100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?-Chapter 474 - Remember Me

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Chapter 474: Chapter 474 - Remember Me

Luke and Cienna’s eyes changed first.

The grief did not leave them.

It sharpened.

What had been helpless sorrow a moment earlier drew inward and became something tighter, steadier, and harder to shake loose. They looked at one another, and in that brief exchange, both of them understood the same thing.

Lucien had prepared something.

The light from before had not only restored memory. It had carried intention with it. A quiet instruction left behind by someone who had expected that even death might not be the end of his work.

The name of that skill alone was enough to say everything.

Luke drew in a slow breath.

"We need to bring him back to Lootwell," he said.

His tone was gentle, but there was enough weight in it that no one mistook it for suggestion.

Cienna nodded.

"Whatever he prepared, it should not be disturbed by the wrong place, the wrong eyes, or the wrong handling."

That was enough.

No one argued.

The battlefield no longer felt like a place where grief should remain exposed. It still held too much residue and too much unfinished malice from powers that had no right to linger even after retreat.

Luke bent and carefully lifted Lucien’s ruined body.

He moved with unbearable care, as if any roughness now would be a betrayal too late to forgive.

The sight of that alone made several of them look away.

Eirene moved ahead of the others and quietly created a bed of flowers and shaped flora inside the Verdant Ark for Lucien.

The others followed aboard.

Even Seran, Shadow, and the ancient beasts turned away from the matter of the cure and the campaign without hesitation.

The conquest in the West could wait.

The spread of the cure could wait.

Everything could wait.

Because now that memory had returned, none of them could lie to themselves anymore.

Lucien mattered more.

Marie took the controls as soon as the body was secured.

She gripped the Ark’s steering mechanisms and drove it toward Lootwell with terrifying focus.

•••

The flight back was quiet at first.

The kind of silence that only happened when too many people were hurting in the same room and no one trusted their own voice not to break.

Lilith sat closest to Lucien’s body. Marie kept her eyes fixed ahead. Kaia leaned against the wall with her arms crossed too tightly. Marina wiped her face again and again, only for new tears to keep coming. Sylra sat beside her, straight-backed, jaw tight.

The ancient beasts occupied the space differently. They were too old for fidgeting grief. Their sorrow came as silence, stillness, and a frightening heaviness in the air. Even they seemed to know that any careless word now would diminish the dead rather than honor him.

It was Luke who finally broke the silence.

"Do not drown in despair yet," he said.

The words made several heads turn.

He looked down at Lucien first before continuing.

"My son is not ordinary. Even if he is dead, do you really think he would simply accept that as the end?"

That line struck the room like a small crack through solid grief.

Cienna continued for him, her voice softer but no less steady.

"The light from earlier was not only for memory. It carried a message too."

Marie’s head snapped toward them.

Seran’s gaze sharpened.

Even the ancient beasts shifted.

Luke said, "The name of that skill was..."

He paused once.

Then Cienna finished.

"Remember Me."

No one spoke for a moment after that.

Then Luke said, "My boy wouldn’t name a skill like that without reason. He was sending us a message, and we need to decipher it."

Seran stared.

He had seen the battlefield. He had seen the scale of the aftermath. He knew what kind of monsters Lucien had just fought.

And through the pieces he now remembered, he knew something even worse.

Lucien had not merely fought Convergence.

He... had fought Convergence and Severance together.

At the Celestial Realm.

And one of those incarnations had fallen.

That alone was enough to step outside common sense.

Yet Luke and Cienna were now telling them that in the middle of all that... while forgotten by the world, hunted by Primordial Incarnations, cornered beyond reason, and preparing for his own death... Lucien had still managed to leave behind a skill specifically designed to return memory and convey intent after his fall.

For anyone else, Seran would have called it impossible.

For Lucien—

the more he thought about it, the more believable it became.

And somehow, that made the grief worse and better at the same time.

Worse, because it meant Lucien had known this end might come.

Better, because it meant he had not entered it blindly.

Astraea lowered her gaze.

