Chapter 505
The water listened.
At first it only trembled, currents tightening into spirals, debris reversing direction, bubbles freezing in place as if the chamber had forgotten how to breathe. Then Ludger’s control deepened, and the trembling became a pull.
The entire flooded quarter of the final chamber began to rise.
Not like a wave.
Like a wall being lifted by invisible hands.
Water peeled off the ruins and pillars in thick sheets, ripping free from cracks and broken staircases. It rolled upward in a single, cohesive mass, the surface smoothing as if an unseen blade had shaved it flat. In seconds, what had been a drowned arena became a draining basin, stone revealed, slick and dark, shining under the faint rune-light as the last streams crawled away and joined the ascending flood.
The floor turned dry. Not damp. Not half-submerged. Dry enough that dust, old and forgotten, lifted in faint puffs as the pressure left it.
There was so much water that Viola’s mind struggled to measure it. Enough to drown the entire chamber again and still have plenty left over. Enough to fill a small lake. It hovered above them now, a massive suspended reservoir, its underside rippling with contained force.
And Ludger held it all.
His arms were raised, hands spread, fingers slightly curled as if he were gripping the world by its throat. Mana ran through him in a controlled torrent, not flaring wildly but coursing with cold precision. The floating mass responded to every minute adjustment of his wrists, tightening, flattening, compressing, ready to become a weapon the moment he decided to let it.
The guardian reacted instantly.
Its propulsion runes flared hard, trying to stabilize in a medium that no longer existed. Shields angled reflexively. Cannons spun up in a panicked recalibration. For a heartbeat, the six-armed golem looked… wrong.
Like a predator dragged out of the sea and left on land.
Then gravity reclaimed it.
The massive construct dropped.
It slammed onto the exposed stone with a shock that rattled the entire chamber. The impact cracked old tiles and sent a spiderweb of fractures racing across the ancient floor. Its spears scraped, shields gouged, and its cannon arms jerked as the targeting systems tried to understand why the world had changed.
Viola watched it hit the ground and felt the Rage Flow humming in her bones like a war drum.
She smirked.
“Good,” she muttered, voice tight with heat and focus. “Fall.”
Viola and Luna moved at the same time.
Rage Flow made the world smaller and sharper. It stripped hesitation out of their limbs and replaced it with a clean, violent certainty. They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to. The moment the guardian hit the dry stone and its systems began to reorient, both of them launched forward, mirroring each other’s angles like they’d trained together for years instead of merely surviving together for days.
Viola took the center line, sword low and ready, using her longer reach to threaten space. Luna stayed half a step to the side and slightly behind, knives held in reverse grip, posture compact and predatory. Different weapons. Same rhythm. One drew attention. The other punished anything that overcommitted.
The guardian’s cannon arms snapped toward them.
Runes flared.
And the chamber filled with motion.
Mana bullets didn’t whistle anymore, there was no water to soften them. They cracked through the air like invisible hammers, leaving pressure ripples that kicked dust off the floor and chipped stone from pillars. The first volley came as a spread meant to catch a charging group, a fan of shots that turned the open ground into a kill grid.
Viola and Luna didn’t slow. They split.
Viola shifted left with a sharp step, sword trailing behind her like a counterweight, torso turning just enough that the first bullet passed where her ribs had been a fraction of a heartbeat earlier. She felt the shock of it in her teeth more than her skin. The next shot came higher, aimed for her head, and she dipped without breaking stride, letting it scream overhead and detonate against a ruined column behind her.
Luna mirrored the movement on the opposite side.
She didn’t duck the way Viola did, she folded. A compact collapse of posture, knees bending, shoulders rolling, letting the bullets skim past her in a blur. One shot clipped the stone beside her foot and showered dust across her shin. She didn’t flinch. She pivoted around the impact, using the recoil as a timing cue, slipping through the narrow gap between two projectiles like she’d always known it would be there.
The guardian adjusted, barrels rotating with unsettling precision.
A second barrage followed immediately, tighter this time, less scatter, more intent. It tried to pin them into predictable lanes, herding them toward its shields and spears.
Viola read it instantly.
She kicked off a cracked tile and changed pace, not just direction, tempo. Rage Flow let her accelerate without warning, and the guardian’s predictive arrays overshot by half a beat. Two shots carved the air behind her. A third tore across her front at chest height.
She dropped her shoulder and let it pass so close she felt her hair lift.
Luna matched that tempo shift perfectly, sliding in closer to the guardian’s flank with short, efficient steps that minimized her profile. Her knives stayed tucked in tight, ready to strike, but she didn’t commit yet. Not while the cannons were still tracking.
They weren’t just dodging.
They were closing.
Every evasion shortened the distance. Every sidestep turned the guardian’s firing solution into wasted motion… And with Rage Flow burning in their veins, neither of them hesitated at the edge of danger. They treated the bullets like weather, something to move through, not something to fear.
In the background, Ludger held the entire lake of floating water above the chamber, arms raised, eyes locked, maintaining control like a loaded threat.
Five minutes.
Viola and Luna didn’t intend to waste a single second of it.
Viola reached the guardian first.
