100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?-Chapter 441 - Makeshift Universe

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Chapter 441: Chapter 441 - Makeshift Universe

Another month passed.

In that month, progress no longer came in steps.

It came in waves.

The cure production never stopped. Verdant Veil members worked in shifts under Eirene’s direction. Barrel after barrel was sealed, recorded, and prepared for transport. By the end of that month, they had amassed enough cure to reach hundreds of millions.

And still the production continued.

But Lucien had not spent those weeks on medicine alone.

He had also pushed forward the other design he had been refining in silence.

The makeshift small universe.

Not a true universe.

But just a stable interplanar enclosure large enough to house several small worlds without crushing them together, while remaining hidden from anything that might be wandering the gray beyond.

To make it, Lucien did not work alone.

He brought the four elemental women with him into the interplanar gray space.

The semi permeable layer was not built from one force. It was a stabilized environmental shell, a membrane of balanced conditions that allowed a world to remain sealed, isolated, and partially concealed while still retaining its internal continuity.

Fire, wind, earth, and water all had roles in that balance. Heat gradient. Pressure circulation. Material cohesion. Fluid continuity.

The shell of the small world was not just a wall. It was a climate made into structure.

That made the four of them uniquely suited for the task.

Lucien led them to a region of the interplanar gray space.

Then the work began.

Marie anchored the foundational stability, giving the forming enclosure something to settle upon rather than allowing it to float loose in gray drift.

Kaia provided thermal agitation in carefully measured patterns so that the shell would not collapse into dead stillness and crack under internal pressure changes.

Sylra shaped the circulation lanes that would keep the enclosure’s internal pressure from becoming stagnant and turning destructive over time.

Marina wove continuity through the whole thing, smoothing transition boundaries so the shell would not reject its own contents.

Together, their Laws did not merely combine.

They resonated.

Lucien felt it clearly.

The frequencies of their attributes approached the same layered logic he had once sensed in the membranes around naturally veiled small worlds.

But close was not enough.

So Lucien added the parts only he could provide.

He used his Cosmic Attribute to give the enclosure scale without granting it true openness. That mattered.

If he built only a hollow shell, the worlds inside would fight one another for space through pressure, orbit drag, and environmental interference. But if he gave it too much breadth, it would become unstable and easier to notice.

So he built not distance, but relation. The interior was folded and segmented by cosmic layering, allowing each world to occupy its own position in a curved local structure without needing absurd physical separation.

Then he modified the shell further.

He integrated the properties of the Abyssal Pool into its outer concealment layer.

Enough to borrow its unidentifiability.

From the outside, the enclosure could not be cleanly read. Divination slid across it. Ordinary spatial probing found only absence and distortion. Presence-sensing did not catch on it easily because the outer shell did not answer like a normal sealed realm.

It was there.

But reality had difficulty admitting it.

That was the point.

Even then, Lucien did not consider the structure finished.

A small universe containing multiple worlds faced a simpler but more brutal problem.

Attraction.

Not merely physical gravity, but planar influence. Worlds pulled at one another by mass, Law density, ambient motion, and environmental hunger. Left unattended, they would drift, tilt, draw too close, or begin slow collisions that would ruin them all.

So Lucien asked the ancient beasts for help.

Condoriano, with the Law of Horizon, helped define fixed relational distances so that the worlds inside the enclosure would always "understand" where their boundaries ended relative to one another.

Grave, with the Law of Burden, was used in measured pulses to establish local anchoring points, preventing the worlds from drifting like loose stones in water.

Thal’voryn, whose Law of Depth understood contained pressure better than almost anyone present, helped Lucien prevent internal collapse between layered regions.

Aurvang, through the Law of Momentum, was ironically essential in stopping motion from building into destructive drift by helping Lucien establish stable circulation routes for residual movement.

Virex contributed with the Law of Stagnation to create certain dead-zones where unwanted motion and cross-pull could be arrested before becoming cascade failure.

Even Astraea helped.

Her storms were not merely violence. They were pattern. She helped Lucien establish outer turbulence veils so the enclosure would resemble naturally dangerous gray-space instability rather than a hidden crafted haven.

Each contribution mattered.

Each solved a different failure point.

And when the last layer settled into place, the makeshift universe finally held.

It was small by the standards of true cosmic space.

But it was enough.

Then Lucien began placing the worlds inside.

Marina’s world.

The Lithrens’ world.

And the three other small worlds he had acquired over the past year.

He did not simply drop them into the enclosure.

He mapped mass, elemental bias, residual Law pressure, population density, and environmental stress first, then assigned them positions that would not antagonize one another.

Worlds with stronger water or wind systems could not be placed too close to each other without creating inter-shell resonance. Dense mineral worlds needed deeper positional anchoring. Worlds with unstable skies needed more circulation buffering.

