Font Size
15px

"We are in the demon empire!?"

Kia's voice cracked through the heavy air like a blade striking stone. Her crimson eyes widened, a mix of disbelief and fear flashing across them as she turned toward . The wind whipped against her hair, carrying with it the scent of sulfur and decay from the sprawling wasteland below us.

The demon empire was not a place where others tread lightly. It's very soil thrumd with malice and hunger alike. And yet, here we were, standing above it, unseen and untouched by any detection.

"Yes," I replied calmly, the faint smile on my lips never fading. "We are."

Kia frowned, her arms crossing over her chest as she turned away. "You've lost it. This place hates outsiders. They hunt people for sport, Azrail. Why would you bring here?"

"To learn," I said, stepping forward to gaze down at the city that sprawled below — the Gravemourn Stronghold.

From above, the city looked like a dying heart, pulsing faintly in a pool of darkness. The walls, made from blackened obsidian and dried demon bone, shimred faintly under the red sky. The wind howled through the cracks, carrying whispers of the damned.

Kia's voice grew quiet as she followed my gaze, her earlier anger giving way to unease. "What… is this place?"

"Gravemourn Stronghold," I said softly. "A city where talent cos to die."

Her head snapped toward . "What does that even an?"

I turned toward her, my smile faint but knowing. "Co. You'll see soon enough."

With a wave of my hand, the two of us descended, cloaked in my power, unseen by the eyes of any who walked the cursed land. The mont our feet touched the blackened streets, the atmosphere changed.

The air was heavy. Every breath carried the weight of despair, sweat, and blood. The sound of tal clashing echoed through the narrow alleys, followed by the screams of the defeated. Kia flinched when a group of children — no older than ten — ran past, each holding jagged weapons, their eyes hollow yet burning with instinctual fury.

"What are they doing?" she whispered.

"Hunting," I replied. "Surviving. The Gravemourn Stronghold is where the unwanted are thrown. Children from demon families, those who lack power, control, or purpose, are cast here to die. So call it exile. Others call it training."

As we walked, Kia's gaze lingered on the surroundings. The buildings were cracked and leaning, held together by bone and dark runes. Fires burned in the distance — not for warmth, but to cremate the fallen. The streets were littered with rusted weapons and bones.

And yet, amidst the chaos, there was sothing more, movent, life, purpose.

Everywhere, young demons fought each other, scavenged for scraps, trained, and bled. The adults, disfigured veterans and lost souls, watched them from the shadows, offering no help, only judgnt.

"Every demon here," I continued, my voice calm and deliberate, "was abandoned by their families. Too weak to inherit, too untad to control. But look at them now, Kia."

She watched as a small boy his horns chipped, his arm bleeding stood his ground against a creature twice his size. He didn't cry. He didn't run. He fought, screaming as he swung a makeshift blade until it dug into the beast's skull. The creature collapsed, and the boy fell beside it, panting, his body trembling from exhaustion.

But before he could rest, two others leapt at him, stabbing him and taking his kill.

Kia gasped, taking a step forward, but I held her arm firmly.

"Don't," I said. "Here, rcy is betrayal. Help soone, and you beco their enemy. There's only one rule in Gravemourn survive."

Her expression darkened, her hands curling into fists. "That's horrible… this is just cruelty for cruelty's sake."

"Is it?" I asked quietly. "Or is it truth in its purest form?"

She turned toward , anger flashing in her eyes, but I continued before she could speak.

"Here, no one cares who your parents are. No one cares about your bloodline or your potential. The only thing that matters is what you can do and what you're willing to give up to live another day."

We walked deeper through the stronghold, passing by a pit where young demons were forced to fight under the watchful gaze of a towering figure — a judge wrapped in chains, his face covered by a bloodstained mask. The fights were brutal, savage even, but the crowd around them cheered — not out of joy, but desperation.

"Why would anyone create such a place?" Kia muttered.

"Because it works," I replied. "This city belongs to the Emoire family, one of the oldest demon clans on the continent. They believe strength only grows when stripped of everything else — privilege, pride, safety. Those who rise from this place beco monsters the world fears."

