100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?-Chapter 340 - Buying Time
Color had not returned.
The battlefield remained bleached as if the world had been sketched in ash and then varnished by an Emperor’s will.
Only one unexpected thing moved.
Lucien. 𝒇𝓻𝓮𝓮𝙬𝙚𝒃𝒏𝓸𝙫𝒆𝙡.𝓬𝓸𝒎
His throat tightened.
’Aura of Unyielding,’ he thought.
Any suppression beneath primordial class entities would slide off him the way rain slid off glass.
The knowledge did not comfort him.
It made him swallow.
Because his instincts were screaming so hard that it felt like his bones were trying to get out of his skin.
He knew it with a clarity that did not allow bargaining.
He had zero percent chance of winning.
Perfect Loop had already confirmed it.
He could defeat those stronger than him. He could outplay Kings. He could even humiliate a battlefield.
But Emperors and Eternals were not a problem to solve.
They were a ceiling.
Every method he had led to the same ending.
He died.
Every time.
Lucien took a subconscious gulp anyway because the body did not care what the mind had proven. It still begged.
Across the gray silence, Kharzun’s gaze rested on him.
One second.
Two.
Lucien held his breath without meaning to.
Then Kharzun looked away.
Not dismissively, but with the cold efficiency of a butcher deciding which cut mattered first.
Lucien felt the insult more sharply than the fear.
Kharzun had not registered him as a threat.
Kharzun had only registered the possibility that Lucien possessed a treasure that kept him outside the edict’s address.
As if Lucien were a lockpick, not a blade.
That was when Lucien saw it.
Kharzun blinked.
To the execution array.
The formation circles hovered above the field, still rotating in the frozen world. The array lived in a different layer, written into a depth of reality the edict did not need to pause.
Kharzun’s fingers lifted.
Essence flared at his fingertips like ink that had learned to burn.
Lucien’s instincts spiked into a new octave. So hard that for a heartbeat he heard nothing else.
’Once the formation completed, there would be no living after.’
Their bodies could be mended. But their souls could not.
This was not death. This was obliteration.
No return. No reincarnation. No loophole.
Lucien moved.
His voice came out dry.
"Equip Genesis Set."
Five armaments answered at once.
He blinked.
A step through reflected space, aimed straight at Kharzun’s hands.
Kharzun noticed him instantly.
The Emperor did not turn his whole head. He did not need to.
His attention arrived like a wall.
"Trying to die early?" Kharzun asked.
The air around Lucien petrified.
Conceptually hardened space. Distance became stone. Movement became a statue’s regret.
Lucien’s blink caught in his own throat.
He felt the trap clamp down.
Just then...
The Boots of Reflection moved.
Lucien’s foot landed in a different layer, a seam of mirrored reality that did not accept the same grammar. He emerged beside Kharzun’s head, close enough to see the texture of the Emperor’s basalt plates. Close enough that Kharzun’s horn ridges rose above him like broken towers.
Kharzun’s eye slid toward him with mild interest.
"Oh," Kharzun said. "Interesting."
Lucien summoned Morphis.
The weapon unfolded into a greatsword with a sound like a hinge in the sky opening. Its edge was not merely sharp. It was insistent.
Lucien inhaled once.
He used a Goliath technique he used in the Mural World, and for a heartbeat his posture changed. His shoulders widened. His stance became an anchor. His arms became leverage.
"Heaven-Splitting Strike."
The greatsword tore forward.
Lucien layered the Law of Collapse into the blade’s arc, forcing the strike to carry inevitability with it. Space in front of the sword cracked as if it had been waiting for permission to fail.
Kharzun raised a single claw.
He petrified a slab of reality.
A section of the world hardened into an unbreakable page.
The greatsword struck that page.
A shattering sound rang out, sharp enough to feel like a bell inside the skull.
And then...
The petrified reality fractured.
The collapse caught the fracture and accelerated it.
The hardened page collapsed into shards of frozen law, and the strike continued.
It hit Kharzun’s head.
The impact was clean.
Lucien felt the contact.
And then he felt the truth.
Nothing.
Not even a crack.
His strike had landed on a mountain and the mountain had not noticed the weather.
For a breath, silence held.
Then Kharzun’s expression changed.
Not from pain.
From annoyance.
Lucien had not harmed him. But Lucien had inconvenienced his timing.
Kharzun’s Law of Petrification surged.
It aimed at Lucien’s possibilities.
The air around him hardened into geometry that refused to allow "escape" as an option.
At the same time, Kharzun’s other hand drew a line through the gray world.
Blood appeared.
It rose in thin threads from the battlefield itself, pulled out of frozen corpses, from halted veins, and from blood that had been paused mid-splash and now obeyed a new master.
The threads formed runes. Blood script.
Grave magic followed behind it like a shadow that carried weight.
Kharzun did not throw death like a fireball.
