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#ACTION
#ADVENTURE
#ROMANCE
#SYSTEM
#WEAKTOSTRONG
#DARK
#TRANSMIGRATION
#NO-HAREM
#RAREBLOODLINE
#BLOODPUMPING

Prince of Nightmares: Banished to Hell With a System

After being cast to the depths of hell just for being born 'wrong,' Lokus was beaten down and trampled upon in its unforgiving lands, where power was everything. And for someone with no power like him? He was stuck at the bottom of the food chain. But his heart burned with a vengeance and a desire to show the world just how big of a mistake it had made in pushing him aside, to make those who had cast him down regret that they had ever looked down upon him. Amidst his suffering, the Phantom Monarch System answered his call for vengeance. Now armed with the opportunity to tear down those who stood above him, he begins his ascent to the top of the world, to cast down the ones who have thrown him away and make them rue the day they had ever thought themselves his betters. His so-called parents? He would show them what it meant to be worthless. The man who had banished him? Lokus would crush him under a torrent of ice. Those who had shunned him, scorned him, hated him? He would repay their hatred back tenfold. During his crusade, the words of a prophecy loom to his back all the while, its words haunting and its fulfillment fast approaching. "Dread thrice-shunned's rise heralds death. Broken kingdoms, shattered bonds, Reducing the waning light to but a distant whisper. Under sin, the daughter births a kindred spirit Tolling the war of void and stars for power nearest. Sinful winter shall clash with righteous sand, Inching towards an eclipse. Death heralds the end, the end heralds the beyond." ........ Readers will learn about the world as Lokus does. However, if you have questions and I deem them okay to answer without spoiling anything, I'll be more than happy to reply. Otherwise, you'll have to wait for Lokus to learn about them. The power system is inspired by both cultivation novels and rpgs, and the world itself by several fantasy books I loved growing up. If you like gritty scenes, systems, no harems, and struggles between good and evil, this might be the story for you.

Lolbroman25 · Huyền huyễn
Không đủ số lượng người đọc
103 Chs
#ACTION
#ADVENTURE
#ROMANCE
#SYSTEM
#WEAKTOSTRONG
#DARK
#TRANSMIGRATION
#NO-HAREM
#RAREBLOODLINE
#BLOODPUMPING

City

Lokus sighed. There really wasn't anything he could do about it. Maybe he could find an antidote or something once he entered the city.

Speaking of…

Lokus hauled himself to his feet, scooping up the bag of demon claws the cloaked woman had given him along with the fire poker and eyeing the demon's remains.

'This would probably be worth some coin in the city. Or claws, I guess. Too bad I can't carry all of this on my own. Or can I?'

Lokus went to the pile of bones, scratching his chin as a plan slowly formed in his mind.

'First thing's first,' he thought, bending down.

He took the twenty claws from the demon, each of which was around the size of his index finger, and set them into a pile. If these things were the currency in this world, he didn't want to break them if he could help it.

Next, he pulled the demon's ribcage out of the pile of bones, inspecting its condition before giving an approving nod and reaching for the piles of fur.

Because he had stopped cutting into the meat a few bites in, the hide was mostly intact barring the first incision and the stomach area. He laid this fur on the inside of the rib cage, filling in the gaps between ribs and creating an area largely devoid of holes.

It was an ugly creation, and the hide didn't fit properly within the rib cage, leaving many parts of it poking out or drooping down, but it would do.

Next, he began stacking the other bones inside of the rib cage, spending over an hour finagling them so they all fit inside.

When he finished, the furry hide bulged out in between the ribs as bones pressed against it. This, along with the small pieces of meat still attached to the hide and bones gave it a grotesque appearance, but Lokus wasn't going for aesthetics.

With that done, he stuck his fire poker in between some of the bones and placed the demon's claws and the bag containing more claws at the front of his haphazard tower, for easier access.

Taking a step back to examine his work, he grimaced. It smelled horrible, although truthfully that might have been him, and it looked just as bad. But if it worked, that was all that mattered.

He grabbed the thing by the protruding spine and started to pull. He used the hill the demon had come from as a reference point to orient himself, dragging his creation along behind him and hoping that the spine wouldn't fall apart.

...…

'Finally.'

As the strange green sun began to crest the horizon, Lokus finally laid eyes on his destination.

Against his expectations, it wasn't some sinister construct of towering black, blood-soaked walls with pike-mounted heads in front, nor did it have moats of blood and snapping, angry abominations standing guard at the gate.

If anything, it almost looked… normal.

The walls were tall, yes, but instead of a grim black, they were the light gray of average stone. There were no mounted heads or chained abominations in front of the gate, chomping at the bit to devour unruly passersby, only a calm and orderly line that stretched back from the gate for a few dozen meters.

While guards manned the top of the walls, and everyone in line, including the scant few children, had some manner of weapon at their hip, everyone was quite relaxed. Lokus couldn't help but wonder, was this because they were so close to the city? Or because they had faith in their own strength?

He stepped into line, dragging his makeshift sled behind him. Those in front of him glanced back with wrinkled noses, but when they saw the mountain of bones and fur next to him, the white hair that was so out of place in the assembly of otherwise natural hair color, and the bloody appearance he bore, they wisely turned away and said nothing.

It was two hours before Lokus got to the front of the line, and when he did, the two guards at the gate scowled distastefully as an unpleasant smell assaulted their noses.

There were two of them, each wielding a spear. They were unarmored, save for a bowl-shaped helm, but they oozed the authority and confidence of someone with an entire city's power behind their decisions. They didn't even pause to gawk at Lokus' hair, they were so sure of this power.

"Fucking hell, kid," the older of the two said, looking Lokus up and down. "What did you do, cut your way out of some demon's stomach? Ever heard of a bath?"

"How much to get into the city?" Lokus asked the guard, ignoring the pointed questions. He didn't feel like regaling them with the tale of how he slew this beast.

"Ah, one of those ones," the guard grunted, shaking his head. "We stand out here for hours at a time, you know. The least you could do is humor us when we try to start a conversation. This idiot here isn't exactly a master with words."

"Hey, that's just not fair," the other guard protested. He was much younger than the first, perhaps only a few years older than Lokus. "I have loads of stories."

"Your weekly visits to a brothel don't count as 'conquering a woman,' you dope," the older guard sneered, before turning back to Lokus and leaning on his spear. "Now, tell us. What happened to you? It got anything to do with that corpse you're dragging along?"

"It attacked me. I killed it."

"I take it back," the older guard said to the younger one. "You're not the worst storyteller I know anymore." Turning back to Lokus, he said, "Five lesser Prince claws for entry."

Lokus extracted his bag of claws from the sled and tugged open the drawstring, peering inside. Taking five out at random, he proffered them to the guards, who gave him a blank look.

"You do know how to tell the value of a claw, right kid?" the older guard asked him.

'Oh,' Lokus thought. He had forgotten about that.

"We aren't an accounting service," the younger guard said. "If you can't give the correct amount, we'll have to ask you to step out of the line until you can."

Lokus grimaced, recalling the hours-long wait, but since the guards didn't look like they were going to change their minds, he reluctantly stepped out of line.