Chapter 33: Chapter 32: The Infinite Reflection
The Grand Library of the Academy was usually a place of silence, dust, and the smell of old parchment. Tonight, it smelled of ozone and terror.
“Keep moving!” Arthur shouted, grabbing Zack by the collar of his robe and hauling him around a corner.
A fraction of a second later, a beam of pale blue light sliced through the air where Zack had been standing. The beam hit a marble bust of a former Headmaster. There was no explosion, no fire. The statue simply turned into gray dust, collapsing into a pile of sand with a soft hiss.
“Disintegration magic,” Julian gasped, sprinting alongside them, his long legs eating up the distance. “That’s… that’s forbidden! That’s lost magic! How is a statue casting high-tier destruction spells?”
“It’s not a statue!” Arthur yelled back, his lungs burning. “It’s a Sentinel Mark III. It’s a janitor with a gun!”
They skidded around the corner into the East Wing corridor. Behind them, the heavy, rhythmic THUD-CLANK-THUD of the pursuer echoed off the stone walls. It wasn’t running; it was walking with the terrifying inevitability of a glacier.
Arthur’s mind raced. He had spent two years preparing for the Mana Meltdown, but he hadn’t expected the security system to wake up this early. The pressure in the Ley Lines must be causing the ancient defense protocols to trigger false positives. To the Sentinel, Arthur and his friends weren’t students; they were “corrupt data” blocking the pipes.
“Where are we going?” Vivian demanded. She was running backward, her rapier drawn, eyes scanning the darkness behind them. “My sword bounced off its skin! It’s made of Enchanted Granite!”
“The Workshop!” Arthur commanded. “We need home-field advantage!”
….
They burst through the doors of the Gymnasium, sprinting across the polished wooden floor toward the secret panel behind the scoreboard.
“Open! Open!” Arthur slammed his palm against the hidden rune-lock.
The stone wall groaned and slid open. They dove into the workshop, tumbling onto the metal grating of the floor.
“Zack, seal the door!” Arthur barked.
Zack scrambled to the control panel, mashing the close button. The heavy stone wall slid shut just as the Sentinel appeared at the gym entrance.
BOOM.
The impact shook the room. The Sentinel was hammering on the door. Dust rained down from the ceiling.
“That door is three feet of reinforced stone,” Julian said, leaning against a workbench, trying to catch his breath. “It will hold.”
HISSS.
A blue light began to burn through the center of the door. The stone turned molten orange, dripping like wax.
“It’s cutting through!” Vivian yelled. “We have maybe two minutes!”
Arthur stood up, wiping grease from his hands onto his trousers. He looked around the workshop. It was filled with tools, half-finished projects, and piles of scrap metal. But they didn’t have a weapon strong enough to crack enchanted granite.
“We can’t out-damage it,” Arthur muttered, his eyes darting across the room. “Julian’s fire just makes it glow. Vivian’s steel can’t scratch it. We need to attack its logic.”
“Its logic?” Julian asked, staring at the melting door. “Arthur, it’s a rock monster. It doesn’t have a brain to confuse!”
“It has a Core,” Arthur corrected. “An Atherian Processing Core. It runs on a loop of commands: Identify Target -> Analyze Threat -> Neutralize.”
Arthur grabbed a large, polished silver mirror from a pile of junk. He grabbed a second mirror. Then he grabbed a jar of glowing mana-ink.
“Zack,” Arthur said, his voice deadly calm. “Do you remember the lesson on Recursive Runes?”
Zack’s eyes went wide behind his fogged glasses. “The… the infinite loop? But Arthur, that’s theoretical! If you create a rune that feeds into itself, the mana density becomes infinite! It creates a singularity!”
“Exactly.” Arthur slammed the mirrors onto a workbench, facing each other. “We are going to build a Mana Trap. A Hall of Mirrors for its brain.”
…
The door was glowing brighter. The center was sagging inward.
“We have sixty seconds!” Vivian shouted. She stood in front of the door, shield raised, ready to buy them time with her life.
