Font Size
15px

Asterion shot

a grim nod, acknowledging the danger. He stepped forward first, releasing a short flick of arcane energy from his dagger. It cut through the illusions in a ragged slash, but the ltdown responded with a vicious snap of tendrils that lashed out, crackling with enough force to burn. I lunged between him and the altar, absorbing the brunt of the energy with my coat, though it left a scorching line across my forearm. Pain flared white-hot. I bit back a hiss—pain was a distraction, a wedge illusions could use. Instead, I swung my blade in a savage downward arc, shattering the illusions that tried to re-form around . Sparks flew, coalescing into fractal shards that pelted my shoulder and stung like dozens of tiny needles.

Sowhere in the swirl of epheral noise, I heard the ltdown's breath again—a deep, ragged exhale that rattled the air. My heart pounded in ti with it, the dryness in my mouth intensifying to the point I half-expected dust to trickle from my lips. Asterion hurled another burst of illusions to counter the ltdown's efforts at regenerating the altar's protective shell. That gave

a mont's window.

I thrust my blade straight into the runes. Their screeching clashed with the ltdown's roar, a cacophony of twisted sound that threatened to shatter my concentration. Summoning the last bits of resilience, I forced the blade deeper. The stone cracked, lines radiating outward in fractal patterns. A jolt of power lashed up my arm, burning my muscles with an almost electric surge. I refused to yield. Another savage strike finished the job, severing the runes with a final crack that reverberated through the corridor. The illusions tethered to that altar flickered, then tore away, leaving the chamber stripped of epheral defenses for a few precious seconds.

My breath ca shallow, each inhale scraping against the dryness in my throat like a dull blade. Asterion half-slumped against the wall, sweat slicking his brow. His eyes locked onto , searching for signs of collapse. I offered him nothing but the sa cold resolve, though inside, I felt the ltdown's presence gnawing at my lungs and sapping my strength.

A heartbeat later, the air thickened as though the temple itself were drawing breath, preparing to push back. A low groan echoed in the corridor, stone grinding against stone. My grip on the sword tightened. I'd felt sothing like this before, in the Ashen Expanse, when illusions realized how close I was to unraveling them. The ltdown wasn't a mind, but it had a will of sorts, a reactive cunning that turned illusions into living defenders.

That was when the specters arrived.

They drifted out from the walls, or maybe they ford from them. Faceless figures of fractured light and shadow, silhouettes so wrong they hurt my eyes. And they felt different—denser, harder to break. Not illusions, or at least not re illusions. These were echoes of the city's forr people, half-manifested through the leyline's instability, as if the ltdown had rummaged through Kael'Thorne's dead mories and given them shape. I felt a chill that had nothing to do with fear—more like a jolt of disgust. The ltdown was forcibly twisting souls, or pieces of them, into partial existence.

The first specter struck fast. Its elongated fingers, sharpened into epheral claws, sliced past my shoulder. I pivoted too late to avoid a shallow graze. Even that slight contact sent a chilling jolt through , illusions scraping across my nerves as though trying to latch on. I snarled under my breath, batting the specter's arm away with my forearm and swiping my sword in a diagonal arc. The blade cut through the specter's torso with moderate resistance, as if slicing a thick sli rather than air. It howled, a static-laced wail that rattled my skull, but it didn't die. My sword passed through empty air as it re-ford behind .

anwhile, Asterion flicked his wrist at another specter, sending a burst of arcane energy that battered epheral limbs aside. The specter rippled, absorbing the impact, then snapped back as if regenerated by the ltdown's stored magic. Asterion cursed under his breath, stepping back to avoid another slash. "They don't break like the others," he muttered, flicking

a glance laced with tension. "Figures."

I adjusted, no wasted motion. The dryness in my mouth had reached a stage where each swallow felt like shards of glass, but I had no ti to dwell. My mind raced: illusions re-ford quickly if not destroyed at the heart. So I struck at the seams where their forms flickered, the points that might anchor them to the ltdown's power. Each well-placed attack forced them to stutter, losing coherence for a second or two. Asterion caught on, shifting tactics. Instead of raw blasts, he conjured illusions of his own—simple shapes or flickers of movent that tangled with the specters' epheral composition, throwing them off balance. That gave

the opening I needed to thrust my sword into their unstable cores, unmaking them from within.

It was brutal, exhausting work. We repeated the pattern: break them, exploit the confusion, drive a final blow. But the ltdown spat forth more specters from the walls. Each ti I felled one, another flickered into existence. My breath turned shallow, limbs heavy as though lead weighed them down. The dryness seared, a constant rasp that set a dull headache behind my eyes. Asterion's movents grew sluggish, spells taking longer to form, illusions from his side less crisp. Still, we fought. Another specter lunged, I cut it off mid-scream. Another tried to coil around Asterion's leg; he stunned it with a crackle of illusions that reversed its form for an instant, letting

slash it to pieces.

"Pace yourself," he warned at one point, voice hoarse from the dryness and effort.

"I don't have that luxury." And it was true. Each mont spent parrying specters was a mont the ltdown could entrench itself further. If we wasted ti, illusions would mount a new wave, perhaps more monstrous. If we advanced too slowly, Belisarius or this so-called Harbinger might find a way to finalize the ltdown's grip on Kael'Thorne. This city was a tinderbox about to explode with cosmic fla. Better to burn my stamina now than die slowly in illusions' jaws.

