ShadowBound: The Need For Power-Chapter 367: The Green Calamity (2)
Chapter 367: The Green Calamity (2)
Cities had descended into utter chaos. freewebnσvel.cѳm
The once orderly queues of civilians—lined up with tense patience just moments before—were now fractured into maddened disarray. Screams rose louder than the roaring winds, as the very earth beneath their feet cracked open. Gaia demons erupted from beneath the stone roads and shattered foundations, hulking abominations with bark-plated skin and vines like living whips trailing behind them. Their guttural cries reverberated through the narrow alleys and wide streets alike, the sound like the war chants of hell itself.
Gaia hybrids—grotesque half-breeds of man and corruption—sprang from the shadows, their forms lean, too long, misshapen, and wrong. Their glowing green eyes shimmered like ghostfire, and their snarling jaws were already stained with blood. Some came in packs, launching at families like wild animals. Others crawled along rooftops or dragged themselves out of ruined wells and burned-out shrines.
Children screamed for parents, parents fought with bare hands to shield them. The panic was thick, suffocating, impossible to navigate. Bodies collided in desperation, while debris rained from the sky.
But the knightly forces of the Tempest Kingdom met that chaos like a blade to the throat.
Armored warriors surged forward, blades drawn, myst surging from their forms. Mages raised their hands skyward, casting waves of defensive barriers and elemental strikes with brutal precision.
"Shield the civilians! Guide them to the portals—NOW!" a commander roared, his voice cutting through the noise even as he crushed a hybrid beneath his myst-infused blade.
Flames danced through the air, streaks of lightning lit the sky, and pillars of ice jutted from the ground like spears. Stone walls rose to block off charging demons, and holy myst flared as healing spells mended the wounded. The sky itself shimmered under the glow of coordinated magic.
At the heart of the battlefield dropped Magnus, his blade already slick with green ichor. He landed hard, knees bent, and in one smooth motion he carved through two lunging hybrids, their bodies splitting mid-leap.
Above him, Galen was a walking inferno, encased in a sheath of burning myst. With every casual flick of his wrist, demons combusted mid-charge.
"Magnus!" he shouted through the chaos. "We gotta keep those portals open, or this turns into a massacre!"
"They’ll stay open!" Magnus yelled back, swinging wide and severing a vine that had snared a small boy. "We just need to hold the line long enough to—"
He stopped, his words cut off by a strange shimmer in the air.
A glowing portal opened directly behind Galen.
"GALLY! WATCH OUT!" Magnus bellowed, his voice strained.
Galen turned, brow furrowed. "The hell is th—"
The portal snapped shut with a sudden pulse, sucking Galen into its core with frightening speed. One blink—he was gone.
Magnus’s heart skipped. His mind tried to grasp what had just occurred, but the battlefield offered no time for clarity. Screams snapped him back to reality.
A young mage stumbled backward, a hybrid baring down on her with open claws—until a burst of compressed air blew straight through the creature’s chest, leaving behind a gaping hole that pulsed with dying green light.
The girl turned, eyes wide in shock. She saw Magnus a short distance away, sword in hand, standing like a sentinel.
"Get to the portals! Help the others keep them stable!" he ordered.
"Y-Yes, Sir Magna!" she stammered, quickly bolting off into the fray.
As she disappeared into the swirling chaos, Magnus’s eyes flicked back to the spot where Galen had vanished.
"What the hell just happened to Gally?" he muttered. His gaze sharpened, scanning every arcane disturbance he could detect. That portal hadn’t been one of theirs. And he knew—he knew—Mystica wouldn’t do something so reckless. Especially not now. This wasn’t some prank or wild experiment.
Which meant it was the enemy.
He clenched his jaw. Still, worry didn’t settle in his gut—not fully. This was Galen. If anyone could survive whatever trap they’d just triggered, it was him. Whoever did this had unknowingly signed their own death warrant.
Still, Magnus shoved the thoughts aside. There were more immediate concerns—like the fact that demons were pouring into the city like a flood of pestilence.
"I’ve got to clear the streets," he muttered under his breath. "But I can’t go all out... If I do, I’ll end up hurting the people I’m trying to protect."
Adjusting his grip on his sword, his myst surged. Wind coiled around his boots as he launched into the air, rising high above the burning cityscape. Below, civilians still ran, knights still clashed steel against claws, and mages continued to fire blast after blast.
Then he spotted them.
