Chapter 181: Tartarus
Morning arrived without ceremony. The sky over Agatha was the colour of old iron, and the air that pushed through the Madhouse’s cracked window carried the smell of machine oil and something else — something older, like stone that had never seen the sun.
Leon was already awake when the others began to stir. He had been lying on his back for an hour, hands folded across his chest, listening to An Lang’s uneven breathing and the distant sound of boots on gravel outside. He had not slept well. When he did sleep, the dream came again — not the lizard-lady, not the old woman, but his father, standing at a distance that never shortened, no matter how fast Leon moved.
He sat up before Wu Ze opened her eyes and dressed without making a sound.
Liu Yan was next. She moved to her wardrobe without looking at him. That was still happening. He had tried twice to understand what had shifted between them, and both times the attempt ended in a silence heavier than any argument.
An Lang eventually woke on his own, rubbed his face with both hands, and immediately said, “Is there food?”
No one answered.
The summons came forty minutes later — a single knock, a folded paper slid under the door. Not the Instructor’s Chamber this time, but the Blackscale Citadel.
—
The Citadel’s interior always felt like a held breath. The ceilings were high enough that sound travelled strangely, arriving a half-second after it should. The lights inside were pale and directional, throwing hard shadows below every face.
Hei Luo, Hei Yung, and Lu Wang stood at the head of the briefing table when the Madhouse squad entered. None of them was seated. That alone told Leon something.
He took his seat. Liu Yan sat two chairs away. An Lang dropped into the chair beside Leon and leaned back until it creaked. Wu Ze sat last, placed both hands flat on the table, and did not move them again.
Hei Luo did not greet them. He pressed a control on the table surface, and the wall behind him shifted — panels sliding aside to reveal a projection screen. On it was an image of a stone.
It was not large in the photograph. It sat inside a containment frame, pale blue-white, translucent in places, with something moving inside it that the camera had failed to capture cleanly. It looked almost liquid. It looked almost alive.
“The Starfire Opal,” Hei Luo said. “Pre-civilizational in origin. Seven documented fragments, distributed across a single site. Each fragment has been confirmed to restore cellular structure. Organ regeneration. Neurological reversal.”
Leon’s hands, resting open on his thighs, closed slowly into fists.
He said nothing.
Hei Luo continued. “The fragment required for a full neurological restoration cycle is approximately the size of a human thumb. Direct handling without insulated contact results in cellular acceleration — the opposite of what it does passively. You touch it with bare skin, it will eat through your hand before you finish drawing breath.”
An Lang’s leaning posture straightened slightly.
“The location.” Hei Luo moved to the second image. A map — or what should have been a map. Most of it was black, with three points marked in red. Below them, a label in printed characters: Tartarus.
“Subterranean territory. The three entry shafts are the only confirmed access points. Every expedition sent through any of them has not returned. We have no record of contact. No bodies recovered. In two cases, the entry team transmitted for exactly ninety seconds before the signal cut. Nothing after.”
The room remained silent as he let that settle.
“The territory is occupied,” Hei Luo said. “Two categories. The first are the Horned. They predate any creature in the Mortal Continuum or the Dominance Continuum. They are not classified as beasts. They are not classified as divine constructs. The Existence Grade system classifies them as Illegal, meaning their continued existence violates continuum law. They should not be alive by any framework we have. They are.”
Lu Wang stood to the left with his arms behind his back, watching the squad’s faces the way a man watches ice to see where it will crack first.
“Below the Horned,” Hei Luo said, “are the Fallen Gods.”
He said it without inflection, the same way he might say the next floor or the eastern corridor.
“They were stripped of divine rank during a war that no complete historical record documents. What we have are fragments — inconsistencies, gaps, accounts that stop without ending. What we know functionally is this: the Fallen Gods do not negotiate. They do not detain. They do not leave evidence. They erase.”
He paused and inhaled once.
“If one of them becomes aware of your presence, the mission is over. So is the team.”
An Lang went very still. Leon noticed without looking directly at him — a slight change in his breathing. Wu Ze did not change at all. Her hands stayed flat on the table. That was somehow worse than if she had reacted.
Liu Yan’s jaw was tight. She was staring at the map.
Hei Luo looked at all four of them and then said, plainly and without ceremony: “You are not going to fight them. You are going to steal from them without being seen.”
He pressed the control again. The screen went dark.
“Full documentation packages will be distributed this evening. Study them completely. What you don’t absorb now, you will not have time to retrieve underground.” He stepped back. “Dismissed.”
