Shards of demonic energy raining down like ash across the sky. This was one of Lawrenceâs skills, [Infinite Regeneration Field]. A healing field that literally granted endless regeneration to allies within its range. It was a healing technique that went one step further than Garuelâs technique, [Space of Regeneration].
The demon named Lawrence was a higher-grade version of Garuel Monzasi, who was considered a solid Tier 1 in âHero of Knightsâ.
His unexpected appearance proved to be a deadly variable. Lawrence was the one who made the elusive Ashvka defeat impossible. Nevertheless, Cadel ignored Lawrence and focused on defeating Ashvka. This was despite the fact that he should have taken out the healer first.
The reason was simple. On the stage he had tackled, Lawrence couldnât die. It wasnât that he was invincible. In the game, Lawrence appeared alongside other High Demons, not Ashvka. Once Lawrence had lost a certain amount of HP, he would leave, leaving behind a profound statement that sounded like a bunch of lip service.
After that, Lawrence was never seen again in the stage. At the time, Cadel was annoyed that he didnât kill Lawrence outright, so he looked up information and found out that Lawrenceâs final demise occurred within a story cutscene.
In other words, if he could just drive Lawrence off this battlefield, heâd be dead anyway.
âTo take out Lawrence, we need to take out Ashvka.â
In order to do that, first, theyâd have to kill him before he could regenerate, and second, since Lawrence had made Ashvka immortal, they would need to use healing to replenish their alliesâ power.
And who had the healing power to match Lawrenceâs. The only one on the human side with such power was his own knight, Garuel Monzasi.
âLawrence is enough of a deterrent, Garuel, trust me and deploy your area healing to help our allies deal with Ashvka.â
Cadel asked Garuel, who rushed over, to abandon Lawrence and fulfill his role as healer. It was a difficult request for Garuel to understand. As a capable commander, he should know what should be prioritized in warfare, and his orders would be ill-advised. But Garuel nodded without argument.
âIâll do that, but maybe the commander of the Guardian Knight Order over there will recognize that my healing isnât black magic.â
âDonât worry about it. Iâll be sprinkling in my dark mana as well, so if Sir Ector gets suspicious, we can just pretend he got it mixed up with Lawrenceâs demonic energy. Itâs no big deal.
Except for Ector, no one in this chaos had the presence of mind to distinguish whether the power to heal oneself was demonic energy or black magic. All they had to do was to be thankful and go back into combat. Garuel complied, drawing in demonic energy as Cadel spoke.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
In the meantime, Cadel approached Ector, who was busy again fending off the tidal wave of insects. As he cleared the swarm around him with a heavy blast of heat, Ector, wielding his greatsword, looked back at Cadel.
âLetâs aim for Ashvkaâs heart, Sir Ector.â
âVery well. If we donât kill him quickly, weâll be trapped among these disgusting insects for the rest of our lives.â
Ectorâs reply was cool as if heâd come to the same conclusion as Cadel, and he spoke softly, his sword energy flying toward the bloodsuckers targeting his subordinates.
âMy plan is this: while the Guardian Knight Order binds Ashvkaâs limbs, restricting his movement, the Empireâs elite knights cut his throat in one fell swoop.â
âI agree.â
âIâve always wished the Empire had an elite Knight Order. Weâll cover your backs, and your knights can take up their swords.â
The man had seen many battlefields over the years, leading the Empireâs most prominent Knight Order, and yet there was no compulsion for him to be the star of the show, no arrogance that his forces should be the only ones in charge.
His paintings depicted every single knight. The seasoning of years of experience and the determination to override it all in an instant, a talent coveted in a commander of his caliber.
âOnly one of my subordinates is capable of killing Ashvka. The other one will deploy area healing, and the Guardian Knight Order will help keep Lawrence in check.â
âI think I just heard a horribly envious remark, but Iâll ignore it, so as soon as you start the healingâ¦â¦.â
Without another word, Ector sent a blast of sword energy at Cadelâs back. Turning his head reflexively, he saw.
âI wondered where you ran off to, but here you are.â
Shaking off the humans holding him down, Lawrence took flight, leaving everything aside to find Garuel.
* * *
Born with a curse-like stigma, he was immune to most attacks that would kill him. That was why Garuel tried to ignore all of Lawrenceâs attacks as he basked in the dark mana that Cadel had spread like a shroud.
His job was to keep everyone on the battlefield alive, not to fight Lawrence in the name of evil. He had to follow Cadelâs instructions with the same dedication to righteousness that had kept him walking.
