Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 328: Vs Ghost 2
Elreth kicked a possessed badger away, her eyes wide. "Fire into ice? It’ll just make steam!"
"Exactly!" Nero shouted, a fierce grin cutting through his exhaustion. "Just do it!"
He stopped trying to hit individual ghosts. He started gathering every ounce of his remaining Lightning prana. He let it build inside him, a storm contained in flesh and bone. The air around him buzzed, his hair standing on end.
"NOW, KHIONE!"
Khione thrust both hands toward the main ghost and the cluster around it. "Absolute Zero: Binding!"
It wasn’t an attack. It was a cage. A sphere of instantly-formed, super-dense, ultra-cold ice crystallized in the air, trapping the main ghost and a dozen of its minions inside a frozen prison. The ghosts shrieked, their movements slowing to a crawl within the sudden, profound cold.
"ELRETH, NOW! THE CENTER!"
Elreth didn’t hesitate. She planted her feet, dropped her spear, and brought her hands together. Her amber eyes blazed. All her frustration, her feeling of uselessness against the ghosts, she poured into this one spell. "Searing Sunbeam!"
A column of concentrated, white-hot fire, thin and intense as a laser, lanced from her palms. It shot across the clearing and pierced directly into the heart of Khione’s frozen sphere.
The reaction was instantaneous and catastrophic.
FWOOM-SHSSSSSSSSSSSCCCCCRACK!
The super-heated fire met the ultra-cold ice. It didn’t just melt it. It caused a violent, explosive phase change. The ice didn’t turn to water; it turned instantly to a massive, expanding cloud of superheated, high-pressure steam. But more importantly, the sudden, extreme thermal shock traveled through the magical ice into the ghosts themselves.
Ethereal as they were, they were still bound by magical laws. The violent clash of extreme elements—Khione’s absolute cold and Elreth’s concentrated fire—created a ripple of chaotic, unstable energy within the ice sphere.
This was Nero’s moment.
He unleashed the Lightning he’d been holding. But he didn’t aim it at the ghosts. He aimed it at the steam.
"CHAIN LIGHTNING: CONDUCTION!"
A massive, branching bolt of golden electricity shot from his sword into the billowing, ion-rich steam cloud. The lightning didn’t dissipate. It traveled, zigzagging madly through the moist, charged air. Every ghost trapped in the steam cloud was struck not by one bolt, but by a hundred arcing forks of energy jumping through the medium their frozen forms had helped create.
The clearing lit up with a deafening, continuous CRACKLE-BOOM. The ghostly shrieks were silenced, swallowed by the thunder.
When the light and steam cleared, the frozen sphere was gone. The main ghost and its trapped minions were gone too. Vaporized. The remaining ghosts, stunned and leaderless, flickered weakly.
The trio didn’t let up. Exhausted but triumphant, they pushed forward. Elreth and Khione cleared the last of the possessed beasts. Nero, with his last sparks of energy, swept through the remaining specters with precise, crackling strikes.
Silence fell, broken only by their heavy breathing. The first true rays of dawn broke over the cliff, washing the rocky clearing in pale gold light. The oppressive, fearful cold was gone.
The dawn light, now clear and strong, felt like a blessing. The adrenaline of the fight faded, leaving behind deep fatigue and a collection of aches. They sat on the cold rocks of the clearing for a long while, just breathing, letting the sun warm their chilled skin.
Finally, Nero pushed himself up. "We need to search this place. That thing was smart. It lured us here. This might be more than just a hungry ghost."
The others agreed. Moving slowly but thoroughly, they combed the clearing and the base of the cliff. The fight had scoured the area, but Khione’s sharp eyes found it first: a narrow, almost invisible fissure in the cliff face, hidden behind a scrubby bush. The air coming from it was colder than it should have been, and carried a faint, metallic smell.
They squeezed inside. The fissure opened into a small, natural cave. It wasn’t a lair. It was a cache.
Scattered on the floor were items. A farmer’s sturdy wool hat. A tinderbox. A small, carved wooden toy. Personal effects from the missing villagers. But more chilling were the other things: several strange, dark crystals that hummed with a sickly energy, and a torn piece of a map that showed not just Oakhaven, but several other villages in the region, with small, ominous marks next to them.
"This wasn’t random hunting," Nero said quietly, holding one of the cold crystals. It seemed to drink the light. "This was harvesting. Collecting something... maybe life force, maybe fear. And it was organized." He pointed to the map. "Oakhaven was just one stop."
The ghost had been a tool. A sophisticated, deadly tool, part of a larger operation.
The weight of the discovery settled on them. This was no longer a simple Level Two monster clearance. They had stumbled onto the edge of something bigger, something darker. They carefully collected the crystals and the map as evidence.
Exhausted but driven by this new urgency, they made their way back down to Oakhaven. The walk was quiet, each lost in thought about the implications.
Chief Boren met them at the village edge, his haggard face full of fearful hope. They didn’t give him all the grim details. They simply told him the immediate threat was gone. The creature that took his people was destroyed. 𝒻𝑟𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝑛𝘰𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝘤𝘰𝘮
The relief that washed over the villagers was palpable. It was like watching color return to a grey painting. Tears were shed. A few even managed weak smiles. They offered the cadets food, a place to rest, but the trio declined. They needed to report to the mayor and process what they’d found.
They drove back to Oxglen in silence, the morning sun now high. They went straight to the mayor, presenting the crystals and the map. Mayor Alistair’s face turned from gratitude to grave concern. "This is beyond our local guard," he admitted. "I must send this to the regional capital. This suggests... coordinated malice."
He urged them to stay in Oxglen for a few more days, to see if the disappearances truly stopped and to be on hand if anything new developed. They agreed.
For the next two days, life in Oakhaven returned to a fragile normal. No one else vanished. The fear began to slowly recede, replaced by cautious relief.
Back in their villa, with the immediate crisis over but the larger mystery unresolved, the trio did what warriors do: they trained. The confrontation had exposed weaknesses. Elreth’s frustration at being useless against the ghosts was a burning motivator. She spent hours in the back mountain, not just with her spear, but practicing condensing her fire into tighter, more intense beams, theorizing ways to superheat the air or create concussive blasts that might affect non-corporeal foes.
Khione, too, refined her craft. She practiced layering her ice—creating shells that were brittle on the outside but held a core of different density within, or forming ice that was laced with conductive minerals, experimenting with ways to make her spells more than just barriers or blunt instruments.
Nero pushed his synergy harder. He set up exercises where he had to switch between Fire and Lightning not just in sequence, but in combination, mid-action. A lightning-fast dash that ended in a fiery explosion. A wall of flame he’d then electrify. He was chasing the feeling they’d created in the clearing—the amplified power of their laws working not just together, but through each other.
They trained separately, but the villa was filled with the quiet energy of their focus. Even their meals were spent in thoughtful silence, analyzing the previous day’s sparring or discussing theories about the dark crystals.







