Episode-465


Chapter : 929


As the Sandworm’s terrifying form crested the earth, the air itself screamed. A dark, insectoid shape descended from the storm clouds with the velocity of a meteor. It was Kael. But he was no longer just a man. He had fully merged with his spirit, transforming into a terrifying warrior of nightmare. His body was encased in a shell of glistening, black chitinous armor. Two pairs of translucent, iridescent wings beat the air with a deafening, high-frequency buzz. In his hands, he wielded a ten-foot lance that tapered to a wickedly sharp, venom-dripping stinger.


He was the Hornet, a Crown-Rank terror of the skies, and his target was not the carriage, not the princess, not the lord. His target was the single, most critical component of their defense: the driver. He descended in a blur of motion, his stinger-lance aimed directly at the heart of Ken Park. It was a perfect blitzkrieg, a high-speed decapitation strike designed to eliminate one of the primary guardians before the battle could even truly begin.


Ken, however, was not a normal man. His senses, already on high alert, had registered the flicker of hostile intent in the sky a microsecond before Kael began his dive. He did not dodge. He did not flinch. He simply rose from the driver’s seat, turning to meet the charge head-on. Thɪs chapter is updatᴇd by novę


As Kael’s lance descended, a change came over Ken. The simple, black fabric of his butler’s uniform began to shimmer, a subtle, almost imperceptible distortion in the air. A wave of immense, crushing pressure radiated from him, a power so vast and ancient it felt like the weight of a dying star. The nascent, crimson energy of his own spirit, the mighty Redborn, was awakening within him, turning his flesh to iron and his will to a fortress.


The Hornet’s venomous stinger met not the soft flesh of a man, but an invisible wall of pure, unyielding force. The impact was a cataclysmic, thunderous explosion. The entire front of the carriage, the solid oak driver’s box, vaporized into a cloud of splinters. The shockwave ripped across the clearing, flattening trees and sending a tsunami of mud and rainwater outwards. The four destriers, their tethers snapping, screamed in terror and bolted into the woods.


The carriage itself, protected by Habiba’s sand pillar and its own reinforced structure, held firm, though it was violently thrown back several feet. Inside, Lloyd and Amina were braced, their faces masks of cold, analytical focus. The opening move of the assassins had been played. It was a move of shocking, overwhelming violence. And it had been, with an equally shocking display of power, contemptuously met. The hunt was over. The war had just begun.


The aftermath of the initial cataclysmic impact was a moment of suspended, ringing silence. The air was thick with the smell of ozone, shattered wood, and damp earth. Kael, the Hornet warrior, was thrown back by the force of Ken’s invisible shield, his wings beating furiously to stabilize himself in the air, his face a mask of shocked disbelief. He had put the full force of a Crown-Rank aerial charge into his strike, an attack that could have punched through the gates of a fortress. It had been stopped. Cold.


On the ruined front of the carriage, Ken Park stood amidst the splinters, completely unharmed. The shimmering aura around him intensified, the contained power of his King-Level spirit now fully awakening. The transformation was terrifying to behold. His simple butler’s uniform did not rip or tear; it seemed to melt and reshape itself. His skin took on a crimson hue, and two massive, elegantly curved horns of black obsidian grew from his temples. His body swelled with an impossible density of muscle, and his form was encased in a suit of articulated, crimson armor that seemed forged from solidified rage. He was no longer Ken Park, the retainer. He was the Demon Lord of Ferrum, a titan of raw, overwhelming physical power.


Before Kael could recover from his shock, a new threat emerged. Jager, who had been orchestrating the attack from the concealment of the trees, stepped into the clearing. He moved with a languid, almost bored grace, a stark contrast to the violence he had just unleashed. Behind him, the very air seemed to darken and coalesce. A monstrous form materialized from the shadows—a twenty-foot-long alligator, its scales the color of black iron, its eyes glowing with a malevolent, crimson light. It radiated a spiritual pressure that was a perfect match for Ken's—a King-Rank aura of pure, predatory hunger.


