Chapter 396: The Dragon Emperor’s Decree
The grueling, humiliating journey from the devastated, blood-soaked expanse of the Central Plains to the magnificent, unassailable Imperial Capital of the Celestial Dragon Empire took several arduous days. The landscape outside slowly shifted from the vitrified, mud-churned graveyards of their ruined armies to vibrant, emerald forests and sprawling, prosperous merchant cities that had remained entirely untouched by the devastating regional war.
General Bao, the Iron-Blood Demon, rode at the absolute vanguard, leading a massive, heavily armored escort of elite vanguard troops. The rhythmic, synchronized thud of ten thousand steel-shod boots marching in perfect unison was the only sound that dared to pierce the solemn atmosphere.
Trapped within the convoy, stripped of their dignity and separated from their respective surviving lieutenants, were the two greatest young warlords of the current era.
Inside a heavily reinforced, rune-carved prisoner carriage forged from dense, Qi-suppressing Black-Iron Wood, Long Chen sat in suffocating, humiliating silence. His wrists and ankles were bound by thick, heavy imperial shackles cast from cold-forged star-steel. These were not mere physical restraints; they were engraved with plex, high-tier sealing arrays that actively drained and thoroughly suppressed the dense, aquatic Battle Aura circulating within his meridians. His usually radiant, deep-blue Qi was reduced to a stagnant, sluggish trickle, rendering his formidable Invulnerable Body heavy and unresponsive.
Long Chen rested his head against the cold, iron-barred window of the carriage, his ocean-blue eyes staring blankly at the passing countryside. The physical exhaustion of fighting a two-month-long war of attrition was nothing pared to the violent, agonizing turmoil churning within his Sea of Consciousness. General Bao’s chilling revelation back in the mand tent had shattered the foundational truth of his crusade.
‘Who could have done it?’ Long Chen pondered bitterly, his brow deeply furrowed, his teeth grinding together until his jaw ached. ‘Who could have possessed the absolute, terrifying power and flawless stealth to slip past my elite tidal guards, infiltrate the innermost sanctums of the Pure Maiden Holy Temple, and abduct Princess Hai Lan without leaving a single, microscopic ripple in the ambient Water Qi?’
He meticulously, desperately sifted through the vast rosters of his surviving enemies within the Eastern Prefecture. He analyzed every pirate lord who had knelt before him, every orthodox sect leader who had surrendered to his fleet, searching for a hidden mastermind capable of such a flawless, continent-spanning deception.
‘Could it be the remnants of the Azure Tide Sect?’ Long Chen wondered, his eyes narrowing as he pictured Patriarch Zhao Hai’s furious, bearded face. He considered their resources, their hidden techniques, their profound mastery over the oceanic arts. But then, he immediately shook his head, discarding the foolish notion with a heavy sigh. ‘No. Zhao Hai relies entirely on overwhelming, brute-force tidal waves and straightforward, rigid phalanx formations. He lacks the profound, shadowy cunning required to not only bypass the temple’s divine wards but also to orchestrate a massive, flawless false trail leading directly to the western badlands. Furthermore, to perfectly replicate the residual energy of the Desert Demon’s dark arts… it is impossible for them.’
Long Chen leaned back, the star-steel chains clinking loudly in the small confines of the carriage. The more he analyzed the situation, the more terrifying the reality became. Someone had deliberately, expertly played him. Someone had used his profound love for Hai Lan as a leash to drag his entire armada onto the mud of the plains to bleed out against the desert.
In a separate, equally fortified carriage positioned further back in the convoy, Qin Wu sat pletely, unnervingly motionless.
He sat cross-legged on the rough wooden floorboard, his heavy, dark iron sword resting across his knees. The imperial guards had deemed the weapon too heavy and inert for a suppressed cultivator to wield effectively, allowing him to keep it, though they had confiscated everything else. Deep within his Dantian, the malevolent artifact—the Abyssal Soul Bead—pulsed faintly with a residual, starved malice, agitated by the dense suppression arrays carved into the carriage walls.
