©NovelBuddy
100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?-Chapter 470 - Remembered
Lucien grabbed another drop while rolling away from the next incoming line of death.
Voidcraft Healing Ring — A rotating cosmic seal that converts absorbed momentum into gradual structural recovery.
At first, it seemed useless.
He still got hit.
He still hurt.
And hurt badly.
The ring did not absorb damage. It absorbed momentum. That meant the force still entered him first. The pain still came. The fracture still happened. It only meant that whatever motion did not finish him at once could be stolen afterward and fed back into recovery.
That was not comfort.
That was only permission to keep suffering a little longer.
Lucien bled through gritted teeth and kept moving.
Spell after spell. Law after law. Drop after drop.
He used whatever answer his mind could still find.
His divine energy reserves had already fallen below half. It was being shaved away by survival faster than he could justify to himself, and his thoughts had begun fraying under the weight of Perfect Calculation and Perfect Loop running too many branches too quickly.
There were methods.
Too many, in fact.
That was the problem.
His mind could still see dozens of ways the fight might be turned.
He simply lacked the openings to execute any of them.
His head throbbed.
Information kept arriving faster than the battlefield allowed him to act on it.
That was when the two Primordial Incarnations attacked again.
They did not wait for him to recover. They did not wait for his thoughts to settle. They did not even wait for his pain to become properly his.
Convergence appeared behind him.
"What?" he asked lightly. "Out of methods already?"
Then he punched.
Lucien reacted on pure instinct.
"Bouncy Buddy."
The skill activated.
Convergence’s fist landed—
and for the briefest instant, his expression changed.
His punch had met something like impossibly compressed elasticity. The destruction still entered. The force still struck. But the absolute finality he expected from the blow was blunted into rebound.
Lucien was launched away anyway.
His body slammed toward the ground.
He hit once.
Then bounced.
His back screamed.
The pain was vicious, but not decisive.
The Voidcraft Healing Ring spun into life at once, drinking the stolen momentum from the rebound. Bouncy Buddy had kept the impact from concluding him.
Lucien would have smiled—
if Severance had not already been there.
Waiting.
Where Lucien was going to be.
That was what made fighting them together so monstrous.
Convergence did not merely attack you. He arranged where your next answer would become valid.
Severance stood in that answer with a scythe ready.
Lucien killed the Bouncy Buddy state instantly. If he kept bouncing, he would only feed himself into the blade more cleanly.
He issued a silent Edict through the Covenant of Unspoken Law.
"Resistance."
But then—
Convergence’s voice cut through the battlefield in the same instant.
"Pull."
That single word was fatal.
Lucien felt the law seize him.
His body, already half committed to evasion, was dragged off the line he had chosen and into the line Convergence preferred. He was pulled toward Severance’s descending scythe as though his survival had become a clerical error reality was hurrying to correct.
Lucien braced.
The scythe struck the Beloved Bastion.
The armor held.
Barely.
The conceptual severing that should have split him at the logic of his being was reduced again... forced down into impact and penetration resistance because Beloved Bastion had been forged for exactly this kind of impossible refusal.
Lucien made one more adjustment.
He partially invoked Dragon Beast Mode.
Black draconic scales flashed across his chest and ribs beneath the armor, thickening the surviving line just enough that the scythe halted a breath deeper than it should have gone.
That breath was enough.
Morphis shifted into a large shotgun.
Lucien fired at point-blank range.
The blast hit Severance directly, enough to rupture timing and give Lucien recoil.
Lucien let the recoil take him.
He flew backward—
straight into Convergence.
"Hi," Convergence said.
Lucien’s instincts did not even ring.
Convergence had already gathered the world into his fist. Dust, angle, proximity, failure, and arrival all narrowed toward one point with frightening grace.
Then he punched.
The Beloved Bastion was not penetrated.
It would have been kinder if it had been.
Instead, Convergence transferred the full impact beyond the armor’s outer refusal and drove the conclusion straight inward. Lucien felt his ribs cave inside. His organs burst. Blood exploded from his mouth in a hot choking flood.
He fell.
His body hit the ground hard.
His sight blurred at once.
Inside him, everything was already failing.
That was when Lucien revealed another answer.
Covenant of Rejected Ruin — Declares that the chosen target cannot be brought to structural zero by a single decisive act, denying instant annihilation regardless of magnitude.
The destruction inside him stopped.
His body remained a collapsed ruin of internal damage, but the final step into total structural zero was denied.
He had not been restored. He had merely been refused permission to finish dying.
That bought him enough time for the Voidcraft Healing Ring to do its work.
The ring drank what remained of the strike’s momentum, converted it, and fed gradual structural recovery through the ruin inside him.
Lucien pushed himself up again.
It hurt beyond language.
Every breath felt stolen. Every movement wrong.
Then he moved anyway.
A wave of Severance came for him. He twisted aside on pure will. Before he could stabilize, Convergence was already there again, forcing him to choose between the cut in front and the inevitability at his side.
"Who would’ve thought," Convergence said, almost admiringly, "that you could still live after that."
Then his smile sharpened.
"But not for long."
Lucien already knew.
The Covenant of Rejected Ruin had been expensive. He had stored enough divine energy in it over the past year for two guaranteed refusals.
One was already gone.
One remained.
That should have comforted him.
It did not.
