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The sprawling expanse of the governor's mansion was completely unrecognizable, the magnificent building and its nicely kept garden now shattered into a canvas of destruction.

The ground, once smooth and polished, was marred by deep craters, as if the earth itself had beco fragile beneath the weight of the battle.

Cracks spiderwebbed across the estate, turning it into a maze of ruptured stone and dirt.

So fissures stretched for dozens of feet, their jagged edges glowing faintly from the lingering heat of their creation.

Amidst the palette of craters stood a man, the long military coat on his shoulders flapping continuously in the wind, its bottom damaged, burnt, and blackened.

His eyes carried a detached intensity, reflecting the chaos around him.

He stood still, as if the devastation was beneath his concern, rely a trivial consequence of his power.

His boots scraped against the uneven ground as he shifted his stance, surveying the wreckage with an air of grim satisfaction.

Before him, a large figure struggled to rise from one of the deeper craters-a man barely holding onto consciousness, his body battered and bruised. His shirt was ruggedly torn, blood seeping through the lacerated gaps on his skin, and his face was twisted in pain.

"Is this all your strength amounts to?" the man in the military coat asked, his voice cold, devoid of emotion. "I expected more from a governor."

The fallen man coughed, blood splattering onto the cracked ground as he tried to speak, but the effort was futile.

His voice was lost in the wind, swallowed by the vast emptiness of the battlefield that had once been his ho.

Lieutenant Dante sighed boringly. He stabbed his sword impossibly into the ground and brought out another fat blunt from his pocket, complaining in a low tone.

"Damn, I wasted a whole snuff for nothing. If I had known you'd be so easy to deal with, I'd have just fought you with my snuff."

He lit the fat blunt and put it in his mouth. Then he raised his head to look at the governor. He exhaled smoke and sighed.

"What a pathetic state you are in, ntor."

The governor's closing eyes flickered open, and the man began to regain his previous determination.

"Oh oh. That's more like it."

The governor growled painfully, and suddenly-despite his imnse weight and size- disappeared into a blur.

Lieutenant Dante's eyes narrowed slightly as the governor vanished from sight.

He took another long drag from his blunt, the tip glowing faintly in the dim light of the ruined battlefield.

His deanor remained calm, unbothered by the sudden change in the governor's behavior.

"Finally," Dante muttered, exhaling a cloud of smoke. "I was starting to think you'd just lie there and die quietly."

The air around him shifted as the governor reappeared with a thunderous crash, his fist aid directly at Dante's head.

The ground beneath them trembled with the force of his reappearance, sending cracks spiraling outward from where he landed.

Dante puffed out smoke and raised his head slowly to et the governor's enormous fist, a crazed grin on his face.

He tilted his head lazily to the side, avoiding the strike by re inches.

The governor's fist smashed into the ground, creating yet another deep crater.

Dust and debris exploded into the air, montarily clouding their surroundings.

"That's more like it, ntor," Dante said mockingly, tapping the ash off his blunt. "But you're still too slow."

The governor, his face twisted in a mixture of rage and agony, roared as he swung again. This ti, his speed was even greater, each strike coming at Dante with the force of a raging

storm.

The air whistled as his fists cut through it, but no matter how fast he moved, Dante evaded every blow with effortless grace, his body swaying just enough to dodge.

"You taught well," Dante continued, his tone almost playful. "But you forgot one thing... I don't play fair."

Before the governor could react, Dante's form blurred, vanishing from his sight.

For a mont, the governor was left standing in confusion, his heavy breaths echoing in the stillness of the ruined mansion.

Then, Dante reappeared in front of him. What the governor saw Dante holding made him tremble heavily, his entire form seed to cave in as he saw the only apple of his eyes, dangling in Dante's hand with a large hole within her belly, blood trickling down her mouth and belly, running her white shirt.

Everything suddenly beca senseless before the poor man.

"DANTTTTEEEEEEE!!!"

His scream, powerful, roared and reverberated across the whole of Arcadia, causing the very air to shudder with intense pressure.

"Oh!" Dante's mouth opened slightly, surprised as to how the governor still managed to summon so much strength despite having expended himself far enough.

The man grasped a pole of a lampstand that had managed to survive the darkest hours of their battle until this mont.

He pulled it out effortlessly; however, in his hands, the lampstand gained fortification, glowing with a faint purple aura covering its fra, as it increased in size.

The governor's body trembled as he held the fortified lampstand, now transford into a massive, glowing weapon infused with his remaining energy.

His eyes, once filled with pain and despair, now burned with an intensity fueled by rage and loss.

The purple aura around the lampstand crackled with violent energy, pulsating in rhythm with his labored breaths.

Dante stood there, the grin never fading from his face, but a glint of curiosity flashed in his

eyes.

He lazily flicked the ashes of his blunt into the wind and examined the governor's newfound weapon with mild amusent.