Arthur worked with terrifying speed. He didn’t use a ruler. He didn’t use a compass. He used his thumb and the ink.
He drew a complex rune on the surface of the first mirror. [Input: Mana Signature.]
He drew a second rune on the other mirror. [Output: Reflected to Input.]
“Julian!” Arthur shouted. “I need a power source to jump-start the loop! Charge this crystal!”
He threw a small quartz shard to Julian.
Julian didn’t argue. He poured his mana into the crystal until it glowed white-hot. “Here!”
Arthur placed the glowing crystal exactly in the center, between the two mirrors.
The effect was instantaneous.
The light from the crystal hit the first mirror, bounced to the second, and bounced back to the first. Because of the runes Arthur had drawn, each reflection didn’t lose energy—it gained it.
The space between the mirrors began to hum. The air distorted. A high-pitched whine filled the room, climbing higher and higher in frequency.
“It’s a feedback loop,” Arthur explained, stepping back and putting on his welding goggles. “It’s a scream that gets louder forever.”
CRASH.
The workshop door finally gave way.
The Sentinel stepped through the molten hole. It was eight feet tall, humanoid, and made of grey stone blocks held together by blue light. Its single eye—a massive sapphire lens—swiveled around the room.
“TARGETS LOCATED,” the Sentinel boomed. Its voice wasn’t spoken; it vibrated the bones in their ears. “PREPARE FOR STERILIZATION.”
It raised its arm. The blue disintegration beam began to charge.
“Hey! Ugly!” Arthur shouted, standing directly behind his mirror trap.
The Sentinel paused. It looked at Arthur. Then, it looked at the humming, glowing anomaly on the table between them.
The Sentinel’s core directive took over: Analyze Threat.
The blue eye focused on the mirrors. It tried to read the mana signature.
“Gotcha,” Arthur whispered.
The Sentinel sent a query pulse into the trap. The pulse entered the mirrors. It bounced. It amplified. It returned to the Sentinel a thousand times stronger.
The Sentinel’s eye widened.
“ERROR,” the Sentinel droned. “DATA OVERFLOW. INPUT EXCEEDS CAPACITY. RECALCULATING… RECALCULATING…”
The Golem froze. Its arm lowered. Its head began to twitch.
Inside the trap, the light was now blinding. The Golem was trying to process an equation that had no end. It was trying to count to infinity.
“RECALCULATING… RE-RE-RE-CALCULATING…”
Smoke began to pour from the Sentinel’s stone joints. The blue light holding it together turned an angry, unstable violet.
“Get down!” Arthur tackled Vivian. Julian dove behind a lathe. Zack curled into a ball.
POP.
It wasn’t a massive explosion. It was the sound of a lightbulb burning out, magnified by ten thousand.
The Sentinel’s blue eye shattered. The light inside its body vanished.
The massive stone construct slumped forward, dead weight, and crashed onto the floor with a sound that shook the foundations of the castle.
…..
For a long time, nobody moved. The only sound was the cooling tick of the Golem’s stone body and the gentle shhh-shhh of steam escaping its joints.
Arthur stood up, brushing dust off his uniform. He walked over to the trap. He carefully kicked the mirrors apart, breaking the loop. The humming stopped.
“Target neutralized,” Arthur said, his voice steady, though his hands were trembling slightly. “Software crash induced via hardware exploit.”
Julian stood up, staring at the pile of rocks that used to be an unbeatable killing machine.
“You…” Julian pointed at the mirrors. “You killed it with a reflection. You didn’t even use a spell.”
“I used logic,” Arthur said. He walked over to the Golem’s head.
The sapphire lens that had served as its eye was cracked, but large fragments remained. It was a flawless, mana-focusing crystal of Ancient make.
Arthur picked up a shard of the blue glass. He held it up to the light.
[Item: High-Grade Focusing Lens.] [Properties: Amplifies Mana Beams by 500%.]
Arthur turned to Julian, a dangerous grin spreading across his face.
“Julian,” Arthur said. “You asked when you would get your gun.”
Julian looked at the lens, then at Arthur. “You want to turn that… into a weapon?”
