Font Size
15px

Silver flashed through the carnage.

Reynold was in motion, threading through the ruinous airspace of the fragnted realm, an eternal sky fractured by violence.

Suspended landmasses, remnants of cities long devoured by the abyss, hung like shattered mories, their edges crumbling under the weight of the unspoken.

The monstrosities slithered, crawled, and soared through this aerial graveyard, misshapen echoes of sothing ancient and wrong, their bodies a blasphemy of sinew, bone, and tendrils that glistened with otherworldly sheen.

They hunted together, sward like an orchestrated plague, driven not by instinct, but hunger of a deeper sort, primal, unrelenting.

Reynold moved as if untouched by the rules of gravity.

The first beast struck, a serpent-bodied grotesque with too many limbs and eyes weeping ichor, its maw yawning open to devour him mid-air.

Reynold pivoted mid-leap, left foot skimming the surface of a floating stone slab.

His body turned like a pendulum, not with resistance but with control, Montum Control.

Velocity bled from his limbs as he halted instantly, spinning around the creature's fangs with surgical finesse.

The tip of his rapier, a needle of annihilation, plunged through one of the weeping eyes, and fire, not mundane, but sovereign, blood.

The phoenix flas ignited from within.

The creature scread, no sound, only distortion.

It burst into cinders, then ashes, then nothing.

Reynold was already gone.

He dashed forward, crossing an impossible distance with unnatural acceleration.

Montum gathered behind him like a storm given form.

Another abomination lunged, a bipedal aberration with wings of bone, arms like clubs, and a mouth where its chest should be.

Reynold didn't slow.

His rapier carved a straight line through the creature's extended limb before leaping into a feint, vaulting from a suspended obelisk mid-spin.

He twisted in mid-air, flipped sideways, and ca down with a flourish, the tip of his blade stabbing through the air.

The flas were gone.

In their place, lightning surged.

Violet arcs snapped and danced from his blade to the beast's open core.

The impact was not explosive, but surgical.

The energy surged into the body, found the nervous system, and incinerated thought before pain.

It collapsed before it understood death.

Reynold landed on the side of a floating spire, defying inertia, the soles of his boots barely touching stone before he pushed off again, redirecting velocity downward, not falling, but choosing speed.

Montum Control, an ability that did not shout, but whispered through each movent, bending the world's forces to his whim.

He was a storm contained in human form, dancing with elegance in an arena built for monsters.

The air thickened.

A quadrupedal colossus made of at and teeth erupted from below, crashing into an entire landmass.

Stone cracked, pillars tumbled, remnants of ancient buildings were reduced to powdered ruin.

It was large enough to blot out Reynold's form, a shadow of sheer carnage.

He surged upward, lightning trailing behind his body like a cloak spun from storms.

Montum reversed mid-air.

He twisted, then struck.

His rapier didn't aim for vitals.

It beca one.

It touched what no one else could see.

The beast spasd, its joints locking in unnatural angles, its flesh sizzling in violent rebellion.

Lightning split it from within, and its mountainous mass fell in pieces that shattered lesser floating ruins beneath.

One by one, the suspended remnants of civilization were decimated, not by Reynold's hand, but as collateral to the savagery of his dance.

The next sequence ca too fast to register.

A winged horror dived from above, skin transparent, bones etched with shifting runes. Reynold, already airborne, shifted montum sideways, stopping himself mid-flight.

His trajectory folded like silk around the beast's claw, missing it by a hair's breadth.

He slid along the creature's spine, leaving behind a flickering line of fire, then jumped again, not off its back, but off the air itself, bending motion like an artisan sculptor.

The creature erupted mid-scream, flaming from the inside out.

Reynold did not pause.

He landed, then vanished.

Another abomination, a leviathan stitched from several torsos, coiled its mass around a floating cathedral ruin and hurled it.

The structure collided with a smaller slab, pulverizing the sky-road beneath.

Reynold shot through the falling debris, weaving between chunks of civilization as they tumbled, untouched, unscathed.

Where others would have faltered or flinched, Reynold was perpetual montum.

He had no equal in this space.

The numbers of the monsters were aningless.

They ca in tens, in dozens, and in hundreds, and yet the sky remained filled only with his movent and their corpses.

Fire blazed again.

This ti it burned more vividly, phoenix flas, ethereal and regal, cascading from the blade in fluid motions that looked like art, not combat.

His movents weren't frantic.

They were composed, deliberate, the product of a calculating mind in the body of a dancer.

He landed atop a horned monstrosity, slid forward as it tried to recoil, and drove his rapier through the center of its skull.

The flas didn't consu, they judged.

The abomination ceased to exist not in fire, but in pure light, its essence discarded as if it were unworthy of the battlefield.

Another volley ca, monsters leaping across fragnts of buildings, howling, charging, clawing at the air.

Their numbers no longer mattered.

They could not reach him.

He had beco untouchable.

Not through brute strength.

Not through raw aura.

But through dominance of motion.

Through mastery of Montum Control, Reynold's battlefield was not the shattered sky.

It was everything that moved within it.

He drew speed from falling stones, launched from angled rubble, twisted through gravity's will like a craftsman navigating threads.

He struck only when he needed to, each blow ending sothing unnatural.

Each movent a page in a silent scripture of annihilation.

Flas.

Lightning.

Silence.

Precision.

He had beco part of the battlefield, his every leap and strike a seamless dance, tracing a line between heaven and earth, fire and lightning, life and oblivion.

There was no room for hesitation.

No thought of retreat.

Each monstrosity that sought to confront him was erased before it could so much as register its own demise.

