Chapter 156: Symphony of Silk
Kuan’s eyes narrowed as Adam’s crimson gaze locked onto him—focused, predatory, utterly without fear. A grin spread across the bandit lord’s brutal features, slow and dangerous.
"Heh. Sounds like things are getting lively out there too." Kuan’s massive shoulders rolled, muscles flexing beneath his intricate tattoos. "I’ll pay you back twice over for the trouble you’ve caused."
Kuan’s kerambit spun in his grip, the blade catching the torchlight in gleaming arcs. Then his aura erupted—a savage, bloodthirsty pressure that filled the cavern like a physical weight. It was the aura of a predator who had never t prey that could fight back. Crude, but potent. The tattoos on his body seed to writhe, dark energy pulsing along their lines.
Adam’s Crown materialized fully on his brow, its presence cold and hungry. His own aura answered Kuan’s— with sothing far more ancient. Sovereign pressure. The weight of a being who had crawled from the deepest dark and evolved beyond death.
"That’s not going to happen," Adam said flatly.
He moved.
Mirage Cascade blurred him into three afterimages, each one darting forward on a different trajectory. Kuan’s eyes tracked them—and widened slightly when he realized he couldn’t tell which was real.
The real Adam materialized at Kuan’s flank, dark energy already coalescing in his palm. Abyssal Piercer—a projectile of void energy sheathed in searing heat, designed to ignore defenses and destabilize its target from within.
Kuan twisted. His kerambit ca up in a blur, eting the projectile not with a block, but a precise deflection. The attack screeched off his blade and embedded itself in the cave wall, where it sizzled and ate into the stone, leaving a small crater of dissolved rock.
"Fast," Kuan admitted, already recovering his stance. "But not fast enough."
His kerambit blazed—literally. Flas erupted along its edge, not natural fire, but sothing dark and hungry, the sa energy that pulsed in his tattoos. Kuan lunged, and his blade traced a burning arc through the air.
Adam twisted. The kerambit caught him across the ribs.
Pain lanced through him—sharp, burning, wrong. The wound wasn’t deep, but sothing in that strike lingered, clinging to his flesh like tar. Before he could recover, Kuan was already moving again, his massive form sohow fluid as water.
"BLAZING VOLLEY!"
Dark fire erupted from Kuan’s free hand, not as a single blast but as a storm of projectiles—dozens of them, each one burning with that sa hungry fla. They filled the cavern, leaving no room to dodge.
Adam’s body responded, but slowly. Too slowly.
’My body’s heavy...’ The realization crystallized in his mind. ’That first cut—it’s weighing
down. So kind of debuff. Not bad.’
He couldn’t dodge. So he didn’t try.
Adam’s arms crossed before his face, his body curling into a protective ball. Scales rippled across his skin, thicker than before, reinforced by the layered defenses of Monarch’s Aegis. The fire projectiles slamd into him one after another—BOOM BOOM BOOM CRACKLE HSSSS—each impact driving him back a step, carving shallow craters in his scales.
Through the explosions, Kuan appeared. His kerambit swept down in a devastating arc, aid at Adam’s exposed neck.
Adam’s scaled forearm shot up.
tal t scale with a deafening CRAAAACK. Sparks showered between them, illuminating both their faces in harsh strobes. Adam’s Aegis held—just barely—the blade stopping inches from his throat, caught in the crook of his armored arm.
Kuan’s eyes widened. Then narrowed. A grin split his brutal features.
"Not bad," he rasped. "Not bad at all."
Adam’s crimson eyes burned through the smoke. "You’re going to regret every second of this."
Kuan’s grin twisted into a snarl. "Don’t waste my ti with your empty threats, bastard!"
Dark fire erupted from his entire body—not in projectiles this ti, but in a concentrated mass that gathered above him, swirling and coalescing into the shape of a massive spear. It hung in the air for a heartbeat, aid directly at Adam’s chest.
Then it launched.
The spear of black fla crossed the distance in an instant. Adam’s arms were still raised from blocking the earlier volley—he couldn’t dodge in ti. The spear slamd into him with the force of a battering ram, exploding against his scaled chest in a shower of dark embers.
BOOM—CRACKLE—HSSSSSS!
Adam skidded backward, his boots carving trenches in the stone floor. Smoke rose from his chest where the spear had struck. The scales there were cracked, blackened, oozing thin trails of blood where the dark fire had found purchase.
’He’s strong,’ Adam acknowledged, his breathing controlled despite the pain. ’Stronger than I expected. But strength alone won’t—’
He didn’t finish the thought. His body was already moving.
Pressurized Spines.
A volley of high-pressure, water-aspected projectiles launched from his scales in a spreading arc. They weren’t aid at Kuan’s body—they were aid at the ground around him, at the ceiling above him, at every surface that could provide footing.
Kuan’s eyes widened as the spines struck. Stone shattered. Dust exploded. The ground beneath his feet beca unstable, chunks of rock breaking loose and sliding.
Seismic Shatter.
Adam slamd his palm against the fractured ground. The shockwave rippled forward—not a wide blast, but a focused, directional tremor designed specifically to exploit the instability his spines had created.
The effect was imdiate.
