Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 79: Ch : When the Ancient Kingdom Rose (2)
The soldier holding it shrugged. "It wasn’t forged for a game. It was forged to block the literal weight of a mountain when the Titans try to dig us out. It doesn’t have stats; it has a purpose."
"Figures," the adventurer laughed, shaking his head. "Everything we do is for points. Everything you do is for breath."
Bella watched the interactions from her position near Aegis, with a faint rare smile touching her lips.
Ruina leaned closer, saying softly. "They admire him, master. Both sides. They’re starting to see him as the bridge."
"They should," Bella replied, her voice laced with a strange pride. "He’s the only one who realized that the Heirs were looking at the wrong map. Ann and Gaia are looking for divine power. Aegis is looking for the people."
RUMBLE!
The moment of unity was interrupted by a familiar, gut-wrenching tremor. This time, it was not the Gravenian army. It was the enemy.
From the distant, ash-choked plains, the first major horde of the campaign emerged. Hundreds of Earth Titans, their bodies merging into the landscape like moving hills, lumbered forward. Count-ranks formed the skirmish lines, while Marquis-ranks acted as the anchors.
Rumble! Rumble!
The ground cracked beneath their monumental steps, and the very gravity of the area began to warp, pulling debris toward the giants.
The army did not panic. There was no shouting, no frantic scurrying for position.
Aegis raised his hand, and every voice fell silent. He did not need to scream; the silence of the army acted as a megaphone for his intent.
"First engagement," he said, his voice carrying through a mana-infused resonance. "I want no heroics. No individual glory-seeking. Follow the command structure. If a Gravenian officer gives an order, you treat it as if it came from me."
"Show them what unity looks like. Show them that the age of the Titans is a relic of the past."
War horns sounded in a high, piercing note from the adventurers and a deep, guttural blast from the Gravenians.
The army moved. "Raaaaahh!"
The Gravenian shield walls advanced first, locking together with a precision that defied the sheer scale of the line. Behind them, adventurer mages synchronized their spells, guided by Gravenian runic officers who acted as living focal points, magnifying the output of the surface-magic. A forest of arrows darkened the sky, each one tipped with specialized Gravenian piercers. Siege constructs roared to life, hurling boulders of compressed mana that exploded against the Titans’ chests.
Then Aegis moved. He was a storm unleashed, a blur of blue and silver. He surged forward, the water pressure around him distorting the very space he occupied.
The God-Killer Trident gleamed with a predatory light as he tore through the front line.
With each strike, massive Titan bodies collapsed inward, their structural integrity failing as if the trident were deleting the laws of physics that held them together. Stone shattered into fine sand; Sky Crystals burst free like overripe fruit.
Bella followed in his wake, her ice and life magic intertwined in a mesmerizing dance. Towering Ice Knights, forty feet tall and wreathed in green vitality, manifested by the dozens. They charged, clashing with Titans half their size and winning through sheer aggression. Where an Ice Knight’s limb was shattered by a Titan’s club, the life magic reforged the ice instantly, making them an undying vanguard.
Above the fray, Ruina’s roar split the sky. Her silver form was a streak of lightning, coordinating the aerial assault. Pyro, resting on her back, expanded into his Titan Slime form once more, a gargantuan mass of boiling, sentient jelly. Together, they unleashed a fused breath of silver flame and concentrated heat that carved literal canyons through the Titan ranks.
Pyro bounced with a terrifying purpose now. Each impact didn’t just hit a Titan; it flattened them.
Boink. A single count-rank was crushed into the dirt.
Boink. A cluster of Count-ranks was reduced to pebbles.
Boink.
The adventurers watched in awe even as they fought. 𝕗𝗿𝕖𝐞𝐰𝗲𝕓𝐧𝕠𝕧𝗲𝐥.𝚌𝐨𝚖
"Are you seeing this?" a rogue shouted to his party as they finished off a wounded giant. "The coordination... it’s not just a brawl anymore. It’s a slaughterhouse."
"Look at the third formation!" a commander shouted. "They’re rotating! The Gravenians are taking the hits while the mages recharge. It’s perfect!"
The Titan horde, which would have taken a week for a standard raid team to clear, broke within minutes. They weren’t just routed; they were systematically annihilated. When the dust finally settled, the battlefield was no longer brown and grey. It was shimmering. Sky Crystals littered the field like fallen stars, thousands of them glowing in the fading light.
Cheers erupted, but they were different from the usual post-battle celebrations. They weren’t wild or reckless. They were the cheers of a professional force that had realized its own potential.
A veteran adventurer wiped the black Titan ichor from his blade and looked at the Gravenian soldier beside him. The soldier was calmly cleaning his spear, his breathing barely elevated.
"I’ve never fought like this before," the adventurer admitted, his voice full of wonder. "I always felt like I was one mistake away from being stepped on. Today... today I felt like the mountain."
The Gravenian soldier looked at him and nodded slowly. "Neither have we. For centuries, we fought to survive another hour. Today, we fought for a future. It is a different feeling, isn’t it? To fight with hope?"
Aegis stood at the center of the carnage, his trident planted firmly into the ground. Bella landed beside him, her armor spotless despite the chaos.
"That was only the first wave, Aegis. The enemies will react. They won’t like being played this efficiently."
"Yes," Aegis replied, staring at the Sky Crystals that his logistics teams were already beginning to harvest. "And it will only get harder. The System will escalate. Ann will escalate."
Gloriana approached, her helm tucked under her arm and her hair damp with sweat. She looked at her soldiers, who were now sharing rations and stories with the surface-dwellers.
"My people will follow you to the edge of the world, Sage. You gave them the one thing a thousand years of hiding couldn’t: the sky."
Aegis looked out at the vast, unified front. Two million Gravenians. Fifty thousand adventurers. Dragons circling in the twilight. Titans broken and forgotten beneath their feet.
"Then we will not stop," he said.
And as the Liberation Cult advanced, the Primordial Battlefield changed forever.
It wasn’t because a god had descended to save them, but because a man had convinced an army to stop waiting for one and rise to become the heavens themselves.
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