Chapter: 239

The clash was not one of sound, but of silent, violent, metaphysical force. Spectral claw, woven from shadow and will, met razor-edged steel, forged from Void and fury. The air crackled, shimmered, tore. Wires snapped, their contained energy dissipating into faint wisps of smoke. Shadows were shredded, only to instantly reform. For a heart-stopping, impossible moment, the two forces met in a stalemate, a swirling vortex of gleaming steel and writhing shadow, a silent, deadly battle between two diametrically opposed, yet terrifyingly potent, powers.

Lloyd stared, his initial furious lunge momentarily checked, his mind reeling. This woman… Inari… the quiet, beautiful fiancée… her spirit… it wasn't just powerful. It was Ascended. At least. The sheer density of its shadow energy, its ability to intercept and neutralize his full-force steel wire assault… it was on a level far beyond any spirit he had encountered, save perhaps for Ken’s own transcendent Redborn.

She had blocked him. Completely. His surprise attack, his execution strike, fueled by the purest rage he had felt in two lifetimes, had been stopped cold by a girl who looked like she spent her afternoons arranging flowers and writing poetry.

The identity of B was no longer the only, or perhaps even the most pressing, mystery of the night. Who in the hells, Lloyd thought, the fury in his veins now mixed with a healthy, grudging dose of profound, life-or-death caution, are these people?

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The field, once a place of quiet, starlit conversation, was now a silent, deadly battlefield. The air crackled with the aftermath of the clash, a tense, humming stillness where Lloyd’s gleaming steel wires and Inari’s writhing shadow-puma, Kaelan, had met and neutralized each other. The attack was over, but the killing intent, a cold, palpable miasma, still hung thick and heavy between them.

Lloyd stood his ground, his body coiled like a spring, the remnants of his shattered wire-cloud slowly dissipating around him. His Black Ring Eyes, which had flared to life instinctively at the peak of his rage, now burned with a cold, analytical fire, their luminous bluish-white rings fixed on the two figures before him. He was no longer just the furious Major General. He was the strategist, reassessing a tactical situation that had just become infinitely more complicated.

Inari, the serene, flower-braided beauty, was no longer serene. She stood planted before B’s wheelchair, a fierce, protective sentinel, her blue eyes blazing with a cold, predatory light that was utterly at odds with her delicate features. Her spirit, the massive shadow-puma Kaelan, had not dissipated. It flowed around her, a semi-corporeal mass of living darkness, its emerald eyes locked on Lloyd, a low, menacing growl rumbling in its spectral chest. Its claws, forged from pure shadow, flexed, ready to lunge, ready to tear, ready to obey its mistress’s slightest command. The power radiating from it was immense, a suffocating pressure that made the very air feel thick and hard to breathe. Ascension-level was an understatement. This felt closer to the upper echelons of that stage, humming with a power that bordered on the transcendent.

Lloyd’s fury, while still a cold, hard knot in his gut, was now tempered by a healthy dose of pragmatic caution. This woman was dangerous. Exceedingly so. A direct confrontation, would be… unwise. He could probably win, he thought, a flicker of his innate Ferrum arrogance surfacing. The Black Ring Eyes offered him options beyond mere physical assault. A Seal of Severed Perception on her, or her spirit, could end this quickly. But the cost, the energy drain, would be significant. And he still didn’t understand the full picture. Why were they here, in earth? Charging in blindly was no longer a viable option.

Just as the shadow-puma, Kaelan, tensed its powerful haunches, its muscles bunching for a devastating lunge, just as Lloyd was preparing to unleash a new, more subtle, and infinitely more insidious, attack with his Black Ring Eyes, a voice cut through the supercharged tension.

“Inari. Enough.”

The voice was quiet, strained, yet it carried an undeniable, absolute authority that made the fierce, protective Inari freeze mid-motion. B, the broken boy in the wheelchair, the catalyst for this entire chaotic confrontation, raised his single, remaining hand, a clear, commanding gesture.

