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100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full? - Chapter 253

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  3. 100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?
  4. Chapter 253 - Chapter 253: Chapter 253 - Court of Unmoving Stars
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Chapter 253: Chapter 253 – Court of Unmoving Stars
The crowd’s murmurs faded behind them as Lucien and the Verdant Veil stepped back into the branching corridors of the Stillness Ruin.

The Scarlet Sect and the Sskavyrn duo chose to remain in the garden to rest.

The black-robed faction did not follow either.

But the moment Lucien’s group crossed the threshold into the halls—

—they froze.

Because the place they returned to…

Was not the same anymore.

A heavy clang… clang… clang… echoed through the vast corridors, a sound like an ancient heartbeat carved from stone.

Marie stiffened, whispering…

“…Luc. These paths… were never this dark.”

Lucien nodded, eyes narrowing.

The air was different. It was denser, pressing down on them like a gaze from something that no longer slept.

Then they saw it.

Bodies.

Dozens of them.

They littered the marble floor like discarded offerings. Broken talismans glimmered faintly beside snapped spears. Boot marks dragged across the ground ended abruptly in smears of red.

Some corpses were run clean through the torso.

Others were flattened entirely, just a silhouette in blood where something massive had stepped only once.

The Verdant Veil members paled to ash.

“What… what killed them?” someone whispered.

Eirene’s jaw tightened.

“…The Silent Guardians.”

And then they heard it.

Not footsteps… but stone grinding stone.

From the drifting fog of Stillness, colossal silhouettes emerged.

Stone Maidens, towering statues ten meters tall, sculpted from obsidian and moonstone. Veiled faces hid their expressions, but their presence alone was suffocating. In their hands, crystal spears glowed softly with the Law of Stillness.

One Guardian pivoted its head in their direction.

The marble beneath their feet fractured from the pressure alone.

Marie swallowed so loudly it echoed.

“Well… we’re dead.”

Lucien placed a calm hand on her shoulder.

“No. Just stay quiet.”

The Guardians moved. Not toward them but forward, patrolling with unnatural grace.

But when Lucien’s group turned a corner, the reason for the carnage became horrifyingly clear.

A desperate group of practitioners was fighting a Stone Maiden.

They unleashed everything… elemental spells, hidden weapons, talisman scrolls… Each attack exploded harmlessly against the Guardian’s veil.

Then—

FWUM.

A wave of Stillness rolled out like a divine decree.

Every practitioner froze mid-strike.

Their blades dulled into lifeless iron.

Magic sputtered into silence.

“No—NO—!” one man shouted.

The Maiden’s crystal spear glided into him as easily as a needle passing through cloth.

Another screamed.

Another tried to run.

CRUNCH.

The Maiden stepped once.

The man was gone.

The Verdant Veil members recoiled, trembling.

No one attempted a rescue.

Lucien only watched with narrowed eyes.

“…So this is what the ruin became after the mechanism activated,” Marie whispered, voice shaking.

Eirene nodded grimly.

“It’s indeed safer in the Garden… for now. These halls, however…”

She gestured at the carnage.

“…are now hunting grounds.”

The words hung over them like a burial shroud.

A Verdant Veil member spoke in a trembling voice:

“What if the abyss predators climb up from below…? They swallowed fire. They could swallow us.”

Eirene didn’t deny that possibility.

“No location is safe anymore. The ruin now sees every intruder as an invading force.”

She straightened, clutching the pendant at her neck. It glowed faintly against her palm.

“We must not stay in the open. Our next destination is the Court of Unmoving Stars.”

Everyone nodded.

They now held three keys:

• Key of Stillness

• Key of Slumber

• Key of Resonance

There was no point visiting the Chamber of Lingering Echoes now. The black-robed faction had undoubtedly harvested everything there already.

Ahead, a Silent Guardian swept past an intersection.

The gigantic statue paused… turned… then walked away.

Each step shook the dust from the ground.

Only when the tremors faded did Eirene whisper…

“Follow my footsteps. Exactly.”

Her voice was steady, but her knuckles were bone-white around the pendant.

Marie leaned toward Lucien.

“…Please tell me the next place is nicer.”

Lucien gave her a faint smile.

“It’s called the Court of Unmoving Stars.”

Marie blinked.

“That sounds worse.”

Quietly, carefully, they followed Eirene through the Guardian’s blind spots.

Every step was deliberate. Every breath was held.

At last, they reached a thinning corridor where the oppressive presence of the Guardians finally receded.

