Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 88: Operation Heartbreaker

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Chapter 88: Chapter 88: Operation Heartbreaker

Night settled over the Inner Bastion like a heavy cloak, suffocating the usual sounds of a military encampment.

​The fires burned lower than usual, not from a lack of fuel, but from a calculated restraint. Orders had been disseminated at sundown to reduce all visible light; the Liberation Cult was trying to vanish into the shadows of the very mountains they occupied.

Beyond the bastion walls, the horizon pulsed with emerald veins, resembling a sleeping predator whose heartbeat could be felt through the soles of one’s boots.

​Inside the central war chamber, a cold silence ruled.

​Aegis stood at the head of the long stone table, both hands resting heavily on its surface.

The map before him was no longer just a representation of terrain; it was a living record of strategic retreats and the high cost of survival.

Emerald markings bled across the Western territories like a spreading infection. Blue lines traced the desperate evacuation routes of millions, and red symbols marked the silent graveyards of fallen strongholds.

​Bella stood at his right, her arms folded tightly across her plump chest, her expression sharp enough to cut the gloom.

Ruina crouched near the back wall in her humanoid form, her silver wings folded so tightly they looked like a cloak of steel, her eyes reflecting the flickering torchlight. Pyro rested near Aegis’s feet, smaller and denser than usual, quietly absorbing the ambient heat of the room.

​Around the table sat the core leadership. Gravenian generals with centuries of service, veteran adventurer captains, and mage-commanders whose eyes carried the hollow weight of the men and women they had lost that morning.

​Aegis broke the silence, .

"We cannot win a war of attrition against a mind that controls the fundamental laws of the battlefield itself. Every moment we spend defending a border, the Sovereign learns how to break it faster."

​The Gravenian general across from him nodded grimly. "They don’t tire, My Lord. They don’t hunger. And they certainly don’t mourn."

Aegis replied,

​"Exactly, We cannot outmaneuver an enemy that processes data faster than we can speak. And we can no longer protect our people if we continue to let the Sovereign dictate the pace of this war. If we stay on the defensive, we are simply waiting for our turn to be erased."

​He straightened his posture, and the temperature in the room seemed to drop. "So we will not defend. We will not react."

​A veteran captain leaned forward, his voice a cautious whisper. "You are proposing a decapitation strike. An assassination."

​"Yes," Aegis said simply. "We are going to kill the heart."

​A murmur rippled through the room, a mixture of hope and pure, unadulterated dread.

"The Titan Sovereign is not a commander in the way we understand it," one mage-commander argued, gesturing toward the maps. "It is the battlefield’s collective will made flesh. How do you assassinate a force of nature?"

​"By finding the point where that nature becomes a machine," Bella answered for him, her voice cold and steady. "As long as it exists, every Titan is a node in a network aimed at our extinction. We don’t need to kill the army. We need to shut down the signal."

​Aegis tapped a specific, pulsing mark deep within the Titan-occupied territory. "The Titan Heart.

Bella’s observations during the Sovereign’s advance confirm that its gravitational dominance isn’t constant. It spikes. Those spikes correlate perfectly with energy surges localized at its chest."

​He nodded, "It is more than a power source. It is the command relay. When that heart pulses, a million Titans move in unison. If we remove it, the Unity doesn’t just lose its leader. It loses its mind."

​A heavy silence followed.

One of the adventurer captains finally spoke: "And if removing it kills the Sovereign but triggers a System-wide ’Correction’? If we break the heart and the world decides to shatter along with it?"

​Aegis met the man’s gaze with absolute, unyielding clarity. "Then we will face that tomorrow. Tonight, we wneed to face the certainty that if we do nothing, there will be no world left to save."

​The Gravenian general exhaled a long, shaky breath. "Then the question is no longer ’if,’ but ’how.’ How do we reach a Sovereign that is protected by a sea of Dukes?"

​Aegis closed his eyes briefly, envisioning the path. "Operation Heartbreaker."

​The name settled over the room like a final verdict.

​"This will not be an army operation," Aegis continued. "Mass movement is exactly what the Sovereign is designed to track. If we send a legion, it will see us coming from fifty miles away. We will use a strike team. Small, fast, and lethal."

​"Who?" the general asked, though he likely already knew.

​"Myself. Bella. Ruina. Pyro."

​The room erupted.

​"That is suicide, My Lord!"