He wrote it like a document.
The blood script became a contract that tried to bind Lucien’s circulation to the ground. The grave magic became the stamp that declared the contract final.
Lucien felt his own blood jerk inside him, tugged by an external clause.
He felt his injuries from seconds ago try to become permanent, as if the grave attribute were forcing every wound to accept that it had always been fatal.
Kharzun spoke without raising his voice.
"You move because the edict did not name you," Kharzun said. "So I will name you another way."
The blood script flashed.
Lucien’s ribs tightened as if invisible hands had seized them from the inside.
His breath punched out.
Then the petrification pressed down and tried to turn his next step into an artifact that could not begin.
Lucien’s Boots of Reflection flared again, but the mirrored seam had narrowed. The petrified geometry was learning where his doors opened.
Lucien took the hit.
He was hurled away like a pebble thrown from a god’s palm, spinning through the gray air, coughing blood that looked too dark against the drained world.
The Mantle of Infinite drank most of the impact. It turned lethal force into bruising pressure but even reduced... it was still too much.
Lucien slammed into the ground.
The crater did not form properly because the ground was half-statue. It cracked like pottery instead.
Kharzun did not chase him.
That was the worst part.
Kharzun turned back to the formation.
His fingers resumed their work.
Lucien’s chest rose once, twice.
The Aegis of Rebirth lit.
Warm light poured through his ribs, rebuilding what had collapsed, stitching vitality back into his organs as if life were a pattern that could be restored from memory.
Lucien staggered upright.
His thoughts raced.
That confirmed it.
Kharzun was not hunting him because he could not afford distraction.
This frozen world was temporary.
The edict was not an endless dominion.
It was a window.
A window created by conquest, by some prepared authority laid into the planet like a buried seal. A command that could arrest everything long enough to finish an execution.
Lucien did not need to win.
He only needed to make sure Kharzun could not finish the sentence before the window closed.
He needed to buy time until the world remembered it was allowed to breathe again.
Lucien blinked.
He went Dragon Beast Mode.
His body surged larger, plated with draconic scale, muscle swelling with borrowed ancestry. His claws dug into the gray air as if it had texture. His eyes sharpened into predatory focus.
The Boots of Reflection flared and he stepped into mirrored depth again, not to strike Kharzun but to reach the execution circle itself.
He aimed for the writing.
He aimed for the final stroke.
Kharzun turned his gaze without turning his head.
Fury simmered in his eyes now but his hands did not pause.
"Persistent," Kharzun murmured. "For a thing that has already been sentenced."
Petrification snapped toward Lucien like a jaw.
Lucien dodged at the last instant by stepping through a mirror seam.
Kharzun’s petrification hit a frozen gargoyle instead.
The creature did not even have time to be afraid. It simply became a monument with a face mid-sneer, then cracked under the pressure of being forced into a shape too perfect for stone.
Lucien struck again, trying to cut the array’s inner ring.
Kharzun answered with blood magic.
Threads of blood hardened into spear-fine spikes that pierced the mirrored seam itself, pinning Lucien’s exit points. Grave magic sealed behind those spikes, declaring those pinned coordinates "closed."
Lucien felt his Boots hesitate.
A door he expected to open had become a grave-mark.
He had to rip himself sideways through another layer, and the effort tore a crack down his own shoulder.
He shifted.
Slime Beast Mode.
His body softened into translucent elasticity, then reformed with monstrous density. Impact resistance, regeneration, adaptive motion. A form meant to survive being hit by the world.
Kharzun’s gaze sharpened.
"Curious," Kharzun said. "This form..."
Kharzun’s voice lowered.
"You must die."
The next attacks were not casual.
They were final.
Petrified reality arrived in slabs, falling from above like verdict tablets. Blood scripts became hooks that tried to pull Lucien’s organs out of alignment. Grave magic trailed behind, trying to make every stagger the last stagger.
Lucien misled him.
He positioned in one place, then dodged at the last second.
Kharzun’s attacks struck the frozen ranks instead.
Stone bodies shattered. Some were pulverized. Some were petrified too hard and then broke because perfection is brittle.
Lucien used Kharzun’s strength to kill his own kin, carving gaps in the field so that when the freeze ended the others would not be surrounded by an intact army.
He then tried to move the Liberator members.
He wrapped divine energy around them and pulled inward, trying to place them into his divine energy core.
But...
He failed.
They were anchored to this conquered world, pinned by the same conquest authority that froze them.
So he covered them instead.
Stygian Shell expanded. It wrapped Kaia, Rhazek, Velun, Darian, and Seryth in a layer meant to absorb spillover.
Astraea and Vaelcar did not need cover.
If Kharzun tried to kill them while they were frozen, he would have to spend a strike strong enough to finish them in one blow.
And even Kharzun did not treat Eternals like debris.