Qin Wu’s dark, calloused hands gripped the hilt of his sword, his knuckles turning white. His mind was a storm of dark, stolen memories and furious, analytical calculations.
‘I scoured the spiritual remnants and memories of every high-ranking Eastern mander I devoured,’ Qin Wu thought, deep, gnawing frustration eating at the edges of his spiritual sea. ‘I ate the souls of their grand strategists, their array masters, their veteran lieutenants. I sifted through their tactical deployments, their secret munications, their deepest fears… yet absolutely none of them had any knowledge of a raid on our hidden desert caves.’
He closed his eyes, visualizing the scene he had found back in the West. The shattered stone, the torn fabric of Mu Qing’s garments, the lingering, potent scent of the salty ocean breeze deeply infused into the sand itself. It had been a flawless crime scene, specifically designed to trigger his most violent, protective instincts.
Qin Wu analyzed his own adversaries in the West, trying to pinpoint a warlord, a disgraced gladiator master, or a jealous desert chieftain with the sheer resources and intellect to frame the Sea Devil for Mu Qing’s tragic abduction.
‘The Sand Wyrm Tribe? They are savage beasts who can barely forge a straight spear, let alone weave a continent-spanning conspiracy. The Crimson Blade Bandits? Mercenaries driven by gold and cheap wine. What about the elders of the Scorched Earth Sect?’ Qin Wu evaluated internally, his dark, pitch-black eyes narrowing into dangerous slits. ‘No. None of them possess the high-tier array masters required to fake the residual sea-energy I found in the cavern. To forge the distinct, heavy pressure of the deep ocean required to fool my senses… it would require a cultivator who has reached the zenith of the Water Dao.’
As the days bled into one another, the rhythmic bouncing of the carriages serving as a constant, maddening metronome, both unparalleled protagonists reached the exact same, bone-chilling conclusion entirely independently.
The true culprit, the grand puppeteer who had orchestrated the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of martialists, was an entity pletely outside their current prehension. It was a shadowy mastermind possessing wealth, intelligence, and martial resources that utterly dwarfed their own respective factions. They had been dancing on the palm of a giant.
Realizing the sheer, agonizing futility of chasing invisible ghosts when they were currently shackled prisoners of the throne, both Long Chen and Qin Wu forcefully, brutally emptied their minds of the conspiracy. They reigned in their overflowing, furious Battle Auras, their thoughts violently shifting to a much more immediate, pressing terror that awaited them at the end of the road.
‘Emperor Huang Long is not a man who forgives the wanton destruction of his lands,’ Long Chen muttered to himself, gazing at the towering, mist-shrouded mountains passing by the iron-barred window. He remembered the legends of the Celestial Dragon Emperor—a man who had united the four prefectures centuries ago through rivers of blood and absolute, crushing martial dominance. ‘We burned his vital trade routes. We slaughtered his tax-paying subjects. We exhausted the martial foundations of two entire prefectures without his imperial sanction. He will undoubtedly demand a heavy, bloody price for the resources we squandered.’
In his own carriage, Qin Wu gripped the hilt of his heavy sword tighter, the rough, rusted iron biting into his calloused palms.
‘If the Dragon Emperor decides to execute me for high treason, I am dead,’ Qin Wu admitted to himself, the cold, pragmatic truth settling heavily in his chest. ‘Even if I forcibly ignite my blood essence… even if my dark artifact consumes every shred of my remaining lifespan to forcefully break these suppression arrays… it will not be enough to strengthen me to the point where I can defeat a true Martial Emperor. The gap between the Martial King stage and the Martial Emperor realm is not a gap; it is a celestial chasm.’
On the morning of the seventh day, the imposing, towering golden gates of the Imperial Capital finally loomed on the horizon.
