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Incubus Living In A World Of Superpower Users - Chapter 432

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  3. Incubus Living In A World Of Superpower Users
  4. Chapter 432 - Capítulo 432: You’ve Been Quiet For Weeks 3
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Capítulo 432: You’ve Been Quiet For Weeks 3

He stood slowly, his knees protesting the way they always do after a fight in which the ground was less than forgiving.

He ignored the ache and let his breath slide out through his nose, steady, training his lungs to behave like they belonged to someone who knew better than to gasp like an amateur.

The knife in his hand was no longer trembling. He bent down, wiped the blade clean on a patch of moss that didn’t mind, and checked the serpent’s head one last time.

As it always did, the twitch came—a final spasm of muscle pretending at life. He didn’t flinch. He let it pass and gave the moment its quiet. Patient. Respectful.

When he finally told his hand to relax, it obeyed. His fingers unclenched without fight. That was good. Muscles should know when to let go.

The system cleared its throat—ridiculous, unnecessary, but it did it anyway. “Nice,” it said, smug and pleased. “Also, you’re welcome.”

“For what?” he asked, voice dry as old stone.

He uncapped his flask, let water touch the back of his throat, and swallowed, sliding down like a contract he hadn’t wanted but had chosen to honor anyway.

“For the knot. For the company. And for keeping your love life and your survival instincts in different folders,” the system said, smug as a fox with feathers in its teeth. “The twins will thank me later.”

He shook his head once, and the closest he came was to laughter. Not a sound, just a shift in expression that bent his mouth for half a breath.

Then he turned toward the gate at the far end of the ruin. Behind him, the serpent’s body steamed, the heat of life abandoning the plates, fading into the moss.

The insects spiraled back in, reclaiming their old circles as if the fight had been nothing more than a brief interruption. The test might be over, but the lesson wasn’t.

“You’re very brave when you don’t have a face,” he said. He crouched at the belly seam, found the pouch, and drew out the shard it had guarded.

He slid it away without ceremony and didn’t glance toward where some proctor was likely pretending not to watch. “You were quiet too long.”

“I gave you room,” the system replied, gentler now. “You did well in the forbidden zone. Built habits without me nagging.

I’m proud of you, whether we bought glitter or not. But coins are for spending. Please don’t be the person who dies with a full wallet.”

He snorted, half laugh, half concession. “Two seconds of mirror thread,” he said. “Fine. Put one in reserve.”

“Purchased,” it chimed instantly. “Do me a favor and don’t waste it on a squirrel.”

The ruin stirred again, not violently this time, but with intent. He felt it in the soles of his boots, the tired ache of his knees, in the old crack of the courtyard where the pump sat.

The wall ahead folded inward like fabric pleated by careful hands. New edges grew out of old stone, ribs of some forgotten hall pushing through moss and dust.

Steps unrolled along the left, too clean, too unworn for this place—the kind of clean that whispered, come here if you think you deserve a fall.

On the right, an archway yawned open, curved like a mouth pretending to smile. Beyond those new ribs, he caught a glimpse of a street that hadn’t existed five breaths earlier.

Lamp posts sprouted from nothing, their globes filling with patient glow, as though the insects had been invited to move in and make themselves at home.

The sim was alive, alive the way a stage becomes alive when a skilled crew changes the set while actors are still speaking.

He checked the pump for any hint of a flood. It slowed, polite, deciding not to make today about swimming with boots on.

The insects spiraled higher, then chose perches on the fresh stone, glowing like beads on a necklace clasped around the ruin’s new throat.

“Adapting to you,” the system said, approving. “It likes your quiet. Wants to see if you’ll keep it when the stage changes.”

He rolled his shoulder, the ache making itself known before stepping back again. His hand brushed along his belt, checking touch points without needing to look.

Knife, water, thread, coil, hands. All accounted for. He stood still and let the ruin finish its reshaping without interrupting like an ungrateful guest.

When it finally stilled, the air felt different. Not warmer, not colder—just newer.

“I’ll keep it,” he said. “Quiet travels.”

“Romance and survival in one line,” the system teased. “Incredible. The girls will be feral.”

“Stop,” he said, and couldn’t quite keep the half-smile from touching his mouth.

He turned toward the arch. Friendly arches always hid teeth; honest tests always hid lessons on the path you’d walk without thinking.

The stairs glowed, neat and eager, too proud of themselves. He ignored them. He moved for the arch instead, placing each step where the ground would forgive him.

In his head, he named the first three rules again—because he liked the way they sounded when repeated. Count. Water. Feet.

The beast exhaled its last phantom breath as it passed the serpent’s body. He didn’t kick it. He didn’t thank it.

He let it remain what it was: a piece in a place, building a picture of him. Respect meant honesty.

A sound reached him from beyond the new street. Not beast, not machine. Voices—clipped, low, the familiar call-and-response of a route drill.

North. Left. Hold. Wait. He almost answered, almost called back. He didn’t. The sim might be kind, it might be cruel, but it had already told him what sort of day it expected.

He would earn the company the way Elira had taught: by being the kind of person someone else would choose to have at their shoulder when maps betrayed them.

“Mirror thread,” he murmured, eyes on the arch. “Show me where it lives.”

A faint coil glimmered inside his wrist, hair-thin, ribbon-bright, tucked beneath his skin. He nodded once. “Alright.”

“Alright,” the system echoed, satisfied. “Don’t make me pry your coin purse open with a crowbar next time.”

“Next time,” he said, “you can start with hello.”

Your gift is the motivation for my creation. Give me more motivation!

Have some idea about my story? Comment it and let me know.

Creation is hard, cheer me up!

Like it ? Add to library!

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