"Little brother," she murmured, "even at the edge of death, you were still thinking ahead."

It was Marie who finally laughed.

A small, broken laugh.

"Hahaha," she said, wiping at her face with the heel of her hand. "That sounds exactly like Luc."

Several of them looked at her.

Marie’s lips trembled.

Then she added, "If you told me he prepared something to cheat death while getting beaten half to death by monsters from outside reason, I’d believe it."

The room went still.

Not because the idea was absurd.

Because everyone wanted it to be true.

What if?

The thought came to all of them at once and took root so quickly it almost hurt.

What if Lucien had prepared one last answer? What if the dead body in the Ark was not the end, only a stage? What if even this had been built into some impossible chain of his?

It might have been foolish.

It might have been the kind of hope people reached for only because the alternative was unbearable.

No one cared.

For the first time since they found him, the silence changed.

The grief was still there. Crushing, deep, and raw.

But now there was something else in it too.

A single thread of resistance.

Just then...

Seran noticed something.

Lucien’s right hand was clenched.

As though he had died holding onto something with the last of his will.

Seran’s brows drew together.

"What is Brother Luc holding?" he asked quietly.

At once, the others looked.

He moved closer and crouched beside the flower bed. For all his strength, he approached the dead with the care of a man afraid of causing one more injury to a body that had already suffered too much.

He tried to open Lucien’s hand.

Gently.

But he failed.

Seran frowned and tried again, adding slightly more force this time, but still nowhere near enough to risk desecrating the corpse.

The fingers did not move.

That made him still.

An Eternal could not open the hand of a dead young man?

That should have been absurd.

Luke looked at him, then at Lucien’s closed fist, and something in his expression softened.

"Let me try," he said.

Seran moved aside at once.

Luke knelt and placed his hand over Lucien’s clenched fingers.

The resistance vanished.

Just like that.

He opened the hand as easily as if Lucien himself had chosen to relax it for him.

That small moment shook the room more than anyone expected.

Even in death, Lucien’s body had recognized someone.

Or perhaps whatever he had prepared had simply known to whom it should yield.

Either way, the result was the same.

Inside Lucien’s palm lay a seed.

Unremarkable at first glance.

And yet the moment they saw it, the whole Ark seemed to grow more attentive around it.

No one recognized it immediately.

Not Seran. Not the beasts. Not the women.

Marie leaned in from the controls just enough to see.

"A seed?"

Luke did not answer right away.

Instead, he activated several protective skills over it in rapid sequence, wrapping it in layered wards, stability shells, and sensory concealment as if the smallest accident might undo something irreplaceable.

That alone told everyone how seriously he was taking it.

Cienna’s voice came low.

"It might mean something," she said. "We do not know everything yet. But my boy would not die holding something meaningless."

That settled it.

The seed became the center of a new kind of silence.

Speculation rose in all of them at once.

Was it a trigger? A key? A rebirth medium? A soul-anchor? A final instruction waiting for the proper place to awaken?

No one knew.

But hope, once invited into grief, became frighteningly hard to drive out.

Then Eirene noticed something.

Her red-rimmed eyes widened suddenly.

The aura of the seed was familiar.

For one dangerous moment, excitement flashed through her so sharply it almost changed her expression.

She mastered it at once.

She said nothing.

She would not give them false hope. Not until she knew. Not until certainty stood where desire was now speaking too loudly.

Still, her hand tightened once at her side.

She knew that seed mattered.

More than the others yet realized.

•••

The Verdant Ark cut through the sky toward Lootwell.

Below them, the land passed in long strips of dark green, gold, and earth.

Inside, grief remained.

But it was no longer the same grief as before.

It still hurt to breathe. Still hurt to look at Lucien’s broken body. Still hurt to remember what they had found on that battlefield and how late they had been.

Yet now another thought moved among them, spreading from person to person like the first warmth after winter’s worst night:

Lucien had known.

Lucien had prepared.

And if Lucien had truly prepared for death—

Then perhaps death itself had not understood whose path it had stepped into.