Chapter Fifty-Nine: Gilded Shadow
Commerce Emperor
The last battle was upon us.
True to his word, Lord Oboro delivered us the runestones for the Colmar and disguises for our infiltrators. Soraseo, Rubenzo, and Mersie had gone with him to infiltrate the ceremony through the front door, while Chronius had been assigned to help Mirokald attack it from another angle. Neferoa would remain in the capital for the sake of distracting the Knots and in preparation for my backup plan, while Eris distributed our prepared soundstones across the entire Shinkoku Empire. Only the Spy remained unaccounted for, though I had taken steps to identify and support them. I trusted them to pull through in our favor at the right time.
Which left Marika, Beni, Ravengarde, and I to run our airship. We double-checked the provided runestones at my request, confirmed the absence of sabotageâon that front at leastâand then set sail into the mist-laden skies.
I found myself in the same situation Iâd been in back when we marshaled together to fight Belgoroth: loading runestones into cannons in the artillery room and readying them for battle. Beni and Ravengarde were nowhere near as talkative as Cortaner and Colmar had been, but they worked hard enough to compensate.
âCan you see the way forward?â I asked Marika through the roomâs loudspeakers. The world beyond our portholes looked like an impenetrable ocean of mist.
âBarely,â Marika replied, her voice carrying through the rooms. âSeoâs map helps, but the fog is getting thicker by the second. The essence is condensing.â
I could feel it in the air too. Anxiety, fear, doubts⦠The mist exacerbated and absorbed those emotions before ferrying them back to Mount Kazandu. It was almost suffocating.
Did Daltia intend to temper her wicked Artifact with the terror of men? Wouldnât the raw desires of the demonic souls caught in her Devil Coins be enough?
Whatever the case, we could expect a welcoming committee once we approached the mountain.
âBeni,â I said with a hand on my fellow Heroâs shoulder; a wise boy whom I had come to consider like a little brother to me. âDemons will soon try to board our ship. Climb inside Ravengarde and donât come out unless absolutely necessary. Do you understand?â
âY-yes,â he replied with more bravery than most children his age could manage, his voice hoarse yet steady. âIâll⦠do my best.â
âI know you will,â I replied with a smile. âAnd so does your mother.â
âI do,â Marika said, her voice wavering with anxiety through the loudspeaker. âBeni⦠promise me that you will stick to repairs and run at the first sign of danger. Uncle Robin will take care of the bad guys.â
Beni bit his lower lip and nodded, though I noticed he didnât promise anything out loud. Ravengarde opened its back compartment to let him climb inside.
Eris appeared inside the artillery room immediately after in a puff of smoke, her once soundstone-filled bag empty.
âDelivery completed and on time,â Eris boasted proudly. âWe at Arcane Abbey Deliveries hope youâll be satisfied with our service!â
âWhy do you think you keep having repeat customers?â I teased her back, though jokes hardly helped alleviate the tension in my heart. The die was cast.
âI wonder what you have in mind, handsome,â Eris replied. Neferoa and I had recorded the soundstonesâ contents in secret specifically to avoid Daltia eavesdropping on it by accident. âDo you intend for the people of this land to take up arms and overrun the mountain?â
âSomething like that,â I replied evasively. âIf all goes well, we can listen to a recording after the battle is over.â
Eris scoffed. âAnd if we arenât lucky?â
âThen weâll hear it in real-time.â The Colmarâs
alarm rang across the airship the moment I finished my sentence, signaling the start of our troubles. âHere they come.â
âDemons!â Marika shouted over the speakers. âI need someone on the deck!â
âThatâs my cue,â Eris said, her staff radiating power as she looked at me with a grim gaze of concern. âDonât die on me, Robin. Iâve buried too many friends.â
As always, it fell on me to lighten up her mood. âOnly if you give me something to live for.â
âFine.â A thin smile spread across her face. âThatâs a bargain I can live with.â
She pressed her lips against mine. Her kiss was quick, clumsy, and hesitant, with little confidence and much anxiety; but it was raw and true. Like all good things, it ended way too soon when Eris teleported away.
âEwww,â I heard Beni complain from inside Ravengarde.
âYouâll get it one day,â I promised him as I slid open the wooden panels and allowed our cannons to stick outside of the hull. Mist flooded into our ship and I saw screaming shadows coming at us from within its depths.
I started blasting.
Soraseo entered the den of evil in her countryâs uniform.
It had been so long since she last wore a common officerâs lacquered armor rather than her crimson one. Father forced her to earn that particular equipment through grueling training. Her current outfit lacked the essence-enhanced capabilities of the other. It made her feel naked as she walked through the incised mine passageways leading into the heart of Mount Kazandu.
She remembered the few times she visited the mountain in the past. The air had seemed so pure back then, even within its deepest tunnels, but it now choked with putrid essence even more intense than a Blightâs heart. She could smell its vile stench through the pieces of her helmet covering her mouth and its influence warped the very fabric of reality around them. The walls glowed with golden and silvery hues, as if the stone had suddenly transformed into precious metals. The heat only continued to increase the further her group progressed inside the volcano, with crimson runestones engraved into the walls providing a flicker of twisted light.
Evil permeated Soraseoâs flesh and bones, trying to find a way in. Her mark burned her skin beneath her armor as the power within recoiled from the intense corruption around them. It shielded her mind as it did when she fought across many Blights, but she hadnât sensed such an oppressive aura in the air since the City of Wrath.
She and her hero allies escorted Lord Oboro into the tunnel, all of them armed and armored to the teeth. Her teacher only carried his ceremonial sword and, true to his teachings, refused to draw it even when robed cultists came to greet him at Mount Kazandu. He didnât need to. Cunning words had earned him a place of honor among the vipers.
