Chapter 444
âWow!â
Zeon let out an exclamation.
The sight before him was astonishing enough to leave him breathless.
To make a serpent seventy meters long stagger with a single blowâ
It was unbelievable power.
But looking at the manâs physique, it made sense.
No ordinary being could possess a body five meters tall.
Even among giants, four meters was usually the limit.
Yet this man stood a full meter taller than that.
An absurd body, with strength to match.
This was none other than Krudu, El Harunâs strongest warrior.
Sensing the danger to the World Tree, Krudu had arrived lateâbut just in time to halt Neria.
And yet, his expression was far from bright.
For though Neria had reeled heavily, she now raised her head once again, intact and unshaken.
From the jaws of the colossal serpent, a tongue flickeredâmocking, provoking.
ââŠStill, I bought us some time. That will do.â
All around, more giants revealed themselves.
The warriors of the Giant Tribe, led by Krudu.
Every adult who could fight had come, children left behind.
Their mere arrival bolstered the morale of the awakeners.
The Giant Tribe possessed natural resistance to magic, their anti-mana force rivaling Neriaâs.
Ordinary weapons could not pierce their rock-like bodies.
Their very forms were living weapons.
Not one giant faltered before the monstrous figure of Neria. They charged without hesitation.
âWaaaah!â
Their war cry thundered, and behind them followed the other races, and the human awakeners.
Thus began El Harunâs all-out assault.
Watching the sight unfold, Zeon murmured under his breath:
âA grand spectacle.â
âYou have time to admire it? Must mean itâs none of your concern.â
A voice came from behind.
Zeon turned.
A beautiful woman in flowing black robes was descending from the sky, as light as a feather.
But from her radiated an air steeped in bleakness.
What struck him was her faceâstrangely blurred, as if covered in mist.
It wasnât a skill. It wasnât an item. And yet, her features refused to come into focus.
Zeon spoke:
âYouâre a nonhuman, too.â
âThatâs right. To you humans, I am one. But from my viewâ*you* are the other.â
âWell⊠everyone has their standpoint. But just now, did you call me an onlooker?â
âIf not, why else would you stand here, idly watching?â
âThereâs no reason for me to interfere.â
âAnd yet you entered El Harun alongside her, didnât you?â
âOur paths overlapped for a time, thatâs all.â
At his reply, her gaze grew sharper.
She walked toward Hera, who was writhing within the White Phosphorus Flame.
Heraâs barrier wavered at its limit, on the verge of collapse. Just moments more and the fire would consume her whole.
The woman stretched out her hand toward the flames, whispering:
âHellfire.â
At once, searing fire bloomed from her palm.
Hotter, brighter than the White Phosphorus Flame.
She brought it to Heraâ
and the White Phosphorus Flame was swallowed whole.
âOh!â
Zeon gasped aloud, unable to help himself.
It was like the old firebreak method, when Earthâs forests burnedâusing greater fire to devour the lesser.
A method few awakeners would ever dare attempt.
âKhkk!â
Freed at last, Hera gasped out the breath she had held in agony.
Though her shield had spared her from direct burning, the pain had seared through nonetheless.
Only because she was powerful had she endured at all. Any ordinary elf would have been reduced to ash long ago.
âYou bastardâ!â
Hera, catching her breath, whirled toward Zeon, rage blazing.
But the woman who had saved her spoke first:
âNot him, Hera! The Black Queen must come first. His judgment can wait.â
âDeva! Butââ
âHera! Set aside your grudges.â
ââŠFine!â
Hera yielded at last.
The womanâDevaâwas a member of the Council, just as Hera was.
Deva belonged to the Abyssal Race, Kurayanâs most mysterious people.
Born from the Pool of the Abyss, they lived unending lives.
Some sneered, claiming their blood mingled with demons. But it was false.
Had it been true, no race in El Harun would have accepted them.
The truth was simpler: their numbers were few. Even fewer than the Highlanders, who numbered only in the dozens.
Because on Earth, unlike Kurayan, there was no Abyssal Pool.
And without it, no new children could be born.
Deva was one of the last, and their leader.
Her kind were born with strange giftsâHellfire being one.
Not even Hera, wild as she was, dared treat Deva lightly.
Deva then moved to Liala, who still lay weakened from Zeonâs earlier blow. With a touch, she cast a healing spell.
In moments, Liala was whole again.
âThank you, Deva.â
âThink nothing of it.â
Deva bowed lightly.
