Episode-591
Chapter : 1161
The arrival of Beelzebub and his two Sovereign-Level abominations was not merely an intervention; it was a fundamental redefinition of the entire conflict. The civil war, the brutal but comprehensible struggle between brothers, was now just a footnote. The true, underlying war had just erupted into the light, and its opening salvo was a direct, contemptuous challenge to the most powerful man in the North, delivered with the casual arrogance of a bored god swatting a fly.
The battlefield, which had been a chaotic but ultimately one-sided slaughter in favor of the Ferrum forces, was now brutally bisected. The war of the mortals and lesser spirits continued to rage on the ground, a backdrop of grinding, attritional violence, a messy, human affair of steel and bone. But the skies above Ashworth had become the exclusive arena for a war of gods, a battle fought on a conceptual level that the mortals below could barely comprehend.
Gog, the living mountain, met the charge of the skeletal Black Dragon in a clash that was a battle of absolute substance against absolute decay. Gog’s fists, two meteors of granite and obsidian, crashed against the dragon’s bone armor, the impacts sending shockwaves that shattered the very ground below, creating new canyons in the ruined square. But the dragon’s shadow-fire was a relentless, corrosive tide, its every breath a stream of pure entropy that ate away at Gog’s ancient, elemental form, turning solid, eons-old stone to black, hissing sand.
Magog, the primordial storm, engaged the Crimson Oni in a duel of pure, elemental fury. The sky became a canvas of warring light and darkness. Magog’s bolts of pure, white lightning, each one a spear of creation’s fire, were met by the Oni’s jagged, black-red spears of cursed energy, lances forged from pure, weaponized chaos. Their clash was a continuous, rolling thunder that shook the heavens, each impact a tear in the fabric of the atmosphere, the very air screaming under the strain.
It was a perfect, terrible, and absolute stalemate. Four Sovereign-Level entities, two of divine order and two of abyssal chaos, locked in a struggle that was tearing the very world apart at the seams.
And at the center of it all, two figures stood in a strange, quiet pocket of stillness, the eye of a hurricane of their own making.
Arch Duke Roy Ferrum watched the war of his gods with an expression of cold, analytical focus. The initial shock of the demon’s arrival, the brief flicker of surprise at this unaccounted-for variable, had passed. It was replaced by the grim, calculating mind of a grandmaster who had just had his board violently and rudely overturned. He was assessing, analyzing, processing the new, catastrophic data. His brother, the traitor Rubel, was no longer the primary target. He was merely a pawn, a disposable tool of a far greater and more terrifying power.
Beelzebub, for his part, watched the celestial battle with the air of a bored aristocrat at an opera he had seen a thousand times before. He had even produced a delicate, black silk fan from his coat and was now fanning himself languidly, a gesture of such supreme, calculated, and insulting arrogance that it was a weapon in itself, designed to unnerve and enrage his opponent.
“A bit much, isn’t it?” Beelzebub commented, his violet eyes twinkling with a genuine, almost childlike amusement as he watched the sky burn. “All this roaring and smashing and… elemental theatrics. It’s so terribly loud. I do prefer a more elegant solution, don’t you?”
Roy’s gaze finally dropped from the sky and locked onto the demon. The air between them crackled with a tension that was more potent than any of the four raging battles in the heavens. “And what do you prefer, devil?” Roy asked, his voice a low, dangerous rumble, the sound of a tectonic plate shifting deep beneath the earth.
Beelzebub smiled, a slow, beautiful, and utterly predatory thing that did not touch his ancient, bored eyes. “I prefer leverage,” he said softly. “I prefer the elegant, beautiful art of finding the one, single, insignificant thread that, when pulled, will unravel the entire, magnificent tapestry.”
He gestured vaguely towards the battlefield, towards the city, towards the entire duchy that Roy ruled. “You fight for this. For land. For people. For honor. For blood. All these messy, fragile, and utterly predictable attachments. They are not your strength, Arch Duke. They are your weaknesses. They are your threads. And oh, how beautifully they unravel when you give them a little tug.”
