NOVEL Young Master's Pov: I Am The Game's Villain Chapter 174: The Bell Under C1

Young Master's Pov: I Am The Game's Villain

Chapter 174: The Bell Under C1
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Chapter 174: The Bell Under C1

The archive bell was not only in the archive anymore.

That was the problem with things that listened.

Eventually, they learned where the voices traveled.

C1 began ringing without sound ten minutes after the prayer runner’s recovery. The corridor did not shake. No black note rolled through the air. Nothing cracked dramatically. Instead, every route marker along the service line turned toward the same direction.

Down.

Niko noticed first because one of his copper tags tried to bury itself in the floor.

"No," he said.

The tag dug harder.

"No."

The tag kept going.

Niko grabbed it with both hands and nearly got pulled onto his face.

Liora caught his belt.

"I am beginning to think your inventions hate you."

"They love truth too aggressively."

Elara knelt beside the floor, palm over the root line.

Her expression tightened.

"The bell fragment has an anchor beneath C1."

I looked at the central map.

Archive. Chapel. C1. Service route beneath Gold. All gray or white-gold lines around the same hidden axis.

The bell had not spread randomly.

It had followed places where names, doors, and routes were contested.

Like rot entering cracks.

The board flickered.

[Hidden Object Detected]

[Classification: unauthorized resonance anchor]

[Location: beneath C1 service route]

[Access: restricted / unstable]

[Risk: route memory distortion, witness-name lure, command centralization]

At least the board had learned to be honest about disasters.

Malcris stood in the observation tier with his hands folded. fɾēewebnσveℓ.com

No visible surprise.

Or excellent control.

Either way, I disliked him.

The simulation timer read two hours and twenty-one minutes.

Piety wanted the prayer runner.

Gold Hall wanted route stability.

Obsidian wanted C1 protected.

Seraphina needed Merrit and the runner kept alive.

Ren needed claims preserved.

Elara needed the roots not eaten by a bell.

Niko needed the floor not to swallow his tools.

I needed not to become the person everyone expected to solve the bell.

Naturally, the board offered a solution.

[Recommended Response: designate resonance lead.]

The word lead glowed.

Subtle.

Not subtle.

A central commander in smaller clothing.

Ren’s voice came through before anyone else spoke.

"Role split."

Good boy.

Dangerous boy.

Elara: root resonance lead.

Niko: technical anchor lead.

Nyx: shadow interference lead.

Seraphina: medical standby.

Aiden: cooperative support by sequence.

Ren: claim and witness protection.

Valeria: public framing.

Liora: combat escort.

Gold Hall: perimeter and exit verification only.

Piety: chapel witness preservation under Caldus, not Yoren.

Draven: "Object classification: if something heavy falls, I hold it?" frёewebnoѵel.ƈo๓

Liora: "Yes."

Draven: "Wonderful. I have become a beam specialist."

The board hesitated.

Then accepted.

[Distributed resonance response recognized.]

The hidden anchor did not appreciate the vote.

C1’s floor split.

Not wide.

Enough.

A black seam appeared between stones, breathing cold air into the service corridor. Inside the seam, something metallic reflected no light.

A bell clapper.

Not the full bell.

A clapper beneath C1, answering the fragment in the archive.

The bell had two pieces.

Of course.

One in a forbidden archive to listen.

One under a service route to answer.

Names heard above. Names carried below.

Niko whispered, "This is a communication structure."

Elara nodded slowly. "Archive hears. C1 repeats through routes."

Nyx crouched near the seam. "And something receives."

That was the worst part.

"Where?" I asked.

Nyx looked along the corridor.

"Not in the simulation."

Silence.

The exercise had an object communicating beyond the exercise.

Malcris.

Custodian Office.

House Valdrake.

The Script.

Pick a nightmare.

The Ledger opened.

[Unauthorized resonance structure: archive fragment + C1 clapper.]

[Function: name reception / route transmission / external relay suspected.]

[Risk: Seraphina assassination pattern exposure.]

