Rebirth: Necromancer's Ascenscion-Chapter 112: Pale Light and Hollow Hope

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 112: Pale Light and Hollow Hope

The light came slowly, not like dawn in the living world, but as though something deep beneath the Reach gave a shuddering sigh and allowed a mockery of morning to stain the air.

It was a pale, sickly illumination—washed-out silver smeared across the horizon like dying breath.

It did not chase away the shadows so much as it coaxed them into hiding, hissing and dragging their malformed edges back into cracks and caverns where they belonged.

The light here did not warm. It only revealed.

Ian stood alone at the edge of their makeshift camp, a jagged overhang of petrified bone and ash-root sheltering them through what was left of the night.

His eyes scanned the landscape with something between hunger and fury, his jaw clenched hard enough to ache.

He hadn’t seen it.

Not even a glimpse.

"When you enter the Reach, there will be one who knows you..."

He remembered the words of Darkmist like a prayer—or a curse.

It had promised him revelation, warned him of a meeting that would tear through the veil of lies and dreams.

And yet, as the light returned, Ian was left only with the hollow stillness of unanswered expectation.

His fingers twitched at his sides. Not fear, but from frustration. The kind that coils in the chest like a snake, tightening with every step that yields no sign, no omen, no truth.

Just more waiting. More delayed inevitability.

The others began to shift behind him. The female mage, rubbed sleep from her eyes and glanced toward the horizon, visibly relieved.

The swordsman, checked his blade out of instinct, then sheathed it with a quiet sigh. The support mage, rose slower, his hand briefly lighting with defensive runes before fading them.

None of them spoke of what they’d heard in the dark.

What they might’ve seen. ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom

It was an unspoken law in the Reach—not all things could be carried into the light without breaking.

Ian turned to them at last.

"We move," he said, voice low and flat.

They nodded.

No questions. No small talk.

The next few hours passed beneath a dead red sky.

The terrain shifted from skeletal plains to ridged craters, broken towers swallowed by vine and soot. No birds sang. No wind stirred.

Even the air felt like it had forgotten how to breathe.

They traveled in a loose formation.

Ian remained at the rear, his gaze ever roving, the twin daggers at his back humming with residual Soul Flame.

He did not trust the quiet. Not here.

As they walked, the other three resumed a quiet conversation ahead, voices hushed but audible enough for Ian to catch snatches.

...talks about the gods chosen...

"I can’t imagine him even needing a tournament," Brann muttered. "He’s already above most ranked Ascendants. They say the Emperor gifted him an entire divine grade weapon."

Ian listened, one eyebrow lifting slightly.

That name. Again.

As if the man were myth and monarch all at once.

He’d not heard the name before, even outside the Esgard City, not even carried in the mouths of wandering priests and scheming nobles.

But now they spoke so much of him:

A champion born of divine rite, shaped in war, tempered in aetherfire.

A paragon.

And apparently, he might soon walk the Reach.

Hours passed.

The road grew thicker with footprints. Not fresh, but recent—people had passed through here.

Dozens. Hundreds, perhaps.

The whispers of civilization in a place that defied it.

Then, cresting over a black ridge, they saw it.

The venue.

It was not a city, nor a fortress.

It was something odd.

A ruin of obsidian and darksteel shaped into wide steps and towering spires—massive concentric rings carved from what looked like the bones of fallen titans.

At its center, a grand coliseum stood like a mouth opened in a silent scream, its walls jagged and scarred from countless battles.

Around it, tents and encampments sprawled like veins. Smoke curled from controlled pyres, proud one’s shouted in tones too low, and hundreds—perhaps thousands—of people moved between arenas and stone halls.

Warriors. Mages. Clerics. Monsters.

All gathered beneath the false sky.

Ian paused at the top of the ridge.

The First Descent Tournament.

He had arrived.

The others moved ahead, joining the steady stream of arrivals passing beneath the massive gateway.

Banners bearing house sigils fluttered in the stale wind—House Korvane, House Eshmir, House Dreyl.

Esgard Houses?

Even the Marked Legion was present, their soldiers recognizable by their emotionless masks and chained weapons.

Ian remained still for a long moment, taking it all in.

This wasn’t just a competition.

It was a summoning.

The desperate. The ambitious. The cruel.

All had come seeking recognition, power... survival.

He descended slowly, his cloak brushing against broken stone and old blood.

He passed a group of armored warriors laughing around a fire. They fell silent as he passed. One of them gripped a hammer more tightly.

Another muttered something under his breath.

Fear.

They felt it, even if they didn’t understand it.

He moved through the crowd like blade through fog—unnoticed by most, but impossible to ignore by those with the senses to feel.

His presence was wrong here.

Not in alignment with the pageantry or pomp.

He wasn’t here to play a part.

He was here to tear through the script.

At the gates of the main arena, a registrar approached him, a tablet glowing with rune-seals.

"Name?" she asked without looking up.

"Ian," he said.

She paused, glanced up at him. Her expression twitched, barely perceptible. A flicker of recognition—or something primal, more ancient.

"You’re not listed."

"I’m not surprised."

"...Do you have a sponsor?"

Ian tilted his head. "No."

Her brow furrowed, and she leaned closer. "Then who exactly—"

"I’ll qualify on merit."

She stared at him for a long second. Then, slowly, she tapped a sigil on the tablet.

"You’ll be tested at dusk," she said. "Fail, and you’re removed. Or worse."

Ian gave a nod, eyes already scanning the horizon again. The false sun was beginning its slow crawl down, the shadows returning—long, hungry things.

Still no sign of the entity.

No whisper.

No glimpse.

But he felt it.

Watching.

Waiting.

And somewhere beyond the Reach’s veil of silence...

Truth was sharpening its teeth.

RECENTLY UPDATES
Read The Void's System
FantasyActionAdventure
Read X-Force: Beyond Omega
FantasyAdultHaremSlice Of Life
Read The New Gate
RomanceFantasyAdventureSeinen
Read Freedom Jumper
FantasyActionAdventureMystery
Read The Game with Fairies
ActionAdventureFantasyHarem
Read Guild Mage: Apprentice
AdventureDramaFantasyRomance