Cherreads

Chapter 345 - Chapter 345: Revelation

[Third Person POV] 

Lucian sat cross-legged along the damp stone floor of the cave. The air smelled faintly of ash and seawater, heavy with the lingering tension of the battle outside. Before him lay a small makeshift workstation: cracked stone arranged like a table, flasks balanced over carefully tended flames, and thin streams of strange vapors curling upward and disappearing into the darkness.

His shadow servants toiled silently, ferrying items back and forth like dutiful workers in a factory. Jefferson, the tiny treasure-seeking mouse, came scampering forward on his stubby legs. He struggled under the weight of a glass vial almost as big as his body, filled with the deep, viscous red of Scylla's blood. When he finally reached Lucian, he squeaked in triumph and held it up with both tiny paws.

Lucian accepted it with a nod of gratitude. "Thank you, Jefferson. You're work is appreciated" He uncorked the vial and began carefully pouring the contents in a thin line around the edge of his workstation. The blood hissed faintly where it met the flame, sending out a sharp, coppery tang.

Outside the cavern, the sound of rushing waves crashed faintly against jagged rock. Overhead, two birds circled—the sleek forms of Thalia and Annabeth. With a sharp twist of wings, they soared past the towering stone pillars that framed the cavern's outer edge. As soon as they cleared the threshold, their bodies shimmered and elongated, feathers peeling away to reveal flesh once more.

Thalia landed in a crouch, lightning crackling faintly across her fingertips as her boots touched stone. Annabeth dropped with one hand braced against the floor, eyes sharp as they swept the cave.

At the entrance stood Asura and the massive Golurk, stationed like unmoving sentinels, their arms crossed and glowing eyes fixed outward. Neither made a move to stop the girls as they passed.

Inside, the cave swallowed them with oppressive darkness, broken only by the soft crimson glow radiating from Lucian's shadow soldiers. The faint sound of whistling echoed ahead—a low, casual tune that sounded almost cheerful in contrast to the eerie atmosphere.

Following the sound, the girls rounded a corner and found Lucian sitting on the floor in the midst of his strange setup. He was still whistling, eyes narrowed with focus as he adjusted the flame beneath a bubbling flask. The liquid inside was shifting colors with every second, from sickly green to oily black, before settling into a faint translucent amber.

"I was wondering what you were up to," Annabeth said, arms folding as she eyed him. "We didn't hear you fighting anymore."

Lucian turned his head slightly, flashing a grin. "Oh, hey! Good timing."

Thalia raised a brow, her expression skeptical. "Mind telling us what you're doing? Because this looks… a little concerning."

Lucian gestured lazily at his workstation. "Alchemy. I'm breaking down Scylla's blood into its separate components. Once I isolate the poison, I can study it and—if we're lucky—figure out how to cure her."

Annabeth crouched near the flames, studying the crude setup with a critical eye. "You know there's a faster way. Just use an alchemic array. It'll do in seconds what you're trying to stretch into minutes."

Lucian clicked his tongue and wagged a finger at her. "Ah, Annabeth, sweet, logical Annabeth. Always looking for efficiency." His tone shifted into a mockingly patronizing lilt. "But sometimes you just need to respect the craft. Alchemy isn't only about results—it's an art. The array might get me answers faster, but it would rob me of the beauty in the process. The smell, the shimmer, the way each component reveals itself. Where's the fun if I skip straight to the end?"

Annabeth rolled her eyes, muttering something about him being insufferable.

Lucian ignored it, swirling the flask in his hand. A thick green droplet condensed and slid into the waiting vial, hissing faintly as it hit. He lifted the vial to his nose and inhaled deeply. A strange smile spread across his face. "Ah… rosemary. Interesting. I think I know exactly what poison this is."

He snapped his fingers at Chomper, who had been lazily lounging nearby. "My mother's Book. Now please."

The beast gagged loudly, before it regurgitated up a thick, leather-bound tome—Medea's book, the very one Lucian's mother had gifted him long ago. Lucian brushed the dust off casually and flipped through pages. His eyes lit up when he reached a certain entry, tapping it with satisfaction.

"Mmhm… yes, that's it," he muttered to himself before turning to Annabeth. "Do you mind lending me some of the Hydra's poison?"

