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Absolute Cheater-Chapter 295: Last key II
"I'll cut the damn chorus."
He twisted midair, his blood dominion bursting out again. This time, the blood didn't seek the ground—it soared, spears and tendrils of command-rich essence piercing toward the mute singers.
The first was impaled—silence turned to a gasp as their sewn mouth burst open. The hymn wavered.
The barge shook.
The Choirmistress turned—her eyes behind the veil burned with outrage. She sang a new note.
The sands below inverted. Space folded—Asher found himself on the ground, disoriented, as if gravity had just chosen a new direction.
But Valeris was waiting.
"Command: Sing no more."
Golden lines of truth slashed through the air, wrapping around the Choirmistress's throat—not choking, not wounding, but binding her will.
The hymn faltered.
Asher rose.
Now.
Twin blades pulsed in his hands. His veins blazed with Crimson Initiate speed, his steps fueled by Bloodlit Dominion's control over the field. The barge tilted as the Choir shrieked, the sky cracking like shattering glass.
He leapt.
One blade swept across the veil, tearing it free.
The other—
—he drove through her chest.
The Choirmistress did not scream.
She sang—a final, broken aria, a note of sorrow and defiance and knowing.
And then she collapsed. Her golden armor crumbled to dust, and the barge began to fall—its song silenced.
The mute singers died quietly, like forgotten prayers. frёewebnoѵēl.com
Ash returned to falling.
When he landed beside Valeris, his breath was ragged. Her hand found his.
"That was the Pale Choir," she said softly. "They never leave Mimir lands. Not unless they're certain the end of something is near."
Asher sheathed his blades. "Then they're right. This is the end."
He looked ahead—toward the final valley, where the wind no longer blew.
Where the sky was missing.
Where the last Sovereign Key slept within a black tower that should not exist.
"Let's finish this."
The final valley had no name.
It was not on any map, and even the ley lines bent around it—veering like rivers skirting a cursed island. The wind stopped. The sky ended. Overhead, there was only a void like the inside of a coffin, smothering even the concept of starlight. Every step forward felt wrong, like moving through the folds of a memory someone tried to forget.
And in the center stood the Black Tower.
It rose without foundation. No base. No stone. Just a spiral of obsidian twisting out of unreality, anchored in nothing and crowned by a pulsating star of inverse light. It did not touch the ground. It hovered inches above it.
Valeris exhaled. "This place shouldn't be. It's older than the Sovereign Wars. Older than the war before that."
Asher narrowed his eyes. "Who's inside?"
She hesitated.
"…Not who. What."
Then a whisper came—not to them, but to others.
Far away…
In the ruins of the Devourer Cult's sanctum, beneath a throne of chains and flayed prophecy, the final disciple woke.
Not with a breath.
With a gnawing.
The Writhe-Lord, last of the Devourer's Unhallowed, shifted in the shadow of a bone-glyph that bled. His back was made of limbs that weren't his. His mouth had no lips, only teeth that repeated words others feared to think.
He saw the Black Tower.
He saw Asher.
And he laughed like a sermon without a soul.
"They are close."
Then, elsewhere—upon a floating crystal gondola trimmed in silver glass—the Mimir Kingdom's Pale Vizier watched through a mirrored chalice. Her face was hidden beneath six masks, each representing a god that had lied too well to die.
"The Tower has accepted visitors," she whispered. "The final Key draws breath."
Behind her, the Choir was dead. Only silence remained in her barge.
"Then the cycle closes."
Back at the Tower…
Asher took the first step onto the ashen floor below the floating base.
No sound. No resistance.
But as soon as Valeris followed—
—a pulse.
The blackstone rippled. The space around them shifted.
And the Tower opened.
Not a door.
An invitation.
Inside, there were no stairs. No walls. Just thresholds. One after another—each a floating plane of shattered thought, each holding a piece of the trial.
"The Key's not just guarded," Valeris whispered. "It's sentient. It's testing us."
Asher drew his blade. His voice was calm, resolute.
"Let it."
First Threshold: Memory.
They stepped into a plane of broken recollection. The sky was a bruised violet, and the air trembled with whispers that didn't belong to any living tongue. Shapes coalesced from the gloom—shadows of those they'd fought before, reanimated not by soul or spirit, but by the echo of conflict.
Zar-Kethel, crowned in gluttonous bone.
Hal-Kareth, veiled in abyssal flame.
The Maw of Chains, jaws rusted with blood.
Each adversary emerged sharpened by memory and magnified by guilt—stronger, faster, more relentless than they had been in life.
Valeris's blade dipped slightly as she saw her own expression etched into one of the shadows—a twisted mirror of herself, eyes gleaming with cruelty. Asher stood still as his father's silhouette emerged, not frail and dying, but vibrant and disapproving, wrapped in imperial judgment.
The battlefield trembled with the weight of trials they thought they'd passed.
But they did not hesitate.
Valeris raised her hand. "Command: Falsehood," she intoned—not to dispel illusions, but to unweave false strength, severing the threads that gave these phantoms the power of truth.
Reality cracked. The shadow of Hal-Kareth shrieked as the flame that cloaked him flickered and died, revealing hollow armor beneath. But he still lunged forward.
Asher drew in a slow breath. "If the Key thinks our past is a weapon," he said, voice quiet but firm, "then it has no idea what we've done to survive it."
And then they fought—not against illusions, but against the memory of every battle that nearly broke them.
And won.
Second Threshold: Hunger.
They stepped into a nightmare of flesh and stone.
The field was endless—a wasteland where the earth itself had teeth. Infinite mouths gaped from the ground, the walls, even the air—gnashing, slavering, endless. Each maw pulsed with unnatural hunger, layered in tongues slick with soul-lust. They did not simply bite; they fed. Not on flesh, but on essence, on memory, on purpose.