The city was an architectural marvel that defied logic, built upon a massive, elevated plateau overlooking a vast, shimmering lake. The outer walls were hundreds of feet high, forged entirely from Deep-Earth Star Iron and inscribed with millions of glowing, golden defensive runes that radiated a terrifying, ancient Battle Aura. The ambient Qi in the air was so dense, so incredibly pure, that it formed a visible, shimmering mist around the towering pagodas and floating palaces of the inner city.
General Bao brought the convoy to a halt before the massive, heavily guarded gates. He rode his Crimson-Scaled Qilin to the very front, his voice booming like thunder, echoing off the star-iron walls.
“Open the gates! Prepare the prisoners!” General Bao roared, his Iron-Blood Battle Aura flaring, demanding absolute obedience from the city garrison. “We do not stop at the dungeons! By direct imperial decree, we march directly to the Heavenly Dragon Throne Room!”
The massive gates groaned open, revealing the bustling, awe-inspiring interior of the capital. The convoy moved forward, the citizens of the empire stopping in the streets to stare in hushed, fearful silence at the two legendary warlords locked in the iron carriages, being dragged toward the Emperor’s judgment.
An hour later, Long Chen and Qin Wu were unceremoniously hauled from their carriages. The heavy, star-steel shackles remained firmly clamped around their wrists and ankles, restricting their stride as they were flanked by dozens of elite Imperial Guards wielding Dragon-Vein Spears.
They were marched up a seemingly endless flight of wide, white marble stairs, leading toward the highest, most magnificent structure in the entire capital.
The heavy, ornate, solid-gold doors of the Heavenly Dragon Throne Room groaned open, revealing a cavernous, opulent hall that was vast enough to house an entire mountain peak. The floor was paved with a seamless, blood-red carpet woven from the silk of rare, high-tier arachnid beasts. The hall was lined with towering, hundred-foot pillars carved entirely from solid, luminous green jade, each pillar depicting the coiled form of an ancient, celestial dragon.
Standing in perfect, unmoving, statuesque silence between the jade pillars were thousands of elite imperial guards. Every single one of them radiated the dense, refined Battle Aura of a Peak Master Martialist, their collective presence creating a crushing atmosphere of absolute, unified martial discipline.
Long Chen and Qin Wu were marched down the impossibly long, blood-red carpet by General Bao. Their heavy, shackled boots echoed in the oppressive, suffocating silence of the grand hall. The air was unnaturally still, devoid of even the slightest breeze, heavy with the scent of ancient incense and overwhelming, crushing authority.
At the absolute apex of the room, situated atop a massive, elevated dais of polished obsidian, was the throne. It was not a chair forged of gold or jewels; it was carved entirely from the massive, plete skull of an ancient, colossal draconic beast, its empty eye sockets staring down at the hall with eternal, predatory malice.
Seated upon this macabre, awe-inspiring throne was Emperor Huang Long.
He was a man whose very existence seemed to warp and distort the fabric of the martial world around him. He did not look like an old, wizened sage. He appeared as a man in the absolute, terrifying prime of his life. He possessed sharp, patrician features, his long hair a cascading waterfall of pure, liquid gold that flowed down his broad shoulders. He wore heavy, Imperial-yellow robes embroidered with nine-clawed dragons that seemed to shift and writhe across the fabric as if alive.
Emperor Huang Long did not speak a single word as the two prisoners were halted at the base of the dais. He merely rested his sharp, angular chin upon his knuckles, his elbow propped upon the bone armrest of the skull throne. His piercing, draconian eyes—irises the color of molten gold with vertical, reptilian slits—locked onto the two kneeling warlords with a terrifying, paralyzing intensity.
General Bao stepped forward, dropping to one knee and pressing his fist to his chest in a crisp, flawless martial salute.
“Your Imperial Majesty,” General Bao announced, his deep voice carrying through the silent hall. “I have executed your will. The regional conflict has been quelled. The Sea Devil, Long Chen, and the Soul Eater, Qin Wu, have been subdued and brought before the throne for your divine judgment.”
Emperor Huang Long did not acknowledge the General immediately. His golden eyes remained fixed entirely upon the two kneeling protagonists.