âI must confess my utmost surprise, honorable Lord Oboro,â their cultist guide said, a small group of his fellow witchcrafters escorting their group into the volcanoâs heart. âI wasnât informed you were one of us.â
âOur masters believed it wiser that I keep my true allegiances hidden from friends and foes alike so that I could sow the seeds of discontentment in Seukaia undetected,â Lord Oboro replied with such calm confidence that he sounded utterly believable, though he had to wipe some sweat off his brow. The corrupt essence in the air weighed on his soul in spite of his training. âI could not miss our greatest triumph.â
Rubenzo had coached Lord Oboro on the Knotsâ secret messages which he had stolen from cultists Chronius and Lady Mersie captured in Goldport. Her teacher had quickly adapted to the deception and played his role well.
Too well.
Soraseo was sure of it now. Tiny details had only confirmed her gut feeling and worst fears. She sent a glance to her allies among the guards, her hand resting on her swordâs pommel. The secret message passed between them.
They were all walking right into a trap; one that they would have to turn against the hunter if they hoped to survive.
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âThis essence in the airâ¦â Lord Oboro choked, his throat dry from the heat. âHave you begun the ceremony already?â
âIt began seven hours ago,â their cultist guide replied gleefully, while a song echoed deeper into the cavern. âYou have joined us just in time for the finish.â
Soraseoâs jaw clenched on its own. Time was running out.
She saw light at the tunnelâs end, and their long journey into the mountainâs depths ended in a great conical cavern dug into the very mouth of Mount Kazandu. Crimson, bloodsoaked mist swirled in the sky above the stone like a spiraling cloud. As her group entered this chamber, Soraseoâs eyes were drawn to a golden gleam at its center. Her eyes widened in shock once they acclimated to the lighting.
An island of gold melted into a pool of magma.
A towering hill of thousands, if not millions of Devil Coins floated on a steaming pit of lava dug into a ring of molten runestones. The mountain of riches gleamed like the heart of the sun in the light of the molten earth, the gilded Soulforged Adamantine making up their structure merging together into a fluctuating shape like a shimmering mirage while their countless ruby eyes flickered with malevolence. Their wicked essence swirling in the air, twisting the mists in the form of floating skulls and golden clouds.
Soulforged Adamantine was supposed to be indestructible, yet the Devil Coins had begun to melt together.
The sheer quantity of them boggled Soraseoâs mind, and their blinding shine hurt her eyes. This tribute to human greed put that of her countryâs to shame. Did all of these coins contain a stolen soul harvested over seven hundred years of demonic deals and corruption? Even if a fraction of them alone held captured spirits, this hoard likely included an entire kingdomâs worth of victims.
And more it would claim still.
Dozens of Shinkokan women surrounded the monstrous pit, their hands bound to the runestone ring by thick metal chains. Many of them screamed and wept from the heated metal searing their skin, pleading with guards and cultists to no avail while their tears turned to steam on their cheeks. All of them had a passing resemblance to Soraseoâs true face, much to her sorrow.
Those poor souls had been taken to suffer in her place.
Dozens of hooded cultists scuttled about on the stone floor around the pool, most of them singing in ancient Erebian around the hill of coins. Two demonsâa tri-faced gargoyle of solid silver and a colossal, monstrous purple fly with a human face and torsoâprayed to an immense marble statue of the Goddess sitting on a golden throne far to the chamberâs rear.
No⦠the Goddess was always represented with a mask and this woman was bare-faced. Her traits sharply reminded Soraseo of Eris, albeit with an expression of condescending pride rather than mischief. The fair creature had furled great wings, a golden laurel crown, and a scroll folded in her hands. This had to be the Devil of Greed.
Doggotaro was sitting on her lap.
Soraseoâs heart skipped a beat in her chest. As the Monk, she had grown used to noticing countless tiny details that she would have ignored before; and the ragged, pale face of her brother filled her with shame and concern. Though dressed in the jade robes of an emperor, he seemed to have aged years since they last met; some of his hair had gone white, and his bloodshot eyes staring at the captive women with visceral fear. Soraseo recognized that look all too well.
Her brother looked the same the night when she murdered their mother before his eyes.
It took all of her willpower not to freeze in place. Instead, Soraseo lowered her gaze and eyed Lord Oboro in an attempt to ground herself back into the present. Her teacherâs attention was wholly focused on her brother too, or at least it seemed at first glance. His gaze instead turned to the statue on which he sat, a brief emotion passing over his face.
A thin smile full of condescension.
Lord Oboro quickly hid it with a bow. âThe lava is rising, Your Majesty,â he said without emotion. âIs there no safer place for you to be?â
Soraseo and her allies had noticed it too. The lava threatened to overflow and drown the captive women in a tide of molten fire as the coins continued to sink into the magma. Their blood would meld with the gilded Soulforged Adamantine and serve as the foundation of their killerâs Crown of Desire. Soraseoâs allies exchanged a look with her, with all of them thinking about how to save these hostages without arousing suspicion.
For a moment, Soraseo thought her brother hadnât listened. Doggotaro then stirred on the statueâs lap, his hands grasping at his imperial robes.
âShe has to die,â he said with empty eyes.
The venomous fear in his voice hit Soraseo harder than the sting of Belgorothâs sword. When he looked at the captive women, her brother only saw her bloodstained face. The vile essence of this place had clouded his mind.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âYour mother shall be returned to you soon, oh wise emperor, by the will of the Goddess returned,â their cultist guide announced. âThe daughterâs blood shall pay for the empressâ safe rebirth among the living.â
Lies. Soraseoâs hand gripped her sword pommel with all of her strength. Demons lie, always.
She had to save him, to drag him out of this cursed place alive and well. Only then would she beg for his forgiveness at her feet and face her judgment without regrets.
A distant detonation shook her out of