410 Divine Zone
We ran with Zealotâs Stride carved into every step, golden power blooming beneath our feet as the world blurred past us. Each stride bent distance just enough to matter, yet not enough to spare us the journey. Fast travel was currently impossible, so brute momentum and divine technique were all we had.
Hei Mao kept pace beside me, his small form moving with unnatural precision as branches shattered beneath our passage. His expression darkened, and I caught the shift even before he spoke.
âI have a bad feeling about this,â he said.
I did not slow. âThen spit it out,â I replied. âWe donât have the luxury of subtle dread.â
Hei Mao exhaled slowly, his eyes narrowing as if he were staring at something only he could see. âIâm no Gu Jie,â he admitted, âbut I know a bit of divination. I picked it up in the Underworld. Ox-Head, Horse-Face, Meng Po⌠they all taught me things you donât learn in life.â
His gaze flicked forward, unfocused. âThereâs a shadow being cast over us. Not literal. Misfortune. The kind that accumulates quietly before it falls.â
I didnât need divination to believe him.
Even someone as dull as me could tell something was wrong. The ambushes had been relentless, striking from every direction as we crossed territories that should not have coordinated so efficiently. The Four Seasons, the Monastery, and factions that should have been rivals instead moved with shared intent. Though they were merely records of a past, their execution had been clean and merciless.
They were competent.
Blunt, predictable, and lacking refinement compared to the enemies I once fought, but still dangerous when circumstances aligned. With my current vessel capped at the Tenth Realm, every encounter placed me at a disadvantage. I was fighting on the back foot, forced to rely on restraint and positioning rather than overwhelming force.
Hei Maoâs presence was the only thing keeping the balance from collapsing entirely.
Though he wore the body of a child and his strength had not fully recovered, his core remained at the Eleventh Realm. More importantly, he was a source of faith. That faith fed me fragments of divine spark, small but precious, allowing me to supplement what this inferior vessel could no longer produce.
We landed on the branch of an enormous tree. Hei Mao halted abruptly, and I stopped beside him without question.
I extended my Divine Sense.
The forest ahead was thick, layered with concealment formations that would have fooled most cultivators. They did not fool me. Four presences pressed against my awareness, each one firmly anchored at the Eleventh Realm.
Hei Mao broke the silence. âTheir shadows are big,â he said quietly. âOurs have become too small.â
I glanced at him. âSuggestions?â
He hesitated, which told me more than any immediate answer could have. âIâm not sure,â he said. âThey didnât bother hiding. That means they came prepared.â
I felt the same unease settle deeper into my chest. Retreat wasnât an option. The way they had positioned themselves cut off every viable path back. More than that, they wanted us to know they were there. It was pressure, psychological and tactical.
I clenched my jaw.
âWith this vessel,â I said, âIâm a liability.â
Hei Mao shook his head immediately. âNot entirely,â he said. âItâs still possible to win.â
He straightened, pride slipping through despite the circumstances. âThe techniques of this era are inferior. What I learned in the Underworld alone gives me an edge. Add what you taught me on top of that, and thereâs still room to maneuver.â
He paused before continuing. âIf we fight, it has to be a contest of skill.â
Even as he spoke, I knew how thin that margin was. Skill could bridge gaps, but not erase them entirely. We were weakened, cornered, and outnumbered by equals.
A bitter thought crossed my mind, and I let it linger. The next time I decided to send fragments of my soul on an external mission, I should personally beat myself for even considering nerfing the vessels as some twisted form of training. This was not enlightenment. This was stupidity dressed as foresight.
Hei Mao turned to me, his expression grave.
âWe may have to risk it,â he said. âEven at the cost of my soul.â
I felt my breath catch. âExplain.â
âYou use Exalted Renewal,â he said evenly. âOn me.â
I frowned, dread tightening my chest. âYou realize that could kill you,â I said. âCompletely.â
It was fine for me to use Exalted Renewal as one of the Six Souls of the True Self. It had been designed that way, a privilege born from fragmentation and redundancy, allowing the True Self to cycle death and rebirth through its divided existence. Even when the True Self used it recklessly, the cost could be distributed, mitigated, or repaired through the remaining souls.
