Harem Master: Seduction System

Chapter 302: The Price of Victory, The Dawn of War



Chapter 302: The Price of Victory, The Dawn of War



There was no sound.


The collision was an event beyond the physics of the mortal realm, an utter negation of sense. One was the concentrated essence of a nascent universe, a searing point of light containing all the potential of creation—fire, ice, wind, earth, lightning—fused into a singular, perfect will.


The other was its absolute antithesis, a sphere of devouring void, a gluttonous hole in reality that promised only the cold, silent peace of non-existence.


When the Genesis Nova met the Black Sun of Oblivion, the world did not explode. It simply... ceased to be.


For a single, eternal heartbeat, there was only white. An incandescent, all-consuming purity that erased the sky, the scarred earth, the distant mountains, and the very concept of color and shadow.


Alaric, at the heart of his own cataclysmic creation, felt his soul being poured into the attack. It was every ounce of his Archmage power, every shred of the Azure Spirit King’s ancient essence, every fiber of his unyielding will focused into a single, desperate, glorious gamble. ’This is it,’ he thought, a strange sense of calm descending upon him. ’Everything. For them. For my future.’


Ingranad, his ten arms raised in a final, terrible sacrament, felt the approach of the Genesis Nova not as an attack, but as a conversation. He saw in its light the audacity, the potential, the terrifying beauty of his foe. For a fleeting moment, a flicker of something akin to primal respect crossed his monstrous features. A king, facing a worthy rival at the end of all things.


Then, the white light consumed them.


For the eight Archdemon commanders still trapped or battling within Alaric’s Labyrinth, the sudden, overwhelming surge of power was their first and only warning.


"What is this power?!" the corrupted Martial King Patrick roared, his demonic Battle Aura flaring as he tried to shield himself.


"It’s... it’s unmaking reality!" the spectral Rahel Klinghoffer shrieked, her dark wards shattering like spun glass before the wave even reached her.


They erected a desperate, final defense. A multi-layered dome of solidified shadow, chaotic energy, and raw demonic will, the ’Barrier of the Abyss’, a last-ditch effort fueled by the combined power of eight Arch-level beings.


It was utterly, pathetically useless.


The shockwave that expanded from the point of impact was not mere energy. It was a conceptual tsunami, the unraveled laws of creation and ruin washing over the world.


The Abyssal Barrier didn’t shatter; it was erased from existence, its complex energies simply ceasing to be.


Patrick was the first to go. His obsidian plate armor, capable of withstanding siege weaponry, was scoured away layer by layer in a silent, incandescent fire. His powerful demonic form, a testament to raw might, dissolved into screaming motes of corrupted light before being utterly, completely extinguished.


Archmage Gideon Thorne, wreathed in his signature shadowflame, met a similar fate. His magical defenses were peeled away like the skin of a rotten fruit, and his very being was incinerated by a light so absolute and a darkness so profound that his demonic soul was scoured from the ledger of reality.


One by one, the mighty fell. Rahel, Madleen, the Frost Archdemon, the Rage Archdemon—all were caught in the expanding wave of annihilation. Their immense power offered no protection. Their desperate struggles were meaningless. They were simply... undone.


The ten thousand lesser demons, the brutes, the sorcerers, the imps that formed the bulk of Ingranad’s legion, were not even granted the dignity of a final scream. They were just... gone. Their existence, their filth, their fury, wiped from the slate of the world in a silent, cleansing fire.


Further away, on the precipice of the expanding catastrophe, the human forces watched in stunned, terrified silence. The world before them had dissolved into a wall of pure, blinding white light.


"AEGIS OF RADIANT MERCY!"


Saintess Ceanna’s voice, clear and strong despite the terror that threatened to freeze the blood in her veins, rang out across the ranks. She stood at the forefront of the army, her small form a defiant beacon against the approaching apocalypse. Her hands were outstretched, her Archmage Cleric aura blazing like a newborn star.


’My Lord Alaric... he has sacrificed himself!’ The thought was a shard of ice in her heart. ’But I will not let his people perish! I will not let his sacrifice be in vain!’


She poured every last ounce of her power, every shred of the energy Alaric’s System channeled through her, into a single, desperate, monumental act of protection. A vast, translucent dome of pure golden light erupted from her, enveloping the entire Jorailian army and Alaric’s elite factions. It was a shield not of arcane force, but of pure, life-affirming energy, interwoven with healing runes that pulsed with a gentle, desperate warmth.


"ALL POWER TO THE SAINTESS! NOW!" Professor Maelis’s roar was a physical force, her own Archmage power surging, not into an attack, but into a raw, stabilizing current that she fed directly into Ceanna’s Aegis.


Professor Lilliana, Sect Mistress Meng Yao, Archmage Priscilla, even the resentful Archmage Zylle—every powerful woman under Alaric’s command reacted in the same instant. Their auras flared, a rainbow of power—Lilliana’s fiery orange, Meng Yao’s arctic blue, Priscilla’s pure arcane shimmer, Zylle’s violet shadow—all pouring into Ceanna’s golden shield, reinforcing it, bolstering it.