Annabeth gave him a flat look. "What's mine is yours," she said with a scoff, not understanding why Lucian was even bothering asking. 

"Thanks, love," Lucian replied smoothly, already turning back to his monstrous companion. "Alright, Chomper. I'll need a vial of Hydra blood, the seed of a golden apple, mandrake root, milk… and lavender."

Chomper groaned like a sick dog before retching violently, one by one spitting out each of the requested ingredients onto the stone floor.

Lucian clapped his hands together and leaned over the bubbling flasks with an eager grin. "Perfect. Now… let's make some magic."

"Wait," Thalia cut in, brows furrowed as she looked between the bubbling flasks and the vial of Hydra venom, "isn't Hydra poison supposed to be—oh, I don't know—deadly lethal? I mean, it killed Hercules of all people. And you're saying you can just… turn that into an antidote?"

"Yup." Lucian didn't even look up. He casually sprinkled herbs into the mortar,. "If you know how to use it correctly. Poison by itself is just… well, poison. But poison amplified by another poison can become medicine." He smirked, as though he were teaching a class. "It's the same principle you see in a math equation: a negative times a negative will always equal… a positive—"

His hand froze mid-motion. The pestle stopped before it reached the mortar as his entire body went still. His eyes glazed over, unfocused, as if his brain had just short-circuited under the weight of its own thought.

Thalia blinked, exchanging a look with Annabeth. "Uh… Lucian?" she asked carefully.

Lucian didn't respond at first. His gaze was locked downward, the thousand-yard stare of someone whose mind was unraveling. His lips parted in disbelief, voice dropping to a whisper:

"Holy crap…"

Pushing the herbs aside, he staggered to his feet, eyes wide as though the universe itself had just handed him a secret.

"What? What's wrong?" Annabeth asked, though there was a spark of curiosity in her tone, already intrigued by the shift in his expression.

"I think…" Lucian began, his voice trembling with excitement, "I was just hit with the mother of all revelations."

He ran a hand through his hair, pacing furiously, words spilling out like an untamed storm. "A negative multiplied by a negative will always equal a positive… that's not just math, that's a principle. Almost like the Law of Equivalent Exchange, right? That states: to gain something, something of equal value must be given in return. But this—this is different. This is fundamental inversion."

He spun on his heel, pacing faster, his tone rising into a manic rant. "The Law of Equivalent Exchange mostly governs alchemy, sure—but the Law of Negative Inversion? That can be applied everywhere. It's not bound by craft, it's universal. Poison into medicine, suffering into strength, a negative turned into its opposite!"

Thalia raised a brow, crossing her arms. "Lucian, what the hell are you even getting at?"

Annabeth, however, had that knowing grin stretching across her face—the grin of someone watching genius unfold, even if it was tinged with madness.

Lucian whipped around, extending his hand. A dark red, writhing aura of curses erupted from his palm, tendrils of shadow licking at the air. "Don't you see!? I can apply it to this! To curses! My whole craft is about twisting the world into negativity, inflicting negative effects onto people… but if the principle holds, then what happens when you invert a curse?"

Thalia shrugged flatly. "Hell if I know."

Lucian threw his head back, laughing like a man possessed. "Neither do I! And that's the best part! It's brand new, uncharted. I just stumbled into it right here, right now!" His eyes were wild with exhilaration, his grin sharp.

Annabeth lifted a hand thoughtfully, her voice calm but sharp as ever. "If you do follow this 'Law of Negative Inversion'—as you're apparently christening it—and apply it to curse-making, wouldn't the logical opposite of a curse be… a blessing?"

Lucian froze for a moment, then burst into manic laughter. "Probably! Which is insane if you think about it! If I'm right, I could forge an entirely new branch of power. A whole new spectrum of magic at my disposal!" His laughter echoed against the cavern walls, fevered and wild. "FUCK, this is incredible! I'm so goddamn rock hard right now!"

Thalia pinched the bridge of her nose, but she was smiling despite herself. "Alright, Mr. Enlightened Philosopher of Boners, maybe dial it back a notch before you blow a blood vessel."

Lucian just kept pacing, muttering possibilities under his breath with the energy of a man standing at the edge of a revolution.

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