That mercy did not extend to my disciples.
As someone who had already experienced death through that Ultimate Skill, I understood its nature far too well. Exalted Renewal did not simply kill the caster. It erased the continuity of existence, severing cause and effect so cleanly that no reincarnation could trace the cut. The death it brought was final, unreasonable, and absolute.
The only reason I had survived was because I possessed the Source... and also Jue Buâs help. Even then, survival had been a miracle I did not fully understand.
I shook my head and looked at Hei Mao. âThereâs another way.â
He didnât ask what I meant.
His eyes sharpened immediately, and he nodded as if he had already reached the same conclusion. âIâm ready,â he said without hesitation.
The truth was simple, even if the execution was not.
There were two paths left to us.
One was to gamble on Divine Transformation, to push Hei Mao beyond his limits and pray that providence intervened. The other was far more violent and far more honest. I could achieve Martial Ascension and step into the realm of a Martial Saint.
Under normal circumstances, such a feat would take decades of tempering and countless battles. The Longevity Method demanded patience, accumulation, and refinement across years. The Transcendent Method was different. It allowed one to bridge the gulf that patience demanded by standing directly in the face of annihilation.
Danger became insight. Survival became proof.
With the experiences the Human Soul had accumulated, my foundation was already laid. All that remained was the catalyst.
We moved forward calmly, passing through dense thickets as if we were merely strolling rather than walking into a battlefield. The forest thinned, giving way to open plains scarred faintly by old formations and lingering qi.
They were waiting for us.
Four cultivators stood in the open, their presence heavy enough to warp the air around them. Two faces were immediately familiar. The Dragon King of the Four Seasons stood tall, his draconic aura restrained but unmistakable. Beside him was the elderly Adjudication Monk from the Monastery, hands folded, eyes lowered, radiating stern composure.
The other two were strangers.
One was a woman cloaked in an ominous aura that clung to her like a second skin. She smiled faintly in my direction, her gaze sharp and assessing, as though she were already calculating how I would die. The last was a man wearing a bamboo hat pulled low enough to hide his face entirely, his presence indistinct yet deeply unsettling.
I inclined my head politely. âI recognize two of you,â I said. âCare to introduce the others?â
No one answered.
The Dragon Kingâs gaze shifted instead to Hei Mao, his lips curling with open disdain. âHow low the mighty have fallen,â he said. âReduced to hiding behind a childâs body.â
Hei Mao stepped forward before I could respond.
He lifted his chin, eyes cold despite his small stature. âFour Eleventh Realm cultivators,â he said calmly. âAll waiting to ambush two weakened opponents.â
His gaze swept across them, lingering on the Dragon King and the monk. âFor those who claim righteousness, you seem awfully comfortable ganging up for the sake of clout.â
Of course, Hei Maoâs words struck exactly where they hurt most.
The Dragon Kingâs restraint shattered instantly. World Force erupted from his body as he roared, his voice amplified by authority and rage alike. The air trembled as he pointed his hammer toward Hei Mao, scales briefly surfacing along his neck.
âYou dare speak of righteousness?â the Dragon King bellowed. âYou, who colluded with dark forces, who deceived the Destiny-Seeker with a false identity and wormed your way into places you did not belong!â
Hei Mao frowned, genuine confusion crossing his face. âClarify,â he said coldly. âWhat false identity?â
The Adjudication Monk let out a short, humorless scoff. He lifted his staff slightly, the metal rings clinking softly as if in mockery.
âTrickster to the core,â the monk said. âEven now you pretend ignorance. You are the Cult Leader of the Eternal Undeath Cult.â
That made me blink.
It was the first time I had heard those words spoken aloud in reference to Hei Mao. For a brief moment, my thoughts drifted somewhere inconvenient. If Hei Mao was their cult leader, then perhaps the Eternal Undeath Cult was not the den of irredeemable lunatics history painted it as.
Hei Maoâs expression hardened. âAnd where,â he asked icily, âdid you hear such words?â
The woman with the vanishing presence laughed softly, her voice slipping in and out of perception just like her aura. âAt least he didnât deny it,â she said, amusement dancing in her eyes.
