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Ti ticked by, and the day of the group’s departure from the HeartForge had arrived. It had been 2 days since Albedo had his breakthrough, and he’d spent the last 48 hours consolidating his foundation and mastering his new level of strength.

The HeartForge had continued its endless rhythm in that ti, the forge fires roaring and dimming in a cycle that was almost alive. The Infernus Smiths had returned to their routines, the clang of their hamrs echoing through molten caverns, the scent of tal and fla forever hanging in the air.

However, sothing had changed, but it seed to be only Albedo who truly noticed it.

The faint tremor in the air whenever he walked near the molten rivers, the way the forgefire seed to bow inward toward him. There was now a very small but noticeable fla authority radiating off of Albedo.

It allowed him to manipulate already burning flas, without even using that much mana, most likely due to his improvent in strength. However, he didn’t test this extensively.

As for the others, they had also spent the previous day making their final preparations. The students had continued refining the weapons and artifacts they had claid.

Zeus testing his reforged gauntlets until they glead like captured suns, Lira ditating beside her Talisman as spectral beasts of molten light prowled around her in lazy circles, and Lucian quietly adjusting the new enchantnts on his blade.

Now it was ti for them to leave, all the various students stood at the forge’s edge that morning, watching as the great rivers of fire flowed beneath the bridges.

The group had gathered near the colossal gate that served as the HeartForge’s entrance, an obsidian arch carved with ancient runes that glowed faintly in the dawn.

Branthor waited there, his massive hamr slung across his back, his soot-streaked beard still carrying the scent of cinders. The old smith looked tired from the strange lancholy that ca with partings.

The air was warm, alive with the forge’s breath. The faint shimr of light from the molten rivers painted everyone in shades of gold and red.

"Well," Branthor said at last, voice booming across the chamber, "it’s been one hell of a ti, hasn’t it?"

Zeus grinned, cracking his neck, "That’s one way to put it. I thought I was going to die the first day."

"You almost did," Lira muttered, smiling faintly. Her red hair shimred in the glow, and her talisman flickered with ember-like light, "You really need to learn to regulate your inter~"

Zeus raised his hands defensively to cut Lira off from finishing her sentence, "Yeah, yeah, lesson learned, no need to keep focusing on that,"

Branthor laughed heartily, the sound like an anvil’s strike, "Aye, lesson learned indeed. The HeartForge has a way of humbling the proud and testing the stubborn, but it also tempers those who endure it,"

The remaining students, led by Lilian and Ysvara finally arrived to leave, and seeing that everyone was here, Branthor spoke, "Well," the Infernus Smith said, his voice softening, "wherever your path takes you next, may your fla never dim."

He turned toward the others. "That goes for all of you. The HeartForge was your trial by fire, and you’ve co through it alive. Whatever cos next, rember what this place gave you. Your weapons, your strength, but most of all, your resolve. That’s what the forge tempers best."

Lira bowed respectfully. "Thank you, Master Branthor. We’ll rember."

Zeus raised his fist with a grin, "Yeah! Next ti we co back, I’ll be a Holy Rank myself!"

Branthor chuckled, the sound deep and warm. "Hah! If you live that long, boy. Don’t mistake it, after a certain level, it’ll take years upon years to improve even just a minor rank, unless you’re incredibly special of course."

The group shared quiet laughter, a rare mont of ease after so much heat and trial.

Then ca the farewells. The Infernus Smiths lined the great causeway leading out of the forge, their hamrs raised in salute, molten runes gleaming on their arms and faces. The air shimred with pride and reverence, a tradition as old as the forge itself.

As the group began to enter the carriages led by the Spectral Horses, Branthor raised his hamr high, "May your flas burn brighter than your fears!" he roared.

The smiths echoed the call, their voices booming like thunder, "Burn brighter than fear!"

The words shook the carriages, echoing deep across the environnt. The carriages continued moving forward, and soon, the air grew cooler and less suffocating, though the faint scent of smoke and iron still clung to everything.