Kuan’s massive form, for all his speed and power, relied on solid footing to execute his attacks. The combination of broken ground and targeted seismic force robbed him of that foundation. His stance crumbled. He stumbled, one knee dropping, his arms flailing for balance.
It was only a mont. Less than a second.
But for soone like Adam, a mont was all he needed.
Monarch’s Pierce.
Adam beca a blur focused speed. His body aligned into a single, devastating line of force, his shoulder lowered, his form sharpening into the ultimate armor-piercing technique. The sa strike that had shattered the core of the Wind Elental Sovereign.
He hit Kuan square in the chest.
CRAAAAAAAAACK—BOOM!
Kuan’s eyes bulged. For a frozen instant, he hung in the air, suspended by the force of Adam’s strike. Then his massive body rocketed backward, flying across the cavern like a ragdoll. He crashed into a support pillar—a thick column of natural stone—and kept going, the pillar exploding into rubble behind him. He smashed into the cavern wall with a sound like a collapsing building, stone cracking, dust erupting.
Then, from the rubble, a groan. Movent. Kuan’s massive form stirred, pushing himself upright, his chest caved in slightly, blood streaming from his mouth. His eyes, when they found Adam, held sothing new—not fear, but genuine shock.
"You... hit like a dragon..." he rasped, spitting blood.
Adam straightened, rolling his shoulder. The wound on his chest throbbed, but his regeneration was already working, scales knitting back together.
"Thanks for the complint," Adam said flatly. "Now stay down."
Kuan’s lips peeled back from bloody teeth in a snarl. "Not... a chance..."
He pushed himself fully upright, his massive fra swaying but holding. The tattoos on his body pulsed with renewed dark energy, and the flas around his kerambit reignited.
anwhile, on the other side of the cavern, the dance between Lilith and Amar had reached its inevitable conclusion.
Lilith stood amid a scattering of severed threads and blood spatter—none of it hers. Her elegant form was untouched, her pale skin unmarred, her crimson eyes fixed on her opponent with the mild interest of a cat watching a dying mouse. She glanced toward Adam’s fight, noting how he dominated the massive bandit lord, and a small, satisfied smile curved her lips.
"Aren’t you worried about your boss?" she called out, her voice carrying that silken, mocking tone. "He’s being completely dominated, you know. He might actually die~"
Amar crouched several paces away, his body a ruin of cuts and gashes. His leather armor hung in tatters, revealing deep wounds that oozed blood with every labored breath. One arm hung limp at his side—dislocated, maybe broken. His poisoned daggers were still clutched in his remaining good hand, but his grip trembled.
Despite everything, he laughed. A wet, bloody sound.
"Keep... laughing, you bitch," he rasped, spitting crimson onto the stone. "You’ll get yours. Boss doesn’t die that easily. He’s survived worse than this."
Lilith’s smile widened. "Bold words from soone who can barely stand."
Amar’s eyes blazed with desperate fury. With a guttural roar, he launched himself forward—not with the speed and precision of earlier, but with the reckless, wild charge of a cornered animal. His dagger swept toward Lilith’s throat in a wide arc.
Lilith didn’t move. Didn’t flinch. Her head simply tilted slightly, allowing the blade to pass inches from her face.
"Pathetic," she murmured.
Her fingers twitched.
Sovereign Silk materialized from the shadows, from the walls, from the very air—threads that had been woven throughout the cavern during their entire fight, waiting, watching, patient. They wrapped around Amar’s limbs, his torso, his neck, in the space between heartbeats.
Amar’s charge halted mid-stride. He hung suspended, limbs spread-eagled, his face frozen in an expression of shock and dawning horror.
Lilith approached him slowly, savoring each step. Her heels clicked against the stone with delicate precision. When she stood before him, close enough to whisper, her crimson eyes drank in his terror.
"You’ve fought hard," she said softly, almost kindly. "But watching you struggle so desperately... it’s beco tedious." Her voice dropped to a purr. "So die."
Her fingers curled.
The threads tightened.
CRACK. CRACK. CR-CR-CRACK.
A symphony of breaking bones filled the cavern—ribs snapping, vertebrae grinding, limbs bending at angles that nature never intended. Amar’s scream started as a guttural roar of defiance and ended as a wet, strangled gurgle as his ribcage collapsed inward.
Lilith’s eyes fluttered half-closed. Her lips parted slightly, a soft, ecstatic sigh escaping her.
"Ahhh... that sound..." She tilted her head, listening to the final, wet pops of Amar’s body surrendering to her silk. Her smile was radiant, beatific. "So beautiful. Truly, there is no music sweeter than the final notes of a stubborn prey."
Amar’s body went limp. The daggers clattered from his dead fingers.
Lilith released the threads, letting the broken corpse crumple to the ground in a heap. She stepped over it without a second glance, her attention returning to Adam’s fight with renewed interest.
"How is your battle progressing, Adam?" she called out, her voice returning to its usual serene lody as if she hadn’t just executed a man with artistic cruelty. "Mine has reached its... conclusion."
She glanced back at Amar’s body, then at the elf prisoners in their cage—so watching with wide, horrified eyes, others too broken to react.
"Shall I assist you with yours?"
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