Devil Gambit
Chapter 78 : High Stakes, Higher Tables

Chapter 78: Chapter 78 : High Stakes, Higher Tables

The moment Dirga stepped through the towering gates of the coliseum, a hum filled his ears—not of cheering, but of anticipation, of raw energy coiled beneath stone and steel.

The structure loomed before him like a sleeping titan: The Gemspire Ring, carved into hell-forged obsidian and inlaid with shimmering veins of blue Zarion crystal.

At the entrance, a towering digital poster flickered overhead.

THE CHAMPION: IRONPULSE

"Break yourself or be broken."

An oni glared down from the screen—his gray skin taut over slabs of muscle, chest bare, gleaming with sweat and scars.

One arm was replaced by a bulky mechanical limb, veins of blue light pulsing through the intricate plating.

His face was that of an aged warrior: grim, furrowed, immortal.

"...Ironpulse," Dirga muttered, taking it in. His aura even in digital form felt suffocating.

He pushed through the doors.

The Gemspire Ring’s interior was less a gladiator pit and more a brutal opera house.

Stone benches rose in layered circles around the central arena, which shimmered under Zarion-powered spotlights.

Even now, the crowd was sparse—just a few dozen gathered. Still early. Still unknown fighters.

Tonight’s match was simple:

A newcomer vs. a newcomer.

No titles. No pride. Just survival.

Dirga found an empty seat and sat, arms crossed, black jacket slightly rustling. His gaze sharpened, absorbing everything.

He wasn’t here to cheer. He was here to understand.

Below, two fighters squared off at the center of the arena.

One was wiry, his sand-colored skin stretched tight over lean muscle, every movement coiled and twitching like a predator.

In each hand, he held a blade wreathed in flickering electric arcs, their hum sharp and urgent. His stance was loose, shifting, like dancing thunder.

The other was a bruiser—broad-shouldered and slow-moving, but solid as a mountain.

Brass gauntlets encased his fists, inscribed with glowing runes that pulsed with raw kinetic charge. Every step he took made the stone beneath his boots groan.

Dirga’s attention, however, drifted past them.

Because behind the violence—was the business.

His eyes tracked to the edge of the ring, where a raised platform buzzed with activity.

A small crowd of bookies operated behind tables cluttered with Zarion-scroll screens and flickering bet glyphs.

The air around them was thick with smoke, money, and tension.

One of the bookies—a human with a cybernetic eye glowing faint red—locked eyes with Dirga.

Then he started walking over.

His steps were smooth, calculated. His smile? Polished. Too polished. The kind of smile that sold you dreams and took your soul in fine print.

"Hello there, friend," the man said, his tone the practiced warmth of someone who could sell insurance to a corpse.

Dirga blinked. "...Hello."

"Not often we see humans in this part of the city," the man said casually, scanning Dirga up and down.

Dirga tilted his head. "Why? Are humans rare here?"

The man’s smile widened just a bit. "Not rare. But a human as strong as you?" He tapped the side of his mechanical eye, the lens rotating. "I can see it. You’re wired. Power like that usually draws attention."

He gave a half-bow. "Name’s Optik. That’s what people call me. Info broker, odds-setter, and part-time opportunist."

Dirga gave him a neutral nod, already trying to read the man.

Optik was too clean. Too smooth.

His dark coat hugged his frame perfectly, laced with silver thread that shimmered like quiet wealth. Hair slicked back—black with silver-dyed edges to match his ’branding’—and not a single strand out of place.

Even his beard was sharp enough to slice.

His gloves were thin. Decorative. A gentleman’s snake.

"You here to place a bet? Maybe looking for... information?" Optik asked, still smiling.

Dirga didn’t flinch. "I need intel. About the tournament. The one hosted by the Ace of Diamond."

That stopped Optik. Just for a breath.

Then he smiled wider.

"You’re not playing small, are you?" He let out a quiet chuckle, one that didn’t reach his eyes. "Alright, alright. For something that weighty—best we don’t talk here."

He leaned in slightly. "Meet me outside. There’s a place called Echelon. Classy little spot, hard to miss. Wait for me there."

Dirga gave a small nod. "Got it."

And without another word, he turned and walked out of The Gemspire Ring, the crowd’s roars fading behind him like echoes in a dream.

...

Once outside, Dirga asked around about Echelon. He didn’t have to try hard—the name carried weight. A few glances, a couple of muttered directions, and he was already facing it.

Echelon was impossible to miss.

A sleek, multi-tiered building with black crystal walls and glowing signage in arcane script.

The restaurant pulsed with subtle glamor, like a place where secrets were traded for appetizers.

Dirga stepped inside. The scent hit him first—smoke, citrus, and something charred—too refined for anything he’d eaten in Hell so far.

A hostess with shimmering scales along her cheekbones greeted him with a professional smile. "Table for two?"

"Yes. Just me for now," Dirga said, his voice low but steady.

He was shown to a semi-private booth near the window—enough space for two, but angled so prying eyes wouldn’t see too much. It was luxurious. Almost too much.

Dirga picked up the menu... and nearly choked.

The prices.

Even the cheapest dish flirted with absurdity. One appetizer was nearly a whole Devil Gold. Just the drinks were half a gold.

Dirga swallowed hard and checked his card.

Three Devil Gold remaining.

If he wasn’t careful, this meal would wipe out two-thirds of his funds.

"Just the cheapest set for two," he told the waitress when she came by, "and bring the drinks first. My... friend’s on the way."

She bowed slightly, professional and silent, and walked away with a flick of her serpent-like tail.

Dirga leaned back in the seat, staring at the city lights outside.

This was new ground.

Hell’s high society.

He could fight monsters and hold the line against death itself—but this? This was a different kind of battlefield.

And he only had one shot to play it right.

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