Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 311: The Hunt is On

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Chapter 311: The Hunt is On

The gentle swaying of the wisteria blooms was the sole motion within the pavilion. Elysia remained perfectly still, her golden eyes intently focused on the location where Nero had previously stood. The atmosphere continued to resonate with the diminishing echoes of his declaration and the residual crackling of her own lightning.

Gradually, the shadow adjacent to one of the fractured columns intensified and then merged into a single form. A figure knelt there, bereft of features and silent, its shape absorbing the surrounding light. This was her personal guardian, a wraith bound to the Raizen bloodline.

"Mistress," its voice was a dry rustling, reminiscent of dead leaves skittering over stones. "Shall I intervene? His disrespect cannot be tolerated."

Elysia refused to meet its gaze. For an extended moment, she remained silent. Subsequently, a soft sound escaped her lips. It escalated, transforming from a mere chuckle into a full, resonant laugh that reverberated beneath the pavilion’s scarred roof. This was not her usual poised, mocking laughter; rather, it was raw, unexpected, and profoundly delightful.

"No," she finally declared, dabbing at a nonexistent tear at the corner of her eye.

"No, you shall not intervene. Not at this time."

The shadow persisted in its bowed posture, awaiting further clarification.

"He threatened to obliterate us," she speculated, her voice still imbued with amusement. "Him. A Red Knight, scarcely more than a child in terms of genuine power, armed solely with his own two hands and that ludicrous confidence." She shook her head, a sincere smile gracing her face. "It has been a while since anyone regarded me as an equal... or a rival. Everyone else perceives only the title, the clan, and the prospective Matriarch. Yet, he merely saw me and commanded me to vacate his path."

The amusement hardened into something sharper, more focused. A competitive fire, long dormant beneath layers of politics and duty, ignited in her core, burning brighter than any spell. "He will bend. I will make him see the futility of his defiance and the grandeur of the legacy he’s spurning. Or..." Her eyes glinted with a dangerous light. "...I will personally break him. But it will be my victory. Not the clan’s. Mine."

She understood now. His meteoric rise, the dual laws, the sheer, unshakeable will—it wasn’t just chance. He was pure Raizen blood, perhaps more potent than even her own. A dormant strain of their lineage had awakened in him with a vengeance. He wasn’t just a tool; he was a missing piece of the clan’s destiny, a wild element that could either complete their ascendancy or shatter it.

"Do not report the details of this conversation to my father," she commanded, her voice turning cool and authoritative. "Only inform him that the first contact was unsuccessful, but that the situation is under my control. There is nothing to fear."

"As you command," the shadow whispered and began to dissolve back into nothingness.

"Wait," Elysia said. The shadow solidified. "Increase surveillance on his known allies—the Undine girl, the Leclair heir. But do not interfere. I want to know everything. What they eat, how they train, what they whisper. He says he relies only on himself, but everyone has pressure points."

The shadow bowed once more and vanished completely.

Alone again, the full weight of the encounter settled upon her. The pleasant tension of a new, thrilling game curled in her stomach. Nero had thrown down a gauntlet she never expected. He wanted a war of wills? A contest to see who would bend first? She would give him one. And she would win.

But first, she needed to burn. The restless, aggressive energy he had stirred in her couldn’t be contained by politics or plotting. It demanded release.

She rose from her seat, the ruined pavilion already forgotten behind her. She didn’t return to her manor. She walked straight to the secluded chamber, placed her hand on the stone, and stepped back into the primordial twilight of the pocket world—the Verdant Crucible.

It had only been hours since her last rampage, but the forest felt different. The monsters had not yet returned to their usual patterns; the silence of their fear still lingered in the hollows. Good. She didn’t want prey. She wanted a catharsis. 𝑓𝓇𝘦ℯ𝘸𝘦𝑏𝓃𝑜𝘷ℯ𝑙.𝑐𝑜𝓂

Elysia drew her sword. This time, she didn’t walk. She announced herself.

She tapped the tip of her blade to the ground, channeling her prana not into a spell, but into a pure, resonant pulse of her aura. The pulse shot through the root systems, the soil, the very air.

THUMM.

It was a declaration of war on the entire ecosystem.

The response was immediate. This was not a hunt; it was a provocation. From the deepest thickets and the highest canopies, the Crucible’s most powerful guardians reacted. A three-headed hydra, each maw dripping corrosive venom, erupted from a murky pond. A pack of Ironhide Drakes, their scales clattering like armor, charged from a cave, their eyes glowing with predatory intelligence. From above, a flock of Stormcrows, creatures of wind and lightning, gathered, their wings crackling with unnatural energy.

Elysia’s cold smile returned. "Perfect."

She didn’t wait for them to converge. She launched herself at the hydra. Her earlier precision was gone, replaced by a devastating, overwhelming fury. This wasn’t about control. It was about dominion.

"Lightning Fall: Judgment." Her voice cut through the din. She raised her sword to the perpetually twilit sky, and true lightning—thick, violent, and purple—answered her call. It didn’t strike her. It struck through her, turning her into a living conductor. She became the focal point of a deafening electrical storm. Bolts arced from her body to the charging drakes, frying them mid-stride. One lanced into the central head of the hydra, making its whole body seize and thrash.

She moved among them like an avatar of wrath. Her swordwork was less finesse, more brutal efficiency. She parried a drake’s claw and discharged a point-blank surge of electricity into its chest, blowing a hole clean through. She spun, slicing through a hydra’s neck; before the head could even fall, she thrust her free hand into the stump, unleashing a "Voltaic Burst" that cooked the creature from the inside out.

The Stormcrows dove, shrieking, firing bolts of their own lightning. Elysia laughed, a wild, exhilarating sound. She didn’t block them. She absorbed them. She spread her arms, letting their attacks hit her directly, using her superior mastery of the Lightning Law to siphon their power into her own reserves. Her hair rose in a crackling corona, her eyes blazing with stolen energy.

"My turn," she breathed.

She clapped her hands together, compressing all the stolen and self-generated lightning into a single, dense orb of violet annihilation between her palms. Then, she thrust it into the ground.

"Cataclysm Wave."

The energy didn’t explode upward. It radiated outward in a silent, expanding ring of pure electrical destruction. It washed over the land. The remaining drakes, the thrashing hydra, the shrieking crows—everything within a hundred-yard radius was vaporized. Trees were reduced to standing, blackened skeletons. The ground was scorched glass.

Silence returned, deeper than before, smelling of ozone and ash.

Elysia stood at the epicenter, her chest heaving, sweat cooling on her skin. The competitive fire, the frustrated ambition, the thrill of the new challenge—it was all burned away in that pure, unthinking release of power. The exhaustion was deep, but it was clean.

She looked around at the circle of devastation she had wrought. This was her answer to Nero’s defiance. Not a plot, not a threat, but a reminder—to herself more than anyone—of what she was capable of. He spoke of surpassing her in a year. He dreamed of erasing their clan.

Let him try, she thought, sheathing her sword with a soft, definitive click. The game is on, little brother. And I always win.

She walked back toward the portal, the ashes of the forest swirling in her wake, her golden eyes already calculating the next move in a battle that had just truly begun.

The hunt is on.

This would be a fun hunt, she thought, with her as the final victor, there was no doubt about it.