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Now reading: Chapter 72: Chosen one from SSS Evolution: Upgrading My Trash Grade Skeleton to Godhood, a Fantasy novel by NoNameEntity.

The shock didn’t diminish.

Lukas had processed enough unexpected developnts in a short enough span of ti that his capacity for surprise had been tested considerably in recent hours. He had thought, sowhere in the back of his awareness, that this testing had produced a degree of resilience — that the threshold for genuine astonishnt had been raised by accumulated experience.

Tommy’s bloodline awakening cleared that threshold without apparent effort.

He understood what it ant. That was precisely the problem. Anyone who didn’t — any young awakener who heard the words bloodline awakening and filed them under the broad, undifferentiated category of power increase without interrogating the specifics — was operating with a model of the world that star monsters were very happy to correct. Permanently. The ones who survived long enough to revise that model did so because they had encountered the reality of a Second Sequence creature with an awakened bloodline and had, through so combination of skill and fortune and the particular grace of not being the primary target, lived through the encounter.

The correction those creatures delivered was not subtle.

A single Second Sequence awakened bloodline bearer — not an exceptional one, not a particularly powerful specin of its kind, just a standard representative of the category — could work through dozens of First Sequence legendary grade creatures without requiring anything approaching its full capacity. Dozens. The creatures that most First Sequence awakeners considered the upper boundary of what they could reasonably expect to face in a given period of their developnt, handled with the casual efficiency of sothing operating several tiers above the engagent.

And Tommy had just crossed that threshold.

From the Epic grade skeleton that had been his companion through everything in this world, through every fight and every close call and every mont where the gap between survival and its alternative had been narrower than he’d wanted — to sothing that had awakened its bloodline, that now occupied the sa categorical tier as the creatures Lukas had considered essentially unreachable from his current position.

The fifth evolution requirent.

The one he had filed under later with the resigned pragmatism of soone acknowledging that certain problems cannot be solved from where one currently stands and must wait for circumstances to change.

Circumstances had changed.

He was still assembling the implications of this — still building toward the full picture of what Tommy’s bloodline awakening ant for everything he had previously understood about his near-term capabilities and limitations — when the calling stopped being sothing he could manage from a distance.

It intensified.

The word was inadequate. What happened was not an increase in the pull he had been experiencing — it was a transformation of its fundantal character, the difference between feeling the gravity of a distant object and suddenly finding yourself within its direct field of influence. Thousands of tis stronger was the number his mind produced, and even that felt like an approximation of sothing that resisted precise quantification. The calling reached into him — past the surface of his awareness, past the careful detachnt he had been maintaining as a professional courtesy to his own continued functioning — and pulled at sothing that felt constitutive rather than peripheral.

He could barely resist it.

The key word was barely. He was still standing. Still conscious of himself as a separate entity with agency over his own movent. But the margin between that state and simply being drawn forward without choice had narrowed to sothing uncomfortably thin.

Tommy would have to wait.

He steeled himself — a deliberate, physical act, the kind of internal bracing that costs sothing — and moved forward into the intensifying cold.

Each step announced itself in ways his body had not previously offered. The temperature had descended past the point where cold was a sensation and beco sothing structural — affecting the chanics of his movent, the fluid dynamics of everything that was supposed to flow freely through a functioning body. His joints were audible. The creaking that accompanied each step was not taphorical — he could hear the ice forming and fracturing at the articulation points of his own skeleton with each movent, the sound intimate and strange and faintly unsettling in the near-silence of the chamber.

The undead greyhound at his side had gone pale white.

The color had drained from it the way color drains from sothing exposed to an extre it wasn’t designed for — not damaged, not dissolving, but fundantally altered in its surface presentation, the familiar dark tones replaced by a stark, bone-pale luminescence that caught the ambient cold light of the surrounding fog and held it.

The fog.

At so point — he couldn’t identify precisely when — visibility had beco a negotiation rather than a given. The undead wind had thickened the air around him into sothing that muffled distance and ate outlines, the cold dense enough to carry the fog the way a river carries sedint — not as a separate thing but as a property of the dium itself. He could see the space imdiately around him with reasonable clarity. Beyond that, the world dissolved into white.

But he knew he was going the right way.

The cries told him.

They had begun as sothing at the edge of perception — easy to mistake for the ambient sound of moving air through stone corridors, the kind of noise that ancient sealed spaces produced as pressure differentials moved through them. But they were not that. They had a character that wind through stone didn’t possess — a responsiveness, a quality of awareness, the specific acoustic signature of sothing that was reacting to his approach rather than simply existing in his vicinity.