“We just destroyed a tank,” Arthur said, pocketing the lens. “Now, we are going to loot it. Zack, help me strip the armor plating. We need it for the car.”
Vivian sheathed her rapier, looking at the melted door. “Arthur… if these things are waking up… the Academy isn’t safe anymore.”
“No,” Arthur agreed, looking at the countdown on his iScroll.
[Time Remaining: 99 Days.]
“The school is becoming a war zone,” Arthur said. “We have three months to finish the car, graduate, and get out before the entire defensive grid decides we are the virus.”
He looked at his friends. They were covered in dust, terrified, but alive.
“Class is dismissed,” Arthur announced. “It’s time for shop class.”
End of Chapter 32
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 138 137: The Cost of Visibility
- Chapter 137 - 136: After the Variable
- Chapter 136 135: This Time, Not Interrupted
- Chapter 135 - 134: Closer Than Intended
- Chapter 134 - 133: Not Part of the System
- Chapter 133 - 132: When It Returns
- Chapter 132 - 131: When It’s Missing
- Chapter 131 - 130: Almost Said
- Chapter 130 - 129: When It Changes
- Chapter 129 - 128: The Space Between Work
- Chapter 128 - 127: A Reason to Return
- Chapter 127 - 126: Staying Longer Than Necessary
- Chapter 126 - 125: The People Who Stay
- Chapter 125 - 124: The Human Variable
- Chapter 124 - 123: The One Thing You Didn’t Build
- Chapter 123 - 122: A Perfect Delivery Day
- Chapter 122 - 121: The Cost of Doubt
- Chapter 121 - 120: The Invisible Delay
- Chapter 120 - 119: The Speed Problem
- Chapter 119 - 118: Too Many Wagons
- Chapter 118 - 117: Where the Road Breaks
- Chapter 117 - 116: The Hidden Weakness
- Chapter 116 115: The First Snow
- Chapter 115 - 114: Messages Move Too Slowly
- Chapter 114 - 113: The Mountain Bottleneck
- Chapter 113 - 112: The Freight Convoys
- Chapter 112 - 111: The Shape of Cargo
- Chapter 111 - 110: The Weight of Silver
- Chapter 110 - 109: The Warehouse Economy
- Chapter 109 - 108: The First Logistics Hub
- Chapter 108 - 107: The Logistics Problem
- Chapter 107 - 106: The Road Changes Everything
- Chapter 106 - 105 — Momentum
- Chapter 105 - 104: The Price of Passage
- Chapter 104 - 103: The Inspection
- Chapter 103 - 102: Silent Countermeasures
- Chapter 102 - 101: The Night the Mountain Moved
- Chapter 101 - 100: The Quiet Between Calculations
- Chapter 100 - 99: Terms of Adaptation
- Chapter 99 - 98: Cracks in Stone
- Chapter 98 - 97: Market Day Without Mud
- Chapter 97 - 96: The First Defection
- Chapter 96 - 95: Breaking the Swamp
- Chapter 95 - 94: The Squeeze
- Chapter 94 - 93: The Office of Flow
- Chapter 93 - 92: The Toll Problem
- Chapter 92 - 91: The Royal Walk
- Chapter 91 - 90: The First Crossing
- Chapter 90 - 89: The Shape of Strength
- Chapter 89 - 88: Steel Day
- Chapter 88 - 87: The Southern Problem
- Chapter 87 - 86: The Pour
- Chapter 86 - 85: The Mix
- Chapter 85 - 84: Survey Day
- Chapter 84 - 83: The King and the Bridge
- Chapter 83 - 82: A Seat at the Table
- Chapter 82 - 81: Coming Home (Season 3)
- Chapter 81 - 80: Back To The Road
- Chapter 80 - 79: Terms of Exchange
- Chapter 79 - 78: The Switch
