Harem Startup : The Demon Billionaire is on Vacation-Chapter 701: Your Survival Priorities are Disturbing
Chapter 701 – Your Survival Priorities are Disturbing
The aura flared.
Not violently. Not explosively. Controlled. Calculated. Like a switch flipping from executive mode to battlefield accounting.
His suit dissolved into black infernal armor that formed piece by piece across his body. Plates locked over his shoulders. Ribbed obsidian metal wrapped around his torso. Greed sigils burned faint emerald along the seams. His wings burst outward, massive and sharp-edged, feathers layered in black-gold infernal steel.
Two daggers slid into existence in his hands, their blades humming softly, edges glowing with contract-breaking enchantments and pure, unfiltered demon greed.
Vizreel watched, unimpressed but alert. The Archon adjusted his grip on his massive sword, the blade shifting into full judgment mode as silver runes began cascading along its surface.
They stood back to back.
Listening.
Nothing moved.
No footsteps. No dimensional ripple. No assassin jumping out of a philosophical staircase fragment screaming about holy purification or infernal corruption. Just endless limbo quiet, stretching into infinity like someone forgot to program enemies into this boss room.
They stood in silence, senses stretched to their limits, yet no movement stirred the warped void around them.
After a long moment, they exchanged a brief glance. No words needed. Both understood the same conclusion. If their enemy refused to show themselves, then they would force them out.
Lux slowly turned his head, scanning the drifting void architecture. "Weird..."
Vizreel glanced sideways. "Define weird. You say that about most things."
"Last time they trapped me in limbo," Lux said, spinning one dagger lazily between his fingers, "at least they gave us a direction. You know. Classic dungeon design. ’Hey hero, walk into this suspicious cathedral and beat up my security team to unlock the exit.’"
Vizreel nodded slowly. "Yes. Standard narrative confrontation structure."
Lux gestured vaguely at the endless nothing around them. "This place doesn’t have anything. No tower. No cult temple. No evil altar with dramatic lighting. Just... this."
Vizreel looked around again, wings twitching slightly as his armor continued scanning reality fractures.
"I do not like this place," the Archon said.
Lux sighed dramatically. "Yeah. Me too. They don’t even have coffee here."
Vizreel shot him a flat look. "Your survival priorities are disturbing."
Lux shrugged. "Caffeine is tactical morale support."
They paced slowly across the void terrain. Their footsteps made soft echo sounds that traveled too far, bouncing across floating staircases and half-formed courtroom balconies before fading into static.
Vizreel spoke again after a moment. "Do you think they intend for us to kill each other here?"
Lux stopped mid-step and slowly turned to look at him.
"...What?"
Vizreel shrugged slightly, armor clinking. "It is a common trap psychology tactic. Isolate targets. Create paranoia. Suggest survival requires elimination of the other."
Lux blinked once. Twice.
"...What makes them think they could make us do that?"
Vizreel tilted his head. "Desperation. Manipulation. The possibility that only one of us could leave."
Lux stared at him for a long moment.
Then snorted.
"That is a cheap trick," Lux said. "That works if I am not a Hell CFO and you are not literally the Guardian of Balance."
Vizreel nodded. "Agreed."
Lux resumed walking, daggers twirling idly in his hands like nervous fidget toys made of demonic murder steel.
"They could attempt hallucination layers," Vizreel added. "Alter perception. Force us to believe we are attacking hostile illusions."
Lux hummed thoughtfully. "Possible. But if they were going to do that, they usually start with emotional bait. Dead loved ones. Betrayed allies. Tax audits."
Vizreel blinked. "Tax audits?"
"Worst nightmare," Lux said solemnly.
Vizreel almost smiled.
They kept moving across the fractured landscape. The ground shifted under their boots occasionally, like the limbo realm was breathing or reconsidering physics every few seconds.
Lux crouched near a floating marble slab and tapped it with one dagger. The blade passed through halfway before hitting a resistance barrier.
"...Huh."
Vizreel walked closer. "Hidden architecture?"
"Maybe," Lux said. "Or fake environmental assets. Limbo loves aesthetic without function."
Vizreel scanned the area again, sword humming louder as it attempted to map dimensional boundaries.
"I still detect no direct hostility," the Archon said.
Lux stood again, wings folding slightly as he scanned the horizon.
"Maybe there are hidden doors," Lux said.
Vizreel raised a brow. "Hidden doors."
"Yes. Secret passageways. Classic dungeon logic. If there is no obvious exit, there is probably a ridiculously dramatic secret one."
Vizreel looked around at floating void fragments. "And how do you suggest we find invisible doors inside an unstable pocket dimension?"
Lux grinned.
"Trial and error."
Vizreel sighed. "Of course."
Lux suddenly flung one dagger forward. It spun through the air and embedded itself into nothing.
For half a second, nothing happened.
Then the dagger hit something invisible with a metallic clang and bounced off, landing tip-first into the void floor beside them.
Lux pointed. "Door candidate."
Vizreel stared at him.
"You threw a weapon randomly."
"I call it proactive environmental negotiation," Lux said.
Vizreel walked toward the impact point. He extended one gauntleted hand and pressed against the invisible surface. The barrier shimmered faintly, revealing a faint archway outline etched in flickering contract glyphs.
"...You were correct," Vizreel admitted reluctantly.
Lux beamed proudly. "I am correct a lot."
Vizreel glared slightly. "Do not become insufferable."
"Too late," Lux said cheerfully.
Vizreel traced the glyph lines, analyzing the energy flow. "This is not an exit."
Lux frowned. "No?"
"No," Vizreel said. "It is a containment reinforcement node."
Lux blinked. "Oh. So I accidentally poked the structural support beam of our prison."
"Yes."
"...Good to know I am still contributing."
Vizreel shook his head slowly, then raised his sword and struck the barrier once. The archway flickered violently but remained intact.
"Destroying these nodes may weaken the limbo shell," Vizreel said.
Lux tilted his head thoughtfully. "So we dismantle the infrastructure from inside. Corporate sabotage style."
Vizreel nodded. "Precisely."
Lux cracked his neck slightly and resummoned his dagger from the floor with a flick of his fingers.
"Alright," Lux said, wings spreading wider as his aura brightened. "Let’s audit this reality and file some complaints."
Vizreel raised his sword beside him.
"For balance," the Archon said.
"For profit," Lux replied.
And somewhere beyond the floating void fragments, something unseen shifted... reacting to their decision to fight back instead of panic.







