Chapter 28 – The Vault Beyond Victory
The last echoes of battle faded like breath against glass.
Leon stood still, his boots planted in a circle of scorched stone. The air still trembled faintly from the aftershock of his final attack, but already the silence was returning—thick, absolute.
He didn't move.
Didn't lower his guard.
Frost still clung to parts of the chamber, spiderwebbing across melted black rock. Steam hissed softly from the cratered floor where his spear had struck. The monster's broken form lay just ahead, its upper half buried in cracked stone, body split and still glowing faintly with elemental residue.
A quiet hum lingered in his bones.
It wasn't fading.
He exhaled through his nose and raised a hand, slow and steady.
The space before him shimmered—his storage activating. The air folded slightly inward as if it knew where to go. With a simple thought, the monster's corpse and the shattered fragments of its hammer vanished into golden light.
Even in ruins, the weapon had weight. Heat. History. He could still feel the echo of its strength as it disappeared into his pocket dimension.
Maybe later, he'd try to reconstruct it. Maybe not.
Right now, it was just… done.
Leon rotated his wrist, flexing his fingers.
No trembling.
No ache.
He should've been drained. That spear—wind wrapped around condensed ice, launched with full force—had been more than anything he'd ever cast before. It had cracked stone, disrupted magic, ended a fight against something that had nearly crushed him.
And yet… he wasn't empty.
Not even close.
His mana hadn't just started recovering quickly. It had never dropped below a threshold he could feel.
A slow breath pushed through his lips.
''That was only a quarter?''
The realization crept in as sensation—not logic. There was no meter telling him how much mana remained. Just the feeling in his limbs. The buzz in his core. The invisible pressure of power waiting quietly beneath his skin.
It didn't rise. It didn't demand.
It just existed.
''I didn't even push close to the limit.''
His mouth twitched. Almost a smile.
It didn't feel triumphant. It felt… curious.
If such a fight had only took about one fourth of his mana he wondered how much mana he actually had.
He lowered his hand and turned back toward the throne, its surface fractured, the stone beneath his feet still steaming faintly. The aura of the battlefield had begun to settle, but something shifted behind the platform.
Where there had been nothing—now there was space.
A narrow opening in the wall. Black stone pulled inward like a door that had never needed hinges.
Leon's eyes narrowed.
He took a few steps forward, head tilted slightly. No wind here. No residual magic. The air felt still—not stale, but preserved. The temperature dropped half a degree, cool enough to notice but not enough to chill.
The new hallway extended into shadow. The floor was smooth obsidian, veined with thin golden lines and carved with runes that trailed like vines. Some glowed faintly blue, pulsing every few seconds. He couldn't read them, but the rhythm reminded him of a heartbeat—slow and patient.
He kept walking.
The deeper he went, the more the atmosphere shifted.
Not in danger.
Not in tension.
But in age.
Like this part of the dungeon hadn't been touched for centuries. Like it wasn't 'meant' to be seen until now.
The hum grew louder the farther he moved. Not sound—but sensation. A quiet vibration that lived somewhere between his ribs and his spine.
And then light.
Soft, golden.
It spilled from a wide circular chamber ahead, brushing faint warmth against his face. He reached the archway, one hand resting lightly against the stone frame, and stepped through.
His eyes adjusted quickly.
The room was small. Round. Domed ceiling. The walls shimmered faintly with a natural glow, light diffused through polished stone. And at the center—
A pedestal.
And on it—
A chest.
Massive. Rectangular. The kind of heavy, deliberate shape that spoke of permanence. Its corners were wrapped in gold bands, edges traced in silver filigree. Script lined the top in circular patterns—half faded, half radiant. The glyphs weren't just decoration. They pulsed once, faint and alive.
Leon stopped three steps away.
He didn't speak. Didn't blink.
The feeling in his chest tightened—not from threat. From weight.
It didn't feel like a reward.
It felt like recognition.
He crouched slowly, not taking his eyes off the chest, and extended a whisper of wind—fine as thread, sharp as a knife's edge.
The current drifted forward, brushed against the latch, and nudged.
Click.
No spark. No curse. No rejection.
Just a simple sound.
Accepted.
He guided the wind upward, wrapping around the lid.
Lifted.
Slowly.
The lid creaked.
Light spilled through the crack—muted, amber-gold.
When it finally opened far enough to see inside, Leon leaned forward.
Then froze.
He stared.
No movement. No breath.
Just him.
And—
Platinum.
Rows.
Bars.
Stacked side by side, each one stamped and flawless, arranged so neatly it looked ceremonial.
He didn't speak for several seconds.
Then quietly:
"…That's platinum."
The words came out flat.
He blinked.
"Bars of it."
No one answered, obviously.
His brain struggled to categorize what he was seeing. It didn't compute.
''Not coins.''
''Bars. Literal bars. Dozens. No Hundreds Maybe more.''
He squinted. Leaned in. Recounted.
Nope. Still there.
"...Huh."
He rocked back on his heels.
Still crouched. Still staring.
No expression.
Then softly—
"…I'm rich."
Pause.
Head tilt.
''Wait.''
"…No."
"…I'm wealthy."
His voice had gained depth. Confusion replaced by recognition.
"Filthy, catastrophic, you-make-the-merchant-faint-just-by-walking-in wealthy."
He let out a quiet, stunned laugh and ran a hand through his hair.
He remembered Seraphine once showing him a single platinum coin, polished and locked in a velvet-lined case. She'd said it was worth over a hundred gold.
One coin.
One.
He had… what?
He didn't want to count.
His stomach turned at the thought of math.
"…This is wrong."
But his grin widened anyway.
Not smug. Not greedy.
Just—'what the hell is my life.'
He reached out and gently lowered the lid. The creak was softer this time, like the chest understood.
He rested a hand on top.
"You're mine now," he murmured. "Stay quiet, stay pretty, and don't start glowing randomly."
A flick of his wrist, and the chest vanished into storage.
The noise it made wasn't dramatic.
But it 'felt' expensive.
---
Leon stood.
Let the silence settle again.
He didn't need to celebrate.
The win was enough.
His steps took him around the pedestal, where the far wall looked collapsed—until he got closer.
A tunnel.
Sloping.
Familiar.
He stopped at the edge.
Tilted his head down.
A chute.
His fingers curled once.
Images flickered—of falling, of pain, of that chamber with the throne and the monster that broke his bones like dry twigs.
He took one breath.
Not deep. Not steady.
Just real.
"…I'm not the same anymore."
The words came quietly.
He crouched again. Planted his palms on his thighs.
Wind gathered faintly around his boots—not flaring, just ready.
He looked into the tunnel.
Didn't flinch.
Didn't hesitate.
Then pushed off and dropped in.
No panic.
No scream.
Just motion.
He descended into the dark—shoulders squared, eyes open.
Whatever waited at the bottom?
He'd deal with it.