The man in the bamboo hat finally moved. He slowly sheathed his sword, the sound crisp and deliberate, before speaking in an even tone. âEnough talk,â he said. âWe should finish this.â
I studied them properly then, letting my attention sharpen.
The Dragon King stood fully armored now, draconic battle plate layered with runes, a massive hammer resting on his shoulder. I had always thought he favored fist arts exclusively, but clearly that assumption had been naĂŻve.
The Adjudication Monk held a staff engraved with suppressive scripture, his stance grounded and ruthless despite his title.
The other two were worse.
The swordsmanâs aura was refined to an unsettling degree, honed not through spells or divine arts but through sheer martial will. I could feel his desire to cut me down without relying on anything supernatural. He was dangerous in the most honest way possible.
The woman was harder to read. Her presence flickered, existing and not existing at once, as though she were standing half a step outside the world.
I exhaled slowly, irritation rising.
âAm I air to all of you?â I asked, raising my voice.
That got their attention.
Golden light surged into my palm as I cast Holy Sword, the Ultimate Skill manifesting as a radiant blade forged from authority and belief. Its weight settled into my hand with familiar comfort, humming softly as if eager.
I glanced at Hei Mao. âWho are the other two?â
He answered without hesitation. âThe woman is likely the Queen of the Night,â he said. âAn assassin of fearsome renown. Monarchs, masters, entire lineages have fallen to her blade. The swordsman should be the Sword Emperor, the greatest warrior of the Martial World.â
I snorted. âOne sounds like a prostituteâs stage name, and the other like the result of a childâs lack of imagination.â
The Sword Emperorâs aura twitched, but I continued anyway.
âAt least the Dragon Kingâs title makes sense,â I added, gesturing lazily with my sword. âHe rules over dragons. But you,â I said, turning my gaze to the monk, âthe Adjudication Monk. Thatâs the most contradictory title Iâve heard in a long time.â
The monkâs eyes narrowed.
âWhat kind of monk chooses adjudication as his calling?â I went on. âAll you adjudicate with is violence. Youâre not even a Paladin.â
I changed my mind.
Using Divine Possession on Hei Mao to force a Divine Transformation would have been efficient, even elegant, but it was not the right moment. That opportunity was something I intended to reserve for Yuan Shun. Divine Transformation was not a trick to be spent lightly. It was a phenomenon where I shared my divine spark through one of the Six Paths, allowing another existence to momentarily stand closer to divinity.
There were only two ways to invoke it.
The first was masterâdisciple bestowal, a permanent binding that could only be performed six times, representing each of the Six Paths. It fused one of the Six Path souls directly to a disciple, reshaping their destiny. The second was temporary bestowal, a far safer and far weaker method that merely allowed another to tap into the divine spark without permanence.
Among all my disciples, only Lu Gao, Yuen Fu, and Ren Jingyi had ever experienced Divine Transformation. Of them, only Lu Gao had achieved true masterâdisciple bestowal by becoming my Hell Paladin. Even then, the minimum requirement for complete Divine Transformation was overwhelming stimulus.
These four were dangerous, yes.
However, they were not enough.
I turned slightly and spoke without looking at Hei Mao.
âStay where you are,â I said. âIâll handle this.â
Hei Maoâs voice came immediately, sharp with disbelief. âNow is the best opportunity. I can attempt Divine Transformation here.â
âNo,â I said flatly. âListen to your master.â
He bristled. âThis is foolish.â
I cut him off before he could finish. âThere is foolishness, and then there is optimism. Learn the difference.â
I finally looked at him, my expression unyielding. âThis is not your fight. Your power is meant for something else.â
Hei Mao frowned. âHow do you know that?â
âFaith,â I answered. âAnd more than that, the choices my soul can perceive.â
The crossroads were clear to me then. A heavy burden had begun to press itself into existence, asserting inevitability. This moment was both an obstacle and an opportunity, and only one of us needed to stand here to claim it.
The world answered my certainty with violence.
My head left my shoulders.
