My Charity System made me too OP-Chapter 409: Note V

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Chapter 409: Note V

The Hollow – Sector C.7: Windwake Ledge

The wind had calmed.

What remained was the slow rise and fall of drifting air, like the final breath of a long-forgotten storm.

Leon stood at the edge of the broken platform where he’d landed. His coat fluttered gently behind him, sword sheathed across his back. Two glowing marks pulsed softly on his body—one at his forearm, a crimson flame; the other near his collarbone, a wind-mark in pale blue.

Behind him, the others approached, leaping from stone to stone as the last airflows steadied.

Kael was first to speak.

"Two Cores down. You planning to collect all six now?"

Leon gave a dry chuckle. "Don’t tempt me."

Roselia arrived next, her boots tapping lightly against the rock. "You’re different now. Faster. Lighter. Stronger."

"I feel it," Leon admitted. "Like I’m seeing two layers of reality at once. The fire gives me force. The wind gives me control."

Aris stepped forward last. "And both want more."

Leon didn’t deny it.

There was a pull deep in his chest now. Like the Hollow was whispering—inviting him deeper. The Wind Core hadn’t satisfied it. Only stoked the hunger.

The team set up a quick camp on the ledge. A fire flickered in a controlled flame bubble Kael designed with Leon’s help.

Roselia activated a temporary seal perimeter.

Aris cleaned her baton in silence, sharpening the edge with a rhythmic hum.

Kael reviewed a scan of the surrounding sector. "From the energy readings, there’s at least one more elemental zone within Hollow range. Could be Earth or Lightning."

Leon glanced toward the dark tunnel ahead. "Any movement?"

Kael hesitated. "Not... movement. But something shifted. Quietly. The Hollow’s resonance changed."

Roselia paused. "You mean the place is reacting?"

He nodded slowly. "Like it’s... watching."

Leon stood. His instincts were screaming—and they’d never been wrong since the Spiral broke.

"I don’t think the Cores are just power sources," he said. "They’re keys."

"To what?" Aris asked.

Leon looked toward the distant abyss.

"To something buried deeper than even this Hollow."

Meanwhile – Below Sector D

Darkness.

Cold, slow, ancient.

Something moved through stone.

Not walked.

Shifted.

Not flesh.

Not metal.

A shape of geometry and echo. A forgotten construct of the Elemental Architects.

It had no eyes. No voice. But it had purpose.

"Dual Signature Detected. Candidate Marked: Leon. Trial Protocol Active."

The construct rotated—runes lighting across its chest in dormant languages.

A hum began to stir beneath the Hollow floor.

And far above, Leon felt it—

A pulse of pressure, like thunder waiting to strike.

Back at the ledge

Leon snapped his head up.

"You felt that?" he asked the others.

Aris nodded. "It’s not wind. It’s... gravity."

Kael stared at his scanner in disbelief. "Something huge just woke up beneath us."

Roselia stood, seals already forming. "Then we move. Now."

Leon drew his blade.

The flames lit first.

Then the wind joined.

Together, they whispered:

"Come deeper."

He turned to the others.

"We’re not done."

They moved in silence now.

The light from Leon’s flame shimmered off damp stone as they descended a winding, cracked spiral ramp into the unknown. The air grew heavy—each breath warmer, denser, like the Hollow itself was pressing in.

Roselia walked behind him, eyes sharp and seal-glyphs flickering at her fingertips. Aris and Kael followed close, the group tense, weapons drawn.

The deeper they went, the quieter the Tower became. No hums. No data pulses. Not even the usual rumble of shifting sectors. Just stone, silence, and the soft crackle of Leon’s controlled fire dancing along his blade.

Kael broke the silence after several minutes. "My scanner’s useless. Something’s jamming the readings—like we’ve stepped into a... memory of the Tower. One that doesn’t want to be disturbed."

Leon didn’t reply. He felt it too.

The Earth beneath his boots wasn’t just old—it was alive. Not like the flame that flickered with hunger, or the wind that moved with rhythm. This power sat still. Waiting. Watching.

Then the stairs ended.

They stepped into a massive cavern. Thick roots crawled down from above, twisted around broken stone columns. Crushed machinery and collapsed Choir constructs littered the edges—half-buried in the walls like fossils.

But what drew Leon’s eye was the statue.

It stood at the chamber’s center. Ten meters tall. Humanoid—but with arms shaped like stone hammers, and a face hidden behind a square helm etched with symbols none of them could read. Its chest bore a deep groove—and within it, a glowing amber light.

Kael’s voice dropped. "That’s not a statue."

Before he could finish, the ground rumbled.

Then again.

A third time.

The statue’s chest lit up—and the stone moved.

Dust rained from its shoulders as it stepped forward, each motion grinding like a mountain shifting. Its glowing eyes locked onto Leon.

Then a deep, unspoken voice echoed through the chamber—not with words, but with weight.

"Candidate. Trial of Earth: Initiated."

The guardian raised one massive hand and slammed it into the ground.

A shockwave blasted the team back.

Leon hit a wall hard but rolled to his feet, sword already igniting with fire and wind.

"Kael, Roselia—stay back!" he shouted. "Aris—flank left!"

He rushed forward.

The guardian met him with a stone-fist swing that shattered the ground where Leon had stood a second before.

Leon dashed sideways using a burst of wind, skimming along the surface, and struck at the guardian’s leg.

His blade scraped—barely leaving a mark.

Too solid.

Too dense.

It turned and slammed both fists down—Leon leapt back, flame trailing from his heels.

"Not enough," he muttered.

He breathed in.

Focused.

Called both elements.

The wind rose.

The fire flared.

He struck again—this time channeling both into his sword in one smooth slash.

Skyfire Arc.

The strike carved a molten line across the guardian’s chest.

It stepped back.

Paused.

Then roared—not in pain, but in acknowledgment.

And the ground split open.

Pillars of rock shot up around them. Aris barely dodged one as it skewered the floor where she’d stood. Roselia launched a shockwave seal to slow the collapse.

Kael shouted, "The chamber’s shifting! It’s forming a coliseum!"

This 𝓬ontent is taken from f(r)eeweb(n)ovel.𝒄𝒐𝙢