Chapter 918: Citadel’s guardians
A massacre unfolded in the skies above the colossal citadel, a storm of fire, steel, and blood. Hazon and Barkial led the charge, their titanic forms blazing with infernal energy, while the rest of the Devils spread across the flanks, carving a path through the endless tide of nightmare creatures.
The clash was savage. Winged monstrosities shrieked as their molten flesh was ripped apart, while the air burned with spells and blood splatters that rained like crimson storms. For fifteen relentless minutes, the battle raged. When at last the Devils touched down upon the scorched ground at the base of the citadel, exhaustion pressed upon their shoulders like lead.
Yet their respite was hollow.
The horrors circling the citadel’s spires did not pursue them. Instead, they lingered high in the ash-choked sky, wings twitching nervously, eyes glowing with fear. They kept themselves at a distance, as though some primal instinct warned them that to draw too close to the citadel was to invite certain death.
The Devils felt the tension rising. Their arrival at the foot of the fortress brought only greater dread. This citadel was no simple stronghold. It was the heart of the dimension itself, and very likely the tomb of the Primordial God they had been tasked to desecrate. But the structure was gargantuan beyond comprehension, so vast that even attempting to map it would take weeks, perhaps months. Worse still, that same suffocating force they had encountered within the sacrificial pyramid now cloaked the entire citadel, but magnified a hundredfold.
Their senses were stripped away. Spiritual perception failed, their divine awareness smothered. They could rely only on their eyes to see and their ears to hear. Every instinct screamed that exploring this fortress under such restrictions would be a journey through death itself. Yet none dared to retreat. To fail here was to face the wrath of Nebolex, and even for Devils of their caliber, that was suicide.
"Should we split?" Hazon’s voice was sharp, but edged with unease. He turned toward Barkial, who stood silent for a long moment before shaking his massive head. Their instincts screamed in unison: dividing their forces in this place would be nothing short of a death sentence.
Without further hesitation, both Devil Lords made their strength rise, their bodies swelling with fire and nightmare flesh. The Legendary Devils followed suit, their energy surging around them like black storms, ready to explode at a moment’s notice. Together, with grim faces and sharpened focus, they advanced as one.
The outer walls of the citadel loomed like a cathedral of bones. Enormous ribcage-like arches stretched upward, fused into jagged buttresses that clawed at the sky. The architecture was impossibly ancient, yet still pristine, the material harder than anything the Devils had seen. Countless eons had passed, yet the structure had not crumbled. If anything, it seemed eternal.
But they had no time to marvel.
The moment their feet crossed the threshold, their eyes widened as the suffocating Law radiation condensed into form. Out of the choking haze emerged spectral warriors.
They were colossal—taller even than Hazon and Barkial. Their bodies burned with a cold, ghostly flame, and their hollow eyes glowed with a malice that pierced into the soul. The weapons in their hands radiated a force not only capable of sundering flesh, but of severing existence itself. They did not speak. They did not roar. They simply advanced, their intent clear: kill the trespasser.
Hazon bared his teeth, flames wreathing his claws, while Barkial hefted his rusted machete that dripped with ancient blood. With primal roars, the two Devil Lords charged.
The first clash shook the sky.
The impact of claw and machete against spectral blades sent shockwaves that shattered the ground and the walls of the citadel. Both Hazon and Barkial staggered, their arms trembling, their knees bending under the monstrous strength of the guardians. Were the Lords alone, their fate would have already been sealed.
But they were not alone.
The other Devils unleashed their fury in a desperate torrent of magic and steel. They had no loyalty, no camaraderie, only survival. If the Lords fell, they would be the next to die. The True Depravitas, Overlord, the Nightmare Eye Devils—all poured their strength into the battle as well. The entire forces of Sector Fourth unleashed blasts of cursed flame, collapsing spears of shadow, and blades infused with death upon the Specters.
The combined bombardment staggered the spectral guardians, halting their advance for a brief moment. It was enough.