There was no warning, no buildup, only the sudden absence of weight as my vision tilted and the world spun sideways. The Sword Emperor appeared beside my falling body, his blade humming softly as he spoke with cold disdain.
âYou talk big for a nobody.â
I did not panic.
âLend me a bit of quintessence,â I said calmlyto Hei Mao.
As my head struck the ground, I seized it with both hands and uttered the words with absolute clarity.
âDivine Word: Raise.â
Power surged. Flesh knit. Bone reconnected. I forced my head back onto my neck as causality screamed in protest, and the world corrected itself violently.
Hei Mao exhaled sharply. âIâll hold myself back,â he said, and vanished into a haze before any of them could react.
The Sword Emperor was flung backward as an invisible force detonated outward. His feet carved trenches into the earth as he skidded away, barely keeping his balance. A thin line of blood appeared along his neck, and his sword rang sharply as it vibrated in protest.
I narrowed my eyes.
He had parried Reflect.
That surprised me.
I invoked Life Aura, emerald light flooding outward as vitality surged through my body. My muscles thickened, my skin hardened, and my Holy Sword shifted hue, its golden radiance stained green with living force.
âDivine Word: Life.â
The declaration settled into my bones, reinforcing my existence itself. Health values surged beyond natural limits, stacking and compounding until my body felt like an unbreakable engine.
I followed immediately with Sanctified Resurgence and Blessed Regeneration, layering regenerative authority upon regenerative authority.
Then I drove the Holy Sword straight into my own chest.
The blade pierced cleanly, lodging itself deep within my torso as pain blossomed outward. Continuous damage began instantly, tearing at my flesh without pause. Sanctified Resurgence converted every shred of recovered vitality into explosive buffs, while Blessed Regeneration flooded me with relentless healing.
Reflect triggered, because of the sword on my chest.
The continuous damage inverted, becoming continuous reflected damage, lashing outward into the world with every heartbeat. With Life Aura and Divine Word: Life reinforcing me, I sustained the cycle effortlessly.
Power roared.
The ground beneath my feet collapsed, massive craters forming as shockwaves rippled outward. Stone shattered, earth imploded, and the plains deformed under the sheer pressure of my presence.
âWell?â I said. âWhoâs first?â
The Dragon King was the first to react.
âThatâs impossible,â growled The Dragon King, voice low and thick with disbelief. âYou impaled yourself. That kind of regenerative loop violates causality. Even a dragonâs bodyââ
His words faltered as another shockwave rippled outward from me, carving the ground deeper. The Dragon King clenched his jaw, pride and fear colliding violently as he realized brute force would only feed the cycle I had established.
The Adjudication Monk reacted differently.
âThis is heresy,â he said at last, voice sharp and offended. âSelf-inflicted harm converted into divine reinforcement. Continuous retaliation anchored by faith. This is not cultivation. This is blasphemy wearing doctrine. A heretic like you must die!â
The Queen of the Night laughed.
âHow vulgar,â she said, tilting her head. âAnd how fascinating.â
Her eyes gleamed as she studied the wound in my chest, the way green-lit blood flowed without weakening me. âTo turn suffering into a weapon so openly,â she continued. âYou donât fear pain at all.â
She licked her lips, amusement giving way to something sharper. âNo. You welcome it.â
The Sword Emperor said nothing at first.
Slowly, deliberately, he raised his hand and touched his own throat, fingers brushing the place where my Reflect had nearly taken his head. His breathing steadied. âSo not a nobody, then,â he said quietly. âJust who are you?â
âYour worst nightmare.â
The Queen of the Night vanished from my sight, only to reappear at my right without warning. I felt her presence an instant too late, the air tightening as thin, glimmering strings unraveled from her fingertips. Daggers were bound to each thread, their edges humming with killing intent as they whipped around me like a storm.
The blades carved into my flesh, opening deep lacerations across my arms, shoulders, and ribs. Blood splashed onto the shattered ground, yet I reached out and seized the strings with my bare hands. Divine Flesh hardened beneath my skin, grinding metal against bone as sparks erupted from the friction.