—
The days of preparation that followed were quiet. There was no celebrating, no performing, no bravado that Leon could find genuine. The Tartarus briefing had changed the air around them, making conversation difficult.
Liu Yan worked on her cloaking field in the east training wing. Leon passed through once and stopped in the doorway to watch without announcing himself. She moved with her arms slightly extended, and the light around her bent — not disappearing but shifting, redirected like heat rising from summer asphalt. If you looked directly at her, your eyes found somewhere else to land. It was subtle enough to be unsettling. It was not invisibility. It was something the brain refused to confirm, which might be more effective.
She did not look at the doorway.
He left.
An Lang requisitioned materials from the workshop quartermaster and spent two days coating his war discs with a layered vibration-dampening compound. He explained the process to no one. The discs looked the same — same shape, same weight — but when he set one on the metal table, it landed without a sound. Not quieter. Silent. As if the landing had not happened. He was affected by this in a way that he tried not to show, which meant he showed it to everyone.
Wu Ze trained in the secondary hall at the far end of the barracks, where the lights were older and a ceiling panel had been broken for three months. She trained alone and in complete silence. No music from the worn speakers. No words. She ran forms with her transformed blades until the motion passed the point of decision — until it was simply what her body did when the thought of moving arrived.
Leon went down to check on her once. She paused between repetitions and looked at him with an expression containing no hostility and no invitation. He asked if she needed anything. She said no. He believed her and left. That concerned him more than if she had snapped at him. The absence of anything extra. Wu Ze, without edges, was a Wu Ze he had no reference for.
—
The Triarch work happened in the sub-levels below the Citadel.
The space had been excavated for storage and then repurposed, so the ceilings were lower than the craft preferred, and the corridors connected at angles that demanded constant recalibration. Up top, the Triarch handled like something that had already committed to its direction before you finished deciding. Down here, it was different. More reactive. It responded to adjustments before Leon finished making them, as if anticipating the environment rather than reading his input.
Hei Yung watched from the monitoring station above the sub-level floor and said almost nothing during these sessions. Occasionally, he spoke through the craft’s internal receiver — a single word, again, or slower, or watch the drag on your left — but mostly, he watched. Leon had the impression he was watching the craft as much as he was watching the pilot.
On the fourth evening session, Leon brought the Triarch through a low passage, made the corner that had been defeating him for two days, and came out level on the other side without scraping either wall. He held it steady for thirty seconds and then landed it in the marked square at the end of the run.
When he stepped out, Hei Yung was already on the sub-level floor, walking toward the craft with his hands behind his back. He ran two fingers along the side of the chassis where the metal met the passage wall’s air pressure. Then he looked at Leon.
“It remembers places like this,” Hei Yung said quietly.
Leon waited.
“Longwei took it underground twice. Testing. He never told me what he found.”
He turned and walked back toward the monitoring station without elaborating.
—
The documentation packages arrived that evening. Leon took his to the corner of the Madhouse room after the others settled into their own reading, pulled the light down over his section, and worked through it page by page. Most of it was dense and procedural — entry shaft measurements, atmospheric composition estimates, notation on communication blackout zones.
Two reports were incomplete. One ended partway through a sentence about subterranean acoustics, the text simply stopping as if the author had been interrupted and never came back. The second had been formally redacted — blocks of solid black text, names removed, dates removed, a whole section that Leon could tell had originally been an eyewitness account based on the surviving punctuation around the edges of the black.
The eyewitness account was gone. But the page header was not.
One name remained at the top, above the first redaction block. Clearance level, team assignment, and date of expedition. Everything else on the header was clean, untouched.
Andrew Storm.
Leon looked at it for a long time.
He did not read the page again. He did not turn it over. He sat with the file open in his hands in the low light, his thumb resting at the edge of the paper, while the room around him continued its sounds — An Lang shifting, Wu Ze’s quiet breath, the distant percussion of the night drills outside.
He thought about his father standing in a place where the lights don’t reach. He thought about his mother’s hands in a hospital bed, and the slow pulse on the monitor, and the word neurological spoken in a room where he had nothing to answer with.
He thought about the Triarch behaving differently underground. As if it remembers.
After a long time, he closed the file.
