Ch.80 Apostle of the Goddess of War
A brief, suffocating standoff continued.
Followers of the demon.
Among them, disciples of Decay who believed in and worshipped decay and circulation.
Humans who followed demonsâbeings that desired and enacted humanityâs corruption and destructionârather than the benevolent Goddesses of the Table.
Now, those who sought to protect humanity had met such people.
It would have been far more natural for slaughter to break out immediately.
The War Knights, inwardly calling upon Goddess Achille, focused their minds on the battle about to begin.
ââŠArenât they attacking?â
But the disciples of Decay did not attack.
If anything, they seemed closer to welcoming them.
Sion spoke calmly.
âThe Apostle invited us, didnât he? He wonât attack me right away.â
âS-still.â
âItâs fine. Letâs go.â
Sion advanced indifferently.
Kegan and the other War Knights struggled to lift their feet forward.
âHow does that kid have such a bold heart?â
âDoes he have multiple lives?â
âThatâs probably why heâs called the successor to the Apostle.â
When the knight unit led by Sion and Kegan approached right up to the entrance, the disciples of Decay bowed in unison.
Then, like the parting of the Red Sea, they stepped aside to both sides, opening a path.
The faces revealed beneath their robes were all expressionless.
Their empty eyes were hollow, like living corpses. As they opened the path, they whispered in low, incomprehensible voices.
âOur Apostle awaits youâŠâŠ.â
It was, in its own way, a greeting of welcome.
A statement devoid of emotion or intonation.
As if someone were manipulating them, merely blowing air through their vocal cords.
Their appearance was too grotesque.
Sion silently stared at the path they had openedâthe entrance to a cave shrouded in darkness.
âItâs dangerous. Itâs a trap.â
Kegan gritted his teeth and whispered.
âThey plan to close the entrance behind us and isolate us.â
âI know.â
Sion answered calmly. There was no way it wasnât a trap.
Men who worshipped demons wouldnât fight with âfairnessâ or âhonorâ.
To march into battle knowing this required immense courage and a strong heart capable of overcoming overwhelming pressure.
Sion had that strength.
And he had also gained steadfast comradesâthe War Knights. Though they were people he needed to protect, the War Knights were strong.
They would at least be able to defend themselves under normal circumstances.
Moreover, their strength would be necessary for the dark future ahead. They needed to overcome these trials together, growing in skill, courage, and faith.
âThey need the experience of winning by believing in Goddess Achille, even in the most difficult and hopeless situations.â
Sion had calculated everything from the beginning.
That was why he brought them here.
To make them experience miracles.
To help them grow stronger.
It was an ambitious plan to transform these newly recruited fighters into true War Knights.
âSenior Kegan.â
âIâm listening.â
âDoesnât anything come to mind?â
Kegan closed his eyes slightly.
He realized Sion had deliberately led him here.
He didnât think Sion had bad intentions, only that there must be some reason.
And he also understood this might be his chance to finally cast off the nightmares and guilt that had tormented him for so long.
âNot yet. Nothing comes to mind.â
Sion gave a slight nod.
âSo I really do have to kill the Apostle of Decay.â
This wasnât just about confronting the Apostle of Decay.
His true purpose in coming to Kashibelli Rock was to restore Keganâs memories.
Both goals converged at a single point. He couldnât predict what would happen, but all he could do was swing his sword.
âIf the Goddess led me here, there must be a reason.â
Sion had now developed an unshakable faith.
Where she says to go, he goes. Where she says to cut, he cuts.
Unwavering belief, conviction, and cold logic had shaped the Sion of today.
[Excellent, Sion.]
The Goddess of War sat on her throne, resting her chin on her hand.
The sight of her new Apostle nearing completion filled her with satisfaction.
âLetâs go.â
Click.
Sion began stepping onto the stone staircase. There was no hesitation in his stride.
He was the very image of a proud, fearless paladin.
Even as he was swallowed by darkness, he shone with his own light.
***
Once they entered the cave, they were completely cut off from the outside world.
Damp, cold air seeped deep into their lungs, and the occasional drip of water was the only sound intermittently breaking the silence.
The path led gently downward in a gradual descent.
Instead of moss, faintly glowing fungi grew on the walls, forming eerie patternsâthis was the only source of light.
âDamn⊠the air is different.â
Jena muttered a curse under her breath.
The Goddessâs protection blocked the poison, but it couldnât shield them from the alien pressure that made their life force feel suffocated.
The deeper they went, the less it felt like a natural cave.
Rather, it resembled an elaborately constructed temple dedicated to worshipping the demon of Decay.
Sion and the War Knights advanced warily through the darkness.
With each step, their hearts seemed to beat in time with their footstepsâthud, thud.
It was like an elite unit infiltrating the enemyâs core.
A mission with only one chanceâfailure meant certain death. The weight of it pressed down on the shoulders of the twenty or so warriors.
It would be a lie to say they felt no fear.
Their palms grew damp with sweat, and the sound of swallowing dryly echoed unusually loud.
Yet no one stepped back.
They walked behind the knight, beloved by the Goddess of War.
In their eyes burned not fear, but a greater resolveâa new mission.
How long had they walked? The descent finally ended.
Before them lay a vast cavern brimming with demonic energy.
ââŠâŠ!â
Everyone present froze, breath caught in their throats.
It was as if they stood inside the innards of a giant monster.
Instead of stalactites, massive chunks of fleshy tissue hung from the ceiling, oozing sticky fluids like sores.
The floor was a muddy swamp filled with writhing, pulsating things resembling blood vessels.
At the center of the cavern stood a horrifying throne, haphazardly constructed from dozens of human corpses.
And seated upon that throne was the Apostle of Decay.
âYouâve come. Come in.â
The Apostle gestured with his hand.