Because something in him had begun fading in a different way.
Convergence had done something.
To his continuation.
Lucien could feel weakness entering the spaces between his choices. Thought was still there. Will was still there. But the authority required to make those things matter under this kind of pressure was thinning.
He looked up.
Severance stood to one side. Convergence to the other.
He was standing.
But he was no longer dictating the fight.
He was surviving between the lines they allowed.
Then they moved together again.
This time Severance severed the connection between Lucien’s intention and his limbs.
For a terrifying fraction of a second, it was enough.
Lucien’s body failed to obey itself.
That was all Convergence needed.
He stomped.
Lucien’s body was dragged upward against his own will, lifted into the exact place where the next conclusion had already been prepared.
Convergence’s bleeding hand pulled back once more.
Then drove forward.
The fist hit Lucien in the head.
The force was obscene.
If his body had not already been reforged through the Abyssal Pool, if the Beloved Bastion had not still been clinging to his existence with stubborn love, if every other prior impossible survival had not thickened him beyond what he once was—
his head would have left his shoulders.
Instead it stayed.
Blood sprayed.
Bone screamed.
His vision turned white.
Lucien activated the final stored refusal in the Covenant of Rejected Ruin.
Again, death was denied.
Again, not healing... only refusal.
The Voidcraft Healing Ring turned the impact into slow recovery, but this time the recovery felt almost laughable compared to the scale of what the two of them were doing.
It bought seconds.
Not answers.
Severance stepped toward him to end it cleanly.
But Convergence raised a hand.
"Wait."
Severance paused.
Convergence’s gaze narrowed on Lucien.
"I feel unsettled," he said. "The Abyssal being left him something. He hasn’t used it yet."
His smile disappeared completely.
"That means either he’s hiding a trap... or he’s too calm for a man who should already be dead."
Lucien’s eyes widened despite himself.
That was enough.
Convergence noticed it.
Lucien exhaled helplessly.
He remembered Alanthuriel’s words.
’Trust your judgement. Nihility is with you.’
He had meant to use that dark radiance for something else.
Now it had become suspicious simply by remaining unused.
Lucien was about to reach for it—
When the sky changed.
He saw it first.
Lying half-broken on the ground, still being dragged back together by the Voidcraft Healing Ring, Lucien stared upward in disbelief.
The sun and moon—
Were converging.
For the second time in a single day.
An eclipse was forming.
For one stunned instant, Lucien could not breathe.
Then he understood.
The reason.
He had been remembered.
There was no other explanation that mattered.
His companions.
They had remembered him.
Someone had reached through Oblivion’s cut. Someone had torn his name back out of absence. Someone had looked at the empty place in the world where he had been taken and said no.
Lucien laughed.
Not because it was funny.
Because hope had returned so suddenly it hurt.
He laughed until tears spilled from his eyes without permission.
The sound broke in his throat and came out half wild, half grateful, half exhausted in a way that should have made the fractions impossible.
The Eclipse Array.
It had awakened again.
For him.
Convergence felt it too.
For the first time since the fight began, his face turned ugly.
Because he recognized the thing descending.
Moonfall Judgment.
And worse—
it was locked onto their position.
Once the Lunarian beam took your location as its answer and you remained in the Big World, it did not simply miss because you wished politely to be elsewhere.
Lucien slowly rose.
His body was still repairing. His divine energy was nearly spent. His guarantees had all but run dry.
But he stood.
"This is it," he said, wiping at his eyes once with the back of his hand. "My companions have acted."
Then he smiled at them.
At Convergence. At Severance. At the impossible battlefield. At death itself, for waiting this long and still failing to make him kneel.
"Are you ready," he asked softly, "for another round?"
This was the opening he had been waiting for.
The two Primordial Incarnations would not flee easily now. If they turned and ran separately, Lucien could escape. If they stayed, Moonfall Judgment would descend on them.
So Lucien chose the third answer.
He used everything he had left.
He cast a cosmic-attribute spell.
Cosmic Convergence.
The irony of the name almost made him smile wider.
He burned through nearly all of his remaining divine energy, leaving only the smallest reserve for final adjustments.
Then the spell completed.
Portals opened behind him.
Hundreds.
And from each portal stepped a Lucien.
Past Luciens.
Temporal selves called from his own lived continuum, each one carrying a different stage of what he had once been.
Different battle habits, different injuries, different tempos, different levels of confidence, different versions of Morphis, different uses of law and instinct and will.
All of them were him. All of them were true. All of them had once stood and refused something.
They stepped out one after another until the battlefield looked like memory itself had chosen to take shape.
Then, together—
Every one of them invoked Dragon Beast Mode.
The air screamed.
Convergence’s expression changed.
Severance gripped his scythe harder.
And from the eclipsing sky, Moonfall Judgment began to descend toward them.
Lucien did not stop there.
He finally reached for the dark radiance Alanthuriel had left within him.
Just enough portion.
Then, the blackness spread through him. His body darkened. The edges of his form lost their obedience to ordinary certainty. The Beloved Bastion and Genesis Set remained on him, gleaming against darkness made personal. His eyes became terrible.
"Abyss Mode," he said.
And then—
with Moonfall Judgment descending, with hundreds of his past selves charging, with his companions’ memory returning through eclipse and tears and defiance—
The final struggle began.







