With her slash, Kurai managed to push back Ursula and give herself so much needed space. Looking down at her keyblade it felt strange but also familiar a sensation most likely due to Hoder's heart which Helios used to make her body. Hoder having been a keyblade wielder before would feel a sense of familiairity even though the underworld has erased her mories. The sensations were still etched in her heart.
The abyss pulsed with stillness as the two won stared each other down.
For a mont, neither Kurai nor Ursula moved. The Shadow Sovereign pulsed in Kurai's grip—an extension of her will, as the power of all the thirteen darknesses fused into one flowed through it. Across from her, Ursula hovered with the trident raised, her form trembling, eyes ablaze with disbelief and fury.
The stillness shattered.
Ursula surged forward, screaming, "You DARE wield that filth against ?!"
Kurai's body blurred into motion—darkness bleeding from her form like wildfire. Her Keyblade ca down in a black arc, colliding with the trident in a blast that sent shockwaves through the sea. The trench around them cracked further. Coral towers toppled.
Kurai pivoted low, dragging her blade along the seafloor, carving a crescent arc of void. The pressure in the water dropped as a gravity well ford—pulling Ursula's massive body off balance. She corrected with a thunderous swing of the trident, parting the waters around her and shattering Kurai's technique.
"You'll sink into the deep!" Ursula spat, channeling power. Tidal arms erupted from the sea floor, each one curling like a serpent. "You'll be buried by the very darkness you claim to wield!"
Kurai narrowed her eyes. "You're mistaken." She raised the Keyblade. "I don't wield darkness…"
A blink—then she was gone. Teleportation.
Kurai reappeared above Ursula's head, bringing the Shadow Sovereign down with brutal force. Ursula barely blocked it, the collision sending a high-pitched screech echoing through the trench.
"…I command it."
The battlefield transford.
Kurai weaved a spiral of shadows mid-air, forming jagged lances that fired in rotating patterns. She zipped between vectors of darkness, blinking through shadow portals like a phantom. Her blade danced in her hand, casting afterimages of itself with each motion.
Ursula roared in frustration, spinning to conjure a tidal do around herself. Lightning burst from the trident's tip, searing through the water.
Kurai ducked and spun, twirling through the bolts with her blade arcing behind her. The spiral teeth caught one bolt mid-flight and deflected it into the sea bed. The impact carved a crater below them.
Ursula unleashed a school of cloned water forms—each mimicking her movents, striking from all sides. But Kurai pulsed once, and all around her dimd. Her Keyblade spun in her hand like a wheel, releasing a sphere of total darkness.
The clones were devoured instantly.
"You learned from him," Ursula hissed, teeth grinding. "That little boy you follow. I see it now—his tricks… his step patterns."
Kurai slashed a series of dark sigils midair, each one glowing with nace. "Well, I did learn it from watching his every move."
The sigils detonated.
Ursula scread as her shields fractured. Kurai lunged in, twirling through the debris, her blade scraping across Ursula's arm. Dark ichor bled into the water. The sea trembled.
Still, Ursula endured.
She raised the trident high and slamd it into the seabed. The ocean convulsed. From the depths rose a vortex, spiraling up with elental force—currents wrapped in lightning and searing heat. Kurai was swallowed whole.
Inside, the pressure mounted. The vortex spun violently, attempting to crush Kurai's body, tear her limbs apart.
But the darkness within her boiled.
Kurai extended her hand, darkness crawling up her arm, thickening like armor. With a roar, she launched herself through the cyclone wall, cleaving a tunnel with the Shadow Sovereign. As she erged, Ursula's eyes widened—just in ti to catch a full-force slash to the trident's shaft.
The divine tal sparked.
Small cracks spiderwebbed through it.
"You…!"
Kurai didn't wait. She teleported again—behind Ursula now—repeating the motion, hamring her blade into the trident. Each impact echoed like a war drum. Ursula staggered back, disoriented, her control slipping.
And Kurai pressed harder.
She spiraled into a full-on assault, chaining sword combos like Helios—angled slashes that struck between breath and heartbeat. She bled into the openings, danced with calculated malice.
Ursula scread and lashed out wildly, but Kurai caught the incoming spell with a dark construct—an ornate shield of abyssal energy, shaped like a sigil-crowned door. The spell shattered harmlessly against it.
Kurai flipped over her, landing behind the back of her neck, and dropped—slamming Ursula's face into the trench floor.
"I was made from your worst nightmares," she whispered.
Ursula roared and surged upward with elental force—cracking the seabed with a seaquake. The water turned chaotic—pressure detonations everywhere. Rocks flew. The battlefield beca a nightmare landscape.
A geyser of cursed light smashed into Kurai's back, sending her flying. Blood and void mist trailed behind her. She hit a crag and dropped—her body convulsing in pain.
Ursula limped forward, bloodied, eyes wild. "You… will never… defeat . Never."
"Well, we'll see about that. After I promised I would. Helios says I should always keep those. So let's not make break my word now." said Kurai
She raised the trident for the killing blow.
Kurai, broken, didn't move.
The sea stilled once more.
And then, with fingers trembling, Kurai raised her blade—slowly. Her breath ragged, her strength near gone. But in her eyes blazed sothing primal, like a dark beast that would devour all.
A silver-black spiral of shadow coiled around her.
And she charged.
Ursula brought the trident down with world-breaking force.
Kurai sidestepped it—barely—and struck the trident one final ti.
It cracked yet again.
The explosion that followed threw both won apart.
Darkness and the trident's energy ruptured in tandem, shattering coral, tearing apart the trench. Debris blanketed the battlefield.
As the waters cald, both combatants lay bloodied and spent on opposite ends of the seafloor.
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