My Charity System made me too OP

Chapter 557: Abyssal XX



Naval shielded his eyes as shards of marrow-light streamed upward, vanishing into the cracks of the sky. "Leon… whatever you just did—it's not stopping here. That refusal of yours, it's spreading."

Milim's wings unfurled again, violet fire catching the strange new stars above. "Heh. Good. Let the Tower choke on it. About time someone forced it to sing instead of whisper judgment."

Roselia stood straighter, her constellations circling her with renewed brilliance. "No Arbiter was ever meant to be denied. And yet… the marrow accepted his defiance. It didn't erase him. It bent."

Liliana clutched her chest, her silver threads dancing faintly in the shifting light. Her voice trembled, reverent. "This is… the birth of something new. The marrow doesn't chain him because it can't. His resonance exists outside the verdict."

Leon breathed deep. His flame flickered ragged, his body scarred, blood drying in streaks down his arms. But when he raised his gaze to the shifting sky, there was no weakness in his stance.

"This Tower was built on echoes bound by law," he said quietly, more to the battlefield than his companions. "But now the marrow itself carries my refusal. From here on… every climber will face not judgment, but resonance. They won't be measured. They'll be answered."

The marrow sky thundered, as if sealing his declaration into its bones.

Naval barked a tired laugh, wiping his mouth. "Hah! Then I guess you just turned the whole damn Tower into your sparring partner."

Milim's grin widened into something feral. "Even better. Every challenger will add to your song. That's way more fun than some dusty throne."

Roselia closed her eyes, whispering as if in prayer: "The Tower of Echoes… born from refusal."

Liliana's silver threads braided themselves into Leon's chains, binding not as shackles but as accompaniment. "Leon… you've made it so we don't climb alone anymore. Every echo will join you. Even the broken ones."

Leon exhaled, marrow flame steady at last. He looked ahead—beyond the battlefield, beyond the marrow walls, into the endless climb waiting above.

"No more trials of verdict," he said, his voice carrying like a pulse through the marrow realm. "Only trials of resonance. If the Tower wants to hear me, then it'll hear all of us."

The battlefield dissolved into starlight, the hollow collapsing fully, leaving no Arbiter, no throne—only the resonance of Leon's refusal, carved into the marrow forever.

And as the light swept them upward, carrying them toward the next floor, one truth settled in all their hearts:

Leon had not just broken the Arbiter.

He had broken the very idea of judgment.

And in its place, he had given the Tower a new law—

Resonance without chains.

The ascent was not like the others.

No spiral of stone steps, no marrow corridors sealed in silence. Instead, they rose through a column of fractured starlight, their bodies weightless, carried as though the Tower itself wanted them gone from the battlefield before more rules could snap.

The higher they drifted, the louder the sound became—not music, not voices, but resonance itself. It was the rhythm of countless battles, countless refusals, countless climbers whose echoes had once been silenced by Arbiters. Now, those echoes stirred. Freed.

Naval let out a low whistle as he spun lazily in the weightless ascent. "Feels like we're in the middle of some funeral pyre—or maybe a birthcry. Can't tell which."

Milim laughed, stretching her arms wide to embrace the flow. "Doesn't matter! Either way, it's loud. My kind of loud."

Roselia's stars bent toward the current, each one humming faintly in tune. Her eyes widened, reverent. "They're responding to us. No… to Leon. The Tower itself is weaving around his resonance."

Liliana trembled as silver threads drifted loose from her hands, pulled into the column like offerings. "Every floor we've touched… every resonance we've left behind—it's rising with us."

Leon floated at the center, silent. His marrow flame did not roar now; it pulsed steady, aligned with the greater current. He could feel it: a million whispers that weren't judgment, weren't command, weren't verdict. They were simply… answers.

At last, the starlight gave way.

They stepped—no, landed—onto the next floor.

The ground was not stone but glassy echoes, reflecting distorted images of their own faces, their own battles. Above, the sky was no longer marrow-black but a shifting aurora of fractured stars, colors bleeding together where cracks still lingered.

And in the distance, towering across the horizon, rose a hall unlike any Leon had ever seen in the Tower. Its walls were built not of bone, nor stone, nor law, but of layered sound—chords made solid, harmonies stacked into architecture. The Hall of Echoes.

Naval rubbed his neck. "Well, Leon, looks like your refusal just built us a front door."

Milim cracked her knuckles, wings twitching with restless fire. "Then let's knock."

But Roselia's expression was grave. Her stars dimmed, her voice taut. "No… we won't need to knock. The Tower knows we're here. And something is already waiting inside."

Leon's eyes narrowed. He could feel it too. Not the Arbiter's law. Not silence. Something different. Something born in direct response to his defiance.

He took one step toward the hall. His chains rattled softly, not with judgment, but with anticipation.

"This isn't an Arbiter's floor," Leon said, marrow flame tightening around him like a mantle. "This is the first true floor of the Tower of Echoes. And whatever's inside…"

He clenched his fists, bleeding palms steady.

"…it's going to answer me."

The Hall of Echoes did not wait for them to approach.

With a sound like a thousand doors opening at once, its layered walls rippled. Chords of light peeled away from the structure, unfurling into the air. The aurora sky bent down to meet them, and the battlefield shifted again. No stone floor, no marrow horizon—only a vast chamber of mirrors, each one reflecting not their bodies, but their resonances.

Naval's reflection carried every strike he had ever thrown, every drop of blood shed for his blade.

Milim's shone like a storm of violet suns, her laughter threaded with fire.

Roselia's constellations danced in infinite loops, patterns that had once guided, now bound into celestial orbits.

Liliana's threads stretched into endless weavings, some torn, some whole, but all trembling with fragile resolve.


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