Hazon’s roar shook the citadel as his molten claws ripped through the chest of one guardian, while Barkial’s machete, fueled by his colossal might, carved through another. The force of their strikes hurled the titans back, their massive bodies crashing through a building in the distance.
The Devils allowed themselves fleeting smiles. A god’s tomb would have defenses, and while the guardians were strong, they had fallen before their combined might.
But their relief was short-lived.
The spectral warriors rose again.
Their bodies were riddled with wounds, but instead of weakening, they grew stronger. Their eyes burned brighter, their speed sharper. In a flash, they closed the distance once more. Hazon and Barkial barely managed to intercept their weapons, their faces tightening as they felt an even greater weight driving down upon them.
The other Devils redoubled their attacks, spells and weapons hammering into the guardians’ backs. But to their horror, the more damage the specters sustained, the more ferocious their strikes became. Each wound only fueled their strength, their weapons pressing down with crushing inevitability.
Hazon’s roar of fury turned into a scream of agony.
One guardian’s blade pierced his chest, the weapon burning with a power that went beyond flesh. The flames seared his body and spread like wildfire into his soul. His immense form shook violently, and his claws bled as he attempted to halt the sword, but the weapon pushed deeper, inching closer to his heart.
The other Devils attacked with wild desperation, their strikes tearing chunks of shadow from the guardian’s body. But the strength behind the spectral weapon only grew heavier, the push unrelenting.
Hazon’s eyes widened in true horror as he felt the cold edge of the spectral blade pressing closer to his heart. The guardian’s sword was only moments away from piercing through his heart and ending him. Though the Specter’s form was already half-destroyed, its power had not waned. It was clear the entity would complete its duty, even at the cost of its existence.
For the first time in countless ages, the Devil Lord tasted the certainty of death.
Then, just as Hazon’s doom seemed absolute, the world shook with a thunderclap. It was not mere sound, but the detonation of a spatial storm, a ripple of distorted reality that echoed across the citadel like the cracking of the heavens. From within that storm of distortion, a figure emerged—Vlad.
But this was not the Vlad the Devils had seen before. His body had changed, transformed into something more fearsome. His muscles bulged with raw power, his skin streaked with scales that shimmered with lightning and space force alike. Black horns curled upward from his skull, crackling with sparks, while arcs of violet thunder danced across his frame, and a third eye appeared on his forehead.
Without hesitation, he raised his sword.
A detonation of lightning, wreathed in dark flames, erupted from his weapon, blasting upward with such force that the Specter was hurled into the ceiling. Vlad did not relent. In the blink of an eye, he flashed forward, his blade expanding in size until it was the length of a city street, and with one earth-shaking strike he drove the weapon straight into the Specter’s chest. The force of the blow pinned the colossal entity to the ceiling, embedding it deep into the citadel’s obsidian bones.
The gathered Devils froze.
The raw might Vlad displayed was beyond anything they had expected. His strength now stood clearly at the level of a Lord. Perhaps at the bottom of that tier, yes, but Lord-tier nonetheless—a height no Sector Master present could ever hope to reach. Their eyes burned with shock and envy.
And Vlad was not done.
The sword that pinned the Specter began to thrum with power. Dark radiance bled from its edges, forming a vortex that devoured all essence and vitality within its reach. The guardian’s body writhed, its form unraveling as streams of its spirit-force were drawn into Vlad. Inch by inch, the towering specter was consumed, its cold flames extinguished, until nothing remained but silence and the faint echo of its fading roar.
The Devils could scarcely believe their eyes. That which had nearly slain a Devil Lord had been consumed like prey by the True Depravita of Wrath.
But there was no time to dwell on their shock.
Across the battlefield, Barkial still fought desperately against the second Specter, and his situation was rapidly deteriorating. The guardian pressed him back with monstrous strength, each strike of its weapon forcing the colossal Devil Lord closer to collapse. Wounds tore across his body, his molten blood hissing as it splattered against the stone.
Now that Vlad had finished his battle, the remaining Devils seized their chance.