SSS Ranked Awakening: All My Skills Are at Level 100 Chapter 507: The Temple—3
Loriel went still when she heard it all for the first time.
She’d known the broad shape of the crisis — had been living inside it for weeks, fighting its symptoms daily, watching the casualties mount, and the infected beast numbers climb. But the origin, the crack, the self-reinforcing loop that had been quietly building for years before anyone understood what they were actually dealing with — none of that had reached her.
The upset came first. Sharp and genuine, the feeling of being kept outside something important that directly concerned her world and her role in it. She was next in line for the Saintess position — confirmed, accepted, a matter of when rather than if. That made this her inheritance in every practical sense, and she’d been left outside it.
Then it subsided.
she thought, working through it honestly,
Luna had clearly been trying to solve it before passing the position on. Trying to hand over something intact rather than something on fire. Things hadn’t gone that way, and now here they were — but the intent behind the secrecy wasn’t cruelty. It was the specific protectiveness of someone trying to shelter what they loved from a weight they weren’t sure it could bear yet.
She let the upset go.
Leon was here. The city she’d grown up in was still standing despite everything surrounding it. And her Mother Saintess — who had been counting her remaining hours this morning — was now healed and upright and thinking clearly.
The crisis could wait twenty minutes.
She took Leon’s hand.
"Come on." Her voice came out bright and easy, the relief of the past hour still sitting warm in her chest. "I want to show you things."
She pulled him forward without waiting for agreement, and Leon followed without resistance, which she took as sufficient permission.
Behind them, Luna watched her daughter drag the only person in the higher domain currently capable of doing something meaningful about an expanding crack in reality away to show him around the temple.
She sat on her newly healed, fully functional legs and tried to decide if she should feel abandoned or touched.
she thought, watching them disappear through the door,
She had also noticed, across the entire explanation she’d just given, that not once had his expression shifted toward panic or even urgency. He’d listened with the patient attention of someone receiving information they found interesting rather than terrifying.
She decided to put her trust in that. She didn’t have many other options, and the alternative was chasing them down and interrupting whatever was clearly going to be a rare, uncomplicated hour for Loriel.
She stayed where she was.
The temple was larger than it looked from the inside — corridors branching in directions that didn’t quite match the exterior’s apparent dimensions, the architecture carrying the accumulated logic of centuries of additions built on top of previous additions. Loriel moved through it with the ease of someone who had learned every turn before she’d learned to read, explaining things as she went.
That altar — a gift from the third Saintess, the one who’d negotiated the domain boundaries. That corridor — longer than it needed to be because the original builder had misjudged the measurements and been too proud to rebuild. That window — she’d broken it at eleven, throwing a practice staff too enthusiastically, and had spent three weeks terrified someone would find out before Luna had simply had it repaired and never mentioned it.
She told him all of it without self-consciousness, her hand still loosely holding his, steering him left and right through the building’s memory.
Leon found himself smiling without deciding to. Her relationship with this place was visible in every detail she mentioned — the particular love people had for spaces they’d grown up inside, where even the embarrassing things were fond. It was uncomplicated and genuine, and he let himself just listen to it.
The library they’d started in. The main hall. Two side chapels that served different functions,s she explained with the earnest thoroughness of a tour guide who actually cared whether he understood what he was looking at.
Then, before he’d fully registered the sequence of turns that had brought them there, he was standing inside her bedroom.
She was still talking — gesturing at a shelf, describing something about a collection of texts she’d been reading since she was a student — and Leon stood just inside the doorway and looked around at the space.
he thought.
The room was personal in the way only a lived-in space was personal — the small details that accumulated without intention, the evidence of years of daily existence arranged in the specific way that only made sense to the person who’d arranged it. Books stacked at angles that suggested she read multiple things simultaneously. A faded mark on the wall near the window that looked like it had been there since childhood.
He waited.
She kept talking.
He moved. Not toward her — just enough to bring himself to a particular angle near the wall, and then his arm came up against the surface beside her head, stopping her mid-gesture as she turned toward the new interruption in her space.
She found him close. Much closer than the room’s general conversation distance had been a moment ago.
His other hand came up on the other side. Not touching her — just present, framing, reducing the available directions.
She turned to face him properly, ly and the blush arrived immediately. Not panic, just — color, spreading fast, her mind clearly recalculating the architecture of the situation.
She waited for him to say something. Didn’t back away. Didn’t push him away. Just looked at him with the question sitting openly on her face.
Leon waited for the defensive response that didn’t come.
He leaned forward slightly, bringing his face closer to hers, his voice dropping to something sharper.
"Aren’t you a little too defenseless, Loriel? You brought me in here alone. Into your bedroom." A pause. "Did you think I wouldn’t do anything?"
She stammered. The thoughts were clearly moving fast behind her eyes — he could see them moving — and the blush had reached her ears. Both of them, thoroughly.
Her voice came out in pieces. "W-what are you g-going to—"
He didn’t stop. Leaned closer still, his hand moving to her face, fingers sliding her bright green hair back from her cheek in a s, low deliberate motion that made her breath catch audibly.
"What can I do?" he said. "You should have thought about that before leading a man into your bedroom like a clueless idiot."
Her face was fully, completely red now. No portion of it had been spared.
Then — quiet, small, like something half-surrendered before it was fully decided:
"S-Seraph — hine."
Leon stilled.
She’d said it once. Barely loud enough to count. And then she’d closed her eyes.
He straightened and stepped back.
She stood there with her eyes still closed for a moment, her face still completely red, and the picture she made was so genuinely, helplessly honest that he had to look at the ceiling briefly to stop the expression forming on his face from becoming something inappropriate.
he thought. He’d known it — had known it for a while in the abstract, the way you know things you haven’t examined directly. But she’d closed her eyes and said Seraphine’s name once, like a charm or a confession, and that was as clear as anything could be.
He’d only meant to make her aware of how unguarded she was.
She’d turned it into something else entirely without trying.