The crude gate loomed ahead, casting jagged shadows that cut across the forest floor. Made of sharpened logs lashed together with crude rope, it was a monument to savagery, crowned with skulls mounted like trophies. Some were cracked, others half-rotted, their toothy grins mocking any who dared approach. The air here felt heavy, foul with the stench of rot and smoke.
Two hobgoblins stood guard at the entrance. Each was a hulking slab of muscle and malice, taller than Yukio by a head. Sweat glistened across their leathery green skin, tusks jutting from snarling mouths. Their massive axes leaned against the gate, but even in their lax stances, they radiated the promise of violence. Michibiki crouched low behind a tree trunk, her silver hair catching stray streaks of sunlight as her keen eyes studied the enemy. Her calm presence only made the atmosphere feel more oppressive; where Yukio's heartbeat thundered in his ears, her breathing remained slow, even, controlled. "We need to find a way in," She murmured, her voice steady but firm. "Aside from those two, it looks like they didn't bother posting more guards." Yukio clenched the hilt of his sword, trying to swallow the dryness in his throat. Up close, the hobgoblins didn't just look bigger, they looked wrong. Their shoulders were as broad as doors, their fingers tipped with nails more like claws. "How do you even know they're hobgoblins?" He muttered. "Sure, they're bigger, but" "Appraise," Michibiki interrupted, her tone clipped. "Focus on one. Think it." Skeptical, Yukio obeyed. He fixed his eyes on the nearest brute, narrowing his focus until suddenly a shimmer of light appeared in the corner of his vision. [Monster-data] Monster-type: Hobgoblin. Level: 8. He blinked. "Whoa. That's like an actual RPG stat screen. This starter pack is crazy. I'm guessing I'm the only one who has it?" Michibiki's lips curved slightly, almost like she was amused by his awe, but her tone stayed cool. "Yes. It's a gift to keep you alive. Now hush. We're not here for sightseeing." Yukio swallowed and nodded, forcing his nerves down. They crept forward, branches snapping softly underfoot. The hobgoblins barely stirred, unaware of the danger slinking toward them. Michibiki lifted a hand, mana shimmering across her fingers. "Light Spell: Dreamfall." Two radiant glyphs materialized above the guards' heads. In an instant, their eyes glazed over, bodies sagging before they crashed to the dirt, snoring with guttural snores that shook their chests. Yukio exhaled in disbelief. "Scary strong," He muttered. "When do I get to" "Later," She said firmly. Her voice cut through his thoughts, eyes gleaming. "For now… finish them." Yukio froze. His fingers tightened around his sword until his knuckles whitened. Finish them? His stomach lurched. These things weren't threatening him now, they were asleep. It felt wrong. Back home, he'd fought dirty, sure, gambling dens, alley brawls, but this? "Don't hesitate," Michibiki's voice was colder this time, her gaze sharp enough to cut. "Hesitation will get you killed in this world." His throat tightened. He knew she was right. But that didn't make it easier. With a sharp inhale, he stepped forward. His sword felt heavier than it ever had. He raised it high, closed his eyes for a heartbeat, then drove it down. Steel pierced flesh with a sickening crunch. Warmth splashed his hands. His stomach churned, and for a moment, he thought he might vomit. He forced himself through a second strike. By the time he stepped back, the hobgoblins were nothing but ash and loot on the ground. Michibiki swept her hand, and the remains vanished into her spatial storage. "Move." Before he could even wipe his shaking hands clean, she cast another spell. Light shimmered and bent around them, cloaking them in near invisibility. "Light Spell: Phantom Veil." Yukio blinked as his arms faded to air. "We're invisible?" "Correct. Stay close." Together, they slipped through the gate. Inside, the goblin camp was a hive of filth and chaos. Dozens of small green bodies bustled about. Some gathered around fires, tearing into charred meat with jagged teeth. Others hammered crude weapons on stone anvils, sparks rising into the smoke choked sky. The air was foul, sweat, blood, grease, and something rotten all mixed together. Yukio wrinkled his nose. "Smells like the trash pits behind a pachinko parlor." "Focus," Michibiki whispered sharply. Yet Yukio caught the faintest quirk of her lips before she turned away. Her hand rose, light condensing into a blazing orb. "Fire Spell: Sizzling Combustion!" The orb streaked into the camp and detonated. A thunderous blast of fire rolled outward, consuming goblins, huts, and weapons alike. Fifteen creatures shrieked as flames devoured them, dissolving into ash before they could even run. A second blast followed, doubling the carnage. Yukio stared, wide-eyed. "…Yeah, scary strong." But he wasn't going to be overshadowed. He charged into the fray, blade flashing. Each swing cut down goblins, their bodies bursting into