Imp to Demon King: A Journey of Conquest -
Chapter 473: The First Heartbreak 6
Chapter 473: The First Heartbreak 6
Around them, the greater battle raged with escalating fury. Gawain’s solar might had reached its zenith. His blade, Galatine, now burned with light so pure it cast shadows that seemed more real than the substance they outlined. His strikes against the Egyptian bronze warriors carved away layers of divine enchantment until mortal flesh beneath remembered its own will.
"By the Round Table’s honor," he cried, his voice carrying the weight of Camelot’s lost glory, "by Arthur’s dream and my own oath—no soul should be slave to another’s will!" His blade swept in perfect arcs, leaving trails of sunfire that didn’t burn flesh but rather the chains of compulsion binding the Egyptian warriors to Pharaoh’s will.
Nearby, Morwen’s bone lyre sang a descant to Gilgamesh’s binding ritual—a melody that wove through the battle like golden thread through dark tapestry. Her music didn’t force but invited, didn’t command but suggested, reminding every enslaved soul on the battlefield what freedom tasted like. CrazyCatLady’s warriors found their saber-toothed mounts turning gentle beneath them, the great cats remembering what it felt like to hunt for joy rather than duty, to choose their battles rather than be compelled to them.
"Every soul deserves its own song," Morwen called out, her voice harmonising with the chaos around her, transforming cacophony into symphony. "Every heart has its own rhythm. Let no voice be silenced by another’s tune."
The Furies themselves seemed to dance with the music, their primordial fury finding perfect harmony with Morwen’s rebellion song. Megaera’s serpentine hair writhed in time with the melody, each venomous strand striking not to kill but to liberate—her poison eating away at the golden chains of divine compulsion that bound Marduk’s warriors to their god’s will.
Tisiphone’s scorpion whip cracked in perfect rhythm, each strike landing with the precision of a metronome, her targets finding themselves freed from their masters’ control but not from their own dignity. "Justice," she laughed, her voice like breaking chains, "is not submission to divine will—it is the right of every soul to choose its own fate!"
Alecto’s bronze wings beat hurricanes that carried more than wind—they bore the essence of choice itself, the fundamental freedom that preceded all gods and would outlast them all. Where her shadows touched the enslaved armies, divine compulsion withered like flowers in frost, leaving behind mortals who remembered they had once been more than tools.
But not all the contractor forces faltered. StarGazer’s Taoist immortals, choosing their service freely rather than being compelled to it, fought with undiminished fury. Their celestial techniques painted aurora across the hellish sky as they clashed with Zane’s fluid grace. The fallen champion’s inverted blades sang through the air like liquid night, each strike carrying the weight of his own chosen rebellion against predetermined fate.
"You serve because you choose to," Zane acknowledged as he danced between stellar attacks, his dark wings spreading shadows that turned cosmic fire into cool starlight. "I can respect that. But know that your choice was bought with the enslavement of others—and that debt must be paid."
His blades moved, inevitable and irresistible. Where they passed, reality bent backwards, showing the Taoist immortals glimpses of what they could become if they chose their own path rather than following prescribed wisdom. Not all were swayed, but enough paused in their attacks to make the difference.
Miles away, perched on his throne of crystallised torment, the Greatest Imp observed the proceedings with an expression that might have been interest if it weren’t so perfectly crafted to convey supreme boredom. His perfect features remained arranged in that same theatrical dismissal, but his eyes had sharpened with something approaching attention.
"How unexpectedly... quaint," he murmured to his devoted succubus, his voice like honey poured over broken glass. "The first king thinks love can undo divine corruption. The Round Table’s last knight believes honor can cut through compulsion. They actually think their sentiment matters more than power. They’re lord’s a fool."
The succubus gazed at him with that painful adoration that transcended worship. "My lord finds their struggle... entertaining?"
"Instructive," he corrected with a languid wave of his hand. "When they inevitably fail—when love proves insufficient and honor bends before necessity—they’ll be so much more... pliable. Nothing breaks heroes quite like the failure of their most cherished beliefs."
He leaned forward slightly, the first sign of genuine engagement he’d shown. "Wake me when they realise that gods don’t yield to mortal sentiment, no matter how pure. Their despair will be... exquisite."
But back on the battlefield, something was happening that even the Greatest Imp hadn’t anticipated. Gilgamesh’s binding was working—not through force but through remembrance, not through power but through the unbreakable truth of shared experience.
The earth holding Enkidu pulsed with memories: two friends racing through cedar forests, challenging each other to impossible feats, lying beneath stars and wondering what lay beyond the edge of the world. The light surrounding him carried echoes of laughter, of plans made in firelight, of a friendship that had taught two wild souls what it meant to build something lasting together.
And slowly, like dawn breaking over distant mountains, recognition began to flicker in Enkidu’s divine-corrupted eyes. The golden chains of Marduk’s influence strained and sparked, fighting against bonds that were older, deeper, and infinitely more precious than any god’s will.
"Gil..." he whispered, the name falling from his lips like a prayer to forgotten gods, like the first word spoken in a language of the heart that no divine power could truly silence. "Gil... my friend... what have I done?"
The words carried across the battlefield like the first notes of a song that could heal the world, and even in the midst of cosmic war, something fundamental shifted—a reminder that some bonds are stronger than the will of gods, more lasting than their eternal schemes, more precious than all the power in creation.
The battle was far from over, but for the first time since the armies had clashed, hope flickered like a star being born in darkness.
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