Chapter 125: New mission

Chapter 125: New mission


Her grip on him suddenly tightened, her fingers digging into his waist with a surprising strength. It was the first time he had seen such a fearful expression on her.


Even when they were trapped in the burning tent, or attacked by the assassins, she never batted an eye.


"The Seal?" Rhys asked, keeping his voice even. "I have read about it. A barrier that separates the Wastelands from the Mainland. They say it protects us."


"Protects us?" Emma let out a short, bitter laugh that was devoid of all humor. "That is the story they tell the children. That is the lie they have built their entire world upon."


She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a low, intense whisper that was meant for his ears alone.


"The Seal is not a wall, Rhys. It is a lock. And every few years, the great sects offer up their most powerful and talented young disciples as a sacrifice to keep that lock from breaking."


The word hung in the air between them, dark and heavy. He remembered the Celestial Cleansing Tournament, the grand event he was planning to use to force his own path to ascension.


"The Cleanse," he said, the pieces of a new, horrifying puzzle beginning to click into place. "The tournament winners go to the Seal to purify their foundations."


"That is the lie," she hissed, her voice trembling with a mixture of anger and fear.


"There is no purification. There is only a feeding. The Seal is not a simple barrier of energy. It is a living thing, or something close to it.


An ancient, primordial entity that was bound at the end of a long-forgotten war. It is a prison, but it is also a prisoner. And it is hungry."


She took a shaky breath, her words tumbling out now, the story a secret she had carried for too long.


"My family, the House of Lyra, we were one of the ancient houses. Our ancestors were there when the Seal was created. The knowledge has been passed down through generations, a terrible secret known only to the direct heirs.


The Seal requires a constant source of pure, potent life energy to maintain its power. The stronger the energy, the more stable the Seal becomes."


"And the most potent source of that energy," Rhys finished for her, the cold, logical conclusion dawning on him, "is the untainted life force of a young, talented cultivator at the peak of their potential."


"Exactly," she confirmed, her voice a pained whisper.


"The tournament is not a competition for glory. It is an auction. The great sects present their finest goods, their most promising disciples, and the Seal chooses the ones with the most vibrant life force.


They are not ’cleansed’. They are consumed. Their potential, their future, their very essence is drained away and used as fuel to reinforce the lock for another few years."


Rhys was silent. He had thought he understood the cynical nature of this world, the games of power played by the great sects.


But this... this was on another level entirely. It was a system of institutionalized sacrifice, a lie so grand and so terrible that it had been maintained for centuries.


He had planned to use that system for his own gain. Now, he realized he had been planning to walk willingly into the mouth of a god-like entity that devoured the souls of the talented.


He thought of the System. His first, instinctual reaction was to ask it, to confirm Emma’s story, to analyze the nature of the Seal. But he stopped himself.


A cold wall of resolve rose in his mind. The System. The key that had unlocked his power, the guide that had led him out of his darkest moments.


He had trusted it completely. But that trust was broken. He remembered the feeling of knowledge entering his mind, not as a foreign download, but as a half-forgotten memory.


He remembered the System’s convenient silences, its inability to analyze the things that truly mattered, like Kaelen’s true nature or Seduction’s power.


It was hiding something. It had been hiding things from the very beginning. His entire journey had been guided by a voice whose true purpose he did not understand.


He felt a surge of cold, quiet anger. He had been a puppet, a willing participant in a game whose rules he was only just beginning to see.


He would not be a puppet anymore.


He made a silent vow to himself, right there, on the back of a horse in the middle of a dark, dangerous forest.


He would not speak to the System again. He would not ask it for help. He would not rely on its analysis.


He would treat it as what it was: a tool, a passive machine that he would use to burn his lifespan when he needed to, but not a partner.


He would find his own answers. He would rely on his own mind, his own strength, his own judgment.


The silent treatment would continue until the day the System decided to tell him the truth.


He felt her take another deep breath. "My family’s knowledge of the Seal is not just about the feeding," she said.


"The portal we are going to, the one in the ruins of my home... it does not just lead to the Unclaimed Territories. That is only its first destination.


It is a part of an ancient network. There are other portals, hidden throughout the world. And one of them... one of them leads to a place on the other side of the Seal."


Rhys’s hands tightened on the reins, pulling the Horned Horse to a stop.


The beast snorted, its breath a white plume in the cold night air. The entire forest seemed to hold its breath.


"What do you mean?" he asked, his voice a low, intense rumble.


"I mean the escape my father planned for himself, the one Austin thought he was leading me into, was a lie," she explained, her voice gaining a new strength, a new purpose.


"My mother was a scholar, a true historian. She spent her life studying our family’s oldest records, texts that even my father ignored because they spoke of duty and sacrifice, not power and wealth.


She knew our house was doomed. She knew my father was a weak man who would eventually betray us all. So she prepared. She left something for me in the ruins. Not gold, not an artifact. Information. A key."


"A key to what?" he pressed, the words barely a whisper.


"A key to the Seal," she whispered, her voice full of a desperate, dangerous hope.


"My mother believed that the Seal was not just a prison. She believed it was a source of power.


She found records of a ’backdoor’, a way to bypass the Seal without the judgment of Karma, without the sacrifice.


A secret escape route from this prison of a world. That is the true legacy of my house.


That is the real reason my father wants me dead, and the real reason the Crimson Sun wants me alive.


They do not just want my lands. They want my mother’s secret. They want the key to the cage."


Rhys sat there in the moonlight, the world silent around them. His plan had just changed completely.


This was no longer just an alliance of convenience, a simple trade of protection for information. This was a path. A real, tangible path to the one place he needed to go.


He looked at the woman behind him, not as a client, not as a princess, but as the keeper of the most valuable secret in the world.


"Let’s go," he said, his voice a low, determined rumble. He urged the horse forward, a new fire in his eyes. "Let’s go find your mother’s secret."


The Horned Horse galloped through the moonlit forest, its powerful legs eating up the ground.


The new urgency, the new purpose, seemed to affect the beast as well. It ran faster, its hooves barely seeming to touch the soft earth.


Behind Rhys, Emma was quiet. The weight of her secrets, now shared, had changed the dynamic between them.


She was no longer just a client, and he was no longer just a guard. They were partners in a desperate gamble, their fates now intertwined by a shared destination.


Rhys pushed the horse harder, a new fire in his own eyes. The Glimmerwood Forest, which had once seemed like a vast and dangerous obstacle, was now just a prelude.


The Unclaimed Territories, the ruins of House Lyra, the hidden portal—they were all just steps on a much longer, more dangerous path.


A path that led to the very edge of their world, and perhaps, beyond. The game had changed, and the stakes were higher than he could have ever imagined.


He was no longer just running from his past. He was now running towards a future that was far more dangerous and far more meaningful than anything he had ever imagined.


The secrets of the Seal, the legacy of a forgotten mother, and the chance to break free from the cage of his world—it was all waiting for him, hidden in a pile of old rocks and forgotten memories.


He had a princess to protect, a key to find, and a god-like entity to defy. The stakes had been raised to a cosmic level, and Rhys felt a familiar, dangerous thrill.