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100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?-Chapter 475 - Echo
Luke and Cienna stood at the heart of Lootwell and activated the skill together.
The light spread through the territory in a wave so soft that, at first, it almost looked harmless.
Then it touched the people.
And memory returned.
Across Lootwell, people stopped where they stood.
Some dropped tools. Some covered their mouths. Some simply froze as if their bodies had lost the strength to continue pretending the day was normal.
The workers remembered who had built with them. The children remembered who had smiled at them. The monsters remembered the hand that had brought them into the light.
And when they saw that Lucien is dead—
Everyone in Lootwell wept.
Because now they could imagine it.
They could imagine what Lucien had faced alone after being forgotten.
Among all those struck by memory, Morveth and Aerolith were the most shaken.
Because they had been there.
They had stood close enough that they should never have failed him.
And yet they had.
Aerolith stared at Lucien’s face for a long time.
Then, for the first time since anyone there had known her, the Void being cried.
Tears fell from her eyes as she knelt beside the resting place.
"Big brother," she whispered. "I was there... and I still forgot."
Morveth stood behind her with his hand clenched so hard the bones groaned beneath his skin.
His voice was quieter than usual.
"How does one forget a bond like that?"
No one answered him.
Because no answer would have made it less shameful.
No funeral was held.
Not yet.
Because no one there could bring themselves to accept that the Chapter had ended cleanly.
Hope had not died with Lucien.
It had only become more painful.
So instead of a grave, Anvil-Horn made him a resting place.
Not a tomb.
A place worthy of return.
With the Law in his hands, the old master shaped stone, polished wood, flowering metal, and living structure into a chamber of quiet dignity.
He restored Lucien’s face as best he could, not by denying the truth of what had happened, but by refusing to let violence own the final image left to those who loved him.
When he was done, Lucien looked like himself again.
Handsome. Young. Still.
And that smile remained.
That smile made every visit hurt more.
•••
The days that followed became strange.
No one said it aloud, but Lootwell was moving like a place holding its breath.
The cure campaign in the West slowed. The matter was not abandoned, but it was no longer at the center of anyone’s soul. Even those who understood the scale of the mission now found themselves thinking first of Lucien, and only after that of the continent.
Every spare moment became thought.
Observation. Discussion. Silence. Then discussion again.
They tried to decipher the intent behind the skill:
Remember Me.
They examined the seed Lucien had held onto even in death.
They tested it with spiritual senses, with magical analysis, with laws, with structure-reading, with emotional resonance, with everything short of forcing it open and risking whatever fragile thing Lucien had left behind.
Nothing answered them clearly.
The seed remained still.
No sprout. No pulse. No great miracle. No sudden revelation.
As time passed, another thought began to creep into the quieter corners of their minds.
Perhaps that had been all it meant.
Perhaps "Remember Me" had simply been Lucien’s final refusal to be erased.
A final attempt to make the world remember him even if he died.
No one said it openly.
Because saying it out loud would have sounded too much like surrender.
Luke and Cienna noticed that change in the others almost immediately.
They let it breathe for a while.
Then one evening, when the silence in the resting chamber had grown too heavy again, Cienna finally spoke.
"You are thinking too small," she said softly.
The room shifted toward her.
Her eyes were red from days of grief, but there was steadiness in them now.
"My boy is many things," she continued. "Dramatic when it suits him. Ruthless when he has to be. A little too proud. More than a little stubborn. But careless with skill names?" She shook her head. "No."
Luke let out a quiet breath through his nose.
"On a normal day," he said, glancing at Lucien’s still face, "he would have called that skill something absurdly cool."
That earned the smallest shift in the room.
Luke continued, counting on his fingers as if the ridiculousness helped keep grief from swallowing the thought.
"He would have named it something like Mnemonic Rebirth, or Echo Recall Protocol, or Soulprint Restoration, or maybe something even more shameless like Chronicle of the Unforgotten."
Marie snorted weakly despite herself.
"Which means if he named it Remember Me, then he did it on purpose."
Cienna’s gaze lowered briefly to the seed.
"It was instruction."
That changed the room again.
Because once that possibility was spoken, hope stopped being a private shame and became something they could all turn toward together.
Remember him.
But how? As what? In what way? Why so plainly?
The thought bit deeper than before.
And this time, it did not feel like comfort.
It felt like a puzzle.
•••
A few mornings later, Marie decided to visit Lucien’s room.
No one stopped her.
She did not have a reason she thought would sound good if spoken aloud. She only knew she wanted to be there. She wanted to sit in the place where he had once spent ordinary hours. She wanted to feel something of him that had not yet turned into memory, legend, or grief.
When she reached the door and tried to open it, the handle did not move.
She frowned and tried again.
Nothing.
Then an array-lock appeared over the wood, lines of light unfolding in neat interlocking circles.
Marie stared.
Her sorrow gave way to offense so quickly it almost startled her.
"Luc," she muttered, eyes narrowing. "You never lock your room like this."
And then something clicked.
Her heart jumped.
That lock meant exactly one thing.
There was something inside he had not wanted seen while he was alive.
Marie did not waste even a second.
She spun around and shouted for the others.
...
Soon, a crowd formed outside Lucien’s room.
Too many people.
That became obvious almost immediately.
The corridor was tight with held breath, grief, curiosity, and fear. It felt wrong to flood the space like spectators before a performance.
This was his room. The most private place the lord of Lootwell had ever allowed himself. Turning it into a public storm would have been a kind of disrespect.
So the larger group stepped back.