Across from him sat Lira, her crimson hair faintly illuminated by the glowstones lining the carriage walls. She had her legs folded beneath her and her talisman resting on her lap, its surface pulsing with the lazy heartbeat of an ember beast.

She broke the weird silence as she turned to Ysvara, "Soo..where exactly are we heading next?"

Ysvara looked up from the silver tablet she’d been examining. The glow from the rune-screen reflected off her lenses, briefly lighting her sharp green eyes. "Ah, yes. The next site we’ll be visiting..." she paused, letting the words hang for a mont, "is the Sunken City of Vorago."

Zeus cracked an eye open with a raised eyebrow, "Sunken city? Sounds like a beach trip gone wrong."

Ysvara’s expression didn’t change, "If you tried to swim there, it would go wrong. Very quickly."

Elara glanced up from the book she was reading, frowning slightly, "Vorago... I’ve heard of that place before. Isn’t it sowhere in the Demonic Sea?"

"On its outer rim," Ysvara confird, "The Sunken City of Vorago was once the second great Demonic City ever built, a bastion of demonkind before the Abyssal War. During the ancient tis, when the Abyss erged, it was dragged beneath the earth by the will of sothing far greater. So scholars believe it was the Abyss itself that swallowed it. Others say it was sealed deliberately... by the Demon Gods."

The interior of the carriage dimd slightly as the lightstones flickered. Even the thought of Demon Gods carried an almost tangible weight.

Lira leaned forward, curiosity sparkling in her crimson eyes. "And it’s still there? After all this ti?"

"Oh yes," Ysvara replied, voice soft but unwaverin, . "It lies far beneath the Demonic Sea, encased in stone and water. A drowned labyrinth of cyclopean ruins and alien spires, where even the light bends strangely. The demons call it the city that breathes beneath death."

Zeus whistled low, "Sounds like a cheerful place."

"Not in the slightest," Ysvara said. "The abyssal influence there is... heavy. The waters that flood Vorago are tainted, so say they rember the screams of its citizens even now. Abyssal leviathans roam its boulevards, while specters of the drowned still walk its halls."

Lira sighed, though her lips curved into a half-grin, "Wonderful. Just another day in the life."

Zeus chuckled, "You could’ve at least told us to pack swim gear."

Ysvara arched a brow. "You will be provided enchanted suits by the Archeological Division of the Demon Kingdom’s mariti corps. Without them, you’d last less than ten seconds in the blackwater."

"Comforting," Albedo murmured quietly, his voice calm but edged with that dry amusent that ca naturally to him.

Lira turned her gaze toward him. "What do you think, Albedo? You’ve been quiet since we left."

He glanced at her, blue eyes reflecting faint traces of gold in the dim carriage light. "Just thinking," he said simply. "Vorago sounds very cool, I can’t wait to see what’s waiting down there,"

Zeus leaned his head back against the seat, "I don’t know how yall are so positive about this. It’s a haunted and drowning city littered with the Abyss, explain to why this place didn’t just get bombed?"

"Because," Ysvara said quietly, "It is a key place in Demon History, to destroy them would be to erase crucial history that make us who we are. Rembering the past will help us to work for the future,"

That silenced them again. The rhythmic clatter of wheels filled the quiet, mingling with the faint hum of the magic conduits that powered the carriages.

Outside, the tunnels gradually widened. The last traces of molten light faded behind them as they erged into the cool, mineral-scented air of the mountain’s surface. A sky of dark clouds lood overhead, fractured by streaks of crimson light from the sinking suns.

The landscape beyond was rugged and vast, jagged black cliffs, scattered ruins, and distant rivers of mist that flowed like silver veins across the earth.

Far ahead, they could see the desert they arrived from that led back to the Shadow Isles.

The carriages slowed as the terrain evened out, wheels gliding over obsidian plains that reflected the twilight and before long, the group quickly arrived back in the Desert, and far ahead, the faint silhouette of the Shadow Isles could be seen across the horizon.

You are reading The Vengeful Extra's Ascension Chapter 173: Departure! on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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