Absolute Cheater-Chapter 285: Hollow Star II

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Asher looked down.

Now he wore shackles—each link a moment of failure.

Each shackle showed what he knew. "This place really does reflect my first life, huh," he murmured, easily breaking them. "Pity. I already pierced through the illusions in different realm."

As he stepped forward, the chains that once bound him shattered effortlessly. He turned to Valeris. Her chains had broken too—but when it came to Valeria, things were different.

He didn't know enough about her—couldn't reach her, couldn't help her.

She would have to free herself.

But just as he thought that, the air shimmered. Keys of light floated around her, and one by one, her chains began to break.

Valeris's eyes opened once again.

"Are you alright?" Asher asked, stepping closer—but then, sudden laughter echoed around them.

The Echo-Killers had arrived.

Valeris turned to face them, the Sovereign Keys still flaring behind her. The echoes twisted in the mist, their forms half-formed, half-forgotten.

"We need to run. They won't hold for long," she said, already moving. Asher nodded, and together they continued their descent into the dark.

Fourth Descent: Mirror-Glass

The next stair was glimmering—mirror-glass, each step a perfect reflection.

Valeris faltered as she saw her reflection twist—sometimes herself, sometimes the Queen, and sometimes… nothing at all.

"This stair forces self-confrontation," she whispered. "If we don't know who we are… it consumes us."

Asher saw his own reflection—fragmented and flickering.

Cultivator. Killer. Lover. Sovereign. Monster.

The reflections began to speak—not with words, but through sensation:

"You will never be enough."

"You are no one's equal."

"You only fight because you're afraid of peace."

But Asher didn't flinch.

In response, he activated his Absolute Appraisal, golden glyphs flaring to life in his eyes.

The illusions crumbled—shattered under truth. Their real form was revealed: a single, lurking mirror beast, a parasite born of falsehood and fractured souls.

Asher ignored it.

He took Valeris's hand, guiding her forward. She walked unharmed—shielded by the Sovereign Keys bound to her soul.

Together, they continued their descent, the mirrored stair groaning behind them as the Hollow Star howled in frustration.

Fifth Stair: Memory-Sand

The air changed as they stepped off the mirror-glass. The silence was heavier here—not oppressive, but intimate. Knowing.

Beneath their feet, the stair turned to shifting sand, sparkling with ghost-light. Each grain shimmered like crystal dust, and as their boots disturbed it, memories rose from the surface—like smoke made from time.

"The Memory-Sand," Valeris whispered, her voice solemn. "It doesn't show you your past… it makes you live it again."

Asher's steps slowed.

The sand curled up around him—and then he was no longer in the Hollow Star.

He stood in a burning village. Screams in the air. Smoke. Blood. The same moment he had relived in dreams a hundred times.

"You killed us," a voice rasped.

Asher looked at them, they were the reason he turned into monster in his firt life, a mission given to him to brun an entire village alive and he did that.

Asher didn't give any excuse, like he was forced to do it or the orphange where he lived wil be burned down, he just silenly accepted teh accusation as he continued to move.

Valeris touched his shoulder.

The Sovereign Keys shimmered between them. Her aura pressed outward, and the vision began to dissolve.

"This place thrives on unresolved guilt," she said gently. "But guilt can't hold us if we've already paid the price."

Asher exhaled sharply.

"I remember what I lost. I don't need to be punished again."

The sand shifted, parting like a path before them.

But behind them—

The mirror stair shattered.

The echo-killers were descending now, unimpeded.

The mirror beast had been slain, and three Sovereign-forged nightmares walked the sands. But the sand resisted them, distorting under their unnatural presence.

Valeris's echo-child was the first to falter. Her feet sank too deeply, and the sand responded with whispers—real memories. Her memories.

She screamed.

The Valeria-tyrant spat in disgust and raised her hand to incinerate the memory-sand—but her fire only flared backward, twisted by the Hollow Star's will.

The hollow Star even test these Echo-Killers and at the memeroy sand they felt difficulty.

***

The sand thinned.

A dark shape began to rise before them—the final threshold.

A stair carved from voidstone, utterly black, drinking in the light. And at its summit: a gateway of bone and starlight, pulsing with finality.

Valeris stopped, breathing hard.

"This is it. The Final Descent." ƒгeewebnovёl.com

Asher looked toward it. The voidstone gave no reflections. No sound echoed from it. It was the Law incarnate—death, silence, acceptance.

"Are you ready?" she asked.

He nodded once.

"We survive this… and the Law of Death will be ours to wield."

Together, they stepped forward.

Each step upon the Voidstone was soundless.

The light of the Hollow Star dimmed, replaced by a deep, consuming silence that pressed against their chests like invisible hands. There was no echo here, no air, no illusion—just an unsettling, absolute darkness.

If Asher hadn't been holding Valeris's hand, he wouldn't have even known she was still beside him. That's how complete the darkness was.

A pitch-black void. The only things he could feel were the cold stone stairs beneath his feet and the warmth of her hand in his.

Even Valeris—Sovereign of fused souls—slowed. Her breath clouded unnaturally, not from cold, but from the weight of absence.

"We're past time," she murmured. "This stair doesn't test memory or reflection. It asks only one thing—can you face your end?"

Asher nodded grimly.

They reached the final step. Or what felt like the final step.

The stairs no longer descended.

There was no platform. No door. No gate.

Just the same darkness—thick and total, stretching endlessly in all directions.

"This… is it?" Asher asked, voice barely more than thought. Even speaking here felt like trying to shout underwater.

Valeris didn't answer at first. Her hand tightened around his, her breath slow and measured.

"It's not the end," she said finally. "The stair was never meant to lead to a place. It leads to a state."