I Have a Military Shop Tab in Fantasy World-Chapter 109: Inside the Tower Part 5
Chapter 109: Inside the Tower Part 5
The great gate pulsed in the dark like a living thing.
Its violet chains writhed as though sensing their approach, humming with energy that made the skin crawl. It wasn’t just magic—it was layered intent. A will behind the warding, alien and suffocating, watching them. Judging them.
Inigo stepped forward first, his boots squelching on the blood-slick floor. His M4 was ready, mag topped, his grip tight.
"Whatever’s beyond this," he muttered, "it knows we’re here."
"I feel it," Arienne said softly, her voice distant. "It’s old. Too old for words. And powerful."
Korrik grunted and rolled his shoulders. "So was the last bastard. We dropped him, didn’t we?"
Lyra said nothing, but her eyes didn’t leave the chains.
With a sharp inhale, Inigo raised his hand and touched the surface of the gate. The moment his fingers met the outer ring, a wave of nausea hit him like a hammer. He staggered but didn’t fall. Instead, the chains began to unravel. Not snap. Not break. Unravel, like smoke twisting in reverse, pulled into unseen cracks that weren’t there a moment ago.
And then the door opened.
It didn’t swing or creak. It simply ceased to exist.
Revealing a vast chamber beyond.
They stepped through—one by one—into a space that made no architectural sense.
There were no walls. No ceiling. Just infinite black studded with floating shards of mirrored glass, suspended in gravity-defying arcs. Each shard showed reflections of them... and not them. Inigo saw himself in one—wearing armor he’d never owned, holding a weapon he didn’t recognize. Another shard showed Arienne weeping over a grave. Korrik, kneeling in chains. Lyra, gone entirely.
"What is this place?" Arienne whispered.
"A domain," Lyra said. Her voice was steady, but her knuckles were white on her bowstring. "We’re inside someone’s domain."
As if summoned by her words, a ripple passed through the dark.
And then she appeared.
From the black void above, descending with impossible grace, came the Lady of Illusion.
She floated rather than walked, her feet never touching the ground that wasn’t there. Her robes shimmered like oil over water—dark purples, silvers, and shifting hues that refused to settle. Her face was veiled, but even through it, her eyes burned like two violet stars. Her hands were bare, delicate, almost human. Almost.
Arienne gasped. "She’s not—she’s not alive. She’s not undead either."
"No," Lyra breathed. "She’s something else."
The Lady’s voice, when it came, was silk laced with razors. "So... you are the ones who tore through my children. Who scorched my nest. Who dared pierce the veil of my sanctum."
Inigo raised his rifle. "And we’ll keep going. Unless you stop us."
Her head tilted slowly. "I don’t stop intruders. I show them truth."
The mirrors began to move—rotating, shifting, circling them in dizzying spirals. With each turn, the images changed. Inigo saw Lyra stabbed through the chest. Korrik burning alive. Arienne choking on her own blood.
"Don’t look!" Inigo shouted. "It’s illusion—don’t believe it!"
But even as he yelled, the reflections began to hurt. Lyra flinched as though struck. Korrik staggered as one image showed him gutted from behind. Arienne screamed and dropped to her knees, clutching her head.
"She’s attacking our minds!" Arienne managed between sobs.
Momentarily, the illusions dulled. Not gone—but muffled.
The Lady tilted her head again. "So easy."
She raised a hand.
From the void, tendrils of blackness exploded outward—slamming into the mirrored shards, shattering them. The fragments twisted midair and formed into figures—doppelgängers, illusions made flesh. Copies of the team. Four perfect reflections, dressed and armed like them, down to Inigo’s rifle and Korrik’s scar.
"What the—" Korrik didn’t finish.
The battle began without a signal.
The mirrored Inigo opened fire, bursts ripping through the air, forcing him to dive behind a floating shard. His own rifle kicked as he returned fire, rounds ricocheting off semi-real terrain. The fake Lyra moved like the real one—fast, agile, deadly. The copy of Arienne hurled spells with frightening precision.
"Split them!" Inigo shouted. "Don’t fight your own double!"
Korrik roared and slammed into the mirrored Inigo with a shoulder charge, tackling him away. Lyra loosed two arrows at the fake Arienne, staggering her long enough for the real one to counter with a searing lance of light.
But the Lady didn’t stop there.
She floated above the battlefield, hands raised like a puppeteer, eyes glowing brighter with each second.
Inigo fired a burst into the air, aiming for her face—but the rounds dissolved mid-flight.
"She’s not even here," Arienne yelled. "That’s a projection! The real one—she’s somewhere in this space!"
"We need to find her," Inigo snapped, slamming a new mag into his rifle. "Or she’ll wear us down!"
Korrik drove his blade through his doppelgänger’s chest, only for the figure to melt into mist and reappear elsewhere—this time behind Arienne.
"MOVE!"
He tackled her aside, just in time. The false Inigo’s rounds tore through the space where she had knelt.
They regrouped behind a large floating shard.
"Arienne," Inigo said, "can you trace her? Find the real body?"
She shook her head. "I need time. I need quiet."
"Neither of which we have," Lyra muttered, nocking another arrow.
Inigo looked around.
The battlefield was wrong. The rules were wrong. Nothing here obeyed the real world’s laws.
Unless...
Unless he imposed his own.
He raised his left hand. The golden flicker responded.
[Freedom Shop – Accessed]
He had time for one call.
[Thermal Signature Tracker – 2,500 Tokens]
[Confirmed. Balance: 239,842 Tokens]
The device materialized in his palm—a small wrist-mounted screen with a flickering radar. He flicked it on.
Amid the swirl of false readings and mirrored heat echoes... one pulse was consistent. Slightly below. Far back. Still.
"There," he pointed. "Below us—sixty meters."
Arienne nodded. "I’ll get us there. But I’ll need help."
Inigo turned to the others. "Korrik, Lyra, cover us. Arienne and I are going for the heart."
Korrik grinned. "Bout damn time."
As Arienne began casting the descent spell, the Lady’s illusion turned her gaze directly at Inigo.
She knew.
And in that moment, he knew too.
This was no ordinary spellcaster. No common demon.
This was a being born of pure perception, of illusion given dominion over flesh and mind.
And she would not go quietly.
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