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Now reading: Chapter 81. Game Changer from Re:Birth: A Slow Burn LitRPG Mage Regressor, a Comedy novel by AcetheOwl.

Adom watched Cass's face carefully. No screaming. No gasping. No demands for imdiate explanations. Just a calm, asured assessnt of the armored golem now standing in her hospital room.

This wasn't how he'd expected this to go. People usually reacted more dramatically when they discovered his secrets. In his experience, even the most composed individuals tended to lose their cool when confronted with the impossible.

But not Cass. She hadn't even blinked.

"I know how this looks," he began, "and I—"

"I would have done the sa," Cass interrupted.

Adom stopped mid-sentence. "Pardon ?"

Cass adjusted herself against the pillows, wincing slightly as she moved her bandaged head. "I saw John fight in the dungeon. This is by far the most advanced golem I've ever seen. Enough to not have anyone think it's a golem. It can even use Fluid. A war golem."

She gestured toward John with a small wave. The golem remained motionless.

"So I understand," she continued. "I would have hidden it from everyone too, until a mont like this when I'd have no choice but to trust soone enough to reveal it." She shrugged. "Logical progression."

Adom stood there for a mont, his prepared explanation dying on his lips. He'd spent two hours rehearsing this mont while waiting for her to wake up. He'd anticipated shock, anger, perhaps even fear. He'd prepared counterargunts and reassurances.

But not for this. Never for this.

"That was... easier than I thought it would be," he admitted.

"I don't like drama," Cass said flatly. "It's ti-consuming."

Adom laughed, a loud laugh that surprised even him. "You know, Cass, I'm very happy I t you and not another. You're simple to talk to."

"I would have said the sa about you a few hours ago if I hadn't just almost been killed," Cass replied in a deadpan, serious tone. She adjusted her bandage slightly. "But I do share the sentint."

This set Adom laughing again. It wasn't particularly funny, but the tension of the past day needed so release. Maybe he was more rattled by the bombing than he wanted to admit.

He finally composed himself, straightening in his chair. "Let's cut to the chase. Are you ready to listen to my plan?"

Cass smiled back at him. It wasn't her usual businesslike smile—this one had an edge to it, like a rchant who'd just spotted a weakness in a negotiation.

"I'm all ears," she said. "Tell everything."

*****

Midday sun beat down on Adom as he stood before the cave entrance, squinting against the glare. The morning had dragged on forever—combat training followed by an unnecessarily detailed alchemy lecture on the properties of wyrm bile. His classmates were still debating the finer points of stomach acid as he'd slipped away.

The rest of his day was free. Finally.

He approached the cave entrance, his shadow stretching before him on the ground.

"Tomorrow," he said clearly.

The stone rippled, solid rock becoming fluid for a mont before parting to reveal the passage. Adom stepped inside, the cooler air a welco relief after the heat outside. The cave sealed itself behind him with a soft grinding sound.

He moved through the main chamber, past the comfortable area he'd set up for himself, and toward the entrance he'd been avoiding forever. The one that led to the trial rooms.

He was 98% sure he wouldn't have any nasty surprises this ti, but still. Getting swallowed by a stone snake once was enough trauma for anyone.

Adom placed his hand against the wall, channeling mana into the ancient runes carved there. As expected, the snake's eye began to glow with an eerie white light.

"Just do your job," he sighed.

But instead of violently swallowing him whole like last ti, the stone giant snake's mouth simply opened, revealing a swirling portal of energy. It waited, as if politely inviting Adom to enter of his own accord.

"You know," Adom remarked to the stone sculpture, "it would have been more polite—and would have still worked—if you'd done this the first ti around. Instead of swallowing without my consent and all."

The stone snake didn't answer.

It was normal. It was a stone snake.

Adom found relief in that lack of response. He hadn't expected one, but in this place, you never knew. Stone snakes that swallowed people whole existed, after all.

He stepped through the portal.

Instantly, he found himself in the familiar chamber where he'd first t Bob. Sa high ceiling. Sa strange markings on the walls. Sa slightly musty sll of ancient stone.

Speaking of Bob, Adom wondered how the leprechaun was doing. He'd been avoiding using the whistle unless absolutely necessary—no sense bothering the little man for trivial matters—but he was starting to miss him. The rock Bob had perched on during their first eting was still there, worn smooth in the exact spot where the leprechaun had sat.

Behind Adom, the portal remained open—another difference from his first visit. Back then, he'd been trapped with no visible exit.

He turned toward the entrance of the Trial of Courage, a simple archway carved into the far wall. Last ti, it had led him into pitch darkness and a series of nightmarish scenarios designed to test his ttle.