Disciples of Decay, cloaked in dark green robes, guided Sion and the knights forward.
It felt like approaching an evil lord.
Sion walked without fear.
âSuch overwhelming pressure.â
As he drew closer to the Apostle, Sion reflected.
The Apostle of Decay.
True to form, he was strong, as an Apostle of a demon should be.
His presence far surpassed that of ordinary monsters, magicians, or even demonkind.
He was clearly a lifeform of a higher tier.
Though he wore a human form, he seemed more monstrous than anything else.
The skin on his right cheek turned black, melting away to reveal white bone beneath.
But only for a momentânew flesh crawled up over the bone, instantly restoring his original appearance.
The muscles on his left forearm rotted and sagged limply, only to be replaced by fresh muscle fibers that surged up, hardening his arm once more.
The cycle of decay, regeneration, and decay again repeated ceaselessly across his entire body.
Decay and circulation.
Birth and death.
âNow I understand what the Evil God of Decay desires.â
He was proving the terrifying yet sublime laws of nature with his own flesh.
The Apostle spoke.
âSuccessor of the War Apostle. Itâs a pleasure to meet you. I am Fedebrenis, Apostle of the Evil God of Decay.â
His voice was a dissonant chorus of dozens of overlapping tonesâthe result of decaying vocal cords and newly growing ones vibrating simultaneously.
Fedebrenis slowly rose from his throne.
Swish, swish.
As he stepped forward, rotting arms burst from the swamp floor, forming steps for him.
âI thank you for accepting my invitation, knight of the Goddess of War. And you, ghosts of the Black Banner.â
His gaze fell upon Kegan and the mercenaries. A faint, bitter smile revealed blatant mockery and contempt.
Among them, the Apostle of Decay stared directly at Kegan.
âYour scent is familiar. It resembles the ghosts who have become part of my flesh.â
The meaning was instantly clear.
He had consumed the corpses of Keganâs former comrades buried in this land and made them part of his body.
Kiiing!
âYou bastard!â
Kegan immediately drew his sword and lunged forward.
It was an insult too great to control his rage.
Slash!
Keganâs blade severed Fedebrenisâs neck. It happened in an instant.
Jena and the other knights flinched in shock.
But only for a moment.
Creak.
Creak.
Flesh regrew from the severed neck. Bone and muscle reformed, eyes filled in, and half-rotten skin covered it once more.
âYouâ!â
Kegan roared in fury.
âDid I wear a familiar face again?â
âHow can you do such a monstrous thing!â
âDonât make me laugh. I didnât go through all this just to insult someone like you. You merely witnessed a part of the natural process of decay and circulation.â
âShut up, you bastardâŠâŠ!â
Kegan growled, but the Apostle ignored him.
Cutting him with a sword was useless.
As expected, he was not an opponent to be killed easily.
Sion raised his hand to stop Kegan.
âSenior Kegan. Please calm down for now.â
ââŠâŠGrr. Sorry.â
The Apostleâs gaze returned to Sion. On his face, endlessly decaying and regenerating, a sinister smile appeared.
âWhat do you think of my courtyard? In this sanctuary, where the power of Decay is strongest, everything rots and becomes part of me, only to be reborn again in a cycle. This is the law of nature, the one and only law of the universe.â
He spread his arms wide, like an artist proud of his masterpiece.
âSoon, even goldâthe symbol of immortality and purityâwill decay.â
Fedebrenis smiled at Sion.
It was a taunting smile.
His skin continued to decay and regenerate.
âHere, you will become part of me. Even you, the transcendent human chosen by the Goddess of War, will decay and circulate. Unite with me and give me your strengthâthe strength that even our Goddesses fear!â
It was a boastful declaration, as if reciting an inescapable law of nature.
His very existence proclaimed the truth that everything ultimately rots. Even the War Knights were crushed under his oppressive aura, struggling to breathe.
An instinctive fear whispered they could not win, crawling up from the tips of their toes.
But Sion was different.
Amid the storm of crushing pressure, he remained as calm as a tranquil pond.
His eyes stared straight at the Apostle of Decay, not wavering in the slightest.
âNoisy.â
Sion spoke softly. With that single word, all the surrounding noise and pressure seemed to freeze for a moment.
âYou demon worshippers talk too much. The more certain you are of overpowering me, the more you chatter.â
âOh? Confident, arenât you? As expected of a War Knight.â
One of the Apostleâs eyebrows melted and reformed, expressing amusement.
âArenât you afraid? Of death? Of your entire existence rotting into mere fertilizerâa natural process?â
Sion laughed as if heâd heard something ridiculous.
âPeople die. They age naturally and die, then decay. And they circulate.â
âYou understand my Evil God well. A rare talent.â
âBut your demonâs power isnât natural. You force decay onto things that are perfectly fine. Why rot gold?â
The Apostle of Decayâs ever-present smile faded slightly.
âBecause it occupies space without value. What worth is there in a shiny rock?â
âTo decide that is your arrogance. Itâs not the truth.â
âYou. Watch your words.â
Sion smirked.
âThe one who should watch his words is you. Letting me come this far so smoothly was a grave mistake.â
âHmph. Is that so?â
He pointed a finger at the people behind Sion.
âYou came here to kill me, carrying your weaknesses?â
Sion shook his head.
âThe people behind me are not weak. They are War Knights who came with me to kill you.â
ââŠâŠYour confidence reaches the heavens.â
Sionâs voice dropped lower.
He sharpened his senses before battle, circulating the holy ring within him.
Sion pronounced his judgment.
âI have come to deliver the Goddess of Warâs hammer. Apostle of Decay. Be prepared.â
Swishhh.
At last, Sion drew the Yogeo.
A chilling killing intent began slicing through the poisonous aura of decay.
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