âYouâre too close,â I muttered, planting my foot hard into the earth.
The ground groaned as I activated War Smite, torque surging through my frame as I tried to throw her over my shoulder. My timing was off by a breath. Thunder split the air before I could finish the motion.
The Dragon King appeared beside me in a blur of lightning and scaled momentum, his speed uncannily reminiscent of Tao Longâs ferocity. Thunder gathered around the massive war hammer in his grasp, its head engraved with ancient draconic script as World Force compressed into a single tyrannical point.
âDragon Tyrantâs Descent!â
The hammer came down like a falling star. I crossed my arms at the last second, golden light flaring as Flash Parry activated. The impact drove me straight into the ground, the earth collapsing beneath my feet as the shockwave radiated outward. Pain detonated through my arms, bones screaming under the sheer weight behind the blow.
I grit my teeth and forced my stance to hold.
Before he could recover, I stomped forward and slammed my foot against the haft of the hammer, pinning it momentarily against the fractured ground. Stagger rippled outward, twisting his balance as his center of gravity betrayed him and his stance faltered despite his overwhelming strength.
âStay down,â I growled.
The Queen of the Night yanked her strings free, drifting backward as mist pooled beneath her feet.
âSeven Mist Transformation.â
Her body split apart. Seven afterimages bloomed around me, each one solid, each one wielding a different weapon infused with biting frost qi. They struck simultaneously, blades piercing, hammers crashing, needles freezing flesh and marrow alike.
I endured it.
My vision dimmed as frost crept across my veins, muscles stiffening as blood loss mounted. I clenched my teeth and forced the words out.
âCleanse.â
Heat surged through my body, burning away the frost and impurities. The relief came a heartbeat too late.
The Adjudication Monk stepped forward, staff glowing with oppressive scripture as his presence weighed down the land itself.
âUsher the Mountain.â
The blow landed like a continent falling from the sky. My arms shattered under the impact, bones snapping with wet, visceral sounds as I was hurled spinning through the air. Pain screamed through my nervous system, raw and unfiltered.
I cast Great Cure mid-flight, green light knitting bone and sinew back together as bruises faded. I slammed into the ground and skidded violently, gouging a long scar through dirt and stone before punching my fist down to halt myself.
Before I could rise, the Sword Emperor was already there.
Steel rang as his blade left its sheath, the sound sharp and absolute.
âCloud Splitting Form.â
I felt the pressure before I saw it. Instinct took over as I shifted my aura, Life Aura collapsing inward and re-emerging as Zeal Aura. Green turned to silver, speed flooding my limbs as the sword embedded in my chest echoed with the same hue.
Flash Step carried me behind him just as his strike cleaved forward, splitting clouds, rock, and forest in a single, terrifying line. Trees fell like grass in the distance, the land howling in protest.
I surged forward with Divine Speed layered atop Zealotâs Stride, thrusting my hand out as thunder coiled around my arm.
âThunderous Smite!â
He met it head-on, parrying cleanly and flowing into motion without pause.
âThirty-Two Transformations of Storms.â
His sword became a tempest. I answered each swing with my own two fists, Divine Smite crashing against Thunderous Smite, Searing Smite colliding with War Smite. Sparks, blood, and fragmented willpower filled the air as neither of us gave ground.
He was close to the ideal martial realm.
Half a step from Martial Saint, yet his refinement rivaled the masters I once fought within the Martial Alliance. Every exchange carved deeper into my reserves, every clash testing the limits of my inferior vessel.
Then I felt it.
An opening, narrow as a breath, born from accumulated strain rather than technique. I stepped in and drove my fist forward, releasing everything I had been holding back.
The stored Reflect detonated.
Damage from Dragon Tyrantâs Descent, Seven Mist Transformation, Usher the Mountain, and Thirty-Two Transformations of Storms exploded outward in a single, focused burst. It was not a perfect return, but it was overwhelming, willpower forcing raw accumulation into violence.
The Sword Emperorâs blade screamed as cracks spiderwebbed across its surface. His eyes widened for the first time as he was hurled backward, body smashing through stone and crashing into the mountainside with a thunderous roar.
