I Died and Became a Noble's Heir-Chapter 296: The Master

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Chapter 296: The Master

Because fourteen thousand men remained. And only nine hundred twenty spots were left.

The entity’s smile widened into something that belonged on a predator rather than a human face.

"For the rest of you..." Jack’s hand gestured broadly to encompass the remaining mercenaries. "Prove you deserve to leave. Last nine hundred twenty standing earn their freedom."

Absolute silence. As the remaining mercenaries processed what they were being asked to do.

People they’d fought beside for years. They had to kill friends and brothers in arms, all for a chance at survival.

"I..." One soldier started, his voice cracking. "I can’t. I won’t..."

The man next to him drove a knife into his kidney. Twisted it and pulled it out, his knife was covered in blood.

The first soldier collapsed, clutching his side, blood pooling beneath him on the ice.

"One less, I need to return to my family," his killer announced, his voice was flat, he was already dead inside.

Already accepting what he’d become to survive.

And just like that, the third wave of chaos began.

-----

The entity watched fourteen thousand men tear each other apart with the same patient attention someone might give to watching paint dry.

There was no satisfaction or disgust.

Marcus Thorne, held by his captors, watched his army destroy itself.

Watched men he’d paid, soldiers he’d commanded, professional killers he’d trusted...

All of them murdering each other for the slim chance at survival.

His mind broke.

The man who’d been Marcus Thorne, ambitious noble with dreams of reclaiming his house’s glory, a high ranking manager in Phallanx Solutions, simply stopped existing.

What remained was a hollow shell that breathed and blinked but thought nothing and felt nothing.

The entity noticed this with mild interest.

"Unfortunate. I had plans for him. But a broken mind is less useful than an intact one."

Jack’s body turned slightly, addressing the group holding Marcus.

"When he tries to fight back, and he will, once shock wears off and survival instinct kicks in, remove one of his legs. Doesn’t matter which. Just make sure he can’t run."

The soldiers holding Marcus nodded. They’d lost any capacity for moral outrage. They were the ones who would survive. That was all that mattered anymore.

The slaughter continued.

Screams.

Wet sounds of steel in flesh.

Bodies falling.

Blood spread across ice in patterns that almost looked artistic in the dome’s strange blue light.

The entity watched it all with golden eyes that held no judgment.

Fourteen thousand became thirteen thousand. Blood pooled across ice in patterns that spread like crimson spider webs, freezing where it touched crystalline surfaces.

The entity watched with Jack’s golden eyes, tracking the chaos with the detached interest of someone observing ants in a jar.

A mercenary drove his sword through a former comrade’s throat. He twisted his sword and pulled it free in a spray of red that painted his face.

He didn’t wipe it away. He just turned, scanning for the next target, his eyes went wild as his survival instinct had burned away everything else.

Thirteen thousand became twelve thousand.

Groups formed and dissolved. Temporary alliances born from desperation, shattered the moment one member saw an opening to reduce competition. Trust was a luxury no one could afford.

A captain who’d escaped initial capture fought with skill that kept him alive longer than he deserved. His sword wove patterns through attacking mercenaries, each strike precise, each movement didn’t waste any energy.

He dropped three men in a few seconds.

Then someone tackled him from behind. Five more piled on before he could recover. His sword clattered across ice, spinning away as feet and hands pinned his arms, his legs, and pressed his face into the frozen ground until he couldn’t breathe.

"Got another captain!" The shout rose above the general chaos. "That’s mine! My spot!"

The soldiers securing him dragged their prize toward the dome’s edge where the other captured commanders waited. Their faces carried satisfaction mixed with relief.

They’d earned their survival. Everything else was someone else’s problem.

Twelve thousand became eleven thousand.

Marcus Thorne sprawled on the ice where his captors had dumped him, surrounded by twenty guards who watched him with the intensity of men protecting their lottery ticket.

His eyes had gone vacant. Mouth slack. Drool running down his chin to freeze in his beard.

The ambitious noble who’d orchestrated this invasion had simply... ceased to exist. His mind retreated somewhere his body couldn’t follow, hiding in whatever space in his consciousness occupied when reality became too much to process.

One of his guards prodded him with a boot. "He’s not moving. Think he’s dead?"

"He’s breathing," another replied, crouching to check his pulse. "Just broken. Completely fucking broken."

"Good enough. The boss said alive, that’s all that matters."

They went back to watching their prize with paranoid intensity, hands on weapons, ready to defend their claim against anyone stupid enough to try stealing it. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦

Eleven thousand became ten thousand.

The entity’s smile widened fractionally as it watched a particularly brutal exchange near the dome’s center.

Two friends, brothers in arms who’d fought together for years, circling each other with weapons raised.

"Don’t do this," one pleaded, his voice cracking. "We can both make it. We can..."

His friend lunged. Steel pierced his flesh. The plea cut off mid-word, replaced by a wet gurgling as his lungs filled with blood.

The killer stared at his blade. At his friend’s corpse.

At his own hands covered in blood that had been

warm moments ago.

Then he turned and found his next target.

Ten thousand became nine thousand.

Time lost meaning. Minutes stretched into hours, or maybe seconds expanded into eternities.

The dome’s strange blue light made everything feel unreal, like violence occurring in a dream that wouldn’t end.

Bodies piled up. Some areas of the dome floor became treacherous with corpses stacked three deep, making footing uncertain, forcing fighters to scramble over the dead to reach the living.

The smell intensified. Blood and shit and sweat mixing into something that made eyes water and stomachs heave.

Nine thousand became eight thousand.

The entity remained motionless through all of it, Jack’s body standing like a statue while carnage unfolded in every direction.

Golden eyes tracked individual fights with the same attention given to all of them, processing patterns, noting who survived through skill versus luck versus pure desperate savagery.

Emberion had settled into a comfortable position behind Jack, the dragon’s massive form radiating heat that created a pocket of warmth in the dome’s chill.

His molten amber eyes watched the slaughter with something resembling boredom. Humans killing humans held minimal interest for a creature who measured time in centuries.

S stood off to the side with the captured commanders, his red eyes tracking everything while his expression remained unreadable.

Fluffy sat at his heels, her three heads swiveling to follow different fights, curiosity piqued by the sheer violence.

Pho remained near Jack, blank white eyes surveying his handiwork.

Forty-five frozen corpses still hung in the air where his ice spikes had lifted them, monuments to what awaited anyone who forgot what they faced.

Eight thousand became seven thousand.

The fighting had evolved. Early chaos gave way to something more calculated. Survivors recognized patterns, adapted tactics, began working in small groups that could defend against lone attackers while still competing for the limited spots.