The ancient beasts withdrew out of old instinct. They knew when a threshold belonged more to family than to power.
The subjects who had gathered lowered their heads and retreated too. Each of them lingered for one final look before leaving the inner circle to those whose presence mattered most.
In the end, only a few remained.
Luke and Cienna stood before the door.
Behind them were the women closest to Lucien: Eirene, Lilith, Marie, Kaia, Sylra, and Marina.
The array-lock shimmered once when Luke and Cienna approached.
Then it softened.
To them, the structure was not difficult.
"It’s his work," Luke murmured.
Cienna traced one of the lines.
"And he wanted us here."
It did not take long.
The lock dissolved.
The door opened.
...
Lucien’s room was simple.
A bed. Shelves. A table. Chairs. No theatrical excess.
It looked exactly like the room of someone who used his space to think, plan, rest, and then leave again.
And there, atop the table—
was a notebook.
Everyone saw it at once.
No one rushed.
Luke approached first, lifted it carefully, and opened to the first page.
The handwriting was neat.
Calm.
Infuriatingly alive.
He read aloud:
[If you are reading this, then I might already be dead.]
The room tightened all at once.
Marina made one broken sound and buried herself into Sylra again. Lilith’s fingers curled.
Because that line meant he had prepared for his death.
Like a man who had looked at the possibility, stared back, and started planning anyway.
Luke turned the page.
The next line was shorter.
More dangerous.
[Whether I live again or die forever will depend on you.]
No one moved after that.
Even breathing seemed too loud.
Hope lit the room so abruptly it felt cruel.
Luke’s hands trembled for the first time since entering.
Marie covered her mouth.
Kaia took one half-step forward before stopping herself.
Eirene’s eyes went wide, then narrowed with desperate focus.
Lilith’s head lowered.
Luke turned the page.
This time there was a drawing.
A seed.
Immediately, they all knew what they were looking at.
The same seed Lucien had held in death.
Beneath the drawing was the written description:
Echo Bloom — Absorbs the final "echo" of a dying breath, storing it until it can be replanted.
The room froze.
Because now the truth was sharper.
The seed was not symbolic.
It was part of Lucien.
Or more accurately—
it held the final echo of him.
Then they looked lower and saw another line written beneath it.
[This seed does not grow from soil... It grows from truth.]
Luke and Cienna stared.
Then they laughed.
Because they finally understood why Lucien had named the skill what he did.
Tears fell from both their eyes as the realization struck cleanly through grief and turned into awe.
Luke whispered, "Of course."
Cienna pressed a shaking hand to her mouth.
Then Luke turned the page again.
There, in Lucien’s own writing, was the meaning made plain:
[Hold the truth of me together
so I cannot be lost, rewritten, or diminished.]
That was it.
That was what Remember Me meant.
Anchoring.
The Echo Bloom had preserved Lucien’s final echo but an echo was incomplete, fragile, and fading.
It could collapse, distort, or dissolve.
Without support, it would not become Lucien again.
It would become less. 𝚏𝕣𝕖𝚎𝚠𝚎𝚋𝚗𝐨𝐯𝕖𝕝.𝕔𝐨𝕞
The truth of him had to be held together.
Their memories were not meant to shape him.
They were meant to prevent him from being altered.
Luke read the earlier line again, slower this time.
"This seed does not grow from soil," he murmured. "It grows from truth."
Eirene finally spoke.
"That means memory is not the sentiment," she said. "It is the structure."
Seran, who had arrived only moments before the room was opened and now stood silently near the doorway, let out a slow breath.
"The anchors," he said.
Luke nodded.
"Yes."
Everyone turned toward him.
He looked at the others and the weight in his eyes changed.
It was no longer only grief or hope.
It was a problem being solved.
"The people here are enough to anchor the "him" we knew in the Big World," he said. "But that is not enough to restore him fully."
Cienna took over at once.
"He did not begin here. He did not become himself only after reaching the Big World. If the echo is to be reconstructed completely, then it needs truths from every stage of his life."
That landed heavily.
They all understood the problem immediately.
The people gathered in Lootwell knew Lucien as he was now.
But what about before that?
The child. The boy. The youth who began becoming himself long before these people entered the story of his life.
Those anchors were missing.
At once, several of them understood where that line of thought led.
And Lucien, of course, had already accounted for it.
Luke turned another page.
There—
Written in clean, unmistakable detail—
Were coordinates.
Back to the small world.
For a moment, no one spoke.
Then all at once the shape of Lucien’s final plan became clearer.
He had expected death. Preserved his final echo. And left the path toward restoration hidden where only the right people would find it.
Lilith’s hand rose to cover her mouth.
"He planned this far," she whispered.
Marie laughed again.
"That idiot," she said. "That absolute idiot. He really prepared to die and still came out ahead."
Kaia muttered, "Only Brother Luc would treat death like another problem he could outplan."
Sylra looked at the notebook for a long time before finally saying, very softly, "Then we’re not mourning him yet."
Marina lifted her head from Sylra’s shoulder, red-eyed and trembling.
"We’re bringing him back."
Luke closed the notebook with care.
Then he looked at Lucien’s resting place beyond the room, as if the walls between them did not exist.
"Yes," he said.
Seran only smiled with a spark of excitement lighting his eyes.
Lucien had never spoken to him about this plan.
Then he remembered what he had once told him.
’To deceive an enemy, you must first deceive your allies.’
He shook his head with a bitter smile.
And for the first time since Lcuien’s death—
The hope in Lootwell stopped being a question.
It became a decision.