Chapter: 240

“Stand down, Kaelan. If he uses those eyes you cannot sustain a few seconds,” he commanded. Inari hesitated for a fraction of a second, her jaw tight, her eyes still blazing with protective fury. But then, with a reluctant, almost resentful sigh, she gave a sharp, almost imperceptible nod. The massive shadow-puma, with a final, rumbling growl that promised future violence, dissolved, flowing back into the shadows from whence it came, leaving behind only the lingering scent of ozone and cold, dark places. Inari’s own fierce expression softened, her posture relaxing fractionally, though her gaze, when it rested on Lloyd, remained wary, hostile.

“This is not your fight, Inari,” B said, his voice soft but firm. He turned his single grey eye, which now held a strange mixture of profound weariness and an unshakeable, almost stubborn, resolve, towards Lloyd. “This is between us. Between me… and the Major General.”

Lloyd watched, his own attack held in abeyance, his Black Ring Eyes still glowing with their cold, ethereal light. He said nothing, simply waiting, observing, his mind a whirlwind of calculation and suspicion.

Then, B did something that seemed, on the surface, utterly impossible.

With a low grunt of immense, teeth-gritting effort, a sound of pure, unadulterated willpower overcoming physical limitation, he began to push himself up from his wheelchair. His body, frail and broken, trembled violently with the strain. The muscles in his remaining arm corded, his face, pale and slick with a sudden sheen of sweat, contorted in a mask of agonizing exertion.

“Ben!” Inari was moving to assist him.

“Stay back, Inari,” B gasped, his voice tight with pain, waving her away with a sharp, insistent gesture. “I said… this is my fight.”

And as he pushed himself upwards, as he struggled to rise from the confines of his chair, the air around his severed limbs, the stumps of his left arm and left leg, began to shimmer. Not with spirit energy, not with the ethereal glow of Lloyd’s Black Rings, but with the familiar, unmistakable, thrumming hum of Ferrum Void power.

Then, the shimmering intensified. And from the raw, severed ends of his limbs, something began to extrude. Not flesh and bone. But metal. Gleaming, solid, undeniable metal.

Tendrils of what looked like molten, half-formed iron flowed from his left shoulder, weaving themselves together with a painful, audible grinding sound, coalescing, shaping, solidifying with agonizing slowness into the crude, functional form of a hand, a wrist, an arm. Simultaneously, an even larger mass of the same metallic substance flowed from his left hip, building downwards, forming a thick, powerful, if somewhat ungainly, prosthetic leg, ending in a wide, stable, metallic foot that clanked heavily as it met the grassy earth.

The process was clearly excruciating. B’s face was ashen, his body shaking with the immense strain of the transformation, his breath coming in ragged, painful gasps. But he did not stop. He poured his will, his very life force, into the act of creation, forcing his bloodline power to obey, to build, to forge for him the limbs he had lost.

Finally, it was done. B, the cripple, stood before Lloyd, unsteadily at first, then with a growing, solid, immovable presence. He was supported not by flesh, but by his own, self-forged appendages of gleaming, raw iron. He looked like a broken porcelain doll that had been crudely, brutally, repaired with scrap metal, a strange, tragic, yet undeniably powerful fusion of fragile humanity and unyielding Ferrum will.

He took a slow, deliberate, clanking step forward, then another, his new iron leg thudding heavily on the ground, his new iron hand clenching into a solid, metallic fist. He stood tall, or as tall as his broken body would allow, his single grey eye blazing with a fire that was a direct, unwavering challenge.

“Now, Major General,” B said, the name a deliberate, mocking echo of a forgotten rank, his voice no longer weak or strained, but resonating with the full, deep power of his awakened Ferrum bloodline. “Now we can talk. Or,” he added, a flicker of that old, dangerous B-commander confidence returning to his gaze, “if you still prefer… we can fight.” He looked from his own newly forged iron fist to Lloyd’s glowing, ethereal Black Ring Eyes. “On equal footing. This is my fight. And I will not hide behind a woman, or a wheelchair, when I face an old enemy.”

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