Wailing. Rising and falling in frequencies that had no clean analogue in his experience, carrying within them sothing that was simultaneously desolate and, strangely, anticipatory. As if whatever was producing the sound had been waiting. Had been waiting for a very long ti. And was becoming, with each step he took through the pale white fog toward the northern source, sothing that could be described — in the specific, complicated way that things can be described when they contain more than one quality simultaneously — as excited.

The cold deepened.

The fog pressed in.

The cries grew louder.

And Lukas moved forward, his joints creaking in the freezing air, his pale undead companion at his side, toward whatever had been calling him since before he knew it existed.

The cries had been building toward sothing — he had felt it in their escalating pitch, in the way they seed to press against the inside of his skull rather than simply entering through his ears, the sound crossing the boundary between external phenonon and internal experience with a persistence that was beginning to erode the edges of his focus. Another few minutes of it at this intensity and driving him mad would have stopped being a figure of speech.

Then the voice arrived.

It ca through the wailing the way a single clear note cos through noise — not louder, not more forceful, but so fundantally different in its character that everything else simply receded around it. Soft. Serene. Carrying the particular quality of sothing that had existed long enough to have no remaining urgency about anything, including the act of speaking.

Inviting a human with only two star potential. I wonder why he chose you.

The words settled into his awareness with the unhurried ease of sothing that had not asked for his readiness before arriving. Lukas stopped moving.

His gaze swept the surrounding fog with the imdiate, trained alertness of soone whose body had already responded to the presence of an unknown entity before the conscious mind had finished processing that one was there. Left. Right. The pale white density of the fog in every direction, the fractured bones at his feet, the greyhound pale and still beside him.

Nothing.

No figure. No outline. No disturbance in the fog that suggested a physical presence had caused it.

The voice had been close — close enough that his instinct had placed the speaker within arm’s reach. But the fog offered no confirmation of this, and the silence that followed the words carried no footsteps, no breathing, no residual vibration of sothing that had spoken and then moved.

Quite the coward as well.

The voice again — sa quality, sa proximity, sa complete absence of visible source. The words carried a lightness to them that stopped just short of mockery, the tone of soone who found the situation genuinely amusing and was not particularly invested in concealing this. Now it makes even more curious what he spoke about you that he chose you.

Lukas’s heart moved out of rhythm by exactly one beat.

He chose you.

The pronoun landed with a specificity that the surrounding context made imdiately significant. Not a general observation. Not a rhetorical flourish. A specific reference — he, soone with an identity and an agenda and an opinion about Lukas specifically, had made a choice. And this voice, whatever it was, wherever it was, knew about that choice and had apparently been waiting for its consequences to arrive in the form of a two-star potential human standing in a freezing fog surrounded by the powdered remains of creatures that had not survived the sa journey.

He kept his guard exactly where it was and said nothing.

His thoughts moved fast beneath the surface, assembling and discarding fraworks. The voice knew about him — or knew about whoever had chosen him, which amounted to the sa thing from a practical standpoint. It was not hostile, or at least was not presenting as hostile. It was curious. It was comfortable — the ease of sothing in its own domain, completely untroubled by his presence, examining him with the particular interest of soone encountering the answer to a question they hadn’t expected to receive.

What is it talking about? Who chose ? And where is it coming from?

The questions stacked without answers, each one generating two more, the architecture of his confusion becoming more elaborate with each passing second—

A chuckle.

Not external. Not entering through his ears the way the earlier words had — this one simply existed in his head, present and complete, the sound of genuine amusent from sothing that had apparently been following his internal state with the sa ease it had demonstrated in following his external one.

Then the voice again. The quality of it had changed — the teasing edge gone, the serene amusent still present but underneath it sothing different now. The specific warmth of sothing that has been waiting for a long ti and can feel the waiting finally drawing toward its end.

Quiet. I am waiting to et you in person. Just continue walking forward and you will find .

Lukas stood in the freezing fog and heard the difference — held it in his awareness and examined what it ant. The contempt was absent. The disdain that had shaded the first words had left entirely. What remained was stripped of performance and pretense, carrying in its simplicity the most honest communication the voice had offered since it first reached him through the wailing.

Excited.

Whatever waited ahead in the northern darkness of this sealed chamber — whatever had been consuming the vitality of living creatures for long enough that ancient giants had beco the powder beneath his feet, whatever had sent the dallion to him across a distance he couldn’t calculate, whatever had been calling to him through an energy that felt inexplicably like a part of himself — was excited to et him.

He exhaled a visible breath into the cold air.

Then he started walking again.

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