Suddenly, without any physical movement, without weaving a single hand seal, and without the slightest vocal exertion of techniques, Emperor Huang Long unleashed the pure, unadulterated terror of his cultivation.
He unleashed his Dragon Emperor pressure.
It did not feel like a wave of energy; it felt as though the entire sky had suddenly collapsed and fallen directly upon their shoulders. A suffocating, violently crushing wave of pure, absolute Battle Aura descended upon the hall.
CRACK!
The impossibly dense, reinforced polished marble floor beneath Long Chen and Qin Wu spider-webbed instantly, shattering under the sheer, atmospheric weight pressing them down. Both men were slammed firmly to their knees, unable to stand, their bodies screaming in protest against the overwhelming, localized gravity.
‘This… this is the absolute power of a true Martial Emperor!’ Long Chen gasped internally, his lungs burning as he fought just to draw a shallow breath. His Invulnerable Body, normally capable of withstanding the crushing depths of the abyssal trenches, groaned audibly under the immense weight. His bones creaked, micro-fractures forming in his legs. His aquatic bloodline, usually a source of boundless, arrogant pride, screamed in pure, primal, genetic fear, instinctively recognizing the presence of a superior, apex predator.
Qin Wu ground his teeth together so hard that a molar cracked. Blood leaked from his lips, dripping down his chin to stain the white marble floor, as he fought a losing battle to keep his spine straight. ‘My dark artifact is pletely, utterly paralyzed!’ Qin Wu panicked internally, trying to draw upon the Abyssal Soul Bead for strength. ‘The ambient Qi in the entire room… it has been entirely subjugated by his will! He isn’t just releasing energy; he is manding the laws of the world around him!’
Emperor Huang Long’s golden eyes narrowed slightly. He slowly, deliberately activated his Dragon Emperor Domain.
It was a passive, terrifying field of golden energy that expanded from the throne, flooding the massive hall. The very air around Long Chen and Qin Wu thickened, turning from a gas into a viscous, heavy, golden liquid. Every movement became an agonizing struggle through molasses. Every breath burned their throats, the heavily saturated, domineering Qi of the Emperor aggressively invading their meridians and rejecting their own native Battle Auras.
“You two boys have played your bloody, destructive games upon my plains for long enough,” Emperor Huang Long finally spoke.
His voice did not boom; it vibrated. It was a low, resonant frequency that carried the sheer, undeniable force of a falling mountain, shaking the dust from the incredibly high, vaulted ceiling and causing the jade pillars to hum in terrifying resonance.
“You burned my fertile farmlands,” the Emperor continued, leaning forward slightly, the golden liquid of his Domain pressing harder against them. “You slaughtered my tax-paying subjects by the tens of thousands. You have utterly exhausted the martial foundations, the spiritual veins, and the economic lifeblood of two entire prefectures. And you did this without my imperial sanction.”
“We… we were deceived, Your Imperial Majesty!” Long Chen managed to choke out, his voice a strained, ragged gasp as he fought against the crushing weight of the domain to lift his head. “An unknown shadow… a hidden faction manipulated us! They planted false rumors and stole our women to ignite a false war!”
“I do not care about the pathetic, whining excuses of barking dogs,” Huang Long interrupted coldly.
The temperature in the room soared instantly as his Battle Aura flared, reacting to his irritation. The golden liquid of the domain grew searing hot.
“You claim you were manipulated? That only proves your sheer inpetence and blinding arrogance,” the Emperor stated, his draconian eyes pinning Long Chen to the floor. “A true ruler does not burn his own house down because a shadow whispered in the dark. A true martialist does not throw away the lives of a hundred thousand men because his bed is empty. You allowed your petty, mortal emotions to dictate the fate of my empire. That is a weakness I do not tolerate.”
