I Died 2,000 Years Ago: The Underworld Fears Me-Chapter 79 - 76 — The Eight Traitors & the Clock That Will Kill Me
The lock was older than the building, older than the city, older than the idea of mercy.
I had stared at it in the shattered crater beneath the factory. Eight crests were carved into its rusted iron face.
A bleeding coin.
An eyeless owl.
A broken shield.
The metal had pulsed faintly in the mud, as if it remembered something the world had buried.
I didn’t stay in the courtyard to celebrate. I left the Iron Legion standing in the freezing fog, turned my back on the bankrupt ruins of the Alchemist Consortium, and walked out into the streets of Sector 9.
I walked through the acidic rain until I reached the cramped tenement building where this had all started.
I climbed the rotting concrete stairs to Grandma’s apartment. The air in the hallway smelled of boiled cabbage, burnt incense, and damp rust. Somewhere deep in the walls, the old industrial pipes screamed like things being skinned alive. The sound vibrated through my boots as I pushed the front door open.
My black wool suit was ruined. It was stiff with dried concrete, scorched by molten iron, and stained dark with the black blood of corporate enforcers.
Grandma sat in the corner shadow of the small living room.
She gripped her wooden cane with both hands. Her knuckles were bone-white against the polished wood. She looked at the blood drying on my collar, but she didn’t ask if I was hurt. She already knew the answer. We had won the street war. We owned the territory. But the victory felt like ash in my mouth.
I bypassed the small, scratched kitchen table. I reached into my inner jacket pocket. My fingers brushed past the heavy, cooling jade of the Tiger Seal. I pulled out a piece of cheap metal.
Clack
I dropped the rusted hairpin onto the wood. It rattled, the sound unnaturally loud in the quiet apartment.
The silence that followed grew so heavy it felt harder to breathe. It pressed down on my shoulders, forcing my lungs to work harder just to pull in the damp air.
"The Alchemist Consortium is bankrupt," I said. My voice came out flat. Cold. "I took the Ley Line. I broke the bedrock under the factory."
Grandma stared at the hairpin. Her breathing hitched. Just once.
"You found the chain," she rasped.
"I found a lock," I corrected. I leaned over the table, placing both hands flat on the wood. I didn’t blink. "Eight crests. The Zhang. The Liu. The Lei. The Zhou. The entire Board of Directors that rules the Ivory Sky. And right in the center, a Black Lotus."
I tapped the rusted metal on the table.
"A flawless match for the pin you gave me weeks ago."
She closed her eyes. The wrinkles on her face seemed to deepen, carving centuries of exhaustion into her sagging skin. The sweet, frightened old lady from the slums evaporated.
The Keeper of the Sector 9 Gate looked up at me.
"You gave this to me right after my parents sent that coffin from their archaeological dig," I said, my voice dropping an octave. The Sovereign’s authority bled into the air, completely unbidden. The temperature in the apartment plummeted. Frost aggressively bloomed across the edges of the kitchen table, cracking the varnish and creeping toward the rusted hairpin. "Right after I touched the stone and two thousand years of memory slammed into my brain. You knew exactly who I was when I woke up. You knew this pin belonged to the Queen of the First Court."
Grandma’s eyes snapped open. They didn’t hold fear. They held a terrifying, ancient fire.
She slammed her cane into the floorboards.
BANG
The wood splintered. The sheer kinetic force of the impact pushed the freezing air away from her, forcing me to brace my boots against the floor to keep from sliding backward. The latent Qi radiating from my own grandmother was staggering.
"You came to Sector Nine by yourself, Ren!" Grandma snapped. The air around her vibrated with a suppressed, Tier-5 pressure. "But I stayed here to guard the Gate. When you touched that coffin your parents dug up, I felt the Sovereign’s Authority return to your human body. I knew the Eight Traitor Families would feel it too. If they knew you had your memories back, they wouldn’t have sent corporate lawyers with eviction notices. They would have dropped the Ivory Sky on your head!"
I looked down at the table. I picked up the rusted hairpin.
I squeezed it. The rusted edge bit cleanly into the meat of my thumb. A single drop of hot, red human blood welled up, fell, and hit the wood.
For two thousand years, I had not allowed myself to remember her voice.
I had buried the Queen of the First Court beneath layers of bureaucratic arrogance and Sovereign detachment. I had convinced myself that I was just the Auditor, the enforcer of the great Ledger. But holding the cheap metal pin, the phantom smell of her skin cut through the stench of industrial ozone and smog. My eighteen-year-old human heart hammered against my ribs, flooded with an ancient, suffocating grief.
"Where is she?" I asked.
My voice did not rise. It did not need to. The sheer gravity of the question cracked the frost on the table.
Grandma’s shoulders slumped. The terrifying pressure radiating from her cane vanished, leaving only a tired, broken retainer who had carried a secret for far too long.
"Two thousand years ago," she whispered, her voice cracking, "your enemies deleted you from the Ledger. But her..."
Grandma looked at the drop of blood on the desk.
"They couldn’t kill her, Ren. Her Law was too heavy. It refused to be erased. So they broke her. The Yamas held her down, and the Patriarchs shattered her soul into eight pieces."
The rusted metal of the hairpin began to heat up against my palm.
"They didn’t just lock her away," Grandma continued. Horror crept into her voice. "They commodified her. The Traitor Families are using the fragments of the Queen’s soul as biological batteries. They locked the core beneath your factory. They scattered the rest to the lower sectors."
The cheap fluorescent lightbulb hanging above our heads flickered once, as if something far below the city had shifted in its sleep.