The placement resembled astronomy only from a distance.

In truth, it was closer to surgery.

When it was done, the enclosure no longer looked like a random collection of captured realms.

It looked designed.

Then Lucien created the rifts.

He chose the edge-regions of Lootwell where traffic could be controlled without making the place look like a prison.

Then, he tore openings between his territory and the adjacent interplanar enclosure.

He did not allow raw tears to remain exposed. Those would have been dangerous.

Anvil-Horn solved that part.

Through the Law of Forging, he turned the rift anchors into proper gateways. They were beautiful. And more importantly, they told the eye that this was extension, not exile.

The worlds became doors of Lootwell.

And because they remained in separate planes linked by controlled rifts, they did not occupy the territory’s central space at all.

Only the doors stood in Lootwell.

The worlds themselves remained beyond.

That alone eased an enormous weight on Lucien’s chest.

He let the guardian beasts remain within their respective small worlds. The phoenix egg, however, stayed with him.

The three new Liberators who had been trained under the four elemental women were also sent to their assigned worlds to govern and prepare them.

Before the phoenixes of those worlds could mature enough to poison their own realms again, Lucien had already reduced them to eggs and removed the immediate corruption thread.

As for the three Liberators, he placed them carefully.

Tavian returned to his war-torn world and had integrated with the Law of Reinforcement, a law that strengthened anything already established. Structures, defenses, and even entire battle lines became harder to break the longer they endured.

His system allowed him to reinforce anything he claimed, turning fragile materials unyielding and unstable forces steady. In a world constantly at war, his existence became the anchor that could finally hold it together.

Mirelle returned to her merchant-ruled world and had integrated with the Law of Accumulation, a law that governed gradual gain. Resources, power, and influence stacked over time, allowing steady growth to surpass sudden effort.

Her system ensured that nothing she possessed truly diminished, and even in inaction, value continued to gather around her. In a world where wealth dictated survival, she became a constant, unending rise.

Auren returned to his kingdom and had integrated with the Law of Passage, a law governing movement, routes, and exchange. Travel became smoother, pathways more efficient, and distance itself lost meaning under his influence.

His system allowed him to anchor locations and return to them instantly, turning the entire world into a network he could traverse at will. What others crossed with effort, he reached in a step.

Their cheats were undeniably unique and powerful but still too underdeveloped. To truly evolve their systems, they needed greater strength and a deeper understanding of the Laws they embodied.

•••

There had been progress elsewhere too.

The Bio-metal Automaton was finally finished.

Its body was already formidable before, but the final adaptive armor had pushed it into another category entirely. After being subjected to countless attack profiles from practitioners, monsters, ancient beasts, and controlled training arrays, the memory-metal shell had become terrifyingly versatile.

It no longer merely endured impact. It interpreted it.

Lucien wisely chose not to strike it again himself. The first test had taught everyone enough.

The finished construct now possessed a body equivalent to the Celestial Realm in sheer physical resilience, and because its structure incorporated Alloykin-derived properties, it could use the Law of Metal as an active part of its evolution rather than as a static trait.

The soul core placed within it gave it continuity, allowing experience to become real adaptation rather than recorded simulation.

It was not alive in the human sense.

But it could become. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚

That alone made it dangerous.

Shadow’s puppets changed just as dramatically.

The rebuilt bodies had become smoother, more flexible, and disturbingly close to human responsiveness. The delay between command and action had nearly vanished.

Before, Shadow always had to account for a small resistance in movement because the materials themselves fought refinement. Now the response was immediate, fluid, and obedient in the way thought is obedient to will.

And with the changes in their structure, the bond between Shadow and the puppets had evolved as well.

Lucien noticed it at once when he found him again.

Shadow was smiling.

A real grin.

The kind that looked almost alien on him because he wore it so rarely.

"It is different now," Shadow said, looking at one of the puppets as she flexed a hand with natural ease. "Before, I issued a command and waited for the body to catch up. Now it feels as if the movement begins at the same moment the thought does."

"That is how it should be," Lucien said.

Shadow nodded, gaze still fixed on them.

"I know."

Then he finally looked at Lucien.

"There is enough cure," he said.

Lucien nodded once.

There was enough to begin properly.

The two of them stood in silence for a moment, each already seeing the map of the West differently in their minds.

Then Lucien said, "We move now."

Shadow’s expression settled into seriousness again.

Lucien continued, "I will act with you until the West is stable."

That changed something in the air.

Shadow had expected help.

He had not expected that much of Lucien’s direct involvement.

But he did not waste the moment by questioning it.

Instead, he nodded.

"Then we begin the cleansing."

And at last—

After all the production, the planning, the alliances, the hidden constructions, and the preparations—

The West Continent stood at the edge of movement.