100\% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full? Chapter 466 - Broke
Lucien exhaled slowly.
Seran had been right.
The shell Convergence was using was still new. It had not fully synchronized yet.
That did not make Convergence weak.
It made him incomplete.
And incompleteness, Lucien knew, could still bleed.
He had seen it with his own eyes.
Barely enough to count. But enough.
Enough to prove that the body carrying Convergence could still be harmed.
Enough to prove that anything that could bleed could still be brought closer to death.
Lucien’s thoughts sharpened.
There was more.
The Convergence in the Mural World had fought differently. That one moved through close combat as if martial logic itself had been born to obey him. Every angle had become his. Every exchange had ended where he wanted it to end.
This one had not done that.
He had stayed outside Lucien’s reach and killed through conclusion, pressure, redirection, and domain authority. That means, he had not trusted the shell enough to let it carry his truest physical expression yet.
That was a flaw.
A deadly flaw.
Lucien smiled.
Five lives remained.
Then he let his inventory panel hover at the edge of his vision.
Dozens of prepared drops waited there, silent and ready. Every one of them represented an answer to something he had anticipated, feared, or hoped he might force into relevance.
His goal changed.
First, break the domain.
Perfect Calculation had already shown him the problem. Their domains were of comparable intensity at the level of pure "claim." Lucien could not simply drown Convergence’s authority by spreading his own over it. He would lose too much in the clash and die before the result mattered.
So he needed timing.
He needed misdirection.
And he needed enough noise inside Convergence’s clean system to force the first crack.
Lucien moved at once.
He pulled two drops first.
Echo of the Self – Summons a temporary clone (weaker by 30%) of the user that mimics their movements and spells in delayed rhythm.
Varkhaal’s Wraith Sigil – Summons shadow familiars bound to the wielder’s will.
Both activated at once.
A second Lucien stepped out beside him in a shimmer of delayed identity, while a ring of dark familiars peeled themselves out of the ground like obedient fragments of night given purpose.
Lucien armed them immediately.
Timefold Capsules flashed into being in the hands of the clone and in the mouths and claws of the shadow familiars. Each capsule held a stored spell, a compressed law-art, or a volatile sequence prepared exactly for moments like this.
Then Lucien drew one more drop and placed it in the clone’s hand.
Soulbrand Claw – A claw imbued with soul energy; deals true damage that bypasses defenses and strikes directly at the soul.
The clone flexed its fingers once.
Convergence watched all of it.
Then he smiled.
"Humans," he said. "Even forgotten by the world, you still find a way to fight in numbers."
He looked at the clone and the familiars with what seemed like genuine appreciation.
"That’s why your kind became dangerous in the first place. You multiply intent. You pass burden around. You make numbers behave like thought."
Then his smile sharpened.
"Still, it isn’t the same, is it? Not really. Not as good as fighting beside people who actually know you."
He tilted his head.
"Since they don’t anymore."
Lucien did not respond.
He layered buffs onto the clone and the familiars, sharpening speed, clarifying movement, and hardening stability. Then, at the same time, he released another drop into the battlefield.
Witherloom Halo — A drifting ring of pale motes that slowly drains stamina and aura output from nearby enemies.
But Lucien did not leave it in its original form.
As the pale motes spread, he fed them other things.
A thread of Decay. A line of Erosion. A diluted breath of Nihility. A slow poison of Collapse held below the threshold of immediate notice.
The Halo became a quiet killing weather.
Still pale. Still drifting. Still deceptively beautiful.
Only now, anything that remained inside its influence too long would not merely weaken.
It would begin losing agreement with itself.
At the same time, the clone and familiars attacked.
Lucien controlled them from afar with split thoughts sharpened to painful clarity. His clone took high angles and false entries. The familiars darted low and erratically, circling, baiting, breaking rhythm, then re-entering at intervals designed to frustrate convergence-patterns rather than satisfy them.
That was the important part.
If he let them move cleanly, they would die cleanly.
So every time Perfect Calculation and the parallel branches of Perfect Loop showed the same thing... a point where multiple movement lines would narrow into one convergent answer... Lucien deliberately broke the rhythm.
A familiar was sacrificed early. A clone-step was delayed. A thrown projectile was forced slightly off-beat.
Convergence noticed.
Of course he did.
And to Lucien’s growing unease, he seemed to enjoy it.
"This is fun," Convergence said. "You found a way to keep from agreeing with me too early."
His eyes tracked three familiars at once, then the clone, then the real Lucien, all without haste.
"But don’t mistake delay for escape."
His hand moved.
Nothing struck immediately.
That was what made him frightening.
The domain shifted instead.
A route that had looked safe a heartbeat ago became the most obvious path in retrospect. Wind, dust, broken stone, and even the very slope of the ground beneath their feet began nudging all movement toward a set of outcomes Convergence preferred.
