Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 93: The emerald glow vanished.

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Chapter 93: Chapter 93: The emerald glow vanished.

The end did not arrive with a fanfare.

​It simply ceased to exist, like a long-held breath finally released into the quiet of the night.

Across the expanse of the Primordial Battlefield, the earth itself seemed to exhale. Mountains that had walked like men returned to their ancient stillness, their granite limbs crumbling into harmless, inert rock. Fissures that had bled emerald light sealed themselves shut as the crust mended.

Gravity, once a weapon of the Sovereign, normalized into a gentle, familiar pull. The oppressive, soul-crushing weight that had defined every moment since the birth of the Titan Heart lifted all at once, leaving behind an eerie, blessed silence.

​Then, the sky changed.

​A vast, shimmering curtain of iridescent light spread from horizon to horizon. It was soft, pale, and carried with it a detached, cosmic authority that felt both alien and profoundly relieving. The announcement did not roar; it echoed directly into the consciousness of every survivor.

[ GLOBAL ANNOUNCEMENT! ]

[ THE GLOBAL EVENT: PRIMORDIAL BATTLEFIELD HAS REACHED ITS CONCLUSION ]

[ ALL REMAINING PARTICIPANTS WILL BE TRANSPORTED TO ETERNAL SKY SHORTLY ]

[ 10 ]

[ 9 ]

[ 8 ]

​All across the jagged plains and ruined forts, people froze in place. Some stood atop crumbling walls they had defended for weeks; others knelt in the dirt beside comrades who would never stand again. Some held weapons that still trembled in their hands, their eyes scanning the horizon for a threat that was no longer there, unable to process that the event was truly over.

​Then, reality began to sink in.

​Cheers erupted from the distant camps of the Liberation Cult. Laughter followed—jagged, hysterical, and relieved. Shouts of names rang out as survivors searched for friends.

Many simply fell to their knees, their bodies finally surrendering to a level of exhaustion they hadn’t been allowed to feel while survival was still at stake.

​Aegis stood at the epicenter of the final crater. The God-Killer Trident rested against the ground at his side, no longer radiating the cold hunger of the abyss, no longer screaming for the blood of the earth. It felt heavy in his hand—real, physical, and silent.

​Bella stood in front of him, her chest heaving with the effort of existing. She was alive. Her breathing was steady, and the horrific wound that had claimed her moments ago was gone, replaced by faint, silvery scars that glowed with a fading warmth before vanishing into her skin.

​She looked at him, and for a long moment, the chaos of the world faded into the background. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

Neither of them spoke. The countdown continued to tick in the periphery of their vision, a golden timer on the end of an epoch.

[ 7 ]

[ 6 ]

​Aegis finally broke the silence, his voice rough and low.

"So... this is it. The System is pulling the plug."

​Bella nodded slowly, her eyes searching his face as if trying to memorize every line before the transition.

"Seems so. The event is satisfied." Her voice was calm, but her hands were trembling at her sides.

She clasped them together, then unclasped them, looking around at the dissolving world with a strange, hollow expression.

​Around them, Ruina had reverted to her humanoid form. She stood a short distance away, her silver wings tucked in, giving them a small island of privacy in the middle of a dying world. Pyro bounced once, then settled beside her, his glow dimming to a soft, contented amber.

​Aegis exhaled a cloud of mist. "I didn’t think it would end like this. I thought we’d be fighting until there was nothing left but dust."

​Bella gave a soft, almost sad smile—the kind of smile she only ever showed him.

"You never do see the end coming, Aegis. You’re always too busy looking for the next strike."

[ 5 ]

​The battlefield shifted again, but this time the movement was gentle. Translucent pillars of light began to descend from the clouds, opening like windows to a sky they had almost forgotten.

​Adventurers began to disappear into the light. Some waved awkward, tearful goodbyes to the Primordials they had fought alongside. Some simply turned and walked into the portals without looking back, terrified that if they stayed a second longer, the nightmare would resume.

​From the distance, the shouts of the Gravenian soldiers reached them.

​"Sage Aegis!"

"Thank you, Lord Aegis!"

"We will tell the stories!"

​The Primordials gathered in clusters, their expressions filled with a complex mixture of awe and grief. The Gravenian veterans knelt as one, not because an officer had commanded it, but as a spontaneous act of devotion.

​Queen Gloriana stepped forward from the ranks. Her armor was scratched, her cape torn, and her face was smudged with the soot of the cavern.