I exhaled slowly, silver aura roaring around me as the battlefield fell into a brief, stunned silence.
Sword Emperor staggered to his feet amid broken stone, blood trailing from the corner of his mouth as his cracked blade trembled in his grip. His eyes were fixed on me, no longer cold or distant, but filled with something closer to disbelief than fear.
âHow is this possible?â he demanded, his voice strained. âYou are only at the Tenth Realm. You should not be able to do this.â
I exhaled slowly, feeling the pressure of my own heartbeat through the Holy Sword still lodged in my chest. I met his gaze without flinching.
âYouâre just lacking,â I said plainly. âThatâs all there is to it.â
My voice carried no mockery, only certainty.
âYou handle aura crudely, and your control over World Force is sloppy. You rely too much on reputation and too little on understanding.â
The silver sheen of Zeal Aura around my body shifted, deepening into a violent crimson as War Aura surged outward. The pressure in the air thickened, aggressive and unyielding, as if the world itself had chosen a side. I reached up, wrapped my hand around the hilt of the Holy Sword, and tore it free from my chest in a spray of golden blood that immediately began to knit itself closed.
I vanished.
Flash Step detonated beneath my feet, space folding as I appeared directly before Sword Emperor. My arm drew back, Holy Sword blazing as Divine Smite gathered at its edge, ready to end his life in a single, decisive arc.
Before I could strike, a presence slammed into my flank.
âA heretic like you deserves no place to go,â the Adjudication Monk snarled, his eyes burning with wrath. âBut hell.â
He thrust his staff forward, World Force roaring as the space before it compressed violently.
âHeavenly Mountain Push!â
I crossed my arms and invoked Flash Parry, golden light flaring as the impact landed. The technique held, but the momentum was monstrous. My body was ripped from the ground and hurled into the sky, the shockwave tearing through the earth below like an avalanche given form.
Before I could regain control, a calm, feminine voice echoed through the haze.
âNine-Stringed Heavenly Formation.â
Silver threads emerged from nothingness, wrapping around my limbs and torso with surgical precision. They arrested my flight instantly, suspending me in midair as tension bit into my flesh. I looked up just in time to see the clouds part.
An enormous serpentine blue dragon descended from the heavens, scales crackling with violent arcs of lightning. Its maw opened wide, the sky itself trembling in anticipation.
âDragon Tyrantâs Breath of Destruction!â
Lightning poured down like divine judgment, engulfing my suspended form in blinding radiance.
I did not stay to receive it.
I reached inward, touched the Manasoul I had left behind during my exchange with Sword Emperor, and invoked Castling. The world inverted. Space folded.
I reappeared inside a massive crater carved into the mountainside, stone still crumbling around me. I remained seated where I landed, legs relaxed, posture almost casual, as if upon a throne carved by violence itself.
From my vantage point, I looked up at the sky.
The dragonâs breath continued for several heartbeats longer, utterly annihilating the space where Sword Emperor had been. When it faded, nothing remained of him.
The Adjudication Monk stared at me, his face pale, his grip on his staff visibly shaking.
âHow,â he asked hoarsely, âare you this powerful?â
I rested my forearm against my knee and looked at him without hostility.
âItâs not that Iâm powerful,â I replied. âItâs that youâre weak.â
His eyes widened at the bluntness of my answer.
âYouâre all imitations,â I continued. âShadows preserved in a record of the past. This world isnât real. Itâs a formation, a replay, and youâre standing inside it without knowing.â
His expression twisted, fury overtaking disbelief.
âLies,â he spat. âBlasphemy. Heresy.â
I shook my head slowly.
âThe techniques of the future are far beyond what you wield now. In my time, even Eighth Realm cultivators are revered, not because of their realm alone, but because of their mastery, their refinement, and the impact they leave behind.â
I raised my gaze to meet his.
âHere, immortals like you have grown complacent. You mistake longevity for supremacy and authority for understanding.â
I knew exactly why I was saying all of those things to him. It was not strategy, nor necessity, nor mercy. I wanted to shatter him. I wanted to see what would remain when the foundation of his belief cracked beneath his feet.