Chapter : 930


"Impressive," Jager purred, his voice a calm, appreciative murmur in the tense silence. "It seems our intelligence was not just flawed; it was a work of comedic fiction. A King-Level guardian. Who would have thought?" He gave Ken a mock bow. "Jager, at your service. A humble artist. And this," he gestured to his spirit, "is my assistant, Kroth."


Ken did not respond with words. He responded with action. With a movement that was impossibly fast for a being of his size, he launched himself from the ruined carriage, his fist cocked back. He was a crimson meteor aimed directly at Jager.


Jager, with a lazy smile, simply sidestepped. Kroth, the iron alligator, moved to intercept. Ken’s fist, which could shatter granite, met the alligator’s armored snout. The impact was not a crack, but a deep, resonant boom, like a temple bell being struck by a siege hammer. The ground beneath them fractured, and a spiderweb of cracks radiated outwards.


Their duel began, a clash of pure, unrestrained, King-Level power. It was a battle of titans. Ken was a force of nature, his every punch and kick a localized earthquake. Jager fought with a cunning, defensive grace, using his spirit not as a weapon, but as a living, intelligent shield, its impenetrable scales absorbing Ken’s devastating blows while Jager himself looked for an opening.


Meanwhile, the second duel raged. Habiba, the Sand Heroine, stood before her colossal Sandworm spirit, a serene general commanding a living siege engine. She faced the furious, buzzing form of Kael, who was a storm of aerial attacks. Her battle was one of profound tactical genius. She did not try to match Kael’s speed. Instead, she controlled the very ground he flew over.


With a gesture of her hand, the Sandworm would slam its tail into the earth, and the ground beneath Kael would liquefy, becoming a grasping sinkhole of sucking mud, forcing him to constantly adjust his flight path. With another gesture, a solid wall of hardened, razor-edged sand would erupt from the ground, intercepting his venomous lance strikes. She was not fighting him; she was fighting the space around him, turning his greatest asset, his three-dimensional mobility, into a liability.


But Kael was a Crown-Rank user for a reason. He was relentless. His speed was phenomenal, and his venom-laced strikes, when they did get through, sizzled against the Sandworm’s armor, leaving corrosive, smoking wounds. Habiba was a master strategist, but she was in a desperate battle of attrition against a faster, more aggressive foe.


Inside the carriage, the world was an island of absolute calm in the heart of the storm. Lloyd had summoned his own spirits. To his right stood Iffrit, the nine-foot-tall demon of fire, his flaming zanbatō a silent promise of annihilation. To his left, Fang Fairy manifested as a goddess of the storm, her silver hair crackling with contained lightning. Their combined spiritual pressure was a crushing weight, a silent declaration of the third, and most terrible, power that had yet to enter the fray.


But Lloyd held them in reserve. His face was a mask of cold, unblinking analysis. He was not just a participant; he was a commander, watching the battle unfold, gathering critical intelligence on his enemies’ capabilities, their tactics, and their weaknesses. He respected his guardians enough to allow them their own battle, to trust in their monstrous power. But he was also a pragmatist. The moment he saw a true opening, or a sign of weakness, he would unleash his own symphony of destruction.


The duels raged with terrifying intensity. Habiba, her face beaded with sweat, was being forced back, her brilliant tactics struggling against Kael’s relentless aggression. The true crisis, however, was brewing in the King-Level duel. Ken, in his Demon Lord form, was a manifestation of pure, irresistible force. He seemed to have the upper hand, his raw power forcing Jager and his Alligator spirit into a slow, methodical retreat.


But Jager was not retreating. He was hunting. With a brilliant, feigned stumble, he created a fractional opening. Ken, seeing a chance to end the fight, pressed his advantage, lunging forward with a devastating, armor-shattering punch.


It was a trap.


As Ken lunged, Kroth, the iron alligator, did not meet the blow. It moved with an impossible, liquid grace, its massive body flowing around Ken’s attack. Its jaws, wide enough to swallow a horse, opened. But they did not snap at Ken’s body. They snapped at something far more intangible, and far more vital.