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Now reading: Chapter 506 - Plan Started from 100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?, a Fantasy novel by Meagerton.

Lucien decided it was ti.

The communication network had outgrown the stage where it could remain a private miracle hidden inside Lootwell like a clever toy shared only among insiders.

If he wanted to reshape the world properly, then the world had to begin touching the thing itself.

Not all at once.

They would begin with Sareth Region.

Test it there. Stress it there. Watch who loved it, who feared it, who tried to exploit it, who tried to steal it, and who proved clever enough to beco a future problem.

If all went well, then the spread would continue.

Lucien gathered the relevant people and walked through the final considerations again.

The devices themselves were already protected in several ways.

The Crafting Division had done good work.

Each device would recognize the owner’s mana signature during initial imprint. Once bound, it would not respond to another user except through authorized transfer rites.

If soone tried to force the connection, the device would simply refuse to awaken. If they attempted deeper probing through hostile spiritual inspection, the inner arrays would lock, the active routes would sever themselves, and the more sensitive sections would erase in layers before useful information could be extracted.

That was only the first line.

There was also a false shell-array sat close to the outer casing, ant to deceive ordinary reverse-engineers into thinking they had already found the core chanism when in fact they had only reached a disposable mimic layer.

A tampering mark was embedded deeper in the structure too. If soone opened the fra incorrectly, the device would not rely stop functioning, it would rember the intrusion pattern and report it the next ti it ca into range of an authorized signal node.

But even with all those precautions, Lucien knew the truth.

If enough people wanted to imitate the device, eventually soone would recreate sothing similar.

That part could not be avoided forever.

What they could not replicate, however, was the heart of it.

The devices were not the true miracle.

The Origin Core was.

Without a properly structured signal heart, all others would create were glorified paired-ssage artifacts or limited relay tools.

Still, before the full spread after Sareth, the narrative must be considered.

Lucien knew better than most that the world did not accept tools.

It accepted stories about tools.

If the first story surrounding the devices was "suspicious foreign objects that spy on you," then resistance would spread faster than use. If the first story was "an absurdly useful communication treasure that makes trade, family contact, dicine, and ergency response easier," then convenience would do half the conquering on its own.

So Sareth would not receive the devices as an invasion.

It would receive them as opportunity.

That was where Kael ca in.

Lucien called for him the next day.

Kael arrived quickly and with obvious delight already brewing in his expression.

When Lucien explained the plan, Kael’s whole face brightened.

"So I get to sell a world-changing device," he said. "In a major region."

Lucien smiled.

"That is the restrained version of what you’re doing, yes."

Kael laughed.

"Young Lord, I swear to you, by the ti I’m done, the people of Sareth won’t only want these devices. They’ll feel embarrassed rembering how they lived without them."

That was exactly the kind of answer Lucien expected from him.

Kael had always belonged to trade the way so n belonged to war.

And now he had the strength to back it.

He had reached the Ascendant Realm and integrated with the Law of Space, which made him even more dangerous in comrce than he had any right to be.

A rchant who understood distance was already troubleso. A rchant who could think with law-backed spatial instinct beca sothing like a smiling catastrophe for slower competitors.

Lucien spent a long while with him going through contingencies.

What to do if a local power tried to seize the goods. What to do if a sect tried to test the devices by force. How to price first exposure. How to stage demonstrations. How to avoid over-selling in one district and under-covering another. When to withdraw. When to escalate. Which nas from Reaper and Eldran’s route maps to trust. Which ones to smile at while quietly preparing to leave.

Kael learned the device quickly.

A salesman who did not understand the thing he sold was just a liar with packaging. Kael, by contrast, began asking imdiately useful questions about user behavior, interface friction, rchant anxiety, and aspirational ownership.

By the end of the session, Lucien was fully satisfied.

"Leave tomorrow," he said.

Kael grinned.

"I’ll bring back profit, influence, and probably a few dangerous rumors."

"That last one is the only part that worries ."

"It shouldn’t. Dangerous rumors are usually proof that sothing is selling."

Lucien let him go after that and called for Elk next.

He asked her to prepare the first batch.

Elk took that as a sacred challenge.

By the end of the hour, half the Crafting Division had already been pulled into motion under her direction. Packaging, casing finish, style differences for class tier, grip comfort, surface patterns that looked expensive without becoming gaudy, and protective travel housing were all suddenly urgent matters.

That left Lucien free to deal with another resource problem.’

•••

He entered his Divine Energy Core.

The caged ancient beasts sensed him long before he reached them. The mont they felt his presence moving closer, sothing in the atmosphere shifted.

Not because he spoke. Because he did not.

That unnerved them more.

Lucien had no interest in long speeches this ti.

He let his divine sense spread across the cages and examined what remained. Defiance still burned in so. The smarter ones had already begun re-evaluating their future in light of his recent growth, though pride kept them from saying it aloud.

His gaze settled on the Titan and the Behemoth.

The colors around them remained ugly.

So did their expressions.

They still glared at him with murderous intent, as if the fact of their captivity remained a temporary inconvenience rather than a settled truth.

Lucien walked toward their cages without hurry.

The other imprisoned beasts watched in total silence.

