webnovel

Eternal Undying Chronicles

Starting life as a college student is hard, but not as hard as dying on your very first day. Ali Asad was just your average guy, ready to start fresh in a new city for college. But when he jumped into traffic to save a mysterious woman, his good deed got him killed—fast and painfully. Just when he thought it was game over, he woke up alive... sort of. Turns out, the woman he saved, Carrisa, had a few tricks up her sleeve. Now resurrected as an immortal being and renamed Alicarde, he’s thrust into a world of ancient power struggles, dark magic, and impossible expectations. Bound to Carrisa’s fate, Alicarde quickly learns that being immortal isn’t all it's cracked up to be. Instead of focusing on classes or meeting new friends, he’s dodging dangerous foes, navigating Carrisa’s high-stakes supernatural battles, and trying to figure out just what his role is in all this madness. All while struggling with the fact that he really didn’t sign up for any of this. Thrown into a fight for survival with powers he barely understands and a fate that’s now intertwined with Carrisa’s, Alicarde has to adapt fast—or risk dying all over again, this time for good. join discord https://discord.com/invite/5VVpgK9DUU 100 power stones = 1 bonus chapter. 50 golden tickets = 1 bonus chapter.

renegadex · Fantasi
Peringkat tidak cukup
192 Chs

Chapter 112: Think Thrice And Do Good Deeds

The bicorn appeared in a dark and desolate alley, its hooves clattering softly against the worn cobblestones as they materialized.

Alicarde could still hear the distant wail of sirens, a reminder that they hadn't teleported far. Wrath's teleportation abilities had their limits—long-distance jumps were draining, even short ones left the creature winded.

He suspected that their pact had weakened Wrath, especially since Alicarde had hardly been worthy of a familiar of its caliber. Only through Carrisa's blood and his cursed immortality had he managed to bend the rules.

The alley was forgotten, the kind of neglected corner of the city where time itself had stopped caring. No cameras, no curious eyes, just the remains of what had once been a lively area, now reduced to crumbling buildings and faded graffiti.