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As the robed watchers drifted closer, their crackling threads of runes illuminating the oppressive gloom with their crimson glow, a subtle shift occurred beneath David. The shadows, previously inert, stretched unnaturally, elongating like living things, deepening into liquid pools of night. They pulsed with a hidden vitality, a silent current of imnse power that seed to anticipate David's every unvoiced command.

From the deepest part of these expanding shadows, a figure calmly stepped forth. It was Death. Her form, cloaked in robes of swirling midnight, was a stark contrast to the oppressive gold and shadow of the throne room. Her movents were fluid, effortless, utterly devoid of fear or hesitation. She moved with the quiet grace of inevitability itself, her presence a silent promise of destruction to any who dared to oppose her master.

Without a word, without a complex incantation, Death raised a hand. The air around her rippled, bending and distorting as if reality itself was being reshaped. From the swirling darkness of her cloak, a barrier blood, not of solid force, but of fractured twilight.

It shimred with an impossible spectrum of colors, like light shattered into a thousand tiny pieces and then reassembled into a protective shell. It was ethereal, yet impossibly strong, a shimring veil that pulsed with silent power, easily capable of deflecting the oppressive energy emanating from the descending watchers. It humd with a low, resonant frequency, a silent defiance against the Mistress's domain.

Beside her, with the suddenness of a struck gong, the Devil materialised. Not stepping from shadows, but seemingly born from the very tension in the air. Her obsidian sword, a blade of solidified night, was already raised, its surface not rely dark, but actively smoldering with an internal heat that warped the air around it.

Wisps of dark smoke curled from its polished edge, hinting at the raw, destructive power contained within. her eyes, usually a calm, calculating red, now burned with a fierce, unwavering loyalty, fixed on the approaching threats. Her stance was perfect, rooted, poised for imdiate and decisive action. Her aura, though less overtly grand than Death's, humd with a sharp, lethal edge, like a coiled viper ready to strike.

Both Death and Devil stood guard, their forms radiating a silent, unshakeable resolve. They were a bulwark against the encroaching judgnt, their combined presence a testant to the imnse power that served David. They ford an impenetrable defensive line, their gazes fixed on the Mistress and her descending puppets, their forms tense with readiness.

And David, the eye of this brewing storm, simply gazed upward. He did not move, did not speak, did not even seem to acknowledge the impending confrontation with anything more than a passing curiosity. The vastness of the throne room, the chilling power of the Mistress, the encroaching threat of her watchers – none of it seed to disturb his profound calm.

The cosmic gate churned, the black fla dripped, and the robed watchers descended, their crimson rune-threads crackling with power. Death's fractured twilight barrier shimred, and Vivian's obsidian sword smoldered, ready to unleash devastation. The air thrumd with ancient, forbidden magic, pregnant with the promise of conflict.

And David?

David did not act. He did not prepare a spell, did not ready a weapon, did not even shift his weight. He remained utterly still, his gaze fixed on the Mistress floating serenely above the dark gate. A faint, almost imperceptible curve touched his lips. It was a smirk. Not a cruel smirk, or an arrogant one, but a smirk brimming with amusent. It was the smirk of soone who had ticulously planned a grand spectacle and was now settling in to enjoy the show.

It was the smirk of a man who loved such an impossible, thrilling scene.

"For once…" David's voice cut through the thrumming tension, calm and surprisingly light, "…I think I'll be the one getting carried."

His words, simple and direct, held a subtle layer of irony. The Mistress, in her ultimate domain of judgnt, believed she was the one orchestrating the demise of trespassers. Yet, in David's mind, this was rely another stage for his loyal subordinates to shine, another opportunity for him to enjoy the dramatic flair of his grand design. He wasn't the one fighting, not actively, not yet. He was the director, the audience, and the hidden power behind the scene.

He raised a single finger, slowly, deliberately. It was not a gesture of defiance, or of attack. It was a simple beckoning, a silent invitation, as if challenging the entire realm to bring forth its best.

It was a gesture of supre confidence, a quiet, almost theatrical challenge issued to the Mistress and her entire domain. The very air around his finger seed to hum with an unacknowledged power, a silent promise of unimaginable might, ready to unleash if the show required it.

The Mistress's burning sun eyes seed to narrow, just a fraction, as David's words and gesture reached her. Perhaps, for the first ti, a flicker of sothing other than serene certainty crossed her ancient gaze.

However, in the intricate theatre of David's mind, as his gaze swept over Vivian and Seraphina, ready to confront the Mistress's descending puppets, a profound certainty resided. He knew they couldn't handle her, alone, if necessary. The Mistress of the Creed was no re sorceress; she was a leviathan among magic-users, a power player whose na resonated with fear even among the most ancient covens she had once led. Before her enigmatic expulsion as a heretic – a schism the 'novel' vaguely attributed to a pool of her sisters' blood – she had perched at the very pinnacle of the witch hierarchy.

Witches in this realm were a species intrinsically loved by mana, their very essence vibrating with its currents. Their connection to the Sovereign blessed them with an intimate command over Dark power, making humans and other races wary of their veiled might.

But among these mana-blessed beings, there were prodigies, those deed "kissed by darkness" and the Sovereign herself. Such individuals were capable of bringing entire small cities to their knees with a re flick of their hand, and the Mistress was undeniably one of them. David understood this well, the 'novel' having ticulously detailed her formidable strength.

Yet, he also knew a crucial truth: witches of her kind, especially those of the Sovereign's blood, possessed an almost supernatural ability to sll fear. Any hint of weakness, any tremor of doubt in his resolve, and his ticulously crafted plan would crumble to dust. He needed to even the playing field, not with his own power, but with sheer, unyielding bravado. And just in case, flanking him was Vespera. Luna, rged together with his flowing amor of darkness to replicate their strongest skill:

Shadow Wrath.

His strongest servants, his ultimate aces.

Maintaining his theatrical nonchalance, David breathed out, his voice resonating with the quiet authority of a monarch of shadows. "Shall we talk, Mistress of the Creed?" He opened his arms wide, a gesture of defiant, open challenge that drew a subtle, curious raise of the Mistress's ancient brow.

You are reading THE GENERAL'S DISGRACED HEIR Chapter 388: COUNTERMOVE on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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