She stopped several paces from Aegis and lowered her head in a deep, deliberate bow. She did not bow as a Queen acknowledging a peer; she bowed as a soul acknowledging its savior.

​"Sage Aegis," she said, her voice carrying across the quieted field. "On behalf of Gravenia, and every Primordial who still draws breath... thank you. You did more than win a war. You gave a dying world a reason to hope."

​Aegis turned fully toward her, the trident’s base clicking against the stone. "You don’t owe me anything, Gloriana. You were the ones who held the line while I was in the dark."

​She looked up, her red eyes glistening with unshed tears. "Perhaps. But you were the one who showed us we had a line to hold."

[ 4 ]

​Gloriana stepped closer, her voice dropping to a whisper. "You are leaving now. Returning to the sky."

​"Yes," Aegis replied.

​She pressed her lips together, nodding. "Then know that Gravenia will not fade. We will rebuild on the bones of the Sovereign. We will defend what you saved. And we will always remember the man who stood against the world."

​Aegis inclined his head. "That is more than enough."

​She hesitated for a heart-beat, then added softly, "If there is ever a path between our worlds again... I hope we meet as friends, and not as soldiers."

​"I would like that," Aegis said.

[ 3 ]

​The air around Bella began to shimmer with a familiar, crystalline radiance. She noticed it instantly, her hand reaching out as if to catch the fading air.

"So... the separation begins. We go back to our respective corners."

​Aegis looked at her—really looked at her. He didn’t see the Ice Goddess or the strategic partner of the Liberation Cult. He saw Bella. The girl who had been his greatest regret and his most unexpected ally.

​"I don’t like this," she said, her voice small. "The last time we were separated like this, it took a miracle to find each other again."

​Aegis huffed a short, dry breath. "Miracles are becoming a bit of a habit for us, don’t you think, Bella?"

​She took a step closer, crossing the final bit of distance until she was standing in his shadow.

"Listen to me, Aegis. I don’t know what reality looks like after this. I don’t know if the System will let us keep these memories or if the world will try to bury what happened here."

​Aegis remained silent, his heart heavy.

​"But I’m done," she continued, her voice gaining strength. "I’m done running from the past, and I’m done being silent about the future. When we return... I will find you. I don’t care about the distance or the titles."

​Aegis’s jaw tightened. "Bella, you don’t know how complicated my life is outside of this armor. It’s not a game out there."

​She revealed a defiant smile that was pure Skadi. "I don’t care. I’ve faced the Sovereign. Your complications don’t scare me."

[ 2 ]

​He searched her eyes for a flicker of doubt and found only a terrifying, beautiful certainty.

​"Then hear me," Aegis said, his voice dropping an octave. "When this world releases us, I won’t hide. I won’t disappear into the crowd or pretend I’m someone else."

​Bella’s eyes widened.

​"I am your Arlan," he said softly, the secret name hanging in the air like a vow. "And when you find me, I won’t push you away. We’ll be a family. I promise."

​She laughed and a single tear escaping and tracking through the dust on her cheek.

"Then it’s a vow. No more masks."

​She reached out and pressed two fingers against his chest, right over his heart.

"No more silence. No more misunderstandings. We meet again in reality. As ourselves."

​Aegis covered her hand with his own, his grip firm. "I’ll be waiting for the knock on the door."

[ 1 ]

​The light intensified until it was blinding.

The Primordial Battlefield began to dissolve into golden motes, the reality of the world unravelling like a mystery.

​Ruina stepped forward and bowed one last time. "Thank you for the light, Master. Be safe in your Island."

​Pyro bounced once, pressing his warm, jelly-like side against Aegis’s leg. Boink.

​Then, the pull became irresistible.

​Bella’s body began to glow with a brilliant, white light. She held his hand until the very last millisecond, her fingers slipping from his as she was pulled upward.

"Don’t be late!" she called out, her voice echoing as she vanished.

​"I won’t," he whispered to the empty air.

​One by one, the lights shot skyward. Gloriana was the last to fade, her red eyes watching him with a quiet, regal respect until she too became part of the stars.

​Finally, Aegis was alone. The battlefield was empty, silent, and at peace. The light engulfed him, warm and absolute, and the world finally released its hold.

​As the gates of Eternal Sky closed behind him, the Abyssal heart within him settled into a dormant hum, and the memory of a touch on his cheek remained. This was not the end of the story. It was a bridge.

​And on the other side, a girl named Bella was already looking for a man named Arlan.

The Global Event: Primordial Battlefield — COMPLETED.