Chapter 464: Not An Easy Prey
Before Serah had time to process the demon’s sudden fear of Marcus, the Pureblood crouched, coiled—then vanished in a blur. In the span of a heartbeat it was on her: claws extended, talons slicing the air inches from her throat.
But she moved.
A flare of flame surged along her limbs, feeding speed into her muscles. Her claymore rose in a single, fluid motion to meet the lethal arc; steel crashed against blood claws with a scream. Serah adjusted her grip and drove the momentum through the strike, cutting diagonally from the demon’s left shoulder down to its right hip. Fire ran along the edge of the blade as it bit home.
Blood roared into the air and then spilled in a hot ribbon onto the grass. The Pureblood’s eyes widened into stunned black orbs; for the first time it felt the sting of mortal injury. The wound began to knit almost at once, but the shock registered in its face: this woman—this slight, fierce woman—had torn it.
Serah backed away a measured step, giving herself space. The creature watched her, recoiling as if the air itself had burned. The reason became obvious in an instant. Her hair, still red, now shimmered as if threaded with living fire; her irises were not ordinary crimson but a furnace glow, hot and consuming. Her aura flared outward, heat pressing at the grass, making the leaves tremble. The claymore in her hands gleamed brighter than before—flames danced along the blade’s length like a hungry saw.
The demon staggered backward with an animal sound that might have been a curse. ’Wait—’ its mind scrambled. ’That aura... that is the same one I’ve witnessed those weak Redbloods get killed by. That is the princess. The Phoenix of Solara.’ Fear crawled across its thoughts ever so slightly. ’How does she stand here with that dark bastard? Is this some trick?’ It tried to catalog possibilities. ’If she is here to kill the dark mage, she won’t survive. But why would Scourge want me to kill her for him? Wait... that might mean he is weak—or he wants me to think he is weak. Screw all of this, I just need to kill her but that won’t not be simple. She is clearly at the pinnacle of Eight-Star and I’ve been weakened by his magic already. The safest path is to break her mind first, to strike when she falters.’
Blood still slicked its claws; the wound on its flank was already shrinking. The demon forced itself down into a crouch, muscles bunching like coiled ropes, eyes narrowed into slits of predatory calculation. Around it, the air hummed with menace.
"So, princess," it hissed, trying to regain bravado, "why don’t we ha—"
The last syllable died as Serah detonated into motion. She vanished from where she stood in a column of flame and reappeared directly in front of the Pureblood. Her claymore fell in a single terrifying arc toward its neck, moving so fast the grass bowed in its wake.
Flame exploded upward where steel met flesh; a shockwave of scorching air hurled debris into the clearing. Trees nearest the impact were shredded along their trunks; earth cracked and buckled under the pressure of the strike.
When the dust cleared, Serah stood upright, claymore leveled and steaming, as if nothing had touched her but the air itself. The space where the demon had stood was a ruined crater—scorched and splintered. The trees that skirted the clearing bore long diagonal slashes down their bark, as if some enormous blade had brushed past them.
She drew a long breath that steamed in the cool air and then glanced over her shoulder, eyes like coals. "You were faster than I expected," she said, voice low and cold. "A fraction slower and you would have lost your head. Not that it matters—you’ll grow it back anyway."
When the demon finally emerged from the ruin a few paces behind her, it was a grotesque silhouette of what it already was. The left side of its face had been sheared in a clean diagonal; sinew and blackened muscle spilled beneath where cheek and jaw once were. Blood streamed like a dark red, viscous river.
A sound like a laugh bubbled from its throat, but it was raw with pain. Its remaining golden eye narrowed into a malevolent slit. "Yes," it snarled, voice thick with bile, "there’s no hiding it. You are the Phoenix of Solara and I promise you I’ll have a grand time tearing your limbs from your body."
Serah pivoted, flame coiling around her like a living cloak, every line of her body a blade of intent. She assumed her stance again and her claymore angled, ready to clash again.
"I’d like to see you try," she answered, and the words were ice in the clearing.
The Pureblood’s grin widened, its regenerated face twisting into a grotesque mask of malice. The ground beneath its clawed feet cracked as it crouched low, blood bubbling across its skin like liquid armor. The air grew heavy, rank with the metallic tang of iron as crimson tendrils seeped from its veins and slithered across the ground like snakes.
Then it moved.
The demon launched itself forward with such force the earth cratered in its wake. Its first strike was wild yet precise—razor claws dripping with blood hardened into jagged crimson blades. It swung them in a scything arc meant to split Serah from shoulder to hip.
Serah’s eyes blazed. She shifted her stance at the last second, her claymore meeting the claws with a deafening crash. Sparks and embers erupted as fire clashed against blood-forged steel. The force sent tremors up her arms, yet she absorbed it with a controlled step back, her boots sliding across the dirt as heat flared around her.
The Pureblood laughed, its voice layered with mockery. "That’s it? You call yourself the Phoenix of Solara, and all you can do is block?" It pushed harder, forcing her blade toward her face, blood hissing where it touched her flames. "Where is the fire said to be able to wide out hordes of demons? Where is the fury your people boast of, HUH?!"
