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Chapter 25: The Spoils of a Poet

  [Grom's Unyielding Signet]

  Quality: Rare

  Type: Ring

  Weight: 0,1

  Attribute Bonus:

  


      


  •   +5 Physical Damage

      


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  Special Effect:

  


      


  •   [Unyielding Will (Passive)]: Once every 50 seconds, negates a single instance of incoming damage that would not be higher than 75% of your total health.

      


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  Requires Level: 5

  Description: Forged from a single piece of cold, unadorned iron, this signet ring is heavy with more than just its own weight. The craftsmanship is undeniably Dwarven—solid, stubborn, and built to endure. A faded rune, likely that of an anvil, is deeply carved into its flat face, though the edges have been worn smooth by a century of forgotten history. It feels out of place in a goblin's hoard, a testament to a story long since buried.

  A solid piece. The passive was a built-in damage buffer, an excellent tool for survivability. He began to slide it onto his finger.

  The moment his skin touched the cold metal, the world dissolved.

  [Storyteller's Intuition has been triggered!]

  The throne room, the loot, his party—it all vanished, replaced by a chaotic storm of sensory data. The world turned grey and muted.

  CRACK!

  The percussive sound of a pickaxe striking rock echoed in his ears, followed by the deep sound of powerful magic. An oath, sworn in a harsh, unfamiliar tongue that his mind somehow identified as Dwarven, rumbled through him.

  A flash of sight: a grizzled, bearded face, eyes wide with manic discovery in the flickering torchlight. The glint of a pulsating red crystal, buried in the rock like a cancerous heart. Then, the terrible, grinding groan of stone giving way. A wall of rock collapsing, plunging everything into darkness.

  The sensations were followed by a tidal wave of emotions that were not his own. Stubborn pride, so potent it was almost tangible. Unshakeable loyalty to unseen comrades.

  And then, a sudden, soul-stabbing feeling of betrayal.

  The crushing weight of the earth. The feeling of being trapped. The cold. The dark.

  The vision shattered. He was back in the throne room, the ring halfway onto his finger. He stumbled, catching himself on the arm of the goblin throne. His party stared at him, concerned.

  "Kage? You okay?" Lily asked, her voice soft.

  He didn't answer. A flurry of notifications had appeared in his log.

  [You have glimpsed a Lore Echo.]

  [New Conceptual Keyword Discovered: [Betrayal]]

  [Conceptual Resonance with [Betrayal] has been set to 4% (Academic)]

  [Quest Started: The Stone Remembers]

  Grade: Rare

  Objective: An echo of a broken oath and a forgotten treasure lingers within Grom's Unyielding Signet. Uncover the truth of the stone's memory.

  The UI for the quest was unique. It looked ancient, as if carved into the very window of his interface.

  Kage pushed the disorienting vortex of another being's trauma aside. A new questline.

  The Operator’s mind began to recalibrate, processing. Other players would only have seen its value and stats. They would have equipped the ring and moved on, completely blind to the rare quest sleeping within its code.

  But his class... It had unlocked a hidden layer of the game, effortlessly revealing a high-value quest that was invisible to everyone else.

  He cross-referenced this with the data from the final fight. The discovery of Rhythmic Flow and the state of Perfect Cadence had already proven that a path to combat viability existed, however narrow and demanding. It was a hint that the class possessed a hidden, synergistic depth that defied its surface-level stats.

  The humiliation of his forced class change still stung, but the data was undeniable. The path of the Poet was inefficient in conventional grinding, but its ability to generate unique quests and its potential for high-skill combat expression... it was a system of staggering complexity.

  Maybe, he conceded with a flicker of grim analysis, this class wasn't a total liability after all.

  A problem to be solved later. He finished sliding the ring on.

  "Alright, let's get out of here," Finn said, the adrenaline of the fight finally giving way to exhaustion. "My hands are still shaking."

  Stolen from Royal Road, this story should be reported if encountered on Amazon.

  The party turned to leave, but Kage stood still.

  He was staring at the spot where the Goblin War Chief had died. The glittering loot pile was gone, collected into their inventories, but the boss's body hadn't fully dematerialized. It remained as a shimmering, semi-transparent afterimage, a glitch in the world's cleanup protocol.

  At least, that's what his party saw.

  Kage saw something more. Visible only to him, a single, ephemeral string of dark red light emerged from the corpse's chest. It slithered slightly in the still air like a wisp. Floating just above it were lines of text:

  [Passive Skill [Conceptual Purity] Triggered]

  [Conceptual Material Acquirable].

  He instinctively tried to grasp it with his will, the same way he composed a verse. He focused his intent on the string, trying to pull it into his inventory. Nothing happened. The string remained untouchable, a prize locked behind a pane of invisible glass.

  He searched for possible options.

  His mind's eye went to his inventory. To the simple feather he'd received from the Chronographer. The First Maker's Quill.

  He materialized it. It appeared in his hand, a simple, unassuming object amidst the grandeur of the throne room. His party watched, confused, as he approached the lingering afterimage of the boss.

  He slowly extended the Quill, bringing its sharpened tip close to the ethereal red string. The moment it was within an inch, the string seemed to gain a life of its own. It latched onto the Quill's tip with a faint, inaudible hiss, a wisp of smoke connecting to a needle point.

  Kage began to pull back slowly, carefully. The string offered a slight, tangible resistance, like pulling a single, crucial thread.

