Ch. 162 / 17493%

Chapter 162: Yo

~15 min read 2,883 words

[Leo’s POV]

The suffocating pressure of the inner sanctum didn’t go away. If anything, the air got heavier, thick with a cold wetness that stuck to my skin like oil.

I kept walking, my boots cutting through the thin layer of grey ash on the black floor.

Behind me, I could hear Arthur’s heavy steps, Roan’s light footsteps, and Elisabeth’s silent walking. I didn’t look back, but my Soul Perception was stretched out like a net, keeping track of all three of them. I wasn’t going to let this fog take them.

Not again.

Amelia will survive, I thought, pushing down the worry before it could grow.She has the water spirit. If she breaks here, she won’t survive what comes in the future.

We walked through an endless labyrinth of weeping stone.

The smooth black walls seemed to lean inward, the carved figures of kings and children staring down at us with hollow, wet eyes. The purple veins in the rock pulsed faster now, casting a rhythmic, sickly glow over our path.

The maze was pushing us toward one place.

The heart of the trial.

At last, the twisting hallway ended at two giant stone doors.

They were old, split down the middle, with thick strands of purple mist leaking through the opening like steam from a boiling pot. The pulsing light on the other side was painfully bright, throwing long, moving shadows across the dark floor.

"The statue is right behind these doors," I said, my hand resting flat against the freezing stone. "Get ready."

I pushed the doors open.

A big wave of purple smoke exploded outward, blinding us for a second as it shot past into the hall. The heavy fog turned my stomach. I stepped through the opening into a huge, empty room with a tall ceiling.

Nothing was there — except a dark, shadowy figure standing at the far end.

The Statue of the Unforgotten Sorrow.

But the moment my boots touched the floor, something hit me. A sharp jolt shot up my spine. My instincts weren’t just warning me, they were screaming. A loud, clear sound of danger that made the hair on my arms stand up.

Something was wrong. Very wrong.

"Stay close to me," I said, turning around quickly. "Don’t let the smoke get between—"

The words died in my throat.

My blood went entirely cold.

There was nothing behind me.

The doors were gone. The long hallway we had just walked through had vanished.

There was nothing but an endless, swirling sea of thick purple mist, stretching out into empty darkness. Arthur, Roan, Elisabeth — the bright, clear marks of their souls that I had been tracking just a moment ago, were completely gone. Wiped out.

I was entirely alone.

My knuckles turned white as I gripped Tempest’s hilt, my heart hammering a brutal rhythm against my ribs as I forced my senses to scan the empty air. How? My Soul Perception was active. There was no shift in the mana. There was no countdown.

"...Leo."

A soft, melodic voice drifted through the fog from behind me.

I froze.

The sound of that voice was like a physical strike to my chest, shattering the icy calm I had spent months building. Slowly, deliberately, I turned my head back toward the center of the chamber where the giant statue should have been.

The statue was gone.

Instead, standing just a few paces away in a small patch of clear light, was a girl.

She looked exactly fifteen, wearing the simple, worn clothes of the Wayford orphanage. Her amber eyes were bright and filled with a gentle warmth that didn’t belong in this tomb. A brilliant, soft smile graced her lips as she looked up at me.

Mia Rayner.

"You’re late," she teased softly, tilting her head in that stubborn, familiar way she always did when I stayed too long in the jungle. "I kept the stew warm for you, but you took forever."

My breath hitched. My chest tightened so fiercely it felt like my ribs were going to crack under the pressure.

I knew it was a lie.

I knew she was dead.

I had held the blade that pierced her heart.

I carried her Soul Flame inside my very bones.

But as I stared into those bright amber eyes, a horrifyingly familiar scent filled the air — the scent of fresh herbs, wild flowers, and the cheap ale of the Wayford tavern.

The fog rippled again, and a massive, scarred figure appeared right beside her. His brown hair was long and unkempt, a thin scar running down his cheek, and his dark eyes were crinkled with a rough, lazy grin.

He held a wooden practice sword over his broad shoulder, looking down at me like I was still the half-dead kid he had pulled from the river.

"Still standing there with your mouth open, kid?" Roran laughed. His voice was deep, warm, real. "I told you to practice, not stand around looking sad. Get your sword up."

"Master..."

The word came out before I could stop it. My throat felt raw.

They moved closer, stepping right up to me.

Mia reached out, her small hand moving toward my cheek, her amber eyes full of nothing but love and safety. Roran stood beside her, his big hand coming down to my shoulder to give that firm, reassuring pat I had learned to depend on.

It was the perfect sanctuary.

The one place in two lifetimes where I had actually felt like I belonged.

But my Soul Perception didn’t lie.