At last, I cut down the last specter, forcing it into a jittery half-existence before scattering it into sparks. A hush fell, if only for a breath. I turned toward the single passage leading deeper. My mind buzzed with adrenaline and the ltdown's unrelenting presence—like trying to swim through a mire of thick illusions. But the leyline's pulse thundered beyond, stronger now, calling

forward. The ltdown seed to have a center, a vortex where everything converged. That was the only place to sever it all.

We stepped into a chamber that dwarfed the corridors we'd been in. It had a towering ceiling, reaching so high it vanished into swirling illusions at the top. The air was hot, thick, a heat that didn't co from flas but from raw, untad power. At the heart of the chamber churned a vortex: violet-green energy spiraling upward in a storm of fractal patterns and broken reality. It was srizing, in a horrific sort of way, like staring into a wound in the fabric of existence. The dryness in my throat beca a furnace, each breath forging cracks in my lungs.

Encircling that vortex stood a ring of cultists, their hoods drawn, their stances unwavering. They didn't bother turning to see us. They could sense us, or more likely, they were so consud by their ritual that facing us would be redundant—illusions might do the job. But the ltdown had reached a critical mass here, the illusions swirling so thickly that entire sections of the chamber flickered in and out. My gaze picked out columns that half-dissolved whenever the vortex flared, then reassembled an instant later. I braced for a direct assault.

Then ca the high-ranking ones. Three stepped forward, each gripping a runic staff that crackled with energy, illusions weaving around them like serpents tasting the air. They wore more elaborate robes, layered in swirling designs that pulsed with the ltdown's heartbeat. If the lesser cultists outside the temple had proven formidable, these were the ltdown's elite—conduits for power drawn straight from the leyline.

"Three of them," Asterion muttered, tension dripping from his words. "Let's hope that's all."

My gaze flicked over their stances, analyzing. Each staff was a focal point, directing illusions outward to shape them into epheral weapons or barriers. If we tried to slash illusions directly, they'd just re-form, channeling from those staves. "They're channels," I murmured. "Break the focus, collapse the illusions."

We moved in unison, barely exchanging a glance. Asterion took the lead, illusions swirling around his dagger as he conjured a brief, disorienting wave that hamred the first cultist's vision. The man staggered, illusions around his staff shimring in confusion. I drove my sword through his defenses, tal eting epheral resistance. For a mont, I saw the ltdown flicker in his eyes—a swirling sheen that turned them almost serpentine. Then he crumpled, illusions unraveling along with his final breath.

The second retaliated with a surge of fractal energy. I felt the air sizzle, the dryness in my throat intensifying as though it would choke . Heat scorched past my face, singing a few strands of hair. I sidestepped, adjusting low, letting the bolt strike a chunk of rubble behind . The stone crackled, illusions bursting from it like dust devils. Without pausing, I cut through the glyphs engraved on his staff. Each blow chipped away at the illusions' binding. He roared, or perhaps illusions roared for him, but the ltdown's power couldn't outrun the reality of a well-placed blade. In seconds, the staff shattered. Magic sputtered. The illusions turned on their master, devouring him from within in a pulse of raw light that left nothing but a charred husk.

The third attempted to retreat, but Asterion darted in, slashing at the staff's base. A crack ford, illusions flickered. The cultist tried to nd it, chanting in a low monotone that vibrated the air, but it was too late. One swift final strike severed his focus. The illusions flared and popped, and the staff fell in useless pieces to the ground. The ltdown swallowed him in an anguished swirl.

As the last cultist fell, the entire chamber shifted. The illusions stilled, as though the ltdown recognized it had lost key defenders. The vortex turned—no better way to phrase it. That swirling funnel of violet-green energy pivoted like an eye tracking us, acknowledging our presence. My stomach clenched, dryness punishing each swallow. We had the ltdown's full attention.

Then ca the voice.

It resonated through the walls, through the vortex, through the leyline itself, a slow peel of thunder that shaped words. "You continue to persist. Admirable, if foolish."

Asterion hissed under his breath. "Wonderful."

I said nothing. My chest felt tight, the dryness scouring my lungs with each breath. Sothing about that voice hit deeper than illusions alone—like the ltdown found a mortal champion to speak for it, or maybe it was Belisarius's looming presence filtered through a new vessel. But the tone reminded

of the visions, of unstoppable flas and swirling cosmic doom. My knuckles tightened on the sword hilt.

The Harbinger.

Before we could respond, a doorway ford against the far end of the chamber. Massive, half-real, illusions weaving across it in fractal lines. My heart thumped once, a heavy pulse that matched the ltdown's, as I realized the path deeper in had just opened. That was the ltdown's dare: co closer, or turn back and watch the city burn.

Asterion exhaled sharply, sweat glistening at his temple. "It's inviting us in."

I tightened my grip on my sword. The dryness in my throat was nearly unbearable, but adrenaline and willpower forced

to ignore it. Then I stepped forward, forging the final step from caution to confrontation. The ltdown might think I was near collapse, but illusions or not, I wouldn't yield an inch.

The door slamd behind us with a burst of fractal light, sealing off retreat.

And the confrontation began.

You are reading The Villain Professo Chapter 589 589: Breaking the Last Defenders 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.