  He watched as the red energy flowed from the corpse, coiling around the Quill, before it finally came free. The moment the last of it was extracted, the afterimage of the Goblin War Chief dissolved completely, leaving nothing behind.

  The red energy on his Quill solidified into a small, red orb and vanished into his inventory.

  [You have harvested a Conceptual Material: [Concept: Chained Fury]]

  "Okay," Zara's voice cut through the silence, completely baffled. "What the fuck was that?"

  He took a slow, steadying breath, his face returning to its usual neutral mask.

  More data points. I will have to look at all of them at once.

  Then, he calmly walked to the back of the massive stone throne. Tucked away in the shadows, growing in a damp crevice, were exactly five patches of pale, faintly glowing moss. The reason why he came here in the first place.

  [Gloom-moss]

  


      


  •   Quality: Uncommon

      


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  •   Type: Lichen

      


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  •   Weight: 0.1

      


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  •   Description: A rare, pale-green lichen that clings to ancient, damp stone in places the sun has never touched. It emits a faint, cool light and smells of deep earth and cold minerals. When crushed, it releases potent regenerative compounds, making it a crucial ingredient for poultices designed to mend stubborn breaks in bone and tissue.

      


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  His first instinct was to gather it quickly and complete the objective. But his Operator's mind re-ran the calculation. This was a rare, geographically-locked reagent. The potential for a better quest reward from Anya—and the chance to acquire extra samples for his own use—made the time-cost a worthwhile investment.

  "Wait for a moment," he said to the party, his voice flat.

  They watched, confused, as he stood perfectly still, his eyes closed. To them, he was doing nothing. But they learned to believe that whatever he was doing had a purpose.

  He knelt by the patch of moss. He focused his intent on the potent regenerative properties Anya had described, trying to coax a richer harvest.

  Title: A Potent Yield

  Poem: Growth

  The [Perfect Cadence] buff was already off.

  [-50 AWN]

  A soft green light pulsed from his hand into the moss. He began to gather.

  [Gloom-moss Acquired x3]

  [Harvesting (Basic) EXP +4.5%]

  [EXP Gained: 30]

  A good yield. He repeated the process on the next section of the patch. This time, the light that pulsed from his hand flared with a brighter, golden hue.

  [Harvesting Critical Success!]

  [Gloom-moss Acquired x2]

  [Gloom-moss (High Quality) Acquired x1]

  [Harvesting (Basic) EXP +6.0%]

  [EXP Gained: 40]

  [Quest Objective Complete: Gather Gloom-moss (5/5)]

  He had his five quest items, plus a bonus high-quality sample. Perfect efficiency. He slowly harvested the last three patches, netting a total of 13 Gloom-moss.

  Job done.

  The party followed him out of the throne room, their chatter a low, buzzing mixture of adrenaline and reverence. They were walking on air, high on their victory.

  As they breached the threshold into the antechamber, the adrenaline-fueled chatter of his party died. It was replaced by the suffocating silence of a room where oxygen was scarce.

  The Gilded Jackals were still there.

  They hadn't moved. They looked like discarded assets, their high-tier gear scuffed and dull in the torchlight. Argent stood at the center, a focal point of high-saturation gold appearing garish against the grey dampness of the mines. His posture was rigid. Too rigid. The stiffness of a man holding his breath, waiting for the structural integrity of his ego to fail.

  Argent’s eyes snapped to Kage. His jaw tightened, the muscles bunching. He was preparing for the script. In his mind, this was the dramatic confrontation. The moment where the rival acknowledges the victor, where insults are traded, where the narrative pivot occurs. He stepped forward, his mouth opening to launch a defensive volley, his gaze locking onto Kage’s face.

  Kage stopped. He looked directly at Argent.

  To the onlookers, to Finn, whose breath hitched, and to Lily, who squeezed her staff, it looked like a stare-down. A silent challenge.

  Inside Kage’s mind, it was purely administrative.

  Background contrast: Optimal.

  Argent’s forehead was wide and pale, framed by the dark interior of the cave. It was a perfect, glare-free canvas for a translucent overlay. Kage didn't see a face; he saw a monitor stand.

  He flicked his eyes imperceptibly to the left, summoning the post-combat allocation screen.

  Two points available.

  The Operator in him wanted to dump them into Strength. Strength was math. Strength was simple. But the new reality—the glowing ring on his finger, the headache behind his eyes from the poem he’d just composed—demanded otherwise. The hidden mechanics were screaming for resources.

  He mentally tapped the plus sign.

  [Attribute Allocation]

  Artistry: 34 -> 36

  Confirm.

  The text flashed white against Argent’s sweating forehead, then dissolved.

  Kage blinked, dismissing the UI. The "monitor stand" was looking at him with a mixture of terror and fury, waiting for the words that would define their rivalry.

  Kage shifted his weight, his boots scraping grit against stone, and walked past him.

  He didn't shoulder-check the man. He didn't sneer. He simply navigated around Argent’s hitbox with the same disinterest he would show a rock or a support beam. He adjusted his grip on the strap of his sword, checking the time. The market in Oakhaven would be flooded with low-tier herbs in a few hours; if he wanted to offload the excess Gloom-moss at peak pricing, he needed to move.

  Behind him, the silence stretched, thin and agonizing.

  Argent stood frozen, the unsaid insults dying in his throat. A direct insult would have been a validation. It would have meant he was a threat, a variable worth calculating.

  But this silence was a void. It was the crushing, absolute realization that in Kage’s world, Argent wasn't an antagonist.

  He was just background noise.

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