There was no real benefit in doing so. Not tactically, not spiritually, not even emotionally in any clean way. Curiosity played a part, and so did something uglier. A small, selfish desire to feel better by watching someone else confront despair before I had to confront my own.
If one day you learned your entire life had been a lie, that everything you fought for was no more than a moving image in a preserved record, would you break or would you endure?
The Adjudication Monk trembled where he stood, his grip on his staff loose, his breathing uneven. The certainty that once wrapped him like armor had peeled away, leaving only fear and confusion. He looked broken, and that realization unsettled me more than it should have.
A part of me hoped he would remain strong. I truly hoped for it.
If a monk who had spent his entire existence pursuing enlightenment and nirvana could shatter so easily, then what did that say about me?
I exhaled slowly and steadied my heart.
âWe should end this,â I said, my voice calm despite the storm beneath it.
I looked at my own hands, flexing my fingers as power continued to circulate through my body.
âI didnât expect achieving Martial Ascension to feel this⌠lackluster.â
That much was true. The realm of a Martial Saint was supposed to defy common sense, allowing one to transcend reality through martial arts alone. In truth, I believed I had crossed that threshold long ago, back when I contended with the Supreme Void over Chen Weiâs body. The problem had never been insight or qualification.
It had been excess.
I wielded too many powers, carried too many systems, and divided my attention across too many paths. My martial arts had never been allowed to fully breathe. At the realm of Martial Saint, aura itself became an art, capable of manifesting abilities without the need for spells or techniques.
Yuen Fuâs aura had manifested something related to sharpness, though his circumstances were too abnormal for me to draw clean conclusions. As for mine, I felt it the instant it stabilized.
It was unmistakable.
Divine spark.
I shifted my aura deliberately, letting War Aura fade as Holy Aura surged outward. Crimson light transformed into gold, radiant and solemn, carrying a pressure that felt both gentle and absolute. Drawing on my battles, my Paladin-derived martial arts, and my closeness to the Source, I released it fully.
âDivine Zone.â
Golden light expanded outward, swallowing the battlefield in a five-hundred-meter radius. Space itself seemed to acknowledge it, bending subtly under its authority. I could feel its boundaries clearly, and I knew with certainty that it could grow larger with time and refinement.
The Adjudication Monk stared at the light in confusion, his lips trembling.
âWhat⌠is this?â he asked.
Before I could answer, a furious roar echoed from the sky.
The Dragon King descended, lightning still crackling along his scales, his voice shaking with rage and disbelief.
âYou tricked me!â he bellowed. âYou made me kill an ally!â
He was already inside the Divine Zone, though only partially. That was more than enough.
I did not raise my hand. I did not chant. I did not focus.
I spent a dozen Manasouls.
Twelve Heavenly Punishments descended simultaneously.
Golden swords manifested inside the Dragon Kingâs body without warning, erupting outward in a grotesque crown of divine judgment. Dragons possessed terrifying vitality, and under normal circumstances I would never risk holding back. I did not need to now.
The Dragon King died before he could finish screaming.
Ordinarily, Heavenly Punishment required casting time, channeling, and an unavoidable cinematic descent. Its power lay in inevitability rather than speed. Within the Divine Zone, those limitations ceased to exist.
Every skill obeyed me absolutely.
Flash Step, once limited by distance and interception, became indistinguishable from true teleportation. Casting time, travel, and reaction windows collapsed into nothing.
The Adjudication Monk did not even have time to scream.
I crossed the distance instantly and swung.
Divine Smite severed his head cleanly from his shoulders, golden light fading as his body collapsed in silence.
Within the Divine Zone, I understood the nature of my authority with unsettling clarity. Any skill I invoked manifested instantaneously, carrying a ninety-nine percent certainty of success. It was not an exaggeration to call it an all-sure-fire domain, one capable of killing almost anything unfortunate enough to be caught within its bounds. When paired with Hollow Pointâs absurd critical rate, the result bordered on invincibility.
Of course, invincibility always came with conditions. Anything beyond the reach of the Divine Zone remained outside my grasp. I had never been naĂŻve enough to ignore that weakness.