Naturally.
That was worse.
Lucien watched the simulations in his mind race ahead.
Every line he checked—
Every branch he spun—
And every projected survival route—
eventually curved inward.
No matter how much he staggered the attack pattern, no matter how often he sacrificed a familiar to break tempo, all of them kept being pushed toward the same class of convergence point.
Not now.
But soon.
Convergence was right.
Lucien was not breaking inevitability.
He was only making it wait.
Then the future branched in a slightly different direction.
Lucien saw it.
A secondary object entering the convergence field not as an attack, but as interference.
Lucien smiled.
The Witherloom Halo had not been idle.
Actually, hidden among its pale drifting motes was another drop.
Inversion Spark – A fractured elemental mote that disrupts enemy elemental synchronization.
It had been drifting quietly the entire time, carried by the Halo’s pale weather, treated by the domain as one more harmless piece of battlefield residue.
Now it moved.
The Spark shot toward Convergence.
He noticed it, of course.
But he noticed it too late to classify it properly.
The mote stopped before reaching him.
Then exploded.
A brief fractured pulse spread through the local field around Convergence and tore his elemental synchronization out of alignment.
That was all it needed to do.
The domain stuttered.
Just once.
But that once was enough.
The wind stopped obeying. The ground lost its timing. The converging terrain-lines hesitated.
Several attacks already "in progress" failed to fully complete.
Everything around Convergence paused for the smallest fraction of a second.
That was the opening.
The clone and familiars attacked immediately.
Timefold Capsules flew from every angle. Their arcs were ugly, inelegant, and impossible to harmonize because Lucien had already broken their sequence on purpose.
The clone leapt in through the instability without any regard for survival. It did not need to live long. It only needed to land.
Convergence moved for the first time with something closer to urgency.
He still did not use his body directly.
But the domain reacted, trying to restore agreement before Lucien’s layered preparations could fully enter.
Too late.
The first batch of capsules detonated.
Stored spells burst open in rapid sequence. Light lances, crushing gravity pulses, corrosive law ripples, spatial slicing discs, and a delayed Stillness ring that froze the nearest layer of reactive terrain before it could become answer again.
Before the dust had fully risen, the clone reached him.
The Soulbrand Claw struck.
It buried itself into Convergence’s side.
And for the first time since the battle began—
Convergence recoiled.
Actually recoiled.
Pain crossed his face. Sharp. Real. Unwanted.
"Fuck," he hissed, hand twitching toward the wound. "This shell still can’t handle pain."
The blast-cloud parted.
Convergence remained standing.
But now he was visibly injured.
The clone was in his grip, fingers locked around its throat. The Soulbrand Claw remained embedded in his side. Smaller wounds cut across his body from the Timefold detonations, and several of the pale motes from the Witherloom Halo had sunk through the torn flesh and entered the openings.
The healing began at once.
Lucien expected that.
Which was why the familiars attacked again.
They no longer cared about the clone.
Timefold Capsules rained toward Convergence and toward the outer edges of the domain itself, deliberately targeting structural points, pressure seams, and authority anchors rather than just his body.
At the same time, Lucien tightened his control over the Halo.
The pale motes drifted inward and entered Convergence’s wounds more deeply.
Decay. Erosion. Collapse. Traces of Nihility.
Convergence groaned this time because the injuries were no longer merely on the shell. The laws inside them were trying to convince the shell to stop agreeing with itself.
The detonations rippled across the battlefield.
Convergence’s domain entered visible disarray.
Its edges wavered. Its terrain synchronization thinned. Its internal convergence-lines became rougher, slower, and less absolute.
And the Inversion Spark’s disruption was still interfering with the elemental logic that fed much of his environmental control.
It was time.
Lucien expanded his own domain.
Resistance hit him immediately.
Hard.
Like pressing his hands against a closing gate.
Convergence’s domain was still there, still strong in structure, but now it was injured, burdened, and losing coherence at key points.
Lucien pushed.
Divine energy flooded outward. Authority spread. His will bit down and refused to retreat.
Convergence noticed at once.
His head snapped up.
He started to counter and force his own domain back into supremacy—
But the clone and familiars moved again.
The clone, already half-broken in Convergence’s hand, detonated its remaining Timefold Capsule point-blank. One familiar hit his shoulder and burst. Another latched onto his arm and exploded. A third reached the wounded side and tore itself apart there, smearing more unstable pressure directly into the injured shell.
For the first time in the fight, Convergence had to spend attention on too many simultaneous incompletions.
That was all Lucien needed.
He pushed harder.
His domain surged.
Convergence’s cracked field fought back, but the weakness was there now.
The first split appeared. Then another. Then the whole elegant certainty of Convergence’s domain gave way with the soundless violence of an answer being refused.
Lucien clenched his fist.
And Convergence’s domain broke.