Qin Wu struggled to speak, the blood pooling in his mouth making him choke. “Your Majesty… we… we seek justice…”
“Justice?” Huang Long scoffed, a terrifying, humorless sound. “I am justice in this realm. I should execute you both where you kneel. I should sever your heads and mount them on spikes upon the capital gates to serve as a rotting, bloody warning to all rebellious upstarts who think their meager, backwater talents elevate them above the laws of the Celestial Dragon.”
The threat was not an empty boast. It was a cold, pragmatic statement of fact. The Emperor let the absolute, suffocating terror of impending, unavoidable death wash over the two protagonists. They could feel the killing intent radiating from the skull throne, sharp and undeniable as a guillotine blade resting against their necks.
Both Long Chen and Qin Wu lowered their heads entirely, pressing their foreheads into the cracked, shattered marble. The arrogant, unwavering pride of the ‘Sons of Destiny’—the absolute belief in their own invincibility, their respective cheats, and their heaven-defying luck—was thoroughly, catastrophically shattered under the overwhelming, god-like might of the true ruler of the lands. They were not kings. They were insects waiting to be crushed.
For several agonizing, endless minutes, Emperor Huang Long allowed the crushing, golden pressure of his domain to linger. He watched them sweat, watched them bleed, watched their formidable, youthful egos break beneath the weight of his absolute authority.
Finally, with a subtle shift of his posture, the Emperor slowly retracted the suffocating aura back into his Dantian.
The golden, viscous liquid dissolved back into air. The crushing gravity normalized.
Long Chen and Qin Wu collapsed forward, gasping desperately for air, their lungs burning as they pulled in the sweet, unfiltered oxygen. Their bodies were drenched in cold, clammy sweat, their muscles twitching with exhaustion. They realized, with profound, shaking clarity, that they had just survived a brush with absolute, inescapable annihilation.
“However,” Emperor Huang Long stated, leaning back against the bone-carved backrest of his throne, his golden eyes observing their pathetic, heaving forms. “Despite your overwhelming foolishness, your petty, insignificant lives still possess a marginal shred of utility to the Celestial Dragon Empire.”
The Emperor looked down at them with calculated, highly pragmatic disdain.
“You will put aside your pathetic, fabricated differences immediately,” Huang Long decreed, his voice brooking absolutely zero negotiation. “The blood feud between the East and the West ends here. If I hear of a single scimitar or a single aquatic beast engaging in bat on the plains again, I will personally travel to your respective prefectures and erase your entire sects and bloodlines from the annals of history. Is that understood?”
“Your Majesty… we accept your judgment,” Qin Wu gritted out, his voice a hoarse, painful rasp. He kept his head bowed, staring at his own blood on the marble. He knew that arguing, that demanding the right to search for Mu Qing, would only invite immediate, fiery death.
“We submit to the throne,” Long Chen added, his fists clenched tightly against the floor, swallowing his pride, his desperation to find Hai Lan temporarily buried beneath the absolute necessity of survival.
“You two will be conscripted,” Huang Long manded, his golden eyes sweeping over them. “You will be stripped of your titles, your fleets, and your armies. You are no longer the Sea Devil or the Soul Eater. You are foot soldiers of the throne. You will serve directly under the mand of General Feng Jin, the Supreme mander of the Heavenly Vanguard.”
Both men flinched slightly at the name. Even in the far reaches of the provinces, the name of General Feng Jin carried a terrifying weight. He was known as the ‘Emperor’s Executioner’, a man whose martial arts were so brutal, so ruthlessly efficient, that his own soldiers feared him more than the enemy.
“General Feng Jin is currently stationed at the Northern Abyssal Rift, building a specialized, highly powerful army,” the Emperor explained, his tone flat and unyielding. “You will lend your martial prowess, your unique bat arts, and your boundless, destructive energy to his ranks.”
“A specialized army, Your Imperial Majesty?” Long Chen asked cautiously, wiping a drop of bloody sweat from his brow, daring to look up slightly. “For what purpose?”
