Urban Plundering: I Corrupted The System! - Chapter 358
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- Chapter 358 - Chapter 358: Origin Families Playlist of Origins and History
Chapter 358: Origin Families Playlist of Origins and History
Parker lifted his hand with that smooth, lazy kind of gesture that still somehow made the air pause.
Helena Nyxlith—goddess of grace and quiet obliteration—rose like a blade unsheathing itself. Fluid. Lethal. Regal. She turned, faced the great hall, and bowed first to the throne. A deep, full bow. Not just formality—acknowledgment.
The room stilled.
Her hair fell like midnight snow across her shoulders as she raised her head and let her gaze sweep across the sea of bloodlines and ancient names seated below. Her voice came next—smooth velvet stitched in steel.
“Let it be known,” she began, not loud but perfectly clear, the kind of tone that didn’t need volume to command obedience. “You are all gathered here tonight to greet and present yourselves to His Highness, Prince Nyxlith.
“The Original.”
A current passed through the room. Barely a breath moved.
“After eight lives—yes, count them, eight,” she added, almost dryly, “our Prince has awakened fully in his final incarnation.”
A pause. Her eyes tracked them like scanners reading bloodlines. “Which means… this is it. No more lifetimes. No more resets. No more ‘oops, guess he died again.’ This is the last one.” She tilted her head. The corner of her mouth curled.
“So if any of you were planning on waiting till his next life to pledge your loyalties… you fucked around too long.”
It was almost funny, except no one dared laugh.
“To the Origin Families,” Helena continued this time seriously, letting the moment cool, “descendants of the oldest and purest bloodlines in the Existence—you have come to offer your respects.”
Her gaze found Robert Blackwood first. The air around him seemed to sharpen.
“To the proud Voidhowls, whose howl once carved through ancient dimensions.”
The Voidhowl family stood together. Heads bowed. As one.
She turned to the elegantly dressed horrors in the shadows. “To the infamous Daemons of the Shadowmire Clan, whose legends drip in shadow and silence. You’ve played in the dark long enough. Let’s hope your manners aren’t as sharp as your knives.”
The Shadowmires stood. Bowed.
Next: the shimmering, annoyingly symmetrical beings who practically glowed with elven superiority.
“To the High Elves, the only ones left who haven’t watered down their blood with tourist DNA. The Purest. And the First.” A beat. She smirked. “Though the name Kingswells still sounds like a 1970s soap opera couple than what your bloodline represents.”
A few subdued chuckles broke the tension. Evelyn rolled her eyes but bowed with the rest.
Helena shifted to the Ravencrofts, gaze zeroing in on Salem like she remembered his awkward teen phase. “To the rarest Witch Bloodline.”
The Ravencrofts stood. Bowed. Maya held her expression still.
Then came the Zhangs.
“To the High Humans, the only ones who didn’t get swallowed by mediocrity and stock market scams. Pillars of balance. Silent guardians of the mundane world.”
They stood with solemn pride. Bowed.
And lastly—Helena turned to the one who hadn’t needed an introduction. “To the Dravens, the Oldest Vampire Bloodline, forged before time had a name.”
Her eyes locked with Noctavine Vaelith Draven. “And you, Lady Draven—Matriarch of Night’s Throne. Your presence honors this hall.”
Noctavine rose. Her bow was nothing short of a coronation unto itself.And as each family stood to bow, it became clear:
They bowed to Parker.
Not Vivian, who sat beside him bored, despite being his sister. Despite being terrifying in her own right. Although Vivian was also a child of existence—immortal, dangerous, carved from the same primordial fabric as Parker himself—the families bowed to him, not her.
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Not because she was weaker. Hell no.
Vivian could unmake dimensions just by waking up in the wrong mood. But that throne? That title? That was his. And they all knew it. Every bowed head, every bent knee, wasn’t just respect—it was instinct. Authority in its rawest, most ancient form.
They acknowledged her power, yes. Feared her, certainly. But Parker? They respected him. Revered him. Submitted to him. There was a reason for that, one that didn’t require explanation—just presence. It wasn’t about strength anymore. It was about origin.
Helena, having concluded her speech to the bloodline elders, bowed once more. A bow not of obligation, but of deference. A silent offering of recognition. She bowed to the Prince—and when he gave the slightest nod in return, it was like history signed a treaty in that moment.
Then Helena faced the hall again—but this time, her gaze wasn’t for the old names. It drifted beyond them, to the younger generation.
The sons and daughters. The heirs.
The future.
And beyond even her—her eyes fell briefly on Naomi, Elena, and Tessa. Three women not apart of any of the gathered bloodlines, but now deeply entangled in the threads of this legacy. Outsiders by heritage, yet sitting closer to the throne than many dared.
Some of the descendants, no doubt, were wondering.
Wondering why the very air seemed to bend around Parker when he entered a room. Why their hearts pulsed faster—not in fear, but recognition. Why their parents, capable of snapping mountains in half, bowed to a man who hadn’t even spoken a command.
For the girls;
Why their boss—the man who signed their checks, who smiled at their sarcasm—was being treated like he was something holy.
For the younger bloodlines, it was simpler. Their bodies responded to the Prince because of who he was—because of what he was. Which wasn’t the case of they faced Vivian… to them their bodies only reacted because she was a Nyxlith and also freaking powerful but to Parker it was different…
Their blood hummed to his voice. Their instincts aligned with his command. It wasn’t learned. It was genetic memory.
For the others—Naomi, Elena, Tessa—it was harder to place. But they were feeling it now. That unmistakable truth pressing into their bones:
This man wasn’t just obeyed. He was remembered.
Helena didn’t explain all that to the three women. She didn’t need to.
All she said was:
> “You’ll understand soon enough.”
And that was it.
The final word. The end of the sermon. The room, once again, fell into stillness. Not out of fear—but awe.
She turned back once more, Helena Nyxlith—regal, poised, but now with a gaze that cut deeper. This time, she wasn’t looking at the elders or ancient figures of power.
She was looking beyond them.
At the young generation—those who had never seen the wars but were born from their ashes. At the heirs whose blood thrummed without reason around Parker, who didn’t yet know why they couldn’t meet his gaze too long, or why their instincts screamed to kneel the moment he breathed.
Naomi, Elena, and Tessa:
Women who didn’t come from these bloodlines, who weren’t raised in marble halls or cursed forests or endless timelines. Yet here they were, at the foot of something vast and ancient, surrounded by beings older than the concept of nations.
Perhaps they were wondering—why?
Helena opened her mouth again, but this time, her voice carried something older—something ceremonial.
“In the beginning,” she said slowly, “after the Prince was born into existence—before thrones, before wars, before even learning to greet his older siblings—the first thing he did… was not conquer. Not destroy. Not even build a world.”
Her hands opened slightly, as if revealing something sacred in air. “He created.”
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