But then—

They hit a dead end. Robed statues lined the wall.

Everyone halted, confused.

Then Eirene stepped forward onto a faint star-shaped sigil etched in the marble beneath the dust.

Her foot pressed against it.

The sigil pulsed once…

…and a low rumble tremored through the hall.

The walls began to shift.

Marble folded like flowing silk.

Statues rotated without their bases ever moving.

A new corridor unfurled like a blooming lotus.

A doorway appeared, crowned with soft, impossible starlight.

Eirene looked back at the group.

“This is the path. Stay close. And whatever happens… do NOT run.”

Lucien nodded at Marie and the Verdant Veil.

Together, they stepped through the doorway.

And entered—

•••

The doorway swallowed them in silence.

For a heartbeat, there was nothing.

Then light unfolded.

A curtain of cold radiance parted before them, and Lucien’s group stepped into a world that looked less like a chamber and more like the inside of a dead constellation.

They stood on a vast obsidian floor polished to a perfect mirror. It reflected everything twice… so that every person had two silhouettes walking side by side.

Above, there was no ceiling.

Or rather, the ceiling pretended to be a sky.

An immense vault of unmoving constellations stretched forever overhead. Thousands upon thousands of stars were frozen mid-twinkle.

Not one flickered. Not one wandered. They hung in absolute stillness as if time itself had been tried here and sentenced to death.

For a moment, no one spoke.

Marie finally exhaled.

“…This is the Court?”

Eirene nodded slowly. Her voice was softer than usual.

“The Court of Unmoving Stars,” she said. “The tribunal of Stillness. A place where motion is weighed, and where anything that shouldn’t move… doesn’t.”

Lucien’s gaze swept the horizon.

The “floor” extended outward in all directions like an endless disc of midnight glass, broken only by islands of starlight. They saw raised platforms, floating stairways of stars, and clusters of crystalline plinths.

There were already people here.

Practitioners stood in scattered groups. Some knelt, pale and sweating. Others stood rigidly upright, barely daring to blink.

A few clutched their own throats as if something invisible was holding them in place.

And they…

They didn’t move at all.

Not in the still, composed way of those meditating.

Their eyes were wide open, their pupils were fixed, and their faces were frozen mid-expression. Their robes fluttered not at all, not even with the faint currents of wind.

“Luc…” Marie whispered. “Are they…?”

Lucien’s eyes narrowed.

“They’re not corpses,” he murmured. “Their bodies are alive. Their movement has been… removed.”

Then they saw it.

Hanging high above them all, directly over the center of the mirrored floor, was an enormous object.

At first glance, it resembled a star compressed into shape. But as their eyes adjusted, they saw the contours. It was a hammerhead of crystallized starlight, attached to a haft woven from frozen nebulae.

A gavel.

It was suspended in place as if the entire realm were awaiting a verdict.

Marie shivered.

“I don’t like that thing.”

Lucien did not disagree.

Just then…

A tremor rippled through the star-vault.

Lines of light drew themselves across the sky. The constellations rearranged in a slow, grinding arcs until they formed strange looping shapes. Ancient runes burned into existence between the stars.

Eirene tilted her head, then inhaled.

Some of the symbols translated themselves directly into their minds, not as sounds but as understanding.

Across the false sky, the first statement formed:

[ WHEN THE WORLD WAS YOUNG, MOTION STOLE FROM STILLNESS.

HERE, STILLNESS DEMANDS ITS DUES. ]

A second cluster of runes flared beneath it.

Marble pillars rose from the mirrored floor in a wide ring around the center of the chamber as if welcoming them. On each pillar, a different line of runes burned like cold fire.

Lucien focused on the nearest.

[ STEP LIGHTLY.

LET NO FOOTFALL RATTLE THE STARS.

THOSE WHO WALK WITHOUT BALANCE

SHALL BE PINNED IN THE SKY THEY DISTURB. ]

On one side, they saw a nervous practitioner took quick steps backward.

The mirror beneath that man’s feet rippled.

For a split second, his reflection detached… reaching up like a shadow made of stars. His ankles were gripped by his own inverted self.

He didn’t even have time to scream.

There was a soft click.

Then…

He vanished.

Above, one of the countless stars now glowed slightly brighter. Its shape resembled a tiny human figure curled in on itself.

The Verdant Veil collectively stopped breathing.

Marie slapped both hands over her mouth.

“Okay,” she said through her fingers. “That’s terrible.”

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