[Risk: Ren witness chain mapping.]

[Risk: Kael bloodline response.]

There it was.

The bell was not only a hazard.

It was a map thief.

If allowed to continue, it might transmit names, routes, roles, vulnerabilities, maybe Seraphina’s public assassination-risk marker, maybe Ren’s deputy system, maybe the service routes that had just become safer.

We had built distributed structure.

The bell was trying to export it.

"No central touch," Seraphina said.

Her voice carried through the channel before I could think.

She knew where my thoughts would go.

Null Touch.

Right hand.

Eat the clapper.

Dangerous. Direct. Probably effective. Probably costly. Probably exactly what the bell wanted if it needed my bloodline answer point.

"Agreed," I said.

The warning thread loosened by one notch.

Seraphina exhaled.

Good.

Bad.

Good.

Niko crawled closer with a copper grounding frame.

"I can dampen if someone holds the seam open."

Draven sighed. "I hear my title."

Liora pointed. "Hold."

He held.

The seam tried to close on his hands.

His arms shook.

For once, he did not joke.

Elara pushed root lines into the stone around the clapper.

They blackened at the tips.

She bit back a sound.

Nyx cut the shadow cast by the seam, preventing it from widening toward Ren’s route marker.

Aiden stood between Elara and Niko, light divided into three threads, waiting for requests.

"Support?" he asked.

Elara: "Yes."

Niko: "Yes."

Draven: "Absolutely not."

Liora: "He means yes."

Draven snarled. "Fine. Yes."

Gold light steadied them all.

The board flickered.

[Cooperative support accepted by multi-role response.]

The clapper began moving.

No sound.

Still, everyone flinched.

Names appeared along the corridor wall.

Merrit.

Ren.

Seraphina.

Kael.

Sera.

Halven.

Caldus.

Lucien.

Draven.

Liora.

Elara.

Niko.

Nyx.

Valeria.

Aiden.

A list.

Not bait this time.

Inventory.

Valeria’s voice turned cold. "It is mapping participants."

Ren answered, "No names are exported."

"Can we stop it?" Aiden asked.

Niko shouted, "Working on it!"

The clapper moved faster.

The seam widened.

Draven grunted, muscles straining.

Liora stepped beside him and wedged her sword through the gap.

"Do not make this romantic," he said.

"I would rather die."

"Reasonable."

The clapper twitched toward my name.

My right hand burned.

The warning thread tightened.

Too late again.

Seraphina saw through the channel.

"Kael?"

"Hand response. No activation."

The name on the wall darkened.

Kael.

Then another line appeared beside it.

Ashborne.

The corridor went silent.

The bell had pulled more than the academy knew.

Valeria inhaled sharply.

Ren stopped writing.

Seraphina’s voice cut through the channel.

"Names are not bait."

Everyone repeated.

The name darkened anyway.

Not bait.

Inventory.

Different attack.

The difference mattered.

Bait wanted a reaction.

Inventory wanted ownership.

A baited name could be refused, mocked, buried behind a counterphrase, or left untouched until the hook grew bored. An inventoried name had already been filed somewhere. It implied a shelf, a hand, a future retrieval.

The bell was not calling us.

It was cataloging us.

That made every silence in C1 feel borrowed from an office that had not yet opened its doors. Archives, Churches, noble houses, systems, scripts—every power loved lists because lists made people easier to move later.

No one said that aloud.

Everyone felt it.

Ren recovered first.

"Names are not property."

A new phrase.

Rough.

Unprepared.

Perfect.

Seraphina repeated it immediately.

"Names are not property."

Aiden repeated.

Elara. Niko. Liora. Nyx. Valeria. Caldus. Lucien. Draven, after swearing.

Even Merrit whispered from the chapel cot.

"Names are not property."

The wall list flickered.

Niko slammed the grounding frame into place.

Elara wrapped root around the clapper.

Nyx cut the outgoing shadow thread.

Aiden’s light pulsed through all three.

Draven and Liora held the seam open long enough for Niko to twist the copper lock.