Liala glanced at Zeon, then sprinted toward the Black Queen. Hera followed.
Zeon turned back to Deva, puzzled.
âYou wonât join them?â
âMy role is rear support.â
âSeems a waste of your power.â
âAnd besides⊠someone has to keep an eye on you.â
âFair enough.â
Zeon shrugged.
After all, he had entered El Harun alongside the Black Queen. Reasons to keep him in check were countless.
No one would dare leave him unattended.
Kwaang!
The battle only grew fiercer with Liala and Hera joining.
But Neriaâs venom sprayed in all directions, the casualties mounting too quickly.
The Council leaders had no choice but to order their forces back, leaving only themselves to engage.
âNeriaâŠâ
Zeon watched her in silence.
Neria was calamity.
The calamity El Harun had summoned.
Uron was dead, but the disaster he had called forth now unleashed hell.
Even under the combined might of the Council leaders, Neriaâs frenzy only escalated.
It was madness incarnate.
ThenâDeva spoke.
âNeria!â
ââŠYou know her.â
At Zeonâs words, Deva flinched.
Everyone else in El Harun had called her only
the Black Queen.
Deva was the first to speak her true name.
âSoâyou know she is Neria. Yet all others whisper only her title, trembling in fear. You know more than the rest, donât you?â
Her face still blurred, yet Zeon could
feel
her brow tightening.
He pressed further.
âWhat happened? What drove a dark elf to fall, to become the Black Queen?â
ââŠâ
âWas it your people who made her this way?â
âNo! Nothing like thatââ
âThen why? Why would a sound, whole dark elf become cursed by the gods? There must be a reason.â
âThat⊠that isâŠâ
Deva could not finish.
The haze that masked her face wavered, rippling like heat haze.
Zeonâs voice was calm, yet firm.
âTell me. If I know the truth, maybe I can help. Speak.â
âYou cannot help us. Withdraw, now.â
And thenâ
âAaaghhh!â
A scream tore through the battlefield.
Deva turnedâ
Kelota. His lower half was stone.
The red ray from Neriaâs eyes had struck him, turning his body to rock.
He crashed to the ground, struggling. His petrified half was numb, lifeless.
Summoning all his remaining strength, Kelota roared:
âGhhkk! Bewareâthe Black Queenâs petrifying beam!â
Crkkk!
The warning ended as his face hardened to stone.
âNoâ!â
âKelota!â
The Council leaders cried out in horror.
Petrification beams could not turn just anyone.
The power worked only on those weaker than the caster.
Kelota had been S-rank.
If he fell in an instantâNeriaâs rank stood higher still.
âDamn it! Everyone, watch for her gaze!â
âIf we kill her, Kelota will return!â
For petrification was a curse.
And curses could be brokenâby destroying their caster.
So they believed.
But the problem was simple.
Killing the Black Queen was all but impossible.
Grrrrrrr!
Dragging deep furrows through the ground, Neria advanced.
The Council leaders unleashed their full power, but still she came.
âGhaaahhh!â
Another screamâ
Repo, locked in close combat.
The ray struck him, too. His body turned to stone.
Thud!
He crashed down, lifeless stone in moments.
âRepo!â
Krudu shouted, but there was no answer.
Liala whispered, despairing:
âAt this rate, the World Tree is finished.â
âWe canât let that happen. No matter what.â
Heraâs reply burned with mana.
They were rivals, bitter as oil and water. But such petty strife vanished now.
Before the fate of El Harun, all were one.
The Black Queenâparadoxicallyâwas the very force uniting them.
Kwaang! Kwoom!
Krudu and the Council rained their might upon her. Yet nothing stopped her advance.
âThis⊠canât beâŠâ
Devaâs shoulders shook.
Zeonâs eyes fell on her.
âWhy donât you use the Hellfire you showed before? That could harm her.â
âThat isâŠâ
âBecause of guilt, isnât it?â
ââŠYes.â
âThen speak. If you wonât stain your hands, someone else must.â
âYouâare you saying
you
would fight her, if you knew?â
âI could.â
ââŠIs that true?â
âYou of all people can tell, canât you?â
ââŠTrue.â
The Abyssal raceâeyes that could pierce truth itself.
No lie could stand before them.
And Deva saw: Zeon was not lying.
He spoke truth, at least in this moment.
Stillâher lips held back.
Until Zeon pressed the final nail:
âWait longerâand the chance to help will be gone forever.â