“The seers of the Imperial Court have read the celestial currents. The grand astrolabes have aligned with the ancient prophecies,” Huang Long revealed, his expression turning incredibly grim, the golden light in his eyes darkening. “The peace of this realm is an illusion. Demons from the abyssal planes—creatures of pure, chaotic malice that defy the natural laws of our world—will soon attempt to pletely breach the dimensional barriers of our world in the ing years. They seek to devour our spiritual veins and plunge this empire into eternal darkness.”
The Emperor stared down at the two shocked warlords. “You will be deployed to the Rift. You will fight them. You will bleed for this empire to repay the debt of blood you spilled upon my plains.”
Both men bowed deeply, pressing their faces to the floor once more.
“We shall offer our blood to defend the empire, Your Majesty,” they chanted in perfect, forced unison, their martial honor demanding they accept the call to defend humanity, even if they were entirely forced by circumstances to accept the mand.
As they bowed, remaining in a posture of absolute submission, Emperor Huang Long observed them silently, his brilliant, calculating mind assessing their hidden, profound destinies.
His eyes, enhanced by the profound, ancient ‘Dragon’s Insight’ technique passed down through the imperial lineage, pierced through their physical flesh and evaluated the very spiritual, karmic threads that bound them to the world.
‘These two possess immense, terrifyingly unnatural karmic luck,’ Huang Long thought, his golden eyes narrowing slightly as he analyzed the dense, swirling halos of invisible energy that crowned their heads. ‘They are classic ‘Sons of Destiny’. Their paths are littered with miraculous encounters, absurdly potent artifacts, and heaven-defying survival instincts. They have the faint, distant, but undeniable potential to one day step past the threshold and into the true Martial Emperor realm.’
The Emperor drummed his fingers against the bone armrest.
‘However, they are still incredibly green,’ the Emperor mused internally, his vast, centuries-old experience recognizing their fatal flaws. ‘Their foundations are built on rage, looted resources, and chaotic, unrefined bat arts. Even taking the monumental, soul-crushing step into the Half-Step Martial Emperor stage will be a massive, grueling challenge for them with their current, unrefined potential. They lack the philosophical depth and the absolute control required to forge a true Emperor’s Domain.’
A cold, utterly pragmatic smile touched the Emperor’s lips.
‘But their profound, heaven-defying luck is exactly what I need,’ Huang Long resolved, his grand strategy falling into place. ‘The demonic tides are unpredictable, capable of overwhelming standard martial armies through sheer, chaotic attrition. I will throw these two ‘Sons of Destiny’ into the absolute vanguard. I will use their absurd, unyielding plot armor to shield my elite troops against the demonic tides.’
The Emperor knew that wherever these two walked, trouble followed, but they almost always survived, leaving a trail of dead enemies in their wake. They were perfect, highly destructive meat shields.
‘Their bizarre, unpredictable bat arts and their malevolent artifacts should harm the demons quite greatly,’ Huang Long concluded his internal assessment. ‘If they miraculously survive the crucible of the Abyssal Rift, they will be forged into useful, hardened hounds of the empire, bound to my will. If they die against the demon lords… then their immense, hoarded karmic luck will simply return to the earth, nourishing the spiritual veins of my empire.’
It was a flawless, ruthless strategy. Win or lose, the Emperor profited.
“You are dismissed,” Emperor Huang Long manded, waving his hand dismissively, breaking his intense scrutiny. “General Bao will escort you to the teleportation arrays. Report to the Heavenly Vanguard barracks at the Northern Rift immediately. Do not disappoint me, boys. You will not receive a second pardon from this throne.”
Long Chen and Qin Wu rose unsteadily to their feet, their bodies aching, their pride entirely broken, and their futures violently redirected. They bowed one final time before turning to follow General Bao out of the grand, oppressive hall, leaving the terrifying majesty of the Dragon Emperor behind.
Their quest for their missing women was forcibly paused, replaced by a desperate, bloody march toward the demonic frontlines, entirely unaware that the man who had stolen their loves was currently looking down at the very same empire, plotting to steal it all.
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