He stopped in front of them and asked, for the last ti,

"Are you certain you do not want to form a pact with ?"

The Behemoth slamd forward first. Its great hand struck the cage barrier in a rage thick enough to distort the air.

"A re human wants equal footing with ?"

The Titan’s contempt was no less.

Their killing intent surged uselessly against him.

Lucien only smiled.

"I gave you a chance."

Then he moved.

The pressure that ca off him as he stepped closer changed the place entirely. It was no longer the pressure of a talented human who had risen too fast.

It was sovereign weight.

The kind that told older things they had already missed the point at which refusal was still strength.

Even the other beasts felt it and swallowed instinctively.

Lucien approached the Titan first.

"If you refuse to be useful," he said, "then you’ll be used."

The Titan roared and attacked through the bars with shackled hands and all the hatred left to him.

Lucien did not dodge.

He no longer needed to.

He raised one hand and redirected the force with cold precision. At the sa mont, the full aura of the Unyielding Sovereign descended.

The Titan’s eyes widened.

Then Lucien activated Structural Insight.

The world turned into layered strings.

In one smooth step, he was above the Titan. His fingers touched the critical lines beneath its current stability, and the entire monstrous body convulsed once before collapsing into forced unconsciousness.

The prison sector went colder.

The Behemoth, seeing that, hesitated for the first ti.

Lucien was already standing before its cage.

"Wait," the Behemoth said.

Lucien’s answer ca without warmth.

"Too late."

A breath later, that one fell into slumber as well.

He broke the cages afterward, stripped the restraints, and transmuted their materials into usable tal without ceremony. Then he dragged both ancient beasts away in front of the others, who watched in complete silence.

No speech was needed.

The lesson had already been understood.

Be stubborn, and beco fuel.

Be useful, and perhaps remain a self.

By the ti Lucien left that place, more than one ancient beast had already begun rethinking its pride.

•••

From there, he went directly to the topmost levels of the Ascension Spire.

He had work to do.

The new fuel sources were integrated carefully.

The unconscious Titan. The sleeping Behemoth. And from the black cubes taken from Covenant-Breaker, three Void entities of the sa class as the Abyss-Eyed Devourer. They were far too hostile to ta cleanly and too alien to leave loose, but unconscious and properly bound, they were perfect for one thing.

Feeding the dungeon.

In total, five new dungeon batteries entered the system.

Lucien smiled as he worked.

This was enough.

Not for Celestial-level floors yet. But enough to push the middle layers open and raise the training ceiling sharply.

The dungeon cores from the small worlds still gave him imnse flexibility. Species identity, environntal patterning, behavioral reconstruction, ecological pressure design. With enough fuel, he could build far more than what currently existed.

So he did.

By the ti he was done, the Ascension Spire had changed again.

New middle floors opened.

New environnts ford.

Lucien still forbade his pets from entering.

Because they could ruin the resource balance.

•••

The next day, the middle floors opened.

And Lootwell nearly exploded with excitent.

The people poured into the Spire with the kind of enthusiasm usually reserved for either great opportunities or highly organized self-destruction. The reviews were imdiate. The monsters were harsher. Smarter. Better adapted. The environnt itself now fought alongside them.

Complaints rose too, which pleased Lucien greatly.

Most of the complaints boiled down to the sa thing:

The higher floors were still closed.

That ant the dungeon had succeeded.

Soon after, it was ti for Kael to leave.

He did not go alone.

Several forr Verdant Veil mbers had beco his friends well enough that they volunteered themselves eagerly for the journey. Edric, Maxim, and Ellen all intended to accompany him.

Lucien gave Edric a long look.

"Uncle Ed. Did Aunt Sylvia and Lucian actually approve this?"

Edric laughed, flexed a little too proudly, and answered without sha,

"I persuaded them."

Lucien did not believe that word ant what Edric wanted it to an.

Still, Edric continued cheerfully.

"Your Aunt Sylvia is obsessed with learning skills now, and Lucian practically lives in the Grand Archives. They’ve both got the communication devices. If sothing happens, we’ll talk."

That part was true, at least.

Lucien had no wish to cage the people under him into safety so complete it beca another prison. He wanted them alive, yes. But also free.

Maxim and Ellen looked no less eager.

They wanted to roam, see, trade, and test the world beyond the territory that had already beco their ho.

So Lucien let it stand.

He turned instead to Morveth.

The ancient beast looked at the departing group once, then at Lucien.

"Uncle Tortoise, I’m leaving responsibility to you," Lucien corrected. "If sothing goes wrong, please act. If soone threatens them, remind the world that Lootwell’s rchants do not travel unguarded."

Morveth’s smile was small and dangerous.

"That part I can do."

Lucien nodded once.

Then he watched as the group finally departed along the routes Reaper and Eldran had prepared.

Kael at the front, already talking as if profit could hear him. Edric laughing. Maxim and Ellen alert and bright-eyed. Morveth behind them like a quiet disaster held on a leash.

Lucien stood there until they disappeared from imdiate sight.

Then he turned back toward Lootwell.

The network had begun moving outward. The dungeon had grown. The beasts were learning fear. The territory was nearing the point where its hidden strength would beco difficult to hide forever.

And sohow, after all that—

he found himself smiling.

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