Chapter : 967
He turned to face the three anxious, hopeful faces watching him. Mina, her usual pragmatic composure strained to the breaking point. Yacob, his boyish hero-worship replaced by a raw, fearful vulnerability. And Rosa. Her face was a perfect, unreadable mask of ice, but her dark eyes were a vortex of a decade of suppressed pain and a single, fragile, and newly kindled spark of hope. He knew that his next words would either fan that spark into a flame or extinguish it forever.
He chose his words with the care of a man disarming a trap. He could not use the language of his own world—of parasitic entities and spiritual entropy. He had to translate the cold, hard science of his diagnosis into the mystical, allegorical language they would understand.
“It is not a physical ailment,” he began, his voice a low, steady instrument of calm authority. “The healers were right to find no cause in her body. Her flesh is merely the canvas upon which a deeper sickness has been painted.” He paused, letting the weight of his words settle in the silent, grief-soaked room.
“This is a sickness of the soul,” he continued, his gaze meeting Mina’s. “A… a curse. A subtle and deeply woven one. It has not attacked her spirit, but has… entangled it. It is like a vine, a shadow-vine, that has coiled around the very heart of her life force, and it is slowly, patiently, drinking the light from her.”
The metaphor was both beautiful and horrifying, a perfect encapsulation of the ugly truth he had witnessed. Mina let out a soft, choked gasp, a sound of validation and despair. For ten years, they had known, had felt, that this was something more than a simple illness, and to have it finally named, finally confirmed, was both a relief and a new kind of terror.
“But…” she whispered, her voice a fragile, trembling thing. “Is there a cure? Can the vine be… cut?”
This was the moment. The crux of the entire, desperate gamble. Lloyd held her gaze, and the gazes of her siblings, for a long, profound moment. He could lie. He could say it was hopeless. It would be the easiest, the safest path. But he looked at Rosa, at the single, fragile spark in her eyes, and he found that he could not bring himself to be the one to extinguish it.
He turned his mind inward, to the silent, star-filled interface of his System. Administrator, he commanded silently. Cross-reference the energy signature of the Grade A Spiritual Corruption Curse with all known alchemical and spiritual reagents in the continental pharmacopeia. Identify a counter-agent. A cure. Now.
The response was instantaneous, a flood of data that was both a miracle and a death sentence.
[QUERY COMPLETE. IDENTIFYING CURATIVE PROTOCOL.]
[ANALYSIS: CURSE IS A SYMBIOTIC ENTITY OF PURE, NEGATIVE SPIRITUAL ENERGY. REQUIRES A COUNTER-AGENT OF EQUAL, OPPOSITE, AND PURE POSITIVE SPIRITUAL ENERGY.]
[PRESCRIPTION: A SYNERGISTIC COMPOUND OF THREE REAGENTS IS REQUIRED TO CREATE THE NECESSARY HARMONIC RESONANCE TO DISPEL THE ENTITY WITHOUT DESTROYING THE HOST.]
A list appeared in his mind, three names that were not just rare, but were the stuff of pure, unadulterated myth.
He turned back to the family, his face a grim, unreadable mask. "There is a way," he said, his voice quiet but firm. "A theoretical one. A prescription from the oldest and most esoteric texts. It is a cure of last resort, a combination of three ingredients so potent, so pure, that their combined energy is said to be able to rewrite the very laws of life and death."
A wave of desperate, disbelieving hope washed over the room. Yacob’s eyes widened. Mina took a half-step forward, her hands clasped together as if in prayer.
Lloyd delivered the final, crushing blow. He listed the ingredients, his voice a cold, clinical finality that was more devastating than any emotional outburst.
“To break this curse,” he stated, “we require three things. A single petal from a Heavenly Jade Lotus. A single leaf from a Violent Purple Tree. And a single, flawless, 5-Color Divine Pearl.”
The names fell into the silent room like stones into a deep, dark well. They were not just ingredients; they were legends. They were the centerpieces of a hundred epic poems, the mythical MacGuffins in a thousand bedtime stories told to frighten children and inspire heroes. They were not things one simply… acquired.