The floating landmasses beneath him quaked under the weight of his movents, their stone foundations cracking and splitting as his body defied the very laws of physics.

He slid off the side of a crumbling tower, narrowly avoiding a massive clawed swipe, then planted his feet on the edge of a decaying bridge to propel himself into a backflip, his rapier cutting through the air as he flew.

As his body spun, a cascade of phoenix flas erupted, leaving behind a flaming arc that danced in the wake of his leap.

The flas were not re destruction; they were a cleansing force, a purification that turned monstrous flesh into smoldering ash.

A trio of horrors, lumbering beasts, one with a spiked club for an arm, another with a maw filled with serrated teeth, and the third a writhing mass of tendrils, charged toward him in unison.

Their grotesque forms twisted through the debris choked sky, their movents synchronized, their hunger overwhelming. Reynold didn't flinch.

His rapier moved before the attack even ca.

He crossed his blade over the first beast's club, deflecting it with a fluid turn, then shifted in mid-air to avoid the second creature's gnashing teeth.

With a single flick of his wrist, the tip of his rapier punctured the third monstrosity's central eye, detonating a burst of electricity as his lightning infused strike surged through the creature's body, rendering it nothing more than charred remnants.

The remaining two monsters were already turning to engage again, but they had no ti.

Montum Control.

Reynold twisted, his body folding in the air, altering his trajectory mid-flight, his rapier a silver blur as it carved through the first creature's ribs.

The strike was so precise, so controlled, that it passed through the massive creature's defenses with the gentleness of a breeze.

The monstrosity's heart, a twisted mass of coagulated sinew and venomous energy, collapsed under the pressure, and the beast crumbled into itself, its massive form crumbling as if it were nothing more than sand.

Without missing a beat, Reynold turned, now airborne above the final beast.

He corkscrewed down, landing softly atop its back with the grace of a dancer, his rapier sinking into its skull.

The monstrosity screeched in agony, its bones splitting from the force of the blow.

Lightning arced from Reynold's body, seizing its body with a violent, stuttering pulse that sent shockwaves through its massive fra.

In re seconds, it was reduced to a smoking heap, unable to withstand the surge of energy coursing through it.

Around him, the remaining landmasses teetered precariously, so of them already crumbling as if afraid to bear witness to the power he wielded with such casual precision.

His movent was flawless, fluid, efficient, and utterly unforgiving.

Two more horrors erged from the shadows, their gnarled, skeletal hands reaching out to grasp at him, their bodies fused with warped tal and twisted flesh.

Reynold's expression remained calm, calculating, his rapier already in motion before they had even fully entered his sights.

One attempted a wide swipe, but Reynold twisted his body, using his montum to dance underneath the attack, the rapier slashing through the exposed belly of the creature as he passed beneath it.

The beast scread, though it had no tongue to utter such sound, and its body erupted into flas, consud by the ever-present heat of the phoenix flas that trailed him like a fiery cot.

The second creature wasn't quick enough to react to his speed, its attempts at defense failing miserably as Reynold launched himself forward, crossing the space between them in the blink of an eye.

His rapier pierced through its throat with such force that it broke through bone, continuing its journey into the thing's heart.

A blast of violet lightning detonated from the point of contact, shattering the creature's skull as the rest of its body collapsed in a heap of liquefied viscera.

The sky, already filled with the floating wreckage of ruined lands, continued to tremble with each death that Reynold inflicted.

He danced through the madness, uncaring of the chaos around him, his movents an elegant blur that left destruction in its wake.

He wasn't tired.

He wasn't injured.

He wasn't even challenged.

Montum Control allowed him to push his body to its absolute limits, redirecting his energy with precision, accelerating and decelerating as the situation demanded.

His rapier beca an extension of his will, graceful, lethal, unstoppable.

Another wave of monstrosities approached.

This ti, they ca in greater numbers, their twisted bodies weaving through the broken cityscape like so nightmarish tide.

They ca in all forms, spined, segnted, grotesque, each one hungry for his flesh.

But Reynold didn't see them as a threat.

Their numbers ant nothing in the face of his ability to control montum.

Their attacks were re distractions, and their strength was irrelevant.

He leaped once more, soaring over the battlefield, his blade flashing as it cut a bloody arc through the air.

One of the monstrosities, a hulking beast with iron claws, rushed toward him, but Reynold simply slowed his descent, catching the thing's claws on the edge of his rapier with minimal effort.

He didn't stop, though.

Instead, he spun, using the montum to launch himself back into the sky, his rapier cutting down at a sharp angle.

The beast's claws were severed in a single, fluid stroke, its massive body swaying as if confused by the sudden loss.

Before it could recover, Reynold was already upon it again, his movents a blur of speed and precision.

His blade danced, slicing through its armored skin with ease, until the creature was little more than a pile of shredded flesh.

And then, without hesitation, he moved on.

More fell, one by one, to his onslaught, their bodies torn apart as he cut a path through the monstrosities with ease, his rapier a shining beacon of destruction amidst the shattered remains of a ruined world.

Ti was irrelevant in the sky of floating ruins.

Reynold was a force of nature, a storm contained in human form, his every action perfect, his every movent a calculated masterpiece of martial grace.

The monstrosities could never hope to catch him.

There was only the dance.

The constant, unending dance of destruction.

The battlefield was his to shape.

The monstrosities would continue to co, their numbers endless, their forms grotesque and hungry.

But Reynold did not care.

He would never stop.

He was the storm, and they were the wreckage.

You are reading MIGHT AS WELL BE OP Chapter 408: The Storm on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.