The shockwave hit.


It was not a sound, but a physical impact of unimaginable force. The golden Aegis groaned, the very light seeming to bend and warp under the strain. The ground beneath them bucked and shattered like a broken plate, but within the shield, the soldiers were merely thrown from their feet, buffeted and bruised but not destroyed.


Ceanna fell to one knee, a thin trickle of blood escaping her nose. The strain was immense. She felt her mana reserves, vast as they were, draining away like water from a shattered vessel.


"Hold on, Ceanna!" Meng Yao’s voice was a pillar of strength as she moved to support the wavering Saintess. "We are with you!"


For thirty agonizing seconds, the world outside their golden bubble was a hell of pure, untamed energy. Then, as quickly as it had come, the wave passed. The incandescent light faded, the crushing pressure receded, leaving behind an eerie, profound silence.


Ceanna’s Aegis flickered, then dissolved into motes of golden light. She slumped forward, utterly depleted, caught in the waiting, strong arms of Sect Mistress Meng Yao.


The survivors slowly, hesitantly, picked themselves up. They stared out at the new world Alaric and his foes had created.


The battlefield was gone. The rolling hills, the ruined farmhouses, the patches of scorched forest—all of it had been replaced by a vast, glassy crater, miles wide, still glowing with a faint, residual heat. The very rock had been melted and fused into a smooth, black, obsidian-like surface. The sky above was a bruised, sickly purple, the very atmosphere thinned, a visible wound in the world. Of the demonic army, their siege engines, their banners, their very existence... nothing remained but dust.


And in the very center of that new desolation, two figures remained standing. Barely.


Alaric was on one knee, his magnificent Azure Elemental King avatar shattered, gone. His body was a wreck. His fine clothes were shredded, his skin a latticework of bleeding cuts and severe, weeping burns. He coughed, and a spray of blood painted the glassy ground before him. His breathing was a ragged, painful gasp. He had used the last, fading vestiges of his avatar as a focused, personal shield, sacrificing it to absorb the catastrophic feedback of his own spell and the unmaking energy of Ingranad’s. The cost had been immense.


A short distance away, Ingranad was in an even worse state. His Ten-Armed Ruin God form was a grotesque mockery of its former glory. Four of his six physical arms were gone, ripped from his torso in the blast. The remaining two were mangled, claws shattered. His spectral arms had vanished completely. A massive, gaping hole was torn in his chest, revealing the smoldering, dying embers of his demonic core. He stood, swaying, held upright by sheer, indomitable will.


He looked at Alaric, and a sound, a dry, rattling, gurgling sound, escaped his lipless mouth. It was a laugh.


"Heh... heh heh..." The psychic voice was weak, laced with a strange, almost joyful finality. "To think... a human... of this era... could push me this far."


He took a stumbling step forward, his colossal frame trembling. "You... you are no mere Archmage, boy. You are... a fledgling Creator... and a Destroyer."


He looked Alaric up and down, his multiple eyes, now dim and clouded, holding a flicker of genuine, profound respect. "You are truly... the foremost talent of your age, Alaric Steele. A king worthy of the name."


Alaric scowled, pushing himself painfully to his feet. He swayed, his vision swimming. "Save your flattery for the souls you’ll be tormenting in the abyss, Ingranad," he spat, his voice hoarse.


He began to walk towards the dying Archdemon Lord, a slow, unsteady gait. He could no longer summon his avatar. His elemental fusion spells were beyond his grasp. But he was not powerless. A faint crackle of azure lightning, a flicker of his former glory, gathered around his feet. It was enough.


Ingranad watched him approach, the rattling laugh continuing. "So much... wasted effort... for nothing..."


Alaric’s pace quickened, the lightning propelling him forward. He was preparing a final, simple barrage of attacks—’Azure Lightning Lances’, ’Wind Shear Volleys’—weak compared to his earlier spells, but more than enough to finish the grievously wounded demon.


But Ingranad was not finished. He had one final, terrible gambit to play.


He ignored Alaric’s approach. He closed his remaining eyes. And he focused his will.


All across the vast, glassy crater, something began to stir. Every drop of demonic blood, every shred of demonic flesh, every lingering fragment of a tormented soul from his annihilated legion... it all began to glow with a sickly, crimson light.


"You have won this battle, mortal," Ingranad’s psychic voice echoed, no longer with arrogance, but with a chilling, triumphant finality. "But you have lost the war."


The crimson light surged, flowing across the crater floor, forming a vast, impossibly complex magical array. The blood of ten thousand demons, the power of eight Archdemons, all coalesced, fueled by the dying essence of their lord.


"I was hesitant to use this," Ingranad continued, as the array pulsed with a terrible, world-breaking power. "It requires a price I was unwilling to pay. My own bloodline. My own soul."