How many humans do you think will survive Ashvkaâs power? Youâre wasting your energy. Why donât you spend it attacking me like your lowly friends say you should, that would be much more interesting.â
âShut up. If youâre going to keep talking, give me some space. Or shall I go?â
Demonic energy, thicker and darker than usual, flowed through his body, sucking the ground beneath him. He needed to be ready if he was going to match Lawrenceâs range of healing, and he had just a little more to go.
Garuel endured the irritating pain of being cut here and there by Lawrenceâs playful longsword. The wounds regenerated quickly, but only because Lawrence wasnât really attacking Garuel; he was provoking him as if to elicit something from him.
And soon, Garuel realized what Lawrence was trying to draw out of him.
âBut why is there dark mana around you? Itâs as if youâre trying to hide your true form. Donât those inferior races know where you come from?â
âShut up.â
âProtected by this superior power, yet unaware of its true nature? My poor nephew, my heart breaks for you. I must give you your first and last gift before your short life ends.â
ââ¦â¦Youâd better cut the crap.â
Lawrence was trying to prevent the human from recovering by agitating him. No, that wasnât all, he could have simply slit Garuelâs throat if that was his goal. Lawrenceâs goal was not only Garuelâs death, but to sow the seeds of chaos among the humans.
If Lawrence revealed his true identity, things would be irrevocably screwed up. But to keep Lawrence quiet, he must cut off the flow of demonic energy he had been saving for healing.
âIâm taking this mana and revealing it to all. That your foolish race dares to defy the demons, but in the end, you are relying on this superior power to keep you alive.â
It was then that Garuel hesitated, torn between the worst of both worlds.
âWho are you to treat my subordinate as though he were your equal?â
[Fire Chains] appeared through the dark mana and wrapped around Lawrenceâs legs in flight. Cadel appeared next, stepping between Lawrence and Garuel, his eyes glaring ferociously.
âNo matter what you say, Garuel will never be an enemy of humans, so save your mockery for your bearded snout.â
ââ¦â¦So your name is Garuel.â
âDonât you dare call me that. I wasnât born with a pretty name to be called by you.â
âI refuse.â
The [Fire Chains] scorched Lawrenceâs skin with intense heat, and though he looked unharmed, he was barely regenerating by the slimmest of margins, maintaining his supposed invincibility. Nevertheless, he remained relaxed.
âGaruel, donât stop the healing. Iâll deal with your annoying relative.â
ââ¦â¦I understand.â
âWhat Iâm saying is donât be swayed by even a single word.â
Lawrence swept a leisurely glance at the two men. The newcomer was a magician heâd had his eye on since heâd first appeared. He was unusually skilled and seemed to have a knack for reading his opponentsâ minds. As the magician had predicted, Garuel had already begun to be swayed by him.
âDid you say Garuel would never become an enemy of humans?â
âIf I had known you didnât already know his name, I would never have told you.â
âI sincerely hope so. He is a child born of love, and if the Demon Realm has rejected him, the Human Realm should accept him.
âWhat?â
Now, look. The half-bloodâs shallow roots in his resentment were shaken by the sudden shock.
ââ¦â¦I told you to shut up.â
Beyond Cadel, Lawrence smirked, his eyes glittering with murderous intent and pulsing with demonic energy.
There was no way Garuel could think straight in this frenzied, breathless battlefield. So he pushed aside the story of his birth, the story heâd heard from his own uncle, Lawrence, and tried to focus on the battle.
It was impossible. If Garuel could keep his mind in check, he wouldnât have the tiring task of regretting his pathetic past every night.
âThen you can pick anybody to blame, and live to blame.â
âIâll live to prove it. You birthed me this way, but I lived right. Iâve saved countless lives with the same power that has driven countless humans to their deaths, so my life hasnât gone wrong, and Iâm glad I was born.â
He chose to live in resentment. He decided that since his parents had pushed him into the pit, he would live to avenge them. He accepted this curse-like power in exchange for hating his parents, whom he didnât know if they were alive or dead.
However, the existence of his parents, whom he learned for the first time, was far from the object of resentment.
âWhat was your life like, born of my younger brotherâs tearful paternal love and your humble motherâs sacrifice?â
They were simply, irresponsible. They knew plainly what their love would bring, but they did it anyway, and in the end, they couldnât bear the consequences of their greed. They couldnât handle it, and they died.
He could not blame them for their weakness, for that would be like blaming himself for embarking on an equally weak, reckless love.
The scaffolding of hate had shaken, but life had not yet lost its meaning.
âSo follow me. Iâll prove to you that your life is not wrong, and weâll walk the same path.â
It was okay to have Cadel. As long as there was a light to illuminate the dark path, he could somehow walk through life. Because he was the meaning of life. Andâ¦â¦ that was the problem.
âLewin said he loved your mother. He begged me to let him return to the Demon Realm with you, for you were the child she had sacrificed her life for.â