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Absolute Cheater - Chapter 433

  1. Home
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  3. Absolute Cheater
  4. Chapter 433 - Chapter 433: Higher Dimension V
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Chapter 433: Higher Dimension V

Asher’s boots clicked softly against the marble-paved streets as he walked deeper into the heart of the city. The air here felt heavier than the realms below—not because of mana or soul pressure, but because of law. Invisible threads wove through every archway, every hovering platform, every market stall filled with artifacts and rare beasts. This was a place where order had been built deliberately, not out of trust, but out of necessity.

Ben’s words still rang in his mind. Eldritch. Pale Beyond. Seals. He tucked them away, but not so deep that he’d forget. For now, he needed something practical—stability.

His first destination was the Dimensional Association.

The building itself dominated the square it sat upon, an ivory fortress rising like a jagged tooth into the sky. Wide steps carved from crystallized stone led up to its open gates, guarded by sentinels clad in mirrored armor, their faces hidden behind shifting masks of light. Every soul who passed through was scanned, measured, recorded.

Asher moved with the flow of cultivators—humans with banners of flame, elves draped in cloaks woven from starlight, even a pair of scaled beastkin carrying massive crates between them. The line moved quickly, efficiency cutting through the crowd.

When it was his turn, one of the sentinels extended a hand, voice a low vibration that seemed to carry into Asher’s bones.

“Identification.”

Asher reached calmly into his storage ring and presented the pale crystal card Ben had given him. The sentinel took it, a stream of light scanning Asher from head to toe, pausing briefly on the crimson flicker in his eyes before releasing. The crystal resonated with a faint hum, then the sentinel returned it.

“Proceed. Registration chamber three.”

Inside, the association resembled a vast cathedral more than a bureaucratic hall. Rows of desks glowed with floating script, overseen by officials in grey-and-gold robes. At the far wall, enormous murals depicted wars of ages past—armies of dragons clashing with tides of shadow, legions of humans and elves fighting beneath shattered stars.

Asher approached a counter, where a robed woman glanced up from her slate. Her voice was brisk, professional, but not unkind.

“Name.”

“Asher.”

Her stylus moved, recording. “Affiliation?”

“None.”

Her brow arched faintly, but she continued. “Origin realm?”

“Lower strata,” Asher said evenly.

There was a pause, a flicker of judgment in her eyes before she nodded, as though silently noting his answer. “Very well. You understand that in the higher dimensions, travel, lodging, and even marketplace access requires an Association ID. Without it, you’ll be marked as unregistered—suspected as a spy, or worse.”

“I understand.”

She slid a crystalline plaque across the desk. Its surface was blank until Asher pressed a drop of his soul essence onto it. Immediately, glyphs spread like veins across its surface, solidifying into an emblem uniquely his own.

“Your registration is complete,” she said, sliding the plaque back. “This ID will log your presence wherever you go. Lose it, and you’ll have trouble. Abuse it, and you’ll be hunted. Treat it as you would your own core.”

Asher accepted it, slipping it into his robe.

The woman inclined her head slightly, already turning back to her next task. “May fortune guide your path.”

Leaving the desk, Asher stood still for a moment, watching the streams of cultivators flow through the association. So many races, so many banners—and yet, they all followed the same rules. War had taught them at least one truth: no one survived alone.

Asher turned on his heel and stepped back out into the city. For now, he chose not to contact Ben again, nor to bind himself to any faction. His instincts told him to roam, to observe, to measure this higher realm on his own terms.

The streets opened before him like veins of light, leading to places unknown. His crimson eyes flickered faintly as he set off, silent and self-possessed.

The higher dimensions bustled around him, but Asher was already searching—not for coin, nor for banners, but for something deeper. A sense of where the cracks in this world ran.

Asher didn’t rush. With the Association plaque tucked safely inside his robe, he let the rhythm of the higher realm unfold around him. Every step through its streets carried a different flavor of power—each passerby, each merchant, even each beggar radiated a depth of cultivation that would have been sovereigns in the lower strata. Here, they were just part of the crowd.

He walked first through the Market Arches, where the stalls floated midair on platforms of solidified light. Traders hawked wares that pulsed with their own laws—vials of bottled flame that burned without fuel, ores that bent sound itself around them, even shards of starlight plucked from collapsed realms. The air thrummed with haggling, laughter, and the occasional crackle of duel auras when disagreements turned sharp.

Asher lingered at none. His crimson eyes slid over the goods, over the merchants, weighing, measuring. He was not here to buy. He was here to see.

From there, his steps carried him to the Scholar’s Causeway, a district where entire libraries hung suspended in the air, scrolls unrolling themselves as spirit-lights whispered forgotten histories to their readers. Young cultivators sat cross-legged on floating discs, their eyes glazed as they absorbed knowledge directly through soul resonance. Asher paused at the edge of one such archive, feeling the thrum of laws being etched into minds. He considered entering—then turned away. Knowledge was a weapon, yes, but he preferred to earn it by blood and experience.

The city shifted as he moved further outward. The stone grew darker, the light thinner. The noise of merchants and scholars dimmed into hushed murmurs. Here lay the Outer Rings, where those without faction or banner scraped their living. Tavern doors creaked with voices low and suspicious; alleyways wound like veins into shadow; mercenaries leaned against walls, eyes sharp for coin or prey.

It was here Asher slowed.

Eyes followed him as he passed. Not with recognition—yet—but with the weight of hunters marking someone they did not understand. His steps were calm, but deliberate, crimson gaze unflinching as he took in every corner, every movement.

A fight broke out at one tavern door, two armored men crashing into the street, one’s shoulder already mangled by a curved blade. No one intervened. The law here was simple: strength first, survival second.

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