Rage Flow drove her forward like a spear thrown by a siege engine, feet hammering the cracked stone as she closed the final meters. She didn’t hesitate, didn’t test. She raised her froststeel sword and brought it down in a brutal diagonal strike aimed at the guardian’s cannon-side shoulder—trying to cripple its ranged weapons before it could reestablish a stable firing rhythm.
The runic golem reacted with mechanical perfection.
One of its shield arms snapped up, the slab of black alloy turning at the exact angle needed to catch the blade. Runes flared across the shield’s surface as the impact landed, and the chamber shuddered with the force. Viola’s sword bit in, sparks and mana fragments scattering, but the shield held. The guardian didn’t give her even a heartbeat to recover.
Its spear arm drove forward.
Fast.
A straight thrust aimed for Viola’s ribs, the drill-like spearhead spinning as runes along the shaft accelerated its rotation. It wasn’t just trying to stab her, it was trying to punch through her, tear through armor and bone and leave her bleeding on the stone.
Viola saw it too late to counter cleanly.
She shifted her weight, trying to slip away, but the spear’s reach and speed were designed for exactly this moment, punishing anyone who committed an attack on the shield.
Then Luna appeared. She didn’t shout. Didn’t announce herself.
She simply slid into range on the guardian’s flank and moved like a shadow given purpose. Her knives flashed, two short, precise strikes, aimed not at the spearhead, not at the armored shaft, but at the arm’s joint.
The elbow hinge.
The exact point where runic plating overlapped and mana conduits had to pass through a narrow channel.
Her first knife stabbed into the seam and twisted, biting into the circuitry. The second hit a fraction of a second later, scraping across the rune line in a deliberate, disrupting cut.
The spear arm jerked.
Its thrust stuttered mid-extension as the joint’s reinforcement arrays flickered.
That half-second was everything.
Viola ripped her blade free from the shield and twisted out of the spear’s line, boots skidding across the fractured floor as she retreated just enough to avoid being skewered. The spinning spearhead passed where her torso had been, carving a groove through the air and slamming into stone behind her with a grinding screech.
Luna was already gone from the strike zone, slipping backward before the guardian could counter, knives held low and ready for the next joint.
Viola exhaled sharply, eyes bright and focused. They were working. One drew the response. The other broke the mechanism… And for the first time, the guardian’s perfect rhythm faltered, just slightly, as it realized it wasn’t fighting one opponent. It was fighting a pair that moved like a single weapon with two edges.
The guardian adjusted.
You could see it in the way its posture shifted, how the shields stopped reacting purely to incoming strikes and instead began to herd Viola and Luna into angles where its spears could reach. Its cannon arms rotated higher, tracking both targets at once now, not wasting shots on prediction but forcing space closed with raw volume.
It got serious.
All six arms moved at once.
One shield angled to trap Viola’s sword line. The other shield slid outward to cut off Luna’s flank. Spear arms began alternating thrusts in a staggered rhythm, one probing, one punishing, while the cannons pulsed, charging for another barrage that would turn the ground into a killing field.
Viola felt it immediately.
This wasn’t the lazy, efficient violence of a dungeon monster. This was an execution routine. Then the guardian flinched. Not dodged. Not repositioned.
Flinched, like something had hit a nerve.
A roar of displaced air slammed through the chamber as a column of water came flying in from above, not as a falling wave but as a weapon. Ludger had compressed it so tightly that it held shape like a solid battering ram, a spinning lance of lake-mass turned into a single, focused projectile.
It struck the guardian’s shield with enough force to drive it sideways.
The shield’s runes detonated in a cascade of light, trying to disperse the impact, but the pressure was too concentrated. The construct’s entire frame shuddered, feet carving grooves in the ancient stone as it was forced to give ground.
Viola and Luna used the opening instantly, because Rage Flow didn’t give them time to hesitate.
Viola surged forward toward the exposed spear-side shoulder, blade already rising for the next strike. Luna slipped into the gap the displaced shield created, eyes locked on the joint lines like she could see the rune circuits beneath the armor.
Ludger stood with one arm extended, water hovering in a controlled mass over the chamber like a suspended ocean.
He watched them for a heartbeat, calm, focused, and calculating.
Then he fired again.
Viola inhaled once and let her feet settle.
Rage Flow burned in her veins, but she didn’t let it turn into sloppiness. She widened her stance just slightly, planted her weight, and lifted her sword, then shifted her grip.
One hand.
She held the froststeel blade with her right, arm extended enough that the sword became a line instead of a swing. Her left hand rose beside it, fingers splayed as if she were aiming a bow rather than holding steel. Her eyes narrowed, tracking the guardian’s spear arm like she could see the joint’s weak seam through the plating.
Luna saw the posture and understood immediately. It wasn’t a request. It was a setup.
Luna moved.
One moment she was beside Viola, small, tight, controlled, and the next she was a blur cutting across the broken stone, accelerating so violently that the air seemed to lag behind her. For an instant, it looked like she left afterimages, shadows of motion stamped into the dust where she had been.
The guardian’s attention snapped to her.
Target reassigned.
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