Chapter 551: Clash with the devils
Chapter 551: Clash with the devils
The war horn blared again, louder this time, its mournful cry rolling across the outpost like a physical force. It didn’t just call men and women to arms—it dragged the breath from their lungs, snapping them awake with the weight of deep-rooted instinct. The sharp clang of warning bells joined in, their relentless rhythm hammering into every soldier’s bones. The sound was impossible to ignore, every strike against the bronze echoing off the walls, running through the earth, and settling deep in the marrow like a drumbeat for war.
All across the camp, tents were thrown open, boots slammed into the dirt, and weapons were snatched up in frantic haste. Shadows of rushing figures danced against the flapping canvas walls, swords catching moonlight as they were drawn from scabbards. Voices shouted orders over the din—captains rallying their troops, quartermasters yelling for supplies, guards on the walls calling out positions of the threat. The air was thick with the sudden, suffocating scent of smoke and the metallic tang of fear, each breath hot and shallow as adrenaline surged through every heart.
Misha was already on her feet, sword in hand before her mind had fully caught up with her body. There was no hesitation—her instincts drove her forward, the weapon’s familiar weight grounding her in the chaos. Her hair, still loose from sleep, whipped around her face as she moved toward the tent flap. Beside her, Hiro was strapping on his chest plate, the leather straps creaking under the pull of his practiced hands. His eyes, sharp and alert despite the abrupt awakening, darted toward the sounds outside. His posture was calm, but his every movement was precise and fast, the kind of control honed over years of battle.
Vance, still in his half-fastened armor, had the expression of a man who’d been waiting for something like this—not out of eagerness, but readiness. His jaw was set, his gaze fixed on the unnatural glow spilling into the night from beyond the walls. The light bled into the darkness in irregular pulses, as though the air itself was wounded.
Outside, the darkness was broken by flickering crimson light, not from torches but from the pulsating edges of a portal that was already expanding. The ground around it warped and scorched, cracked lines radiating outward like veins of molten rock. The once half-finished "structure" the devils had left days ago—dismissed by some as an incomplete fortification—now revealed its true nature. It was an anchor. And from it, the swirling rift bled heat and malice, vomiting out shadowed figures by the dozens. Each one moved with an animalistic, predatory grace, their jagged silhouettes framed by the seething light behind them.
"Formation! Keep up shields," Hiro’s voice cut through the chaos like a whip crack, the authority in it enough to push back the tide of panic threatening to spread. His squad—Vance and the others—snapped into motion. Boots pounded against packed earth, armor clinked in rhythm, and the team fell into position with the precision of drilled soldiers. Each knew their place without question, their bodies moving before thought caught up.
Other captains bellowed similar orders, their voices carrying across the camp in a discordant chorus. The once still night was now a living storm—clattering steel, stamping feet, the heavy thud of boots against the wooden walkways, and the constant background roar of the portal’s magic. Lanterns swung violently from poles as soldiers rushed beneath them, casting wild arcs of light over grim faces.
But there was no mistaking the danger—they weren’t facing a probing attack. This wasn’t a test of defenses, a quick raid to weaken morale. This was a full breach.
The first wave of devils tore into the nearest defensive line with inhuman speed, their claws glinting in the firelight like molten blades. Their eyes burned with unnatural light, and their mouths twisted into shapes that suggested laughter, though the sound was buried under the crash of combat. They moved low and fast, ducking under sword strikes, lunging with slashing precision meant to maim rather than merely kill.
The clash of steel and the screeches of the damned rose together into a single, terrible chorus. Sparks flew where blades met claws, and the ground trembled under the sheer force of the collision. Somewhere, a shield splintered with a sharp crack, followed by the wet thud of a body hitting the dirt.
"Cut them down before the portal widens!" Hiro barked, pointing toward the glowing rift that now pulsed as though drawing strength from every drop of blood spilled nearby.
Vance moved without hesitation. Whatever pride or swagger had defined him before was gone—burned away in the immediacy of survival. His blade became a streak of silver in the flickering light, cutting down a devil that had slipped past the front. The impact jarred his arm, but he didn’t falter. His strikes carried no wasted motion, each one measured, decisive. He was no longer here to posture or seek personal glory; every swing was deliberate, each block an act of grim necessity.
Misha darted past him, her footwork crisp and silent even in the chaos. Her blade arced upward, catching a devil under the jaw in a clean, lethal motion. The creature collapsed before it even realized it had been struck, black blood pooling in the dust. She didn’t slow, didn’t let her gaze linger on the fallen—her eyes swept the battlefield for the next opening, the next threat. She knew this was only the beginning.
The bells kept ringing, an unyielding rhythm against the madness, while the horn’s howl lingered over the field like a mournful spirit. And above it all, the portal’s hum deepened, a low, resonating note that seemed to vibrate through the ribs. It was the sound of something building, of a storm not yet at full strength. Every soldier who heard it felt the same truth crawl up their spine—what was coming through next would be worse.
The air grew hotter, heavier, as the crimson edges of the rift brightened. Shadows twisted unnaturally along the ground, stretching long and thin before snapping back. Even the devils already on the field seemed to fight harder, as though the opening of the gateway drove them into a frenzy.
Hiro’s squad tightened formation instinctively. Vance found himself covering Misha’s flank without thinking, his back nearly brushing Hiro’s as they pushed forward. The dirt beneath their boots was already slick, the smell of blood mixing with the sharp tang of sulfur from the rift. The world narrowed to the sound of breathing, the thrum of the portal, and the crash of each blow struck or received.
Still, they held. For now.