- Chapter 78 - 77: The Weight of the Crown
- Chapter 77 - 76: The Capital Node
- Chapter 76: The Point of No Return
- Chapter 75 - 74: Scaling Pressure
- Chapter 74 - 73: The Question That Matters
- Chapter 73 - 72: Comparative Failure
- Chapter 72 - 71: Resistance Inside the Machine
- Chapter 71 - 70: What the Grid Wants
- Chapter 70 - 69: The Trial Node
- Chapter 69 - 68: The Seven-Day Window
- Chapter 68 - 67: Audience Without Trust
- Chapter 67 - 66: The First Prediction
- Chapter 66 - 65: The Grid from the Outside
- Chapter 65 - 64: Terms of Entry
- Chapter 64 - 63: The Border That Does Not Bend
- Chapter 63 - 62: The White Void
- Chapter 62 - 61: The Black Gold Rush
- Chapter 61 - 60: The Glass Ocean
- Chapter 60 - 59: The City in the Sky
- Chapter 59 - 58: The Mirror World
- Chapter 58 - 57: The Chladni Run
- Chapter 57 - 56: The Belly of the Beast
- Chapter 56 - 55: The Serpent’s Throat
- Chapter 55 - 54: The Night Shift
- Chapter 54 - 53: The Canyon of Screams
- Chapter 53 - 52: The Iron Horse
- Chapter 52 - 51: The Sunrise Audit ( Season 2 )
- Chapter 51 - 50: The Arithmetic of Godhood (Season 1 End)
- Chapter 50 - 49: The Torque of War
- Chapter 49 - 48: The Son’s Duty
- Chapter 48 - 47: The clogged Artery
- Chapter 47 - 46: The City of Ghosts
- Chapter 46 - 45: The Invisible Class
- Chapter 45 - 44: The City Beneath the City
- Chapter 44 - 43: The Lonely Sentinel
- Chapter 43 - 42: The Ferrous Jungle
- Chapter 42 - 41: The Dead Zone
- Chapter 41 - 40: The Hamburger Protocol
- Chapter 40 - 39: The Thermodynamics of Trust
- Chapter 39 - 38: The Geometry of a Cliff
- Chapter 38 - 37: The Valedictorian of Chaos
- Chapter 37 - 36: The Iron Skin
- Chapter 36 - 35: The Interpreter
- Chapter 35 - 34: The Iron Spider
- Chapter 34 - 33: The Cassandra Protocol
- Chapter 33 - 32: The Infinite Reflection
- Chapter 32 - 31: The Auditor’s Shadow
- Chapter 31 - 30: The Sophomore Slump (Time Skip Begins)
- Chapter 30 - 29: The Portable Archive
- Chapter 29 - 28: The Global Diagnostic
- Chapter 28 - 27: The Unholy Trinity
- Chapter 27 - 26: The Human Generator
- Chapter 26 - 25: The Sub-Basement
- Chapter 25 - 24: The Taser Doctrine
- Chapter 24 - 23: The Variable of Arrogance
- Chapter 23 - 22: The Capacitor
- Chapter 22 - 21: The Architecture of Comfort
- Chapter 21 - 20: The Theorem of Fire
- Chapter 20 - 19: The Ivory Tower
- Chapter 19 - 18: The Laws of Bounce
- Chapter 18 - 17: The Viscoelastic Paradox
- Chapter 17 - 16: The Princess and the Density
- Chapter 16 - 15: The Law of Elasticity
- Chapter 15 - 14: The King’s Curiosity
- Chapter 14 - 13: The Screaming Wagon
- Chapter 13 - 12: The Heart of the Beast
- Chapter 12 - 11: The Bessemer Blast
- Chapter 11 - 10: The Supply Chain Crisis
- Chapter 10 - 9: The Psychology of Halitosis
- Chapter 9 - 8: The Crystal Box
- Chapter 8 - 7: The Ink and The Iron
- Chapter 7 - 6: The Bankruptcy Simulator
- Chapter 6 - 5: The Porcelain Throne
- Chapter 5 - 4: The Logistics of Mud
- Chapter 4 - 3: The ROI of Ruthlessness
- Chapter 3 - 2: The Thermodynamics of Bathtime
- Chapter 2 - 1: The Young Master’s Grievance
- Chapter 1: Introduction