"Every time a neon light flickers in the Undermarket," Grandma whispered. "Every time the automated turrets fire in the Arsenal. Every time the elites breathe purified air in the Umbilical Gardens... it is powered by her burning soul."
A biological battery for an empire built on theft.
The human warmth in my chest froze, replaced by the heavy, measured rhythm of the Sovereign. A quiet, absolute rage settled over my bones. It wasn’t the loud, screaming vengeance of a mortal boy. It was the cold, calculating fury of an Emperor auditing a ledger.
They had taken the architect of the First Court and plugged her into a wall socket.
"Which sector has the first piece?" I asked.
"Sector Eight," Grandma said, lifting her chin. "The Flesh Exchange. Baron Zhang wears it in his chest. He uses it to power his heart."
Baron Zhang. The Market Maker. A direct descendant of the Zhang Patriarch—the man who had stood in the Imperial Throne room two thousand years ago and called me arrogant for asking the rich to follow the same rules as the poor.
Some debts compounded with interest.
I pulled back the ruined, blood-stained sleeve of my suit jacket. I looked at the cracked glass of my wristwatch. The second hand ticked forward with a sharp, mechanical click.
"Forty-seven hours," I muttered. "And twelve minutes."
Heavy footsteps pounded up the concrete stairs outside the apartment. The front door burst open, slamming against the plaster wall.
Jian stumbled through the doorway. He held a steaming styrofoam cup of synthetic coffee in his shaking hands. He had a heavy leather satchel slung over his shoulder. He looked at the frost on the kitchen table, the splintered floorboards, and the terrifying expression frozen on Grandma’s face.
"Until what, Boss?" Jian asked, his voice cracking. He tried to catch his breath. "Until we celebrate? Because Dr. Zhu is trying to hook up a disco ball to the factory’s smelting furnace, and I need to know if I should pull the plug."
I dropped my sleeve.
"Until Judge Mortis returns to execute me," I said flatly.
Jian froze. His fingers went slack.
The styrofoam cup hit the floor. The thin plastic lid popped off. Boiling, brown synthetic liquid splashed across his worn sneakers, pooling into the cracks of the cheap linoleum.
Jian didn’t notice the heat. His face drained to the color of old paper. He grabbed handfuls of his own hair, his eyes wide and unfocused.
"Execute?" Jian squeaked. His breathing accelerated into a frantic, hyperventilating rhythm. "No. No, no, no... that’s not metaphorical, is it? We just won! We own the zip code! We broke the Consortium! I was looking up dental plans on the terminal!"
"The High Court granted a conditional stay of execution," I explained, turning away from the table. "I had seventy-two hours to complete three proofs of legality. My body required twenty-four hours to reboot from the soul-fusion. The clock is ticking."
"So we’re dying on Tuesday?!" Jian shrieked, pressing his back against the doorframe like it might protect him from the math. "Ren! My blood pressure is a legal biohazard! You can’t just casually drop an execution deadline into a conversation right after we survived a gang war!"
I ignored his panic. I walked past him, stepping out into the damp hallway.
"I’ll call Lingshan!" Jian yelled, scrambling after me, digging his cracked tablet out of his satchel. His thumbs flew across the glass screen. "We mobilize the Iron Legion! We wake up Red Dog! We march the five hundred Myrmidons across the border into Sector Eight right now! We burn the Flesh Exchange to the ground, take the Warlord’s head, and offer it to the Judge!"
"No."
Jian stopped at the top of the stairs, still shaking. "Why not?!"
I reached down and picked up the heavy metal briefcase I had hauled up the stairs and left leaning against the wall. I hoisted it up by the handle. The sheer density of it made the metal joints groan in protest.
"If we cross a sector border with a mechanized army, we trigger the Heaven Metropolis military protocols," I said, tracing the biometric lock on the briefcase handle. "Judge Mortis wouldn’t even need to wait forty-seven hours. He would execute us for unauthorized warfare before we reached the acid rivers. It is a legal trap."
"Then how do we get the soul fragment from a Warlord?" Jian demanded, wiping sweat from his forehead. "We just ask him nicely? We file a grievance form with the local magistrate?"
"No," I said.
I pressed my thumb against the lock.
Click Hiss
The heavy metal latches popped open. I flipped the lid back.
A blinding, pure white light flooded the dingy hallway. The scent of raw, hyper-concentrated wealth washed over the peeling wallpaper, smelling of clean ozone and new-minted power.
Packed perfectly inside the shock-absorbent foam were rows upon rows of glowing, liquid spiritual silver. It was the entirely liquidated, physical asset pool of the Alchemist Consortium. One hundred million coins, condensed into portable, blinding capital.
Jian stopped breathing entirely. He stared at the briefcase, his jaw hanging loose. The blue light reflected in his terrified, greedy eyes. He reached a trembling hand toward the silver, then pulled it back as if the money might bite him.
I snapped the briefcase shut.
The light vanished, plunging the staircase back into shadows. The heavy metal latches locked into place with a definitive, satisfying crunch.
I picked up my black umbrella. I adjusted my ruined, blood-stained tie.
"Tell Miss Ye to leave the army at the factory. Pack the ledgers, Jian."
Jian blinked, tearing his eyes away from the briefcase. "We’re dying in less than two days."
"Yes," I said. I started walking down the concrete stairs, the rusted hairpin burning a hole in my pocket. "We’re buying a stock market."
The hairpin pulsed once against my thigh.
And far below the city, in the freezing dark, the iron chain answered.