"Please," he muttered to no one in particular, "no surprises this ti."

The mont he stepped through the archway, lights flared to life along the walls—glowing crystals embedded in the stone that illuminated the passage ahead.

Another thing that hadn't happened last ti.

Adom paused, looking back over his shoulder at the portal that still swirled invitingly behind him. He could leave now if he wanted. Return to the main cave. Go back to the academy.

Or he could continue forward.

He took a deep breath and stepped deeper into the passage.

Unlike his first visit, when he'd stumbled blindly through darkness, the illuminated passageway revealed its secrets.

The walls were absolutely covered in runes.

They spiraled across every surface—floor, ceiling, walls—so clustered in complex formations, others standing alone in stark isolation. Adom ran his fingers along them as he passed, feeling the slight vibration of dormant power.

This content has been unlawfully taken from ; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.

"Interesting," he muttered, tracing a particularly intricate sequence.

So were ancient. The kind you'd find in first-year textbooks at the Academy. Basic power channeling. Stability markers. Protection circles.

Others were more sophisticated—combinations of modern and old techniques that had been popular around three thousand years ago. The sort of thing scholars still debated about in musty libraries.

But then there were others. Runes that shouldn't be here at all.

Adom paused at a particularly complex configuration. He recognized it imdiately—a variation of the binding formula that had only been theorized two decades ago. And yet here it was, etched into stone that had to be thousands of years old.

"How?" he whispered, running his fingers over the pattern.

The question kept circling in his mind as he moved forward. Yes, humanity had lost knowledge over the centuries—wars, disasters, simple forgetfulness—but this was different. So of these rune configurations had only been discovered in his lifeti. By him and his colleagues.

Or rather, they thought they'd discovered them.

It seed they'd rely rediscovered what was already known. Adom felt a twinge of disappointnt at not being the first after all.

The passage widened suddenly, opening into a vast chamber. Adom instinctively pinched his nose, preparing for the stench of decay, but there was nothing—just cool, slightly stale air.

The sphinx's body still lay where he'd left it. Well, half of it anyway.

The massive creature's torso and human-like face were intact, frozen in an expression of shock and outrage. Golden blood had pooled beneath it, now hardened into what looked like actual tal. The bag was till there, the unstable magic still powerful.

Adom crouched beside the body, picking up a shard of the solidified blood and turning it over in his hand. It caught the light from the crystal lamps, glinting like real gold.

[Identify]

Solidified Sphinx Blood.

"Huh."

He looked at the sphinx's face. Its eyes were still open, frozen in that mont of disbelief when it realized its riddle-ga had backfired catastrophically.

"You had it coming for you though," Adom told it conversationally.

No response, of course.

Turning his attention to its forepaws, Adom examined the curved, gleaming claws. Each was easily the length of his forearm and sharp enough to slice through armor.

He straightened, calling upon his mana. The air around his hands shimred as he wove a powerful [Wind] spell. With surgical precision, he sent the concentrated blade of air sweeping across the sphinx's paws, severing the claws cleanly from the flesh.

The claws and blood shards disappeared with a soft blue glow as he stored them in his inventory.

"Sphinxes are rare enough to grant alchemical curiosity," he muttered to himself. "Might get sothing useful out of studying these."

He straightened, dusting off his hands, and continued toward the chamber ahead—the room of the Trial of Strength. The reason of his visit.

*****

Adom stepped into the Trial of Strength chamber and sighed at the familiar sight.

Golems. Everywhere.

Row after row of sentinels stood in perfect formation, stretching across the massive chamber like an army frozen in ti.

"Still creepy," he muttered, bad mories surfacing.

He'd known they were here, of course. The sea of golems had been visible even during his trial, standing motionless beyond the arena where he'd fought for his life. He just hadn't had ti to appreciate the scale of it then.

He tried counting them—ten, twenty, thirty—before giving up.

"At least one thousand," he said aloud, his voice echoing slightly in the cavernous space.

Cautiously, Adom approached the nearest golem. It was similar in basic design to John, but less sophisticated—tall, broad-shouldered, with a blank stone and tal face and simpler armor.

He stood directly in front of it, half-expecting it to spring to life and attack.

Nothing happened.

He waved his hand in front of its face.

Still nothing.

"Good. Let's keep it that way."

Adom circled the golem, examining it from all angles. Unlike John, this one was clearly from an earlier generation. The runes on its armor were primarily stability-focused, with so ancient variations of enhancent patterns woven throughout.

With no effort at all, Adom began removing its armor plating, piece by piece. The material was surprisingly light for sothing that looked like stone.

Once he had the chest plate off, he located the access panel—positioned differently than John's, and far less elegant in design.