As they drew closer, I reached deep inside myself, searching for their souls. There was nothing. Just cold emptiness wrapped in the stolen shapes of the people I loved. The statue wasn’t just testing me anymore. It was mocking their sacrifice, using their memory as armor.

A deep, ugly disgust burned in my stomach. It burned away the hesitation in my veins.

"You shouldn’t have picked them," I whispered. My voice was quiet and cold.

Before the illusions could even react, Tempest cleared its scabbard.

Black lightning exploded through the chamber, tearing through the purple mist in a brutal, blinding flash. The blade moved in a clean arc, the exact technique Roran had taught me. It cut through Roran’s chest and across Mia’s throat in one motion.

There was no blood. No heavy, wet sound.

Mia’s smile didn’t fade.

It just dissolved into black smoke. Roran’s body broke apart into purple fog, curling up toward the ceiling like ash from a dying fire.

I pulled Tempest back, my hand shaking as I forced the blade back into its sheath.

My stomach churned, a wave of intense sickness washing over me. I felt entirely disgusted. I wanted to vomit. The statue had forced me to execute the two people who had given everything to keep me alive, even if they were just illusions made of smoke.

"...I am going to give you the most unforgivable death imaginable," I spat into the empty darkness, my eyes burning with a cold, murderous rage. "I will burn every single fragment of your existence until there isn’t even ash left to remember you by."

I forced myself to breathe and thought about how the monster worked.

The Statue of the Unforgotten Sorrow...

It was a trap that fed on your mind. First, it used regret and the past. For me, that was the voices from Earth and the fake Amelia. Then, it went deeper, it used my grief and trauma. For me, that was Mia and Roran.

The monster worked on a pattern. First, it used regret. Then grief. And finally...

Tap. Tap.

The sound of slow, heavy footsteps crunched in the grey ash behind me.

A low humming drifted through the fog. A strange, broken melody that made the hair on my neck stand up. A wave of fear hit my chest, not the normal kind, but something deeper. Something that told me I was not in control anymore.

I turned around slowly, my fingers locking back onto Tempest’s hilt.

From the dense purple smoke, a new figure stepped into the dim light.

My breath caught. My eyes widened as my stomach violently churned. I knew that face. I knew it better than anyone in this world or the last.

It was me.

But it wasn’t the version from Earth, nor was it the current version of Leo standing in this place.

It was the real Leo — the original owner of this body, the young noble boy who was supposed to be in this body. He had the exact same messy black hair, the same sharp jawline, and those distinct, striking ocean-blue eyes.

Except his eyes were completely void.

They were entirely hollow and empty of a single human emotion, staring directly at me like a corpse looking through a window.

The original Leo stepped forward, stopping just inches away from my chest. The sheer, suffocating pressure radiating from his form made it difficult to breathe.

The last thing the monster used before creating a new illusion wasn’t regret or grief.

It was... fear.

The fear of exposure.

The fear of being found out. The fear of being a thief who had stolen a dead boy’s name, his body, his life. The fear that one day, someone would look at him and know.

The figure tilted his head to the side, his hollow ocean-blue eyes locked onto mine. Slowly, lazily, he raised a single hand and gave me a casual wave.

"Yo," the original Leo murmured, his voice an exact, haunting echo of my own.

I stared at my own dead face, my jaw clenching so hard a sharp pain shot up my temple. The sheer absurdity and cruelty of the illusion finally broke something inside my patience.

"Oi... give me a fucking break," I muttered, my voice dripping with pure, exhausted irritation as black lightning began to gather wildly along my blade.

"Damn it, just shut the fuck up."

_

[Elisabeth’s POV]

We were walking right behind Leo.

He was in front, his white hair barely visible through the thick purple fog. Arthur was on his right, Roan on his left. I was at the back, my hand on my sword, my eyes scanning the darkness behind us. I was tracking their movements, mapping out every variable in my head.

The stone doors appeared ahead. Massive and cracked. Leo pushed them open, and purple smoke exploded outward, blinding me for a second.

When I opened my eyes, Arthur was gone. Roan was gone.

And the anomaly, Leo von Celestial, had vanished entirely.

I was alone.

I stopped instantly, my fingers tightening around the hilt of my sword. I didn’t panic.

Panic was for people who had never seen the world burn before. I shut my eyes for a moment, reaching out with my senses, trying to feel the trace of their blood.

Nothing.

The fog was absolute. It had severed us completely.

A mental trap, I thought, a cold, sarcastic smile touching my lips.The guardian is trying to separate us. It wants us to drown in our own regrets.

I gripped my blade tighter and walked forward into the empty purple void. I had followed Leo into this inner sanctum for a very specific reason.