She shivered. "That's insane."

I smiled faintly. "And yet, tell , Kia… do you think they're wrong?"

She fell silent, her gaze lingering on a young girl — her body covered in scars, her eyes calm as she stood over the corpse of her opponent. The crowd around her roared, and for the first ti, Kia saw it — the pride in the eyes of soone who had earned her place, not inherited it.

It was then that I spoke again, my voice softer, almost thoughtful.

"You see, Kia… talent is a double-edged sword. The gifted rise fast, but they fall even faster when the world stops favouring them. They grow addicted to success — unable to fight when things turn hard. But those who crawl, those who bleed and break and rebuild themselves — they beco sothing talent can never match."

Kia frowned. "So… you brought here to make feel grateful?"

"Not grateful," I said. "Aware."

We turned into a smaller alley, where the sounds of fighting faded into whispers. Here, the walls were covered in carvings — nas etched in demonic script, each glowing faintly. Kia tilted her head. "What's this?"

"The Wall of the Fallen," I said. "Every na here belongs to soone who once entered Gravemourn. Only a handful survived. The rest beca part of the city itself."

Her eyes traced the nas. Thousands. Tens of thousands. It felt endless.

And yet, among them, a few glowed brighter — those who had survived and left their mark upon the world. Each of them had risen from the ashes of this pit to beco legends.

I could see the silence settle in her. The defiance that had burned within her earlier now began to twist — not into submission, but contemplation. She was starting to see.

"Do you know," I said quietly, "that so of the strongest demons to ever walk this world were once called failures? Even the Empire's grand marshal began here. He was born without a single demonic trait. They threw him into Gravemourn when he was six. By the ti he was sixteen, he had conquered it. Now, the sa family that discarded him kneels before him."

Kia didn't respond. Her expression softened, her gaze distant as we continued walking. The path led us deeper, toward the central district — the Spire of Chains, a colossal black tower that rose from the heart of the stronghold. Around it, blood-red banners fluttered in the hot wind.

From within, the faint echoes of screams and laughter drifted out — the two sounds indistinguishable from each other.

"What happens in there?" Kia asked, her voice a whisper.

"That," I said, my eyes narrowing, "is where those who have survived long enough are tested. The ones who pass leave as warriors. The ones who fail…" I gestured toward the cracks in the ground, where faint whispers echoed. "Feed the city."

Kia shuddered, her gaze fixed on the tower. "That's—"

"—Life," I interrupted gently. "Raw and honest. There are no blessings here, no divine interventions. Only effort, pain, and willpower. And you, Kia… you've had the luxury of never needing to face that."

She turned to , anger and guilt flickering across her face. "So what, you think I'm spoiled?"

I chuckled softly, shaking my head. "No. I think you've forgotten what your power ans. You've been asuring yourself by how fast others move — not by what you can endure."

Kia looked away, her jaw tightening. The silence between us grew thick, broken only by the distant cries from the fighting pits.

"You brought here to humiliate ."

"No," I said, my tone calm but firm. "I brought you here to remind you — your worth isn't decided by how much talent you have. It's by what you do with it when everything else is stripped away."

She didn't answer. Instead, she watched the city again — the chaos, the fighting, the survival. Slowly, sothing began to shift in her gaze.

Maybe it was understanding. Maybe it was pain. Maybe both.

As the night fell over Gravemourn, the fires across the city began to glow brighter, casting twisted shadows that danced across the cracked streets. The sound of the wind was joined by faint murmurs — prayers of those who wanted to live another day.

I looked at Kia, her face illuminated by the eerie red glow, and said quietly,

"Welco to Gravemourn, Aunt. The place where talent dies… and the will to live begins."

And with that, we continued forward — deeper into the city's veins, where the true lesson awaited.

You are reading Heavenly Opposers Chapter 321 320-The City Where Talent Dies on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

The Conquerors Path cover
Same author

The Conquerors Path

Chaosking ·Adventure

Havinglivedanormallifeallhislifeanddiedwithoutbeingabletofulfillhisdesireandwhenhe’sgivenataskbyagod,watchhowhetakestheprotagonistsgirlswhilemaking...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.