"So, this is your last stand, eh?" Dante mused, stepping forward nonchalantly. "Amazing how the rage fueled by loss can ignite greater strength. Honestly, ntor, it's almost touching."

He lazily flung the girl away, the lifeless body thrashing into the nearby wall. The governor didn't respond. His entire focus was now honed in on Dante, his eyes devoid of any traces of humanity, pure rage locked on the Lieutenant that stood before him.

He had taken Dante as a son during his earlier days in the military.

The boy with imnse talent, who was praised as a genius, whom every Citadel would spend every ounce of resources to get but decided to be a soldier. A dog for the governnt.

Back then, the governor, who was just a lieutenant then, had taken this boy as a son, nurtured his talent, and helped him to see the world in a different light.

Who would have thought that Dante would bare the sa fangs which the governor helped him grow at the sa governor?

With a roar that echoed his earlier cry, he charged, the massive lampstand raised high above his head, now a deadly weapon infused with all the power he had left.

The earth trembled beneath his feet as he rushed forward. His speed, despite his heavy fra, defied logic as he swung the lampstand with the force of a hurricane.

The glowing purple aura around it grew brighter, as if feeding off his fury, becoming a beacon

of his final vengeance.

Dante raised an eyebrow, impressed at the sheer speed and power the governor had mustered. But his body remained still, relaxed, as he waited for the inevitable clash.

The lampstand descended with a thunderous crash, the air screaming as it tore through the

space between them.

But just as it was about to connect, Dante moved-his form blurring once again. With impossible grace, he sidestepped the governor's attack, the ground beneath them

exploding as the lampstand impacted the earth, sending chunks of stone and debris flying

into the air.

"Too slow," Dante whispered, appearing behind the governor.

The governor roared in frustration, spinning around with another wild swing, but Dante dodged it effortlessly, his movents fluid and calm.

Each attack was t with the sa frustrating evasion, as if Dante was rely toying with

him.

"You're wasting your ti, old man," Dante said, his tone almost bored now. "This won't change anything. The space between a Sage and a Paragon is enormous, more enormous than

you can ever imagine."

The governor's breathing grew more labored with each swing, his once-unstoppable force

beginning to wane.

But he refused to give up. With every ounce of strength left in him, he continued to fight, each

attack more desperate than the last.

Dante sighed, stepping back to avoid another furious swing.

"You know," he began, stretching his arms casually, "I could have ended this a long ti ago.

But I wanted you to see it. I wanted you to see just how far you've fallen."

As if on cue, Dante disappeared and reappeared instantaneously. He was carrying the governor's dead daughter in his arms like a fallen bride.

His mouth contorted sadly, "She's dead. She really is dead. Your granddaughter. The reason

why you beca a corrupted bastard. The reason why you beca the sa people you loathed. The reason why you abandoned us all, to protect her, to give her a better life, to nurture her. Is this not it?!! Is this not it Salmandell, Iron Wall of the military."

Dante's face crumpled into dark disgust.

"A sage. A re sage is all you were able to amount to. You could have been the strongest if

only you didn't stop chasing."

Neglecting the cries of the lieutenant, the sight of her only reignited the governor's fury, but

his body was betraying him, his movents growing slower, his energy draining with every

failed attack.

The purple aura around the lampstand began to flicker, weakening as the governor's strength

gave out.

His swings beca sluggish, and finally, with one last, pitiful attempt, he swung the glowing weapon at Dante.

The strike was weak, drained of all power, and Dante didn't even need to dodge.

The lampstand slipped from the governor's hands and clattered to the ground.

He stood there for a mont, his body trembling, barely able to keep himself upright. Blood dripped from his wounds, pooling at his feet, and his breathing was shallow, ragged.

Dante watched him, still carrying the governor's daughter, before casually tossing her body

to the ground in front of him.

The governor collapsed to his knees, staring at her lifeless form. Tears stread down his face, mixing with the blood and dirt on his skin.

He reached out with trembling hands, trying to touch her, but his strength was gone.

"Please..." the governor whispered, his voice barely audible now. "Not her... please..."

Dante's grin widened. "You know, ntor, I never did care for sentintality. But watching you now... it almost makes feel sothing. Almost."

With a swift motion, Dante pulled out his sword from where it was buried, the blade gleaming

in the dim light.

He stepped forward, raising it above the governor's head.

"In the end... you are still a crybaby..."

His face struggled for a bit as he heard the governor's voice echo in his ears. He frowned with

determination barely a bit later.

"You were a good teacher," Dante said softly, his voice devoid of mockery for the first ti.

"But all things must end."

The sword ca down, swift and precise.

And with that final strike, the governor's body cleaved into two equal halves, blood gushing

out furiously.

Dante wiped the blade clean and sheathed it, standing amidst the destruction, his expression returning to its usual cold detachnt.

The wind picked up once more, carrying away the dust and debris of the fallen estate.

You are reading I Can Copy And Evolve Talents Chapter 549: The Fallen Estate on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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