Chapter 28: Chapter 28: The Reason for Kael’s Death
The room was quiet.Not truly silent — the old hotel air conditioner rattled softly from the corner, and rain tapped against the window overlooking the dim streets below — but compared to the chaos of the underground base, it felt unreal.
Kael stared at the cracked ceiling above him, unmoving.
Beside him, Lillith slept peacefully against his chest, her long black hair spread across the bed like ink spilling over white sheets. One of her pale legs rested over his waist possessively, her breathing slow and steady.
For a moment, Kael simply watched her.
Then his eyes shifted toward the dark ceiling again.
Sleep wouldn’t come.
Too many things had happened in a single night.
The tournament.
Simon.
The demon.
The hidden basement.
The swordsman that created the Moon style blade technique, Tsukyomi
The ring.
And finally—
His gaze slowly lowered toward his own hand.
The silver ring rested quietly on his finger.
But Kael could still remember what had happened the moment he touched Lillith’s blood.
That overwhelming surge.
That horrifying feeling of something buried deep inside him waking up.
His eyes darkened slightly.
"In Abyssal Chronos: Veil of Ruin... the original Kael died during the demonization incident at Astraea Academy."
The memory surfaced naturally.
Back when he had still been Leon — just another player sitting behind a screen — Kael Draven had been nothing more than a tragic side character.
A talented noble.
A quiet genius.
Someone admired by nearly everyone in the academy.
And eventually—
A monster.
Kael remembered the scene perfectly now.
It happened late at night inside the academy dormitories. The original Kael had suddenly lost control of himself after his demonic seed awakened. The game never fully explained why the seed existed in the first place, only that it had been implanted long before the story began.
At first, Kael had resisted it.
The original Kael was compassionate to a fault. Even while losing his sanity, he still tried to protect the people around him.
But demonization was cruel.
Slow.
Painful. ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom
Inevitable.
Eventually the protagonist — Leon Veyrath — was forced to fight him.
And because the original Kael regained a brief moment of clarity near the end...
He allowed Leon to kill him.
Kael closed his eyes slowly.
"And Lillith was there that night too."
He remembered her screaming.
Remembered her standing there in a thin nightgown, trying desperately to stop Leon from delivering the final blow.
After Kael’s death, she disappeared from the academy entirely.
And not long after that—
The Velvet Gang began actively hunting Leon throughout the story.
At the time, players believed it was revenge.
Now Kael realized the truth was probably much deeper than that.
Slowly, his eyes opened again.
"So that’s what triggered it..."
The demonic seed implanted inside him had likely remained dormant until tonight.
And contact with Lillith’s blood had awakened it.
His expression turned complicated.
"Meaning the original Kael probably never slept with Lillith before the incident."
That single difference had likely accelerated everything.
A soft movement beside him interrupted his thoughts.
Kael glanced downward.
Lillith was awake.
Golden-red eyes stared quietly at him through strands of messy black hair. She looked tired, but alert enough that he immediately knew she had been awake for at least a few seconds already.
"What are you thinking about?" she asked softly.
Kael looked at her silently for a moment.
Then his gaze shifted toward the ring on his finger.
Lillith noticed the movement instantly.
Her expression became cautious.
Kael slowly raised his hand.
"You’re half-demon, aren’t you?" he asked calmly.
The atmosphere changed immediately.
Lillith froze.
Not visibly enough for an ordinary person to notice — but Kael noticed.
Her breathing paused for half a second.
Her fingers subtly moved beneath the blanket.
Toward the dagger hidden under the pillow.
Kael sighed internally.
"She really was prepared to stab me if necessary."
Honestly, he couldn’t even blame her.
Humans and everother race hated demons.
Demons distrusted everyone.
And hybrids existed somewhere in the middle, hated by both sides.
But Kael simply leaned back against the headboard.
"I don’t really care whether you’re a demon or not," he said honestly. "But I need your help understanding something."
Lillith stared at him carefully.
"You really don’t care?" she asked quietly.
"Of course not."
Kael shrugged lightly.
"In fact, I think I might be a demon now too."
That finally broke her composure.
Her eyes widened slightly.
"What?"
Kael rubbed his forehead tiredly.
"My goal has always been survival," he muttered. "If becoming something inhuman is necessary for that, then I’ll adapt."
Lillith studied him carefully, almost like she was trying to determine whether he was lying.
But Kael’s expression remained calm.
No fear.
No disgust.
No hatred.
Just exhaustion.
"...Why?" she finally asked.
Kael looked toward the rain-covered window.
"Because nobody survives this world otherwise." ƒreewebɳovel.com
His voice was quiet now.
"Humans won’t win this war. Neither will demons. Or elves. Or dwarves. Or demi-humans."
Lillith frowned.
"What do you mean?"
Kael’s eyes darkened slightly.
"In the end, they all die."
The room fell silent.
Lillith stared at him as though hearing something impossible.
Because from her perspective—
It was impossible.
The current world still believed victory could be achieved.
Human kingdoms fought believing demons could eventually be eradicated.
Demons believed humanity would eventually collapse.
Everyone still thought there would be winners.
Only Kael knew the truth.
Abyssal Chronos: Veil of Ruin did not have a happy ending.
It was a story about surviving the collapse of the world itself.
Lillith slowly sat up now, the blanket falling slightly around her body. Her black hair spilled over her shoulders as she stared at him seriously.
"How can you say that so confidently?"
Kael smiled faintly.
"Call it intuition."
He didn’t elaborate further.
He couldn’t.
Not without revealing far too much.
Instead, he slowly removed the ring from his finger.
The moment the metal left his skin—
The room changed.
A horrifying wave of dark miasma exploded outward from Kael’s body.
The hotel walls trembled.
The windows cracked instantly.
Lillith’s eyes widened in shock.
Demonic mana poured from Kael like smoke leaking from a broken seal.
His veins darkened visibly beneath his skin.
Pain hit him immediately.
Kael clenched his teeth hard enough that blood filled his mouth.
It felt like his entire body was burning from the inside.
Like something monstrous was clawing its way through his flesh trying to emerge.
Lillith immediately moved toward him.
"Kael!"
But before she could even reach him—
His skill activated.
[Infinite Adaptation Activated]
The familiar mechanical voice echoed inside his mind.
The violent mana surging through him began stabilizing almost instantly.
His muscles adapted.
His veins strengthened.
His body adjusted itself to the demonic energy flooding through him.
The pain rapidly lessened.
Kael exhaled slowly.
Then he stood up.
And immediately realized something had changed.
He felt...
Lighter.
Stronger.
Sharper.
The mana around him felt unnaturally clear.
His senses had heightened dramatically.
Even the darkness of the hotel room no longer felt limiting.
Lillith stared at him in visible shock.
"...That symbol..."
Kael frowned.
"Symbol?"
Lillith pointed silently toward his forehead.
Kael immediately walked toward the mirror across the room.
And froze.
A black symbol had appeared on his forehead.
It looked ancient.
Sharp lines intertwined together into something resembling both a crest and a curse mark. Faint crimson light pulsed beneath it slowly.
Kael stared at it silently.
He didn’t recognize the symbol.
But something deep inside him did.
And that terrified him far more than the mark itself.
Behind him, Lillith approached carefully.
"You really didn’t know?" she asked quietly.
Kael slowly shook his head.
"No."
His reflection stared back at him.
But for the first time since reincarnating into this world—
Kael no longer felt entirely human looking at it.
The mark pulsed once more.
And somewhere deep inside his consciousness...
Something smiled.