"Let's see what makes you tick," he muttered, prying it open.

Inside was a core that was functional, but relatively primitive compared to John's advanced system. Where John had a sophisticated fluid-producing core, this one had a simpler crystalline structure. Still leagues ahead of what modern artificers could produce, though.

"Interesting," Adom whispered, carefully extracting it.

He set the core aside and pulled out his rune crafting tools from his inventory. He began modifying the foundational runes, carefully integrating his mana signature into the core's matrix.

It was delicate work. One wrong stroke and the core could destabilize—or worse, explode.

Two days had passed since he and Cass had escaped the warehouse attempt. She was scheduled to be released from the healer's house today. He'd stationed John with her as a precaution and given her a transport crystal that would take her to a safe location within the Academy grounds if needed.

He finished with the first golem and moved to the second, then the third, fourth... The work was repetitive but required intense concentration. By the fifth hour, his fingers were cramping, but he pressed on.

He'd aid to modify at least 300 of them today. Ambitious, but necessary.

As he worked, his mind wandered to the applications of his growing golem army. His first instinct had been military—who wouldn't want a personal force of indestructible soldiers? But the more he thought about it, the more that seed like a terrible idea.

If these golems were captured during a conflict and studied, they could be replicated. Technology like this hitting the market would drastically change the balance of power—not just in the empire, but across the whole world.

These golems hadn't appeared even in his past life. He couldn't imagine how differently things might have played out if they had.

No, a private army wasn't his problem. His current problem was manpower—reliable manpower.

The warehouse incident had proven just how dirty this business war was going to get. Bombs, hired killers, and that was just the opening move. The rchants guild played for keeps, and he couldn't trust just anyone to stand guard or handle sensitive operations.

Regular people could be bribed, threatened, or replaced with shapeshifters. Information could leak. Loyalties could shift.

But golems? Golems followed orders exactly as given. They couldn't be bribed or threatened. They had no families to use as leverage. They didn't talk, didn't sleep, didn't need food or paynt.

And most importantly, with his modifications, they would respond only to his mana signature. No one else could command them.

Adom reinstalled the modified core into the sixth golem and began reassembling its chest plate.

To start his comrcial war, he needed to introduce a revolutionary product into the market. Communication crystals would be that product—devices that could transmit ssages instantly across vast distances. Nothing like them existed in this world yet. They would change everything.

But there was a problem: Adom was the only one who knew how to make them.

Hiring people would an sharing the manufacturing process, risking leaks to competitors. And while his enemies might not imdiately replicate his work, it would accelerate their progress toward becoming real competition. If he wanted a monopoly on such a life-changing device, he needed to keep its secrets.

Again. Golems didn't leak information. Golems didn't sleep. Golems could work continuously without breaks, complaints, or divided loyalties. These traits made them a ga changer for one reason:

Mass production.

With 300 golems as a start, all working under his command after being instructed in the thods he would show them, he could establish a production line unlike anything this world had ever seen. The golems would create the devices, and he would introduce them to the market, controlling both supply and pricing.

Hours passed as Adom worked on golem after golem. The cave's magical lighting shifted subtly as the day outside progressed, though here, it was impossible to tell the exact ti. His back ached from hunching over the delicate cores, and his fingers were stiff from the precise runic adjustnts each one required.

Finally, he closed the access panel on the three-hundredth golem and secured its chest plate.

"That's it," he sighed, his voice rough from disuse.

Adom stood slowly, stretching his cramped muscles. His knees popped and his back protested after hours of crouching and kneeling. He rolled his shoulders and neck, working out the kinks.

He stepped back to survey his work. Three hundred golems, modified and ready for his command, stood in neat rows before him. The rest remained in their original state, a resource for another day.

Things were really changing now. He was being proactive in a way he'd never managed in his previous life, taking control instead of just reacting to catastrophes as they happened. It was exhilarating, but also terrifying. Each decision to alter the tiline ant he had less ability to predict what would co next.

The future was becoming as unknown to him as it was to everyone else.

But then again, that was exactly why he'd co back in the first place. He wanted a peaceful life to savor—to explore the world on his own terms. For that to happen, he needed to ensure there was a world left to explore. The mories of what had happened—what would happen—without his intervention were still too vivid.

Adom took a deep breath and addressed the golems he had modified.

"Arise," he commanded, his voice echoing in the chamber.

In perfect unison, three hundred pairs of eyes flickered to life, glowing a soft blue that illuminated the cavernous space with an eerie light. Three hundred stone bodies straightened slightly, awaiting further instructions.

Adom looked for a while, face impassive. Was this how his father felt at the command of his n? Very ego inflating. He couldn't help but smile.

"Hehe, nice."

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