He did not close it with force. He just closed it the way you close something you know you will have to open again.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 196: Teeth of Tartarus
- Chapter 195: The Fallen Halo X: Forgotten Blood
- Chapter 194: The Fallen Halo IX: The Blood Scroll
- Chapter 193: The Fallen Halo VIII: One Call, One Corpse
- Chapter 192: The Fallen Halo VII: Kill Your Friend or Watch Them Die
- Chapter 191: The Fallen Halo VI: Stay Here
- Chapter 190: The Fallen Halo V: Breaking Point
- Chapter 189: The Fallen Halo IV: Trapped With a God
- Chapter 188: The Fallen Halo III: Castle of Souls
- Chapter 187: The Fallen Halo II
- Chapter 186: The Fallen Halo I
- Chapter 185: Bone Roads
- Chapter 184: In His Absence
- Chapter 183: Eyes That Does Not Blink
- Chapter 182: Wings of Ruin
- Chapter 181: Tartarus
- Chapter 180: Starfire Opal
- Chapter 179: Triarch Flight Lessons
- Chapter 178: Legendary Gift
- Chapter 177: Dark Omen
- Chapter 176: Cold Welcome
- Chapter 175: Stolen Moment IV: Last Dance
- Chapter 174: Stolen Moment III
- Chapter 173: Stolen Moment II
- Chapter 172: Stolen Moment I
- Chapter 171: False Hope
- Chapter 170: Poisoned Cup
- Chapter 169: Cracked Eyes
- Chapter 168: Even the Gods Will Be Shocked
- Chapter 167: Don’t Go to the Nurses’ Changing Room
- Chapter 166: Way To Hell
- Chapter 165: This Looks Tasty
- Chapter 164: Do You Love Your Life?
- Chapter 163: The Cursed Wish
- Chapter 162: So This Is Your Mother, Leon Storm
- Chapter 161: You Are All Invited to Zoe’s Marriage
- Chapter 160: I Will Choose My Own Husband
- Chapter 159: Our Bond Is Finally Going to Strengthen
- Chapter 158: Blackscale Citadel
- Chapter 157: Wet Footprints
- Chapter 156: I Thought You Were Standing by the Mirror
- Chapter 155: I Want You to Play the Role of My Husband
- Chapter 154: Three Years
- Chapter 153: The Anchored Soul Initiative
- Chapter 152 152: Welcome to the Age of Wealth... or Death
- Chapter 151: I Want Her as Your Wife
- Chapter 150: Blessed on a Doomed Day
- Chapter 149: Breakfast at Storm’s Mansion
- Chapter 148: Welcome Home, Brother
- Chapter 147 147: Retreat... For Now
- Chapter 146 146: Golden Light of Desperation
- Chapter 145 145: The Death Line
- Chapter 144 144: Rise of the Mountain Beast III: Until the End
- Chapter 143: Rise of the Mountain Beast (2)
- Chapter 142: Rise of the Mountain Beast (1)
- Chapter 141: The Return of the Painter’s Son
- Chapter 140: Six Hours Before Hell
- Chapter 139: Birth of the Oculus Devourer
- Chapter 138: The Unwanted Mission
- Chapter 137: The One Who Returned, The One Who Didn’t
- Chapter 136: Sector 8 of Chaos City (4): Titanium-Skinned Soul Eater
- Chapter 135: Sector 8 of Chaos City (3)
- Chapter 134: Sector 8 of Chaos City (2)
- Chapter 133: Sector 8 of Chaos City (1)
- Chapter 132: Adaptive Mood Activated
- Chapter 131: Colors of Chaos
- Chapter 130: Death
- Chapter 129: Soul Eater
- Chapter 128: Last Chance
- Chapter 127: Death-Scented Air
- Chapter 126: Golden Cards & Broken Ties
- Chapter 125: The Reward
- Chapter 124: Paloalto
- Chapter 123: SAVAGE FENTY
- Chapter 122: Dead Means Dead
- Chapter 121: They Didn’t Multiply When He Killed Them
- Chapter 120: Chaos City (3) Devilish Goat
- Chapter 119: Chaos City (2)
- Chapter 118: Chaos City (1)
- Chapter 117: Son of the Blue-Flamed Dragon
- Chapter 116: Welcome to the Madhouse
- Chapter 115: He’s Joining
- Chapter 114: Go
- Chapter 113: Silent Promise
- Chapter 112: Last Goodbye
- Chapter 111: False Sanctuary
- Chapter 110: This Isn’t a School Uniform
- Chapter 109: National Threat
- Chapter 108: Men in Black
- Chapter 107: Unconscious Action Detected
- Chapter 106: Welcome back, Host
- Chapter 105: He’s Dead, So What Now?
- Chapter 104: Classification Suspended
- Chapter 103: Lose Yourself or Lose Them
- Chapter 102: Step. Breathe. Kill.
