Font Size
15px

"Quickly, get the artisans moving. Build a temporary floating platform. Now."

Watching from the rear, Loki imdiately realized sothing was wrong.

The Rainbow Bridge was narrow. At most, six Asgardian soldiers could advance at a ti, and they were being t by exactly six defenders. Every clash beca a controlled six-on-six engagent. Worse still, Rowan’s group wasn’t throwing defeated soldiers into the void beneath the bridge. They were rely knocking them down.

That created a fatal bottleneck.

The soldiers behind couldn’t advance without first pulling their fallen comrades back for treatnt. Each delay bought the defenders precious seconds to recover their breath. Six enemies fell, a pause followed, then another six. Over ti, the defenders barely felt fatigue, while Asgard’s montum steadily bled away.

Asgard might have tens of thousands of citizens, but fewer than ten thousand true warriors. Loki couldn’t afford to let them be worn down like this.

Monts later, golden devices were carried onto the bridge by Asgardian artisans. With a hum of energy, radiant light unfolded outward, forming massive floating platforms that linked seamlessly with the Rainbow Bridge. In seconds, an enormous combat field surrounded the control chamber, eliminating the choke point entirely.

Now soldiers could attack from all sides.

"Not good," Steve muttered.

The pressure surged instantly. What had been manageable beca overwhelming. The defenders were forced back step by step as waves of Asgardian soldiers flooded in from every direction. Injuries began to appear. Steve started calling down lightning more frequently, hamr blazing with thunder.

But he wasn’t Thor.

The power he wielded ca entirely from the hamr, not from within. His control over lightning lacked the depth and endurance of its true master.

"Bruce," Steve shouted, teeth clenched, "it’s ti!"

Seeing the Warriors Three and Lady Sif wounded, Logan riddled with weapons he hadn’t even had ti to pull out, Steve knew they were out of options.

Bruce didn’t hesitate.

He charged forward with a shout, sprinting straight toward the oncoming soldiers. One spear lashed out instinctively—

—and the Hulk erged.

"HULK!"

The roar shook the platform. With a single sweeping motion, Hulk sent a cluster of Asgardian soldiers flying like broken dolls.

"Hulk, help them!" Betty cried.

Hulk turned, saw her, and nodded once before plunging into the lee.

The tide slowed again.

Loki’s hands trembled with fury.

"These wretched mortals," he snarled. "If that’s how they want it... then die."

He raised the Eternal Spear and summoned the final guardian of Odin’s vault.

The Destroyer descended in a thunderous crash, its uru-tal body radiating ancient power. It leapt straight at Hulk, its face opening to unleash a searing beam of energy that blasted Hulk clear across the platform.

Hulk hit the ground, rolled, then rose with an enraged roar and charged back in.

tal t muscle.

The Destroyer could not be destroyed. Hulk could not be put down. The two locked into a brutal stalemate, neither yielding an inch.

But without Hulk holding the line, the rest of the battlefield tilted sharply against the defenders.

Steve was being pushed back.

Loki laughed. "Now what will you do?"

Above the control chamber, the sky darkened.

Black clouds gathered unnaturally fast, layered thick with crawling veins of lightning.

Loki frowned. "What is this?"

It wasn’t Steve.

Rowan stepped out of the control chamber, eyes finally opening as he rotated his index finger slowly.

"Finished at last," he said calmly.

He raised his hand to the sky.

"Ancient Magic: Thunderstorm Descent."

The clouds answered.

Lightning fell like rain.

Bolts hamred the platform in dense, unrelenting waves. Asgardian soldiers struck by the storm staggered violently, bodies locking up, muscles refusing to respond. Even their legendary physiques couldn’t fully resist it.

They didn’t burn. They didn’t die.

They simply couldn’t fight.

That was enough.

Steve and the others cut through them effortlessly. One strike, one fall. The battlefield inside the storm beca a massacre.

Soldiers outside the storm hesitated, watching their comrades collapse the mont they crossed the boundary.

"Steve," Rowan sent ntally, "help Hulk. Use the hamr. Break that armor."

Steve didn’t question it. He sprinted straight toward the Destroyer, hamr crackling with power.

Lightning magic alone wouldn’t stop it.

Mjolnir would.

As Steve joined Hulk, cracks finally appeared across the Destroyer’s surface.

Rowan held the storm steady, his magic linking to the sky itself. The lightning wasn’t draining him. It was draining the heavens.

He could keep this going until Odin woke.

Loki’s expression finally broke.

"Charge! All of you!" he shouted desperately. "I want to see how long he can hold it!"

You are reading Marvel's master of cosmic magic Chapter 184 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

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