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Chapter 340: Growth and Intel

Chapter 338 · 6,480 words

Chapter 340: Growth and Intel

High above the endless lava seas of the Infernal Sulfur plane, Jie Ming hovered in the air, a faint halo shimmering around him.

In his right hand was a newly forged crystal—far more intricate than anything from his second-level days—glowing with deep-blue runes.

This was the prototype of his third-level sigil witch artifact, born from his upgraded elemental mastery and a deeper grasp of the Spiritual Qi Law.

He locked onto a patch of empty sky far in the distance and flicked his thoughts.

Whoosh!

A fist-sized orb of blinding white light shot from the crystal’s tip. It sliced silently through the sulfur-stained crimson sky, too fast for the eye to track.

Seconds later, at the edge of sight, the orb detonated.

The air seemed to crumple under an invisible grip. Then a halo of light over a hundred kilometers wide erupted, like someone had slapped a miniature sun onto the plane’s ceiling.

Pure light and heat flooded downward, turning the lava seas below bone-white for a heartbeat.

Only then came the delayed roar—a sound that felt like it could rip souls apart.

A visible shockwave ring exploded outward, shredding the sky into a vacuum and vaporizing entire layers of sulfur clouds.

The calm lava ocean was hammered into a massive crater. Dark-red waves hundreds of meters high surged outward, triggering a plane-wide lava tsunami.

A scorching storm of radiation and energy shards swept an area the size of a mid-sized province. Anything below a certain energy threshold was instantly vaporized.

Jie Ming watched the province-obliterating blast and nodded, satisfied.

“Power: check. By low-civ standards, that’s ‘nation-killer’ territory.”

It far outstripped the usual third-level “city-buster” ceiling—matching or exceeding veteran fourth-level wizards.

The payoff of deep foundations and a unique path.

But the satisfaction faded fast.

“Great for clearing trash mobs,” he muttered, “but against peers or stronger, the energy’s too spread out. Efficiency tanks.”

At this tier, brute-force energy balls were hitting the limits of compression and penetration.

He could push further, but that was fourth-level control territory.

New direction clicked.

“Shift the sigil line to focused, armor-piercing beams. One line of annihilation—break anything.”

Plan set, he flashed back to the plane’s core lab.

Two packages waited—space-ripples marking fixed-point delivery.

First bag: rare metals, energy crystals, catalysts. Bulk raw stock for the internal auto-factories churning out third-level sigils.

Tucked in the corner: space-warping ores and chips—his starter kit for space research.

Second bag: a grin split his face.

A palm-sized fifth-level large elemental pool, folded down but exquisitely complex.

He’d burned the refinement arrays at max to scrape together the insane merit cost. Black, handling sales, had nearly collapsed—but made a fortune and didn’t complain.

His internal space—Nascent Soul expanded and reinforced—was now city-sized and rock-solid. Perfect for a fifth-level pool.

That tier could power a small plane or a mobile wizard tower. Overkill for factories and nests.

With seventh-level install experience, the fifth-level was child’s play. Months later, it hummed perfectly in the energy grid.

Factories roared faster; nests glowed brighter.

Energy solved. Space research ramped.

Third-level brought perceptual upgrade: he could finally

feel

space’s ripples directly, like wind on skin.

Before, All-Purpose Eye readouts were second-hand data. Now it was raw sensation.

Observation → influence → control.

Add in decades of brain/soul forging from body-tempering arts—superhuman computation—and space theory clicked fast.

Less than ten years: first working prototype.

Test chamber—space-expanded to absurd scale.

Jie Ming tossed a plain metal ball. Even a casual flick sent it screaming fifteen kilometers.

Then he activated the rig: silver rings lit with runes.

At peak glow, space hiccupped.

Hum


Far end: light twisted.

The ball vanished and reappeared above his open palm, dropping neatly.

“Got it.”

Basic short-range matter teleport.

For him? Strategic gold.

“Shrink it, embed in black giant cores. Self-destruct → instant core recall. No more lost tech or damaged seeds.”

Eyes gleaming: reusable suicide trucks—especially the two fifth-level bosses.

Tactical flexibility and deterrence through the roof.

Then a frown.

“With infinite respawns and core recovery, Prowlers and nests are obsolete.”

Nests could stay as rapid reshape factories.

Prowlers—speed and blast—were outclassed in every metric.

“Time for an upgrade path
”

Wizard life: every leap obsoletes the old, births the new.

Countdown blinked: years left.

“Core recall modules: elite units only. Prioritize the two fifth-levels and high-potential fourth-levels.”

He submitted early—two years ahead.

Confirmation pinged. Ultra-encrypted intel packet.

Not target briefing.

Emergency theater update.

First lines: pupils shrank.

Second-wave reinforcements.

First expedition—multiple high-tiers—plus first reinforcements:

all

missing. Radio silence.

Not heavy losses.

Zero

comms. No battle logs, no enviro data, no SOS. Preset emergency runes—gone.

The plane swallowed them whole.

Yet soul-contract vitals: over a million wizards

alive

. Stable.

Uninjured

.

Three confirmed KIA. That’s it.

Even Black’s illusion hell leaked warnings and showed declining vitals.

This? A million in, three out, zero wounded, zero leaks.

Like they’d gone to sleep—or been

preserved

.

Without ninth-levels scrubbing ninth-power planes first, you’d swear something that strong hid inside.

Federation’s big shots held back the nuke option—multiple eighth-levels ripping the plane open, even if natives self-destructed.

A million wizards were worth more than one plane’s loot.

But patience had limits.

If the second elite wave vanished the same way—alive but silent—eighth-level wrath would follow. No cost too high.

“Elite task indeed,” Jie Ming muttered, brows locked. “This intel reeks.”

Mind raced.

Hidden ninth-level? Already checked.

Super illusion/mind prison blocking a million—including high-tiers who see through lies—while keeping vitals perfect?

Isolated inner dimension?

Veterans should’ve sniffed space traps.

Worst case: something

outside

wizard knowledge.

“Good—no immediate death flag.” Deep breath. “Rare chance to see what silences a million wizards.”

Unknown = risk = knowledge.

Irresistible.

But not suicidal.

Whatever waited, keeping

him

quiet wouldn’t be easy.

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