dust. His lungs burned, his arms screamed, but something primal lit inside him, the gambler's high, the rush of dancing on the edge. For the first time in this world, he felt alive. Minutes later, the camp was a ruin. Fires crackled through splintered huts, smoke curling into the sky. Yukio stood amid the wreckage, chest heaving. Then, A shrill chant split the silence. From the flames, a goblin shaman emerged, its staff glowing red, eyes burning with unnatural light. Two hobgoblins flanked it, their growls vibrating the air. The shaman's voice rose in a spell. Yukio felt the veil of invisibility tearing, the world focusing in on them. "Damn," Michibiki muttered. Too late, the shaman had seen them. But Yukio moved before he thought. His body blurred, sword flashing across the shaman's throat. The chant cut off as blood sprayed. The two hobgoblins roared, voices shaking the forest. Skill: Battle Cry! The shockwave shattered what remained of the veil, forcing Yukio and Michibiki into the open. The beasts charged. --- The first slammed into Michibiki's barrier, fists cracking against a translucent wall of blue light. She didn't flinch. Calm as ever, she clenched her fist, golden mana blazing. "Sacred Arts: Divine Impact!" Her punch blasted into its gut like a cannon. The hobgoblin lifted from the ground, folding unnaturally before slamming down. She followed with a spinning kick, her heel blazing with divine light. The monster's skull shattered into dust, loot scattering across the dirt. She dusted ash from her sleeve. "Your turn, chop chop now." Yukio gritted his teeth as the second hobgoblin barreled toward him. Its fist came like a sledgehammer. He dodged, barely, the ground exploding where he'd stood. The shockwave rattled his bones. "Too fast… too strong!" He hissed, rolling aside as another punch nearly clipped him. The monster swung again, its fist clipping his ribs. Pain burst through him, white-hot, his breath torn from his lungs. He staggered, coughing blood. His armor cracked, his chest screaming with every inhale. The hobgoblin didn't let up. Its fists came like a storm, each blow heavy enough to shatter stone. Yukio ducked one, slashed its thigh, but it hardly slowed. A fist grazed his shoulder, spinning him sideways. Another caught his arm, bones jolted, his sword nearly slipping free. "Damn it, damn it, damn it!" His vision blurred, sweat and blood stinging his eyes. He collapsed to one knee, lungs heaving. I can't… win. The thought cut him deeper than any wound. His whole life, he'd lived on the edge, gambling, fighting, clawing for survival. He never backed down. He never lost. The fire surged back into him. He spat blood, glaring up at the beast. "I'M NOT LOSING!" The hobgoblin roared, swinging another colossal fist. Yukio parried with everything he had. The impact rattled through his bones, pain screaming in his arms, but he held. He twisted, blade carving upward, splitting its stomach open. The beast howled, staggering back. Yukio lunged, stabbing into its knee. Bone cracked. It dropped to one leg. His chest burned, his vision doubled, but his gambler's grin split through the blood. "Not… losing… to you." With a roar, he raised his sword high and drove it down into the hobgoblin's chest. The steel pierced deep. The monster's roar cut off into a choking gasp, then its body burst into glowing motes, scattering into the night. Yukio collapsed to one knee, panting, drenched in blood and sweat. His hands trembled around the hilt. Every muscle screamed. Michibiki stepped closer, her eyes softening almost imperceptibly. "Not bad. Rough, reckless… but you didn't break." Yukio forced himself upright, swaying, his chest heaving. He glared at her through exhaustion, blood on his lips. "I told you…" He rasped. "…I don't lose." For a moment, the only sound was the crackle of flames. Then, from deeper in the forest, a roar boomed. Low, guttural, and far larger than anything they'd faced yet. The real fight was only beginning.Latest Chapter
Chapter 61: When Silence Breaks
The evening should have felt calm.Candessa’s estate sat bathed in low amber light, long shadows stretching across polished stone courtyards. The air carried faint traces of city life, distant conversation, clinking glasses, carriage wheels on cobblestone.But inside the strategy room, something was off.Yukio didn’t know what it was at first.Just a faint tightness beneath his skin.Kaede was leaning over the table, tapping the eastern tunnels on Kaelith’s restricted map.“If they’re reinforcing from here.”“Stop.”Candessa didn’t raise her voice.She didn’t need to.Everyone froze.She was standing near the tall windows overlooking the courtyard, her orange eyes narrowed slightly, not at anything specific.At the absence of something.“The birds,” She said quietly.Kaede blinked. “What?”“They’ve gone silent.”Michibiki’s silver gaze lifted toward the ceiling.“I feel displacement.”Yukio’s body tensed before his mind caught up.There.A faint shift.Not mana.Air pressure.A meta
Chapter 60: Beneath What Breaks