"You are the backbone of the entire Cult! If you fall, the Liberation falls with you!"

​Aegis raised a single hand, and the room fell into a grudging, heavy silence.

"I am already the target," he said calmly. "The Sovereign has identified me as the primary existential threat. Any large-scale maneuver will draw its full attention regardless of where I am. By being at the center of the strike, I am drawing the fire exactly where it needs to be."

​Ruina stepped toward him, her silver eyes burning. "Then take me alone, My Lord. I can fly at speeds the Titans cannot track. I can dive, rip the Heart out, and be gone before they even register the breach."

​Aegis shook his head, "You cannot survive the Sovereign’s personal gravitational field alone, Ruina. The moment you enter the inner circle, your wings will be useless without a counter-domain."

​Bella’s voice was soft but final, "And I am not letting him go into that hellscape without a lifeline. I am the only one who can stabilize the mana flow when he unseals the Crown."

​Aegis turned to the officers, outlining the final contingencies,

"The Sovereign is surrounded by layered formations. We will not breach them. We will bypass them. Pyro, you will act as the distraction. You will assume your full Titan form at the Southern flank. Maximum output. Make yourself so large and so loud that the Sovereign has no choice but to calculate you as the primary assault."

​The little slime vibrated with a sudden, fierce energy. Boink.

​"Ruina, you are our extraction. You stay in the high-altitude currents. You do not engage the ground unless we are pinned. Your only job is to get us out once the Heart is secured."

​Finally, he looked at Bella. "You are my heart. Inside the Sovereign’s influence, gravity and time will be distorted. You will use ice suppression to hold the space open and life magic to keep our cores from collapsing under the pressure."

​"And if you fall?" Bella asked, her voice trembling just a fraction.

​Aegis looked at her with unwavering gaze. "Then you need to pull the Heart out anyway. You will take Ruina, you willtake the Heart, and you bring it back here. This mission does not have a failure clause, Bella. It only has a conclusion."

​Bella stared at him, her knuckles white. "I am not interested in a conclusion that ends with your sacrifice, Aegis."

​"I am not sacrificing myself," he said, stepping closer to her. "I am ending a war. There is a difference."

​The chamber door groaned open, and Queen Gloriana stepped out of the shadows. She had been listening from the periphery until now.

"You will not go without my blessing," she said. "But you also will not go without the understanding that if you die, this army dies with you. I cannot hold these people together without their symbol."

​Aegis inclined his head, "I am aware of the burden, Your Majesty."

​Gloriana studied him for a long time, then nodded slowly. "Then go. But do not you dare die before you’ve seen the world you’re trying to save, Sage."

​The meeting dissolved into a flurry of quiet preparations. Only the strike team knew the truth of the morning’s mission; the rest of the army was told only that a high-level reconnaissance was underway.

​Later that night, Bella found Aegis standing at the very edge of the bastion, staring out at the emerald horizon where the earth seemed to be glowing with malice.

"You didn’t tell them the full cost," she said softly.

​Aegis didn’t turn around.

"Fear is a poor strategist, Bella. They needed to believe in the plan, not the price."

​"Tell me," she insisted, stepping beside him.

​He hesitated, his hand resting on the hilt of the trident. "The Sea God’s Crown... it is a King-rank authority being channeled through a Duke-rank vessel. If I push it to its absolute limit to break the Sovereign’s shell, I may not come back the same. Memory, emotion, the things that make me ’Aegis’... they might be the fuel for that fire."

​Bella’s breath caught in her throat. She gripped his arm, her fingers digging into his palm. "Then we will find another way. You shouldn’t use it."

​"But there is no other way to kill a Sovereign," Aegis said quietly. "If I lose myself... if the crown takes too much... I need you to be the one to bring me back. Even if you have to freeze my heart to do it."

​Bella looked at him, her eyes shining with unshed tears.

"I’ll do more than that, Arlan. I’ll drag you back from the abyss myself."

​Boink. Pyro bounced up between them, a small spark of defiance in the dark.

​Aegis smiled faintly, crouching to touch the slime. "Tomorrow, then."

​"Tomorrow," Bella echoed.

​Far away, beneath the heavy crust of the Western Badlands, the Titan Sovereign pulsed once. The emerald light flared, and the ground for a hundred miles groaned in response. It knew they were coming. It was waiting.

​But it didn’t realize that for the first time, Aegis wasn’t coming to fight. He was coming to perform a operation on the world.