In my past life — the timeline where the Abyss King won and everything I loved was destroyed, Leo von Celestial was nothing but a dead footnote. He died in his Path Trial, an insignificant failure who never made it out.

But in this second life granted by the Eternal Night, he was alive.

He had white hair, cold eyes, and a terrifying hunger that should not exist. He was an anomaly — something that did not fit in this world. I had been watching him since the gala, trying to figure out if he would save my people or destroy us all.

I needed to see what he was. I needed to see how he handled the darkness.

The deeper I walked, the more the violet fog began to warp. The smell of rot and old water vanished, replaced by an odor so sharp and familiar that it made my heart stop.

The scent of iron. Pure, fresh blood.

Splash.

My boot didn’t hit grey ash. It sank into liquid.

I looked down. The obsidian floor was gone. I was standing in a literal pool of dark blood. The crimson fluid was rising rapidly, swirling around my ankles, then my calves, creeping up toward my knees.

It was warm. Sickeningly warm.

The fog around me violently parted, and the illusion constructed my worst living nightmare.

I wasn’t in the ruins anymore.

I was standing in the broken courtyard of the von Noctis estate during the last days of the end. The tall towers of my home were shattered, burning with a sick purple fire. And lying across the courtyard, floating in the rising sea of blood, were the bodies of my people.

Vampire soldiers, elders, servants — all of them slaughtered, their pale skin torn to shreds.

"Elisabeth..."

A weak, fragile voice called out from the center of the crimson pool.

My breath caught. My cold, practical mask broke into a thousand sharp pieces as I forced myself to look.

There she was.

My younger sister, a year younger than me, her silver-white hair soaked in blood, her small hands clawing desperately at the stone to stay above the surface.

And right beside her, slumped against a broken pillar, was our grandmother, the woman who had raised us after our parents died. Her throat was torn open, her blank, sightless eyes staring directly at me.

"Why didn’t you save us?" my sister sobbed, her pale face bruising as the blood began to fill her mouth. "You promised you would change the future. You said you came back for us. Why are we still dying, Elisabeth?"

The voices of the dead began to rise from the pool, an overlapping, mocking chorus that echoed inside my skull.

"You failed before, and you will fail again," the illusion of my grandmother rasped, her dead jaw moving stiffly. "You are not a savior. You are just a broken girl playing with a fate you cannot control. You couldn’t save us then, and you won’t save us now."

The crimson pool rose higher, reaching my waist, heavy and suffocating. The sheer weight of the memory, the crushing grief of watching my entire race get completely wiped out while I died powerless, slammed into my chest like a physical hammer.

They were right.

In my past life, I hadn’t been able to save anyone. I had watched my sister scream as she was torn apart. I had watched my grandmother fall.

I had died alone in the dark.

I wasn’t a good person. I didn’t care about righteousness, and I didn’t care about being a hero. All I wanted, all I had ever wanted, was to save my people. I would walk through a mountain of corpses, I would betray anyone, I would commit any sin, as long as it meant my sister lived.

But the illusion was showing me the ultimate truth: I was still too weak.

Despair, thick and paralyzing, crawled up my throat.

Slowly, deliberately, I closed my eyes.

The voices screamed louder, celebrating my submission, thinking they had finally broken the vampire princess. The blood rose to my chest, threatening to swallow me whole.

But I didn’t close my eyes to surrender.

I didn’t do this to become a mindless slave to the statue.

Let it come, I thought, my mind turning cold as ice under the grief.Show me everything. Show me the blood, the deaths, the worst mistakes of my past life.

I wasn’t running away from the nightmare.

I was forcing myself to stand right in the center of it. If I was going to change the future, if I was going to kill the threats to my people — including Leo, if he turned out to be one, then my mind needed to be hard.

I needed to harden my mental fortitude until no illusion, no trauma, and no ghost could ever make me hesitate again.

I let the pain wash over me, using the agonizing memory of my family’s death to forge my will into something completely unbreakable.

Deep within my veins, my blood affinity began to hum. It didn’t fight the pool; it began to dominate it.

I forced my eyes open, the deep violet of my irises bleeding into a terrifying, predatory crimson. The crying faces of my sister and grandmother were still there, but my hands had stopped shaking.

"...I know what happened," I whispered to the illusions, my voice slicing through the screaming chorus with absolute, cold certainty. "I remember every single death. I carry them every day."

I slowly drew my sword from its scabbard, the steel reflecting the burning purple ruins of my home.

"...And that is exactly why I will tear this world apart before I let it happen again."

The pool of blood began to churn violently, reacting to my commands as a suffocating, lethal aura exploded from my body.

The illusion began to crack. The resolve of my own self was set.

I was ready to slaughter my own ghosts.

End of Chapter

Ch. 162 / 17493%
Ch. 162 / 17493%