The tunnels beneath Aurumspire were quieter than they should have been.Not silent.Just wrong.Yukio walked slightly ahead this time, Kaelith’s restricted map held loosely in his hand. Faint lanternlight reflected off damp stone walls, shadows stretching long and uneven across the corridor.Kaede followed close behind him, boots echoing softly against the stone. Her hammer rested at her back, not drawn, but not relaxed either.Michibiki walked last.Her presence always altered the air slightly.Not enough for others to notice.But enough that Yukio did.“Left here,” He said quietly, glancing at the parchment.Kaede frowned at the branching path ahead.“This tunnel wasn’t on the public registry.”“It wasn’t meant to be,” Michibiki replied softly.They turned.The air grew colder.Not temperature.Pressure.Yukio felt it immediately.Like static gathering before a storm.“Same feeling?” Kaede muttered.“…Yes.”Michibiki didn’t answer.Her silver eyes were scanning something none of
Chapter 59: The Weight of Denial
The meeting chamber in Candessa Luminelle’s estate was designed to impress. Not loudly. Not ostentatiously. But deliberately. Dark polished wood lined the walls. High glass windows allowed afternoon light to spill in across the long oval table. Silver inlays traced the edges of the ceiling beams, subtle enough that one had to look twice to appreciate the craftsmanship. Candessa stood at the head of the table, hands resting lightly against the polished surface. She did not fidget. She did not pace. She waited. Yukio stood near the right wall, arms folded loosely, eyes half-lidded in practiced calm. Kaede leaned against a pillar, hammer strapped across her back, posture casual but watchful. Michibiki stood beside Yukio, silver gaze unreadable. The doors opened. Three noble families entered. House Valemont first, Lord Cedric Valemont, tall, narrow-faced, wearing dark blue formal attire embroidered with gold filigree. His expression was measured, faintly amused. B
Chapter 58: Fractured Wards
The eastern ruins didn’t feel the same.Even before they stepped past the barricades, Yukio could tell.The plaza above had been reconstructed, stone relaid, sigils reforged, mana conduits realigned. But the understructure beneath Aurumspire still held memory. The guild had sealed off the lower descent to civilians, and a pair of city guards stepped aside the moment Kaede flashed her adventurer card.“Routine inspection,” She said, adjusting her hammer strap. “We won’t be long.”One of the guards nodded stiffly. “Report any anomalies directly to Captain Alaric.”Yukio gave him a thin smile. “Wouldn’t dream of keeping secrets.”They descended the spiral staircase into cool, dim light.The air changed first.It wasn’t oppressive.Just uneven.Mana flowed here like a river trying to remember its old path after a flood. Subtle eddies twisted where there shouldn’t be any.Michibiki paused halfway down.“It is quieter than before,” She murmured.Kaede snorted softly. “You said that la
Chapter 57: Quiet Wars
The war in Aurumspire did not roar.It did not clash in steel or ignite in flame.It whispered.Candessa Luminelle stood at the center of that whisper.Her office had transformed.The polished elegance of her trading firm remained, but now it was layered with something sharper. Crystal tablets floated in suspended arrays. Ledger scrolls lay unfurled across long oak tables. Pins marked key trade routes on a suspended projection of the city’s map, each glowing faintly in different colors.Assistants moved with quiet urgency. No panic. No raised voices.Only precision.Yukio leaned against a column near the balcony, arms crossed, watching her.Kaede paced slowly beside a wall map, tracing lines between districts with her finger. Michibiki stood near the central projection, gaze steady, silent.Candessa did not look at any of them.She looked at patterns.“Run the crystal import logs again,” She said without turning.An assistant nodded and adjusted a hovering tablet.Numbers shifted. Co
Chapter 56: The Girl Who Tilted the World
he memory always began with silence.Not the soft, comforting kind.The strained kind.The kind that feels like something is holding its breath.In her mind, the past did not unfold like recollection. It played like a stage performance. Scenes shifting in dim lantern light, voices echoing from too far away, faces half-shadowed and distant.She stood at the center of it all, unmoving.A child born beneath banners stitched in silver thread. A name once spoken with reverence, now only whispered in rumor.Act I: The ManorHer first memory was marble.Cold marble floors beneath tiny, unsteady feet.The estate towered above the eastern valley, black banners trimmed in silver cresting the highest spires, a sigil few dared mock.Servants moved like quiet ghosts along polished halls.She had been born under a starless sky.That was what the midwives whispered.Not where her mother could hear.But enough that the servants knew.Enough that the rumors began before she could walk.The chandeliers
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