©Novel Buddy
Absolute Cheater-Chapter 280: Fantasy Dungeon XVIII
Above the Vault, the Kingdom of Mimir shook.
It began subtly—at first a flicker in the sky, like the air itself remembered something terrible. Then the sun dimmed behind unseen clouds, and the soul-alarms—once long dormant—screamed across the capital.
High above, the Celestial Ring, the floating sanctum of Mimir's highest caste, shattered at its edge. Cracks spread like spiderwebs across the sky-embedded seal that had once been etched with divine light. The floating runes of warding, invisible to the common eye, flared scarlet, then vanished altogether.
All across the capital, the bloodbound felt it.
Not just the commoners. Not just the mages.
But the ancient houses—the ones who remembered the old pact.
The ones who knew the prophecy.
In the Tower of Ashen Quills, House Seridahl
Lady Henera Seridahl—the oldest living head of a noble line tracing its origins to the age of the First Flame—woke screaming.
She had not dreamed in decades.
But now she rose from her marble chair, her crystal-sealed bones glowing faintly beneath her skin.
"She rises…" she rasped. "The soul-wrought sovereign walks again."
Servants rushed to her side, but she waved them away, casting a soul-vision spell with trembling fingers.
The vision flared—and showed the blackstone throne below.
"So the seal is broken…"
She turned, calling forth her children. "Send word to the Blood Archive. Inform the Accord. The Queen That Was has returned."
In the Floating Spire of House Nalore
Archduke Veren Nalore stared down from his crystalline observatory, his third eye—the one hidden in his forehead—bleeding softly.
He did not blink.
"She found the Vault," he whispered.
Behind him, war-scribes etched a message into soul-paper.
"She found the throne. Valeria lives again."
An aide trembled. "Shall we call upon the Phoenix Concord?"
"No," Veren said. "The Concord was formed to stop her. If we call it now… we declare war."
"But—"
"She hasn't declared herself yet. She hasn't ascended. We wait. We watch. If she takes the throne in name, not just soul…"
He turned, eyes blazing.
"Then the world burns. Again."
In the Mimir Palace, the Throne Hall
The silence broke with a sound like stone cracking beneath the weight of time.
The Royal Throne of Mimir—a colossal construct of soulstone, shaped from the very peak of Mount Nihrax—trembled. At first, just a shiver. Barely noticeable. A quiver of something ancient waking.
Then—
Cracks spiderwebbed across its surface.
Magister Illior stepped back, horror blooming across his features.
"No… no, this throne was forged with the Flame of Founding—this isn't possible—!"
The throne groaned, not as an object breaking, but as a monument dying.
A keening wail rose from the floor itself, the song of undone magic, of wards collapsing under truth too great to contain. The carvings that once named the kings of Mimir split, the names disintegrating into dust.
And then, with a great whoomph of released energy—
It turned to ash.
Every courtier gasped. The room filled with swirling grey cinders, each one glowing faintly with soul-resonance. The ashes hovered, suspended mid-air, like frozen snowfall caught in a divine breath.
The Flame of Founding snuffed out.
Magister Illior fell to one knee, clutching his staff, his voice hoarse. "The bloodline's claim… is being rewritten."
Then—before the ashes could settle—they moved.
Spiraling.
Pulling together, faster and faster, a cyclone of power that surged and twisted, forming something new in the very heart of the palace.
From the center of that storm, a new shape began to form.
A throne. But not Mimir's. Not the brother's.
This one was sleeker, carved from obsidian and soul-glass, veined with molten silver that pulsed like a heartbeat. The back curled high into a crescent arc, crowned by the symbol of a mountain wreathed in a single black flame—the true sigil of Valeria.
All those present felt it:
This was not a throne meant to be sat upon by kings.
It was the seat of a Sovereign.
A ruler of dungeons, worlds, and truth unfiltered by mortal dynasties.
****
Back in the Vault, Asher and Valeris remained unaware of what was unfolding across the kingdom.
Their eyes were drawn to the treasure chests scattered around the throne room—chests that had appeared the moment Valeris accepted the soul of Valeria. These were the remnants left behind from when the First Queen last walked this world, sealed by time and soul-bound rites.
Though the soul of Valeria now stirred within her, Valeris was not fully consumed.
She was not just Valeria reborn—she was still Valeris, present and whole. A fusion of past and present, of sovereign and seeker.
Now bearing the knowledge, power, and burden of two lives, she led Asher from the throne's side, her fingers lightly brushing against his.
"Asher Magnus..." she thought, her gaze softening as she looked at him.
"What is this human I have fallen in love with?"
Not just a companion. Not just a protector.
But her anchor. Her equal.
Together, they stepped toward the chests, the ancient seals flickering with ethereal light, awaiting their touch.
Asher approached the nearest chest. The lock was unlike any he'd seen—formed not of metal, but of hardened soullight, shimmering like frost under a blood moon. It responded to his touch, reading not his blood, but his intent.
With a soft hum and a flicker of ancient magic, the lock unraveled.
The lid creaked open, revealing the chest's contents.
Inside lay a soulbound cuirass, jet-black and veined with silver threads that pulsed faintly with life. Alongside it, a pair of crystal-blade gauntlets, humming softly with bound echoes—each whispering of wars fought under starlight and moons long fallen. A folded map etched in living ink rested at the bottom, the landmasses shifting slowly across its surface.
But it wasn't the artifacts that made Asher pause.
It was the letter.
Sealed with a symbol he'd seen only moments ago—the black flame atop a mountain. He lifted it carefully. The parchment was old but uncracked, preserved by the same soulcraft that guarded the Vault.
Valeris stepped closer, her eyes narrowing with recognition. She didn't need to open it.
She remembered writing it.
A lifetime ago.
She exhaled slowly, her voice barely a whisper. "I wrote that... when I thought I would never return." ƒгeewebnovёl.com
Asher glanced at her, uncertain. "Do you want to read it?"
She shook her head gently. "Not yet. It was meant for the one who would walk beside me in this life. And that person…" Her gaze softened as she looked at him. "...is you."