- Chapter 101: Believe and Burn
- Chapter 100: You Were Sent Here to Die
- Chapter 99: Perimeter Breach
- Chapter 98: We Are Weaker Because of You
- Chapter 97: Use Your Fist
- Chapter 96: Trust No One
- Chapter 95: A 17% Survival Rate
- Chapter 94: First Task: Survive the Landing
- Chapter 93: Ninety Days in the Shattered Lands
- Chapter 92: Termination Is a Waste
- Chapter 91: Don’t Look Them in the Eye
- Chapter 90: YOU’RE COMING WITH US
- Chapter 89: The Third Creator
- Chapter 88: The Flesh That Dared Heaven
- Chapter 87: Learn How to Please a Lady
- Chapter 86: Welcome to the Qing Clan
- Chapter 85: Everyone Sees What They Fear
- Chapter 84: Who Am I for Them to Kneel To?
- Chapter 83: Welcome, Son of Andrew Storm
- Chapter 82: The Return
- Chapter 81: I Danced With Death
- Chapter 80: Trace That Bloodline
- Chapter 79: Clash of Titans (2): The Birth of Death
- Chapter 78: Clash of Titans (1)
- Chapter 77: Only One Must Survive
- Chapter 76: The E-Rank’s Defiance
- Chapter 75: You want him? You go through Me!
- Chapter 74: Breaking Point
- Chapter 73: NEXT WAVE
- Chapter 72: The Pink Diary
- Chapter 71: Fight Them All
- Chapter 70: TIME OUT. VICTORY: STORM, L.
- Chapter 69: Tired Already?
- Chapter 68: I Let Her Win
- Chapter 67: Razor’s Edge
- Chapter 66: STORM, L. VS. GRACE
- Chapter 65: Welcome, Creator!
- Chapter 64: He’s the One
- Chapter 63: Congratulations on Surviving What Others Could Not
- Chapter 62 - 00:05:00
- Chapter 61: Survive for 10 Minutes
- Chapter 60: Existence Grade: ERROR
- Chapter 59: The One-Man Army
- Chapter 58: Impossible
- Chapter 57: ACTIVE PARTICIPANTS: 1001
- Chapter 56: Need Some Help?
- Chapter 55: HE’S ALREADY DEAD
- Chapter 54: That Was Too Damn Close
- Chapter 53: Endless Task
- Chapter 52: She Knows
- Chapter 51: People Aren’t What They Seem... Remember
- Chapter 50: The Last Light
- Chapter 49: Handle Him
- Chapter 48: Marked as a Target
- Chapter 47: The Video
- Chapter 46: Dies Irae, Dies Illa...
- Chapter 45: A Promise of Annihilation
- Chapter 44: This Is Our Room
- Chapter 43: Really?!
- Chapter 42: Eyes In The Shadows
- Chapter 41: You Are the Creator
- Chapter 40: You’re Waking!
- Chapter 39: A Deadly Dose
- Chapter 38: The Life or Death Test
- Chapter 37: Two-Headed Dog
- Chapter 36: Follow Me!
- Chapter 35: What Do I Do to Control This Unrelenting Power?
- Chapter 34: The Skeletal Nurse
- Chapter 33: The Assessment Orb
- Chapter 32: Is That Me?
- Chapter 31: I’m Still Waiting to End What You Started
- Chapter 30: The Sentinel’s Stare
- Chapter 29: The Secret Behind the Crash
- Chapter 28: I... Am... You
- Chapter 27: Room 777
- Chapter 26: Where... am I?
- Chapter 25: Silent Impact
- Chapter 24: Public Execution
- Chapter 23: Beg on Your Knees and Rot in Shame
- Chapter 22: Fight me with the same strenght you used to laught at me!
- Chapter 21: Say Your Last Words Before You Die!
- Chapter 20: Run!
- Chapter 19: The Death Pit
- Chapter 18: Breathe
- Chapter 17: Sleeping in a Flooded Bed
- Chapter 16: Fight to Kill. Or Be Killed (2)
- Chapter 15: Fight to Kill. Or Be Killed (1)
- Chapter 14: Fifteen Names, One Monster
- Chapter 13: You Must Become the Riverbank
- Chapter 12: The Dam Over the Flood
- Chapter 11: Wake Up. Wake Up. Wake Up!
- Chapter 10: When Silence Becomes a Weapon
- Chapter 9: An Execution with Witnesses
- Chapter 8: The Dusthollow Rat
- Chapter 7: I Will Not Die Here
- Chapter 6: This is a Bad Idea
- Chapter 5: Come and Get Me!
- Chapter 4: Trial One: Survival
- Chapter 3: A Message Written in Blood and Fire
- Chapter 2: Remember
- Chapter 1: Let the Sky Fall