Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 600 600: Pride from I Died and Became a Noble's Heir, a Fantasy novel by DungeonKing.

The Soul Warden's domain.

The place where judgnt was rendered, and souls were weighed. The tower where defiance ant eternal suffering rather than quick death.

Jack's mana began radiating outward, not as visible discharge but as atmospheric pressure that pressed against everything in the chamber.

The air itself grew heavy, each breath requiring conscious effort as the weight of his presence asserted itself across the entire floor.

His demonic essence integrated with the shadow's nature, creating an aura that transcended simple magical intimidation.

This was Pride made manifest, the fundantal certainty that he possessed the right to demand anything from anyone because he possessed the strength to enforce that demand.

The six serpents began lowering their heads slowly, massive skulls dipping until snouts touched the pedestals they'd been coiled around.

The gesture unequivocally communicated deference, as the entities acknowledged a higher authority with a profound reverence.

But they hesitated, their eyes shifting toward one another as if seeking consensus.

The air in the chamber grew tenser, their collective awareness weighing options that all ended poorly but varied in degree of suffering.

"Soul Warden," one of them whispered, its voice carrying through the chamber despite barely audible volu.

"Master," another stated, the title erging with weight.

The serpents looked to each other one final ti, their glowing eyes eting in silent communication that transcended verbal language.

Then, as if reaching a unanimous decision, all six lowered their heads completely, snouts pressing against their pedestals in a gesture of absolute submission.

"Liege," a third individual affird, their tone conveying a sense of resignation tempered with relief that the confrontation concluded without necessitating their intervention.

The remaining three maintained their bowed positions, their silence communicating acceptance more clearly than words could have managed.

Jack's boot lifted from the lead serpent's skull, releasing the pressure that had kept it pinned against fractured stone.

Oscar withdrew from the creature's throat, the four-bladed tip sliding free as the wound began healing despite the weapon's regeneration negation.

The lead serpent raised its head slowly, its movents careful to avoid appearing threatening.

Silver-purple blood still leaked from the puncture wounds, but the flow had slowed to a trickle as supernatural constitution began repairing the damage.

Its eyes t Jack's gaze, the rage and humiliation replaced by sothing closer to acceptance.

"The blood is yours, Soul Warden," it stated, its voice steady despite the trauma it had just endured. "As agreed in the ancient pact. Seven vessels for seven servants. We will fulfill our obligation."

The serpent's tongue flicked out one final ti before it spoke again, its tone shifting to carry curiosity beneath the submission.

"The Titans have been silent for generations. The old wars are long past. Why does the Soul Warden claim his throne now, in this age when the towers stand empty, and the Wardens are forgotten?"

Jack didn't answer imdiately.

He dismissed Oscar back to dinsional storage, the sentient spear vanishing with a quiet hum of displaced space.

His hand moved to the obsidian bowl, lifting the vessel carefully to avoid spilling the blood within.

The liquid glowed brighter in his grip, responding to his touch in ways that confird its supernatural properties.

This wasn't a simple biological fluid.

It was a condensed magical essence, the accumulated power of creatures that had existed for centuries and had absorbed ambient mana throughout their existence.

"The Titans are not silent," Jack stated, his voice carrying across the chamber with certainty that made the words feel like a revelation rather than an opinion. "They're waiting. And when they move, everything you think you know about this world will change."

He looked toward Malakai, still perched on his pillar, still watching with satisfaction that hadn't diminished despite the confrontation reaching its conclusion.

"The Soul Warden claims his throne," Jack continued, his attention returning to the seven serpents now bowing before him, "because soone needs to be ready when the old wars begin again."

Malakai's laugh echoed through the chamber once more, darker and deeper than before.

The entity's form flickered rapidly between its three states before settling back into its human appearance.

"The subconscious limiter is gone," Malakai observed, his voice carrying approval that bordered on parental pride.

"You're not a human pretending to be a demon anymore, Jack Kaiser. You're not asuring your actions against morality that doesn't apply. You're not asking permission or seeking justification."

The entity stood on his pillar, his translucent form seeming more solid than it had monts ago.

"You are the Soul Warden," Malakai stated with finality that made the title feel like a fundantal identity. "And you have finally stopped asking for permission to rule."

Jack's grip on the obsidian bowl tightened fractionally, the vessel containing blood that would fuel the Soul Realm's construction once he returned to Tartarus Spire.

But the hardest part was done.

The demonstration of authority, the establishnt of hierarchy, and the confirmation that ancient pacts would be enforced regardless of how much ti had passed since their creation.

The lead serpent slowly rose from its bowed position, its massive form coiling back around its pedestal with movents that remained careful.

Its eyes tracked Jack's every motion, no longer assessing him as a potential threat but recognizing him as an established authority.

The other six serpents began uncoiling as well, their massive forms sliding across polished stone as they moved to positions around the chamber.

They had known this mont would co. They had been waiting for it, preparing for it, perhaps dreading it, but never doubting it would eventually arrive.

Jack remained in the chamber's center, the obsidian bowl in his hand, and Malakai watching from above.

The dungeon's tenth floor had been designed for this confrontation, this establishnt of hierarchy, this confirmation that the Soul Warden's authority extended beyond simple combat prowess into the realm of ancient contracts and obligations that transcended individual power.

The serpents arranged themselves in their semicircle, heads bowed, massive forms radiating submission that would have been impossible to achieve through force alone.

They served now not because Jack had defeated them, but because the pact demanded it, and defying that pact ant consequences worse than simple death.

Malakai descended from his pillar, his translucent form gliding through the air as if gravity were an optional suggestion rather than a physical law.

He landed beside Jack with a quiet impact, his silver-veined features carrying satisfaction that had only intensified throughout the confrontation.

"The floors taught you well," Malakai observed, his voice quieter now that the demonstration had concluded. "Each challenge stripped away another layer of hesitation, another piece of the frawork you'd built to restrain yourself. By the ti you reached the ninth floor, all that remained was accepting what you'd already beco."

Jack's eyes remained fixed on the seven serpents, his awareness tracking their movents as they prepared whatever ritual the ancient pact required.

His hand tightened around the obsidian bowl, feeling the blood within pulse with a rhythm that matched his heartbeat.

"The integration wasn't corruption," Jack stated, his tone carrying certainty rather than question. "It was acceptance. The shadow didn't make into sothing I wasn't. It just showed what I'd been pretending not to be."

"Exactly," Malakai confird, his expression shifting into sothing approaching genuine pleasure. "And now you stand here, having just pinned an ancient guardian and drained its blood without hesitation. That's not the human who died in the truck. That's not even the reincarnated noble playing at being a tactical genius."

The entity's silver veins pulsed brighter.

"That's the Soul Warden who will rebuild the towers and prepare for wars that haven't been fought in generations. That's the King who stopped asking for permission and started demanding."

Malakai's hand settled on Jack's shoulder, the touch carrying weight beyond simple physical contact.

The entity's translucent fingers pressed against Jack's jacket.

The Soul Warden had claid his harvest.

And the King had stopped asking for permission to rule.

The Soul Warden had claid his harvest.

And the King had stopped asking for permission to rule.

You are reading I Died and Became a Noble's Heir Chapter 600 600: Pride on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Blade Over Magic cover
Same genre

Blade Over Magic

BjOmonobi4986 ·Fantasy

XanderwashailedasTheSwordmasteronearth.Whenitcametoblades,heheldnoequal.Itdidn'tmaterwhatcategoryorhowexperiencedhisopponentwas.Hewasjustbetter,and...

The Innkeeper cover
Trending now

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.