Three massive Gaia demons lumbering toward a cluster of trapped civilians—mothers shielding their children, elders stumbling behind.
In a heartbeat, Magnus vanished in a gust of wind.
He reappeared mid-strike, his blade slicing through the first demon’s neck in a perfect arc. Its head rolled before its body followed, and he immediately drove his sword down into its exposed core, splitting it like brittle stone.
There was no time to breathe.
He lunged toward the second demon and cleaved upward from hip to shoulder, tearing it open and watching its corrupted myst fizzle into the air.
The third demon turned too late.
Magnus was already mid-swing, his blade poised to end it—until a ripple of instinct pulled his attention sideways.
Something’s coming.
From the edge of his vision, a pillar of root and stone surged toward him, like a battering ram sent from the earth itself.
But Magnus wasn’t just strong. He was fast.
In a single, fluid motion, he twisted midair, finishing his swing and carving the third demon in two, slicing straight through the core.
At the same time, his left hand flared with wind myst. A curved barrier formed just in time to catch the edge of the incoming pillar, slowing it for a mere second—but that second was all he needed.
He twisted his body fully and slashed the pillar with a roar, redirecting its force upward. The earthen blast shot toward the sky and exploded harmlessly above the battlefield.
Magnus landed hard, dust billowing beneath his boots. His sword pulsed in his hand. His eyes burned with fury.
Then came a voice—low, cunning, and almost friendly, laced with mockery like a smile sharpened into a blade.
"Just what I expected from the famed Weapon Master himself."
Magnus narrowed his gaze, his stance sharpening as he turned toward the sound.
"I must admit," the voice continued, footsteps crunching over shattered stone and broken roots, "you’re just as fast and powerful as the stories say. Which makes me very glad I chose you as today’s opponent... Magnus Yaer."
From the shadow of the wreckage, a figure stepped into the open—a tall man, equal in height and build to Magnus, clad in jagged dark armor that reflected no light. A long blade rested across his back, its black hilt etched with runes that pulsed faintly green.
His features were sharp, carved like marble—high cheekbones, a pointed nose, and pale ivory skin. Long black hair fell in smooth waves down to his waist, framing a face that bore a sinister smile. But it was his eyes that marked him: glowing, ghostly green, pulsing with unnatural energy. A hybrid. And not just any hybrid—this one was something else.
Magnus didn’t blink.
"I take it you’re a hybrid?" he asked evenly, his voice calm, even bored.
"Indeed," the man replied, the smile never leaving his face. "I go by Einar. The Warlord."
Magnus didn’t respond. His eyes flicked for just a heartbeat toward the mother and children frozen behind him, too terrified to move. He spoke, never taking his eyes off Einar.
"Please run. There are knights stationed nearby who’ll get you to safety. Stay here any longer... and you die."
Still they stood, frozen by fear.
"Go. Now."
That snapped them out of it. The mother clutched her children and bolted, disappearing into the smoke and rubble.
Einar tilted his head slightly, watching them go.
"As noble as they say," he chuckled. "Putting the safety of civilians before even acknowledging your enemy. What a foolish little hero you are."
Without warning, two thick root tentacles merged into one and surged from the ground, hurtling toward the fleeing civilians like spears.
But before they could cross Magnus’s path—they dropped.
In an instant, the entire mass of root tendrils collapsed to the earth in sliced segments.
Magnus stood exactly where he’d been. To any ordinary eye, he hadn’t moved. But Einar had seen it—barely. The flicker. The blur. The whisper of motion. Magnus had cut down the roots before most could even blink.
"Very impressive," Einar said, genuinely entertained. "Let’s hope you can keep that same speed when it actually matters."
He reached up, slowly drawing the long blade from his back. The metal hummed as it left its sheath, a twisted sound like a scream trying to stay silent.
Magnus studied him, eyes narrowing just slightly.
’That aura... it’s dense. It’s well controlled. No doubt—he’s a general-class hybrid.
If I don’t contain him, the civilians are done for. I’ll need to hold back just enough not to level the street—but hit hard enough to keep him away from the innocents.’
Then he smirked.
"Shouldn’t be too much trouble," he said aloud, his voice edged with challenge.
"You called yourself a warlord, yeah?" Magnus continued, tightening his grip on his sword. "That title means you’re not just strong—you’re trained."
He stepped forward, wind curling at his heels.
"Let’s see if you live up to the name."
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