Chapter 457: Battle
Chapter 457: Battle
Leon stepped through the portal with Seraphine beside him.
The dimensional realm’s quiet green stillness vanished in an instant, replaced by something that assaulted every sense simultaneously.
BOOOOOM! CRAAASH! RRRUMMMBLE!
Fire everywhere. The sky above the Pyran settlement was consumed by towering columns of black smoke and raging orange flame, painting the clouds in shades of catastrophe. Explosions detonated in rapid succession across the horizon, each one sending fresh shockwaves rippling through the scorched earth beneath their feet. The heat hit them like a physical wall the moment they crossed through, dry and suffocating, carrying the smell of burning flesh and charred earth.
The Pyran tents—every single one—had been razed to nothing. What remained were smoldering frameworks, collapsed poles, and ash drifting through the superheated air like black snow.
And the undead.
Hundreds of thousands of them.
An ocean of shambling, shrieking, relentless bodies stretching across the landscape in every direction as far as the eye could see. They moved in coordinated waves, crashing against pockets of Pyran resistance with the patient, inexhaustible weight of something that had already surrendered whatever it feared losing.
Seraphine’s breath caught for just a moment. Her amethyst eyes swept the scale of it—the sheer incomprehensible magnitude of what had unfolded while they were inside the tower. The transition from dimensional stillness to full-scale apocalypse was jarring in a way that hit even her seasoned warrior’s instincts like a physical blow.
The ground shook beneath another distant detonation.
BOOOOOM!
She steadied herself within a heartbeat, her grip tightening around her weapon, her posture shifting into combat readiness. But that initial fraction of a second—the widening of her eyes, the sharp inhale—was real and honest.
Leon hadn’t changed expression at all.
His face was cold. Completely still. His eyes moved across the battlefield the way a general reads a strategic map—cataloging, calculating, prioritizing. No horror, no hesitation, no wasted emotional response. Just pure, immediate analysis of everything in front of him.
FWOOSH!
A clone of Leon materialized directly beside Seraphine before she’d fully processed the scene. Fully powered, radiating dense and suffocating combat aura, Looking exactly like him as it scanning outward simultaneously. Leon had created it in the same instant his feet touched the ground on the other side.
"Stay next to the clone," Leon said quietly, already turning away from her. "Don’t wander."
Through the direct mental link connecting him to the clone, instructions transferred in a fraction of a second—no words, just complete and immediate understanding.
Primary directive: Seraphine. Her safety is above everything else, and also finding Ira and making sure she was safe. Secondary directive: the Pyran non-combatants—children, the young, anyone incapable of fighting. Sweep the immediate area. Store them in his world. Don’t request permission. Don’t allow resistance. Their survival is the only thing that matters.
The clone’s head dipped in acknowledgment, already moving.
Leon launched himself forward.
BOOOOOOM!
The shockwave from his departure hit the ground like a localized detonation. A crater erupted beneath where he’d been standing, scorched earth blasting outward in a circular wave that traveled thirty meters in every direction. Dozens of nearby undead simply ceased to exist—obliterated, scattered, flung into the air like broken debris by the sheer displacement of force.
He was already gone before a single piece of debris touched the ground again.
At a thousand meters, moving at the speed that surpasses sound that his body could sustain even casually, Leon cut through smoke and fire and chaos with his enhanced vision working at full capacity.
He saw the battle’s epicenter clearly.
Archon Vyra—her feiry aura flickering in a way that told him everything about how long she’d been sustaining this alone. Exhausted down to her foundations, burning through reserves that should have been replenished hours ago, yet still fighting with a ferocity that was equal parts impressive and heartbreaking. Beside her, filling the sky with its wingspan, a colossal Red Dragon whose scales were scorched and cracked and bleeding from dozens of accumulated wounds.
But the dragon was still fighting.
FWOOOOSH! CRAAAASH! BOOOOOM!
Its breath alone was annihilating Archon-rank monsters by the dozen with each exhalation—torrents of crimson fire that turned even powerful enemies to cinders before they could react. Its tail swept through formations of high-level undead with devastating force, each impact sending shockwaves rippling across the ground. Raw, ancient power expressed without restraint.
Yet more kept coming.
An endless tide pressing from every direction, and every single one of them radiated a full Archon-level aura.
An army of Archon-tier undead. This wasn’t improvised. Someone built this specifically to overwhelm exactly this kind of resistance.
But what seized Leon’s complete attention was the figure hovering above the chaos.
Cloaked. Perfectly still amidst the apocalypse. Entirely unhurried.
The figure wasn’t throwing everything into the assault—wasn’t frantically attacking or expending itself in the way the battle’s scale might have demanded. Instead, it moved with the measured, almost bored precision of someone managing a game rather than fighting a war. An occasional spell sent downward at the exact right moment to neutralize Vyra’s most powerful counterattack.
A subtle skill deployed with perfect timing to wrap invisible restraints around the dragon precisely when it was about to break through the encirclement and change the battle’s momentum.
Small interventions. Precisely placed. Devastatingly effective.
And between them, they were laughing.
The sound carried even through the roar of explosions and screaming and draconic fire—genuine, unhurried amusement. As though the deaths happening below were mildly entertaining rather than a catastrophe, it was being orchestrated.
Leon’s eyes settled on the figure and stayed there.
You’re the axis this entire thing turns on. Everything ends when you end.
He didn’t move yet.
Standing at a thousand meters, Leon began his preparations with the cold efficiency of someone who had already decided exactly how this was going to happen and was simply executing the sequence.
His sword responded first.
Mana flooded through his grip into the blade, and the metal transformed—the physical edge dissolved into something that existed beyond normal material limits. Multiple fused elements layered over each other in cascading, compressing density:
Space Aura’s black shimmer twists the light around the blade, Lightning Aura’s golden crackle spitting arcs into the surrounding air, Ice Aura spreading frozen veins down the fuller, Wind Aura generating a screaming current that makes the weapon hum with barely contained destruction.
The sword became a blinding shard of pure concentrated obliteration. Too bright to look at directly. The air around it distorted from the pressure of what had been compressed into that single point.
ZZZZAP! CRACKLE! HISSSSS! WHOOOOM!
Then the buffs, stacked in precise and deliberate sequence.
Mana Body Enhancement — Transcendent Rank.
His dual-heart system ignited with a sound like war drums beginning.
Thump-thump. Thump-thump. Thump-thump.
Both hearts hammering in synchronized rhythm, pumping enhanced blood through reinforced vessels at a rate that made his entire body feel like a contained detonation straining against its own walls. Every muscle fiber flooded simultaneously with raw transcendent power—his physical capabilities surging past anything his previous body could have sustained without catastrophic failure.
Raijin’s Descent — Transcendent Rank.
CRAAAACKLE! ZZZZAP! BOOOOOM!
God-like lightning erupted across his entire form without warning. Purple-gold arcs cascaded between his fingers, across his shoulders, down the length of his spine, wreathing him from crown to sole in terrifying electrical energy that made the scorched air around him smell of pure ozone. The lightning symbol blazed between his temples like a divine brand burned into his flesh—bright enough to be visible from hundreds of meters away.
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