Alaric faltered in his charge, his eyes widening in horror as he recognized the nature of the array from a forbidden text in the Royal Archives. It was a ritual of sacrifice on a scale he could not comprehend.


"But you have left me no choice," Ingranad’s voice was a triumphant whisper. "My soul will be the final key. The price for this array. The Purgatorial Star-Call Array."


He looked at Alaric one last time. "Soon, Alaric Steele. Soon, my kin, the true legions of the Obsidian Revenant, will hear my call. They will discover this hidden, fabled world. They will come. Not in thousands, but in millions. They will come to claim the legacy of our progenitors, the resources that will allow us to conquer the cosmos and cast down your despicable creators."


A strange, almost wistful pity entered his voice. "It is a shame I will not be here to witness it myself. The glory of our race, ascendant once more."


Alaric’s attacks finally reached him. Azure lightning lances pierced Ingranad’s head, his heart, his dying core. Wind Shear Volleys sliced through his mangled form.


Ingranad didn’t even flinch. His body began to crumble to dust, his essence being consumed by the array, but a final, terrible smile was etched on his face.


"When they arrive, Alaric Steele," his final words echoed in Alaric’s soul, a chilling, prophetic warning, "do your best to grow. Fight. Reach your potential. Or your world... and all your beautiful little toys... will know a despair beyond your wildest nightmares."


Then, he was gone.


And the Purgatorial Star-Call Array erupted.


It was not an explosion. It was a wound. The very fabric of reality screamed, and a massive, swirling tear in space-time ripped open above the crater. The sky itself seemed to shatter like glass, revealing a glimpse of a realm beyond—a realm of swirling chaos, of burning stars, of a terrifying, oppressive darkness.


The laws of the world groaned under the strain. Alaric felt a power, ancient and impersonal, the very will of the planet, surge to contain the damage. A wave of pure, natural energy washed over the tear, suppressing it, stitching the wound in reality closed.


But it was too late. A signal had been sent. A beacon had been lit.


The tear vanished, but the damage was done. Alaric could feel it. The very air felt... thinner. The ambient magical energy of the entire region had been catastrophically depleted, consumed by the array and the world’s desperate attempt to heal itself.


Alaric stood in the center of the silent, glassy crater, a solemn, grim expression on his handsome face. He had won. He had survived. But Ingranad’s final, triumphant laughter echoed in his soul. He looked up at the bruised, wounded sky. What had he done?


Far beyond the veil of stars, in a realm of oppressive gravity and eternal twilight, a throne carved from a frozen star pulsed with a dark, terrible light. The Demon Supreme, the ageless patriarch of the Obsidian Revenant clan, opened his thousand eyes, his cosmic senses jolted by a familiar, long-lost echo across the void.


Ingranad. His third son. The one he had sent, millennia ago, on the most sacred of quests.


The beacon pulsed through the Purgatory, a clear, unmistakable signal of a bloodline sacrifice.


A ripple of excited, predatory energy went through the assembled Elder Demons who served the Obsidian throne.


"The Third Prince!" one hissed, its form a vortex of living shadow. "He has sent the Star-Call!"


"He has found it!" another boomed, its body a mountain of shifting, volcanic rock. "The Fabled Realm! The cradle of our race! The place where the legacy of the First Demons lies hidden!"


The Obsidian Patriarch rose from his throne, his very movement causing the star-stuff around him to tremble. His voice was a galaxy of dying suns, a sound of absolute, chilling authority.


"For eons, we have waited," he rumbled. "For eons, we have been trapped in this purgatorial exile, while the despicable celestial beings hoard the power of creation. No more."


His gaze turned towards the source of the signal, a faint, distant shimmer in the cosmic tapestry.


"The legacy of our progenitors awaits. The resources to forge an army that will shatter the heavens are within our grasp. My son has shown us the way. His sacrifice will be the first stone in our new, glorious empire."


He raised a hand, a gesture of absolute, world-breaking command.


"The Great Hunt begins. We will lead our Purgatory to the source of the call. To the fabled realm. We will reclaim our birthright. And we will drown the cosmos in a tide of glorious, unending darkness."


All across the human world, from the crumbling kingdoms of Eloriath and Jorailia to the ancient empires of Xylos and the untamed dominions of Aethelgard, a subtle, terrifying shift was felt.


The Archmages, the Martial Kings, the Elder Mages, the Martial Emperors—those whose power was attuned to the very laws of the world—they felt it first. A sudden, chilling pressure. A disturbance in the cosmic winds. A shadow falling across the stars.


In the far east, the Celestial Dragon Emperor Huang Long opened his golden, slitted eyes from a deep, centuries-long meditation, a frown creasing his ancient, regal features. "A war is coming... A war of worlds."


The general populace knew nothing. They celebrated. The Jorailian Kingdom, and its mysterious, powerful allies, had routed the main demonic army. The greatest threat was seemingly extinguished. They had no idea that their day of victory was also the first day of a countdown to an invasion of truly cosmic proportions, an invasion that would make Ingranad’s legions look like a child’s tantrum.



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