with a focus so complete it had beco violent. They were not rely watching. They were studying. Learning the faces of the enemies who had done this to their son. asuring them. Committing them to the deepest places in themselves for future use.

Vivian had both hands over her mouth. Sebas looked as though he wanted to reach into the mory and kill sothing imdiately. Cielius’s face had lost all softness.

The older ones in the room understood the implications faster.

They knew what kind of impossibility Lucien had faced. They understood how ridiculous it was that he had remained functional inside that kind of despair.

The younger ones reacted differently.

Cecil and the five beacons stared with eyes full of blazing disbelief. Seeing proof of him doing the unreasonable on that scale made belief feel almost too small a word.

Clara was the strangest of all.

Her hands were clasped under her chin. Tears slipped steadily down her face, and yet she wore a feverishly radiant smile, as though each new impossible scene only deepened her conviction that the world itself was lucky to have ever been arranged around her lord’s existence.

"Ah," she whispered reverently. "That is my lord. The finest of all creations."

Lucien, still seated among them, guided the mories carefully.

Whenever the battle accelerated into motions their eyes could not have followed, he slowed the bubbles down. Whenever an exchange depended on items or techniques they would not understand, he paused and explained.

He told them the items he burned through just to stay alive one step longer. The way he learned even as he died.

He did not glorify it.

He explained it like a craftsman reviewing a desperate work with people he trusted enough to see both the brilliance and the panic in it.

Then ca the part where hope had nearly failed him.

The mory of him broken, cornered, dying under the pressure of two Primordial Incarnations at once.

The room had gone completely still by then.

And then—

the eclipse.

The second Moonfall.

The mont he saw it and laughed.

Lucien himself laughed softly at that mory now, though there was no mockery in it. Only gratitude too large to hide.

"When I lost all hope," he said, glancing sideways, "I was rembered."

That line hit the won harder than the battlefield footage had.

Marie rubbed at her nose again and imdiately looked annoyed at being caught looking emotional.

Kaia coughed once into her fist but because she had suddenly beco very interested in not eting anyone’s eyes.

Sylra’s gaze slid away with unusual speed.

Marina openly cried again, though this ti she smiled while doing it.

Eirene’s familiar simply watched him with a calm, quiet expression that sohow revealed the most.

Lucien continued, gently now.

"Without them, I wouldn’t have had the opening I needed. They gave enough room to move from survival to planning again."

He looked at each of them in turn.

"Thank you."

The sincerity in it made protest impossible.

Then the mory bubbles moved deeper.

Abyss Mode.

Lucien explained that Alanthuriel’s dark radiance had not been spent foolishly. He had divided it into three portions.

"The first portion," he said, "was the one I used for Abyss Mode itself. That was what let stand on equal footing with Convergence for a while."

The mory showed it again. The impossible exchange of conceptual blows.

The room watched in awe.

"But during that part of the battle," Lucien continued, "I was doing sothing else too."

While fighting, a strand of his consciousness had been split away.

It reached, through pressure and death and chaos, toward Skillpedia and the Magic Book.

Luke and Cienna straightened at once.

Lucien smiled faintly.

"I was building a skill."

Marie blinked.

"In the middle of that?"

Lucien shrugged.

"I had ti between dying."

That made even Luke cover his face for one second.

Lucien went on.

"It wasn’t a normal skill. It was part skill, part spell-logic, and part transmission key. It could only be activated if Father and Mother used it together. The dark radiance woven into it was there specifically to erase Oblivion’s influence long enough for mory to return."

Cienna stared at him.

"You did all of that while fighting?"

Lucien nodded.

"I knew you would find eventually, even if I died first. And because your laws are what they are, the restrictions wouldn’t matter once the skill reached you. Law of Skills. Law of Magic. You were the perfect pair to carry it."

Luke laughed once under his breath.

"That’s my boy!"

Lucien smiled.

"What surprised ," he admitted, "was how quickly you found . I expected it to take months."

Luke smiled.

"After all, you created our current bodies. And our old connection to Skillpedia and the Magic Book never really broke."

That explanation left the room reeling in a different way.

Then they reached the final scene.

Lucien’s death.

Or rather, the part just before it.

He was ruined. Unrecognizable. Laughing still. And then—

smoking.

The room almost broke.

Even Clara seed briefly uncertain whether smoking while being beaten to death by a Primordial Incarnation counted as holy behavior or simply another impossible Lucien thing.

Lucien coughed lightly into his fist.

"I should explain that before anyone reaches the wrong conclusion."

"You an," Vivian said, staring at him, "before I conclude you were out of your mind?"

"That too."

He pointed at the mory.

"The last portion of the dark radiance was used there."

The room quieted again.

Lucien continued.

"I couldn’t erase Convergence’s desire to kill . That would have been too obvious. He would have noticed imdiately that sothing fundantal had been altered."

The mory slowed further.

The cigarette. The smoke. The exhale into Convergence’s face.

"So instead," Lucien said, "I erased sothing smaller. His desire to take my body."

Luke’s expression changed first.

Understanding arrived like a blade being drawn.

Lucien nodded.

"He still wanted dead. But once the desire to turn into a shell disappeared, the cost-benefit shifted. So when everyone arrived, he didn’t hesitate over my body. He abandoned it."

He smiled.

"And that was enough."

The room fell into a stunned kind of silence.

Because now they understood the scale of what they had watched.

Nothing in that battle had been random.

Lucien had been dying repeatedly in a fight no one else there could have survived for more than an instant, and still he had been arranging future consequences down to the level of what a single exhale would remove from an enemy’s priorities.

Cielius finally leaned back and let out a long breath.

"Grandson, you really did calculate every part of it."

Lucien made a small face.

"Not every part. Just enough parts to keep living badly."

That earned him a round of incredulous laughter.

But when the mory bubbles finally ended, the dominant feeling in the room was not shock.

It was pride.

He had killed one incarnation.

Not truly forever, perhaps. But enough that Severance would not return to the Big World for a very long ti. Enough that Convergence had been left mauled and delayed. Enough that impossible enemies had been forced to pay.

And Lucien had done it while everyone forgot him, while death followed him from angle to angle, and while he was already planning beyond his own ending.

The people around the table stared at him.

Now they had seen, in full, exactly how hard he had fought to co back to them.

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