[Warning: High-level analysis in progress]
[Gorath the Unyielding - Threat Assessnt: S-Class Entity]
[ Hidden Identity - The Demon Watcher ]
[ Warning: Target’s Knowledge can not be asured. ]
[Emotional State: Intrigued. Calculating. Dangerously Perceptive.]
[Belief: ?]
[Loyalty: ?]
Liam turned slowly, keeping his face carefully neutral even with the weird system Warning. "I’m here because you summoned . Not to play gas."
"Everything is a ga," Gorath countered, spreading his arms wide. "Three centuries have taught that. Politics is a ga. War is a ga. Faith, loyalty, honor—all gas with different rules." His smile widened. "The question is: do you know which ga we’re playing right now?"
"The ga where you decide if I’m useful or if I’m a threat."
"Partially correct." Gorath gestured toward the fortress. "Walk with . Your commanders may wait here. This conversation is between gods."
The last word was delivered with such mocking emphasis that it might as well have been a slap.
Koth tensed, but Liam raised a hand. "It’s fine." He t Gorath’s burning gaze. "Lead the way, my lord."
The two words were delivered with equal mockery.
Gorath’s laugh was delighted. "Oh, I’m going to enjoy this."
---
The fortress interior was a study in contradiction.
The architecture was brutal—sharp angles, rough stone, the aesthetic of sothing built for war and nothing else. But scattered throughout were artifacts of startling beauty.
A painting depicting a battle, woven with such skill it seed to move in the firelight.
A sculpture of a demon warrior, every scale rendered with loving detail. Books – hundreds of books – lining shelves carved directly into the walls.
"You collect," Liam observed.
"I curate," Gorath corrected, running a clawed finger along a shelf. "Three centuries is a long ti to stare at bare walls. I’ve learned that beauty makes monotony bearable." He pulled out a book, its cover ancient and cracked. "Have you read Mor’dukh’s treatise on the nature of sacrifice?"
"No."
"You should. He argues that sacrifice isn’t about what you give up—it’s about what you choose to beco in the absence of what you lost." Gorath replaced the book with surprising care. "I think you’d find it... relevant."
They entered what appeared to be a war room, though it was unlike any Liam had seen.
The walls were covered in maps—not just of Ashard, but of the entire demon empire, the Radiant Empire, territories Liam didn’t recognize.
Pins and markers tracked troop movents, supply lines, political alliances.
"This is my hobby," Gorath said, gesturing to the overwhelming complexity. "Understanding the ga. Not just my piece of it—the whole ga." He fixed Liam with those burning eyes. "Do you know what the most important lesson three centuries of war taught ?"
"That war is inevitable?"
"That war is boring." Gorath picked up a marker representing Radiant Empire forces.
"The humans attack. We defend. Sotis we win, sotis we lose. Territory changes hands. Leaders rise and fall. And then... it all resets. The sa dance, different dancers."
He placed the marker down with surprising gentleness.
"Until you."
Liam waited. This was the mont. The test.
"You massacred surrendered prisoners," Gorath said, his tone conversational. "A hundred and sixteen n who’d laid down their weapons. Executed in cold blood. Do you know what that makes you?"
"A war criminal," Liam said flatly. "By their laws, doubt by yours though."
"It makes you interesting." Gorath’s smile was sharp. "A ’Demon God’ playing by demon rules would have enslaved them. Paraded them as trophies. Used them for propaganda. That’s what Azrakul—the real Azrakul, if he existed—would have done."
He leaned against the war table.
"But you? You made a cold, practical decision that served imdiate tactical needs while disregarding long-term political consequences." Those burning eyes studied Liam’s face. "You fought like you’re playing a short ga, not a long one. Like soone who doesn’t expect to survive long enough for consequences to matter."
[Warning: Psychological analysis penetration detected]
[Defensive response recomnded]
"Maybe I am," Liam said carefully.
"Or maybe," Gorath continued, "you’re soone who knows exactly how precarious his position is. Soone who understands that one mistake, one crack in the facade, and everything cos crashing down." He pushed off the table, moving closer.
"Soone who executes prisoners not because he’s cruel, but because he can’t afford the weakness of rcy."
The words hit too close. Liam’s hand unconsciously moved toward Igar’s Shard.
Gorath noticed. Of course he noticed.
"Relax," the Arch-Demon said, raising his massive hands in a gesture of peace. "I’m not your enemy. I’m your... auditor. I need to know if Queen Lilith’s desperate gambit is a temporary miracle or a sustainable solution."
"And your verdict?"
Gorath studied him for a long, uncomfortable mont.
"You’re the real thing," he said finally. "Not the Primordial Demon—I don’t think that exists outside of desperate prayers and political propaganda. But you’re sothing new. Sothing this war hasn’t seen before." He gestured to the maps around them. "A human who fights like a demon. A demon who thinks like a human. A monster who still rembers being a man."
He leaned in close enough that Liam could sll sulfur and ancient stone.
"That combination either saves us all or destroys us completely. I haven’t decided which."
"Then why summon ?"
There it was – the matter at hand.
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