The fragile hope in the room shattered, replaced by a despair so profound it was a physical weight. Yacob’s face crumpled. Mina let out a soft, defeated sob and turned away, her shoulders shaking. The quest was not just difficult; it was impossible. It was a fool’s errand, a cruel joke played by a merciless universe.
Chapter : 968
But Rosa did not weep. She did not despair. The ice in her eyes did not melt; it hardened. It sharpened. The grief and the hope were burned away, replaced by a single, focused, and absolute resolve. She was no longer a victim of her mother’s tragedy. She was a warrior facing a new campaign.
She looked at Lloyd, her silver-haired head held high, her gaze a thing of pure, unyielding steel. She asked a single, simple, and world-changing question.
“Where?”
Her voice cut through the grief-soaked air like a blade. It was not a question of possibility. It was a demand for a target. A location. The first step on a journey she had already decided to take.
Lloyd met her gaze, and in her eyes, he saw a perfect, chilling, and magnificent mirror of his own unbending will. He had expected to have to manipulate her, to guide her, to convince her. He realized now that it was unnecessary. He had not just found a potential ally. He had just unleashed a queen.
He gave her the first name on the impossible list, the first destination on their shared, insane quest.
“The Heavenly Jade Lotus,” he said, his voice a low, steady hum that was a perfect match for her own. “Grows only on the highest, most inaccessible peaks of Mount Monu.”
The name Mount Monu landed in the room with the force of a physical blow, a name spoken only in whispers, a place synonymous with death and despair. It was not just a mountain; it was a legend, a scar on the face of the world, a place where the gods themselves were said to fear to tread.
Mina’s quiet sobs hitched in her throat, her face draining of all remaining color. Her despair, which had been a quiet, personal grief, was now alloyed with a new and more immediate terror. She knew the stories. Every child in the southern provinces did. Mount Monu was not a destination; it was a grave.
"No," she whispered, the word a fragile, broken thing. "Not there. Anywhere but there."
Even Yacob, whose mind was filled with the heroic tales of bards, knew this name. The bards did not sing of heroes who conquered Mount Monu. They sang of heroes who were consumed by it. The boy’s face, which had been a mask of simple, childish grief, was now pale with a more mature, more profound fear.
But Rosa did not falter. The name, the legend, the terror—it was all just data to her. A new variable in a complex equation. The fear that was evident on her siblings' faces was, on hers, replaced by a new, more intense, and almost frightening resolve. The path was laid out before her. The objective was clear. The risks were irrelevant.
"Then we will go," she declared, her voice a blade of pure, unyielding certainty. The words were not a suggestion; they were a pronouncement of an unalterable fact. She had made her decision. The debate was over.
It was Lloyd who now had to play the part of the rationalist, the voice of caution. He had unleashed this storm of resolve in her, and now he had to guide it, to temper it, lest it consume them both.
"No," he said, his voice firm, authoritative, immediately shutting down her declaration. "You will not. We will not."
Rosa’s head snapped towards him, her dark eyes flashing with a rare, hot spark of defiance. "She is my mother," she stated, as if that explained everything.
"And she will still be your mother when you are a frozen corpse on the side of that mountain," Lloyd countered, his tone harsh, brutally pragmatic. He knew he had to shatter her romantic, heroic notion of this quest before it got them both killed. "You do not understand what that place is. No one does. The stories, the legends… they are children’s tales compared to the reality."
He began to pace the room, his movements slow, deliberate, the professor in him taking over, delivering a lecture on a subject of which he was the world’s sole, living expert.
"Mount Monu is not just a mountain," he explained, his voice a low, grim monotone. "It is an anomaly. A place where the fundamental laws of this world are broken. There is a field, a naturally occurring and impossibly powerful energy field, that blankets the entire mountain, from its base to its peak. This field has one, simple, and absolute function: it seals all spirit power."