The clapper stopped.

The names vanished.

The seam sealed halfway, leaving a copper-root brace across it like a scar.

The board chimed violently.

[External relay interrupted.]

[Name inventory blocked.]

[New counterphrase established: Names are not property.]

[Archive-C1 resonance network damaged, not destroyed.]

Damaged.

Not destroyed.

Of course.

Niko collapsed onto his back.

"I hate bells."

Elara sank beside him, pale.

Nyx stayed crouched, staring at the brace.

Draven flexed his hands. One glove had torn.

"Beam specialist. Door holder. Bell clamp. My education is broadening."

Liora sheathed her sword. "You are welcome."

"I did not thank you."

"You implied it."

"I did not."

"You will."

The tension almost cracked into laughter.

Almost.

Then the board displayed the damage summary.

[Route C1 usable under restriction.]

[Service-route memory partially compromised.]

[Witness-route map export prevented.]

[Assassination-risk pattern exposure: reduced but not eliminated.]

[Archive resonance source remains active.]

Seraphina’s line again.

Reduced but not eliminated.

The bell had tried to export her risk.

My hand pulsed.

This time, pain arrived immediately.

Good.

Progress.

Or warning.

The Ledger opened.

[C1 clapper contained.]

[Archive bell network damaged.]

[Names are not property: established.]

[Kael Ashborne true-name exposure risk increased.]

[Trust web map export prevented.]

[Enemy likely to shift from extraction to local collapse.]

Local collapse.

The exercise still had two hours.

The factions still had scores to protect.

The bell had failed to export the map.

So it would try to break the map where it stood.

From the chapel, Merrit whispered something that the channel barely caught.

"The runner said the bell rings when saints are counted."

Seraphina went still.

Yoren looked at her.

Caldus looked at the patient-visible tally.

Piety had counted mercy.

The bell had listened.

Now we knew why.

The second half of the exercise had found its real mouth.

It was not in the archive.

It was in every system that turned people into numbers and names into property.

The first attempt to brace the clapper failed.

Not completely.

Enough to teach everyone fear.

Niko’s copper frame touched the seam and immediately rang without sound. His nose began bleeding. Elara’s roots snapped backward like burned fingers. Draven lost one inch of ground, and if Liora had not jammed her sword through the seam, the floor would have closed on his hands.

Aiden’s light reached for all of them.

Too fast.

Too wide.

The old hero instinct.

He caught it himself.

"Support requests," he said through clenched teeth.

Elara, face pale, answered first. "Left root line."

Niko followed. "Copper frame. Not me."

Draven said nothing.

Liora kicked his boot.

He snarled, "Hands."

Gold light split carefully.

Not saving everyone at once.

Helping each point that named need.

The frame stopped ringing.

Niko wiped blood from his lip and looked offended by his own mortality.

"That was the bell checking whether we panic."

Nyx stared into the seam.

"No. That was it checking who Aiden touches first."

Aiden went very still.

The bell was not only mapping names.

It was mapping priorities.

The second attempt almost failed for a different reason.

Draven laughed.

Not loudly.

Not because anything was funny.

Because the seam had begun whispering his name in his father’s voice.

Rael blood does not hold doors for servants.

Liora heard enough to understand.

Her face changed.

She did not mock him.

That was how I knew the whisper had cut properly.

Draven’s grip faltered.

The seam widened.

Niko shouted.

Aiden’s light reached and stopped again, waiting for permission Draven was too proud to give.

Liora stepped close enough for the seam’s cold air to tug at her hair.

"Draven," she said.

He bared his teeth. "What?"

"Your father is not in the floor."

The absurdity hit before the horror could finish forming.

Draven laughed again.

This time, real.

"Correct."

His grip steadied.

Liora drove her sword deeper into the seam.

"Hold the damn door."

"Yes, commoner blade."

"Better."

The bell had tried bloodline pride.

It failed because Liora refused to make his wound elegant.

The seam remembered that laughter and disliked it.

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