Serah’s reply was silence—her crimson gaze never wavering, her breathing measured.
The demon pulled away with unnatural speed and, in the same instant, slashed its claws across the air. Crimson arcs of blood shot forth like whips, dozens of them, shrieking through the clearing. They tore into the ground where Serah stood, shredding soil and stone as if they were parchment.
But Serah was already gone. A streak of flame trailed in her wake as she darted sideways, boots leaving scorched prints on the grass. She ducked under one whip, pivoted her claymore to slice through another, and spun around her own fiery momentum, parrying three more in rapid succession. The sound was relentless—whips snapping, steel cleaving, fire roaring.
Still, one caught her. A lash coiled around her left shoulder, burning like acid where it touched. Serah clenched her teeth as smoke rose from her skin. Without hesitation, she willed her flames outward, searing the blood whip until it evaporated with a hiss, the smell of charred iron filling the air.
The Pureblood’s laughter grew darker. "Yes! Burn yourself, little princess! That’s all you are—fuel for the fire. You’ll destroy yourself long before you destroy me!"
It lunged again, this time dropping low, claws sweeping at her knees. Serah leapt, twisting midair, her claymore whistling as she slashed downward. The blade carved a fiery crescent, forcing the demon to roll sideways as the ground split open in molten cracks.
She landed lightly, knees bent, sword raised, her aura still calm—yet her flames flickered higher, answering the Pureblood’s aggression.
The demon rose with a snarl. Blood gushed from its chest and limbs, forming jagged spears that hovered around it like a crown of crimson death. With a flick of its wrist, they launched toward her in rapid succession, a storm of sharpened blood tearing through the clearing.
Serah grounded herself. Every muscle coiled, and every sense sharpened. She didn’t charge or recklessly retaliate, rather... she read. Her claymore moved like an extension of her body, deflecting spears with sparks of flame, each strike precise and economical. One spear grazed her cheek, slicing a line of blood across her skin. Another tore through her sleeve, but none found her heart.
The demon noticed. Its grin twisted. "Defensive, always defensive! Are you afraid, Phoenix? Or are you waiting for your dark master to save you? Tell me, when he’s done using you, will he cut you down himself? Or let you wither in your own flames like your ancestors?"
Serah exhaled slowly, eyes narrowing. The words stabbed at her, but her expression never faltered. Calm—terrifying calm—anchored her stance.
She shifted her weight, sidestepped another volley, and then surged forward in a flash of fire. Her claymore lashed out with two clean arcs, one high, one low, forcing the Pureblood to leap back. The ground where she struck exploded in flame, forcing the demon to shield itself with a wall of blood.
The fight grew faster.
The Pureblood blurred, abandoning restraint. Its claws and blood-formed weapons attacked from every direction—slashes from above, thrusts from below, feints meant to bait her into missteps. It moved with chaos, no rhythm, no repetition, no pattern to exploit. Every strike was different, every angle unexpected.
And yet, Serah endured. Her claymore became a shield and a spear both, weaving arcs of flame to intercept each strike. Sparks hissed. Blood sizzled. Her boots dragged trenches into the ground as she was forced back, back, step by step. She looked overwhelmed—but her eyes told a different story.
She was studying.
Each blow she met, each feint she deflected, each blood spear she burned away—she analyzed. Her gaze tracked the slight twitch of its shoulders before a swing, the microsecond of hesitation before a feint, the unnatural angle its claws bent at mid-strike. There was no rhythm, no repeatable pattern—but there were tells.
And her flames grew hotter with every clash.
The Pureblood noticed the shift too late. Its grin faltered as the air thickened, waves of heat distorting the space between them. Sweat rolled down its crimson flesh as Serah’s flames licked higher, her claymore now sheathed in a torrent of fire that roared like a living beast.
Serah finally spoke, her voice calm, cutting through the chaos.
"You hide behind chaos, demon. You think unpredictability makes you untouchable. But there is no attack without intent... and intent leaves traces."
Her aura surged. The ground cracked beneath her boots as flames erupted outward. For the first time, it was the demon who stepped back, claws raised, blood swirling defensively around its body.
Yet it still tried to mask its unease with words. "Pretty speeches won’t save you! I’ll carve that calm face from your skull, piece by piece! I’ll drink the flames from your veins and—"
Serah cut off its taunt with action. She vanished in a burst of fire, reappearing at its flank. Her claymore swung, flames coiling around the blade like a vortex. The Pureblood crossed its claws just in time, the impact shaking the clearing, flames blasting outward in a scorching wave.
It staggered, screeching as the fire ate at its arms despite its regeneration.
Serah pressed the assault now—her calm was no longer passive but weaponized. Every strike of her claymore carried precision and fury, every motion a culmination of her analysis. She forced the demon back, back, into the very trees that bordered the clearing. The trunks ignited as her flames grazed them.
The Pureblood roared, blood exploding outward in a desperate storm to repel her. But Serah planted her feet, her aura blazing. She cut through the storm with a single sweep, her claymore cleaving blood into steam.
And she did not blink.