Roy remained silent, a statue of contained, volcanic power. He was letting the demon talk, gathering intelligence, assessing the philosophy of his new, absolute enemy.
Chapter : 1162
Beelzebub’s smile widened. He was enjoying the lecture. “Take this war, for example. You, a man of such overwhelming power, came here to do what? To squash a rebellious brother. A family squabble. You brought an army to put down a riot. You were thinking like a warden. I, on the other hand, was thinking like a farmer. I saw a fallow field of resentment and ambition in your brother’s soul, and I planted a single, tiny seed. I gave him a taste of true power, and then I simply stood back and watched him grow into this magnificent, destructive harvest.”
He sighed theatrically. “You see, Roy, you are fighting a war on a hundred fronts, trying to protect every last stone and soul. I am fighting a war on only one. The one that truly matters.”
The demon’s words were a poison, designed to erode the very foundations of Roy’s worldview. He was framing Roy’s strengths—his duty, his honor, his love for his people—as fatal, exploitable flaws.
Roy’s cold silence finally broke. “You talk a great deal for a being of such consequence,” he stated, his voice flat. “It suggests an insecurity. A need to justify your own parasitic existence.”
Beelzebub’s smile didn’t falter, but a new, colder light entered his violet eyes. The lecture was over. The game was about to escalate. “Parasitic? My dear Arch Duke, I am not a parasite. I am a catalyst. I am the force that accelerates the inevitable decay. And you… you are a magnificent, crumbling ruin. It will be a pleasure to watch you fall.”
The demon lord finally tired of the conversation. The time for psychological warfare was over. It was time for a more direct approach. The casual, bored aristocrat vanished, replaced by something ancient, hungry, and utterly devoid of mercy.
“Let us see if your will is as strong as your pets,” Beelzebub whispered, and the world around him began to warp.
Roy, sensing the shift from a battle of spirits to a direct confrontation of masters, knew he had to act. He could not allow this demon to dictate the terms of the engagement. His own power, the SSS-class mastery of his Steel Blood, a power he had not unleashed in its full, terrible glory in decades, finally answered the call.
His steel god, the hundred-armed titan, which had stood as a silent observer, began to dissolve. Not into nothing, but into a flowing, liquid river of pure, dark Ferrum steel. The river of metal did not fall to the ground; it flowed into Roy himself. His black armor began to shift, to writhe, to reform, the liquid steel flowing over it, creating new, more intricate layers of articulated plate. A magnificent, horned helmet of the same dark steel forged itself around his head, leaving only his eyes visible, now burning with a cold, white light.
The river of steel continued to flow, not just covering him, but expanding from him. It became a swirling, silent galaxy of a million individual, razor-sharp shards of metal, each one a self-guiding missile, a miniature sword orbiting his transfigured form.
He was no longer a man in armor. He was the nexus of a storm of blades, a god of war clad in the very essence of his power.
He looked at Beelzebub, who was now surrounded by his own aura of swirling, soul-eating despair, and for the first time since the demon’s arrival, Arch Duke Roy Ferrum smiled. It was a cold, hard, and terrifying smile.
"You wanted a more elegant solution, devil," Roy said, his voice now a resonant, metallic thing. "Let us dance."
The clash between the two sovereigns was a silent, conceptual war that made the raging battle of their spirits in the sky seem like a clumsy brawl.
Roy’s attack was a masterpiece of overwhelming, multi-vector offense. The swirling galaxy of a million steel shards around him was not a chaotic storm; it was a perfectly synchronized orchestra of death. With a single, focused thought, a hundred thousand of the shards converged, forming a dozen colossal, swirling serpents of pure, razor-edged steel. They did not roar; they moved with a silent, liquid grace, their forms constantly shifting, their target not Beelzebub’s body, but the very space he occupied. They were an attempt to shred him from existence.
Beelzebub met the attack not with a shield, but with a void. The bored, aristocratic facade had completely vanished, replaced by an expression of cold, predatory focus. The aura of despair around him coalesced, forming a sphere of absolute, featureless blackness, a perfect, twenty-foot bubble of anti-reality. It did not radiate cold or darkness; it radiated nothing.