That was precisely why I had prepared in advance.
During our earlier exchange, I had embedded a Manasoul within the Queen of the Night. Even if she was only an imitation born of this recorded past, she was still the most troublesome among them. An assassin who specialized in disappearance was not someone I would allow to escape on principle alone.
I reached inward and extracted the Manasoul lodged within her existence. With Castling, space folded obediently, and the world rearranged itself around me.
I appeared beside her.
Her eyes widened in naked shock, the composure she had worn so effortlessly shattering in an instant. She had fled far from the battlefield after witnessing the Dragon Kingâs annihilation, relying on stealth refined over a long time of cultivation. Under normal circumstances, she would have vanished from even an immortalâs perception.
Under the Divine Zone, there was no such thing as concealment.
With Divine Sense extended through the domain, I perceived her so clearly that her stealth might as well not have existed at all. She twisted away instinctively, attempting to escape, but Flash Step carried me ahead of her movement.
I seized her with Monkey Grip, fingers locking around her shoulder and throat, and forced her to meet my gaze.
âPlease,â she said, her voice strained but steady enough to betray long familiarity with desperation. âLet me live.â
I studied her face, searching for deceit, finding none.
âIf I let you go,â I asked calmly, âwould you change your ways, live humbly, and stop killing people?â
The question itself was absurd, and we both knew it.
She laughed, the sound dry and bitter, eyes flickering with something like pity.
âHow inane,â she replied. âYou really donât understand, do you? You donât even know why I became this way.â
âThatâs true,â I admitted. âAnd even though I have the means to learn everything about you, I wonât.â
I could have used Divine Possession, torn through her memories, her pain, and her justifications. I knew myself well enough to recognize how much that ability had already changed me. The thought of leaning on it again unsettled me more than it should have.
âI wonât kill you,â I continued, âif you answer one question truthfully.â
She scoffed, humiliation flashing across her features.
âJust kill me,â she said. âThis is degrading.â
I ignored the provocation.
âWhat would you do,â I asked, âif this world were fake, and your life didnât matter anymore?â
She frowned, genuinely puzzled.
âWhy would that matter?â she said slowly. âFake or real, Iâm alive right now. Nothing takes that away from me.â
âI could,â I replied evenly. âTake it away, I meanâŚâ
She shook her head.
âNo. Youâd just be the catalyst,â she said. âThe reason Iâd die would still be my own choices. I could lie to you, beg you, offer my body, my loyalty, my soul. I could say anything you want to hear. But that wouldnât change the truth.â
My Divine Sense confirmed it. She was not lying.
I killed her anyway.
My grip tightened, and with a sharp twist, I beheaded her cleanly. Her death was swift, unceremonious, and final. That choice had been mine alone. Whatever logic she used to justify causality, the act itself belonged to me.
To me, this world might have been a fabrication. To her, it had been life.
I extended my hand and spoke softly.
âDivine Word: Raise.â
Light surged, shadow recoiled, and her body reformed. She gasped as life returned, collapsing to her knees in confusion, hands trembling as she touched her own throat.
âYou died,â I said. âThat was your punishment.â
She looked up at me, eyes wide and unfocused.
âThe life you have now,â I continued, âis your reward for answering honestly.â
I turned away before she could respond.
Her words lingered uncomfortably in my mind. Fake or real, she had lived. She had chosen. I might never see the life she would lead from this moment onward, but I found myself hoping it would mean something.
That this world was real.
That she was real.
That I was, too.
I had made up my mind. Once all of this was over, Gu Jie would need to face an appropriate punishment. Not for malice alone, but for how far she had gone to violate the lives of people she ought to have protected, regardless if they were fake or not..
Hei Mao appeared beside me then, his presence quiet but steady.
âYou did well,â he said.
I glanced at him, uncertain.
I didnât know what he saw in me at that moment. I couldnât even tell what I had done right. All I knew was that I had spared an enemy, something that would never have crossed my mind in the real world.
âYeah, sure,â I said with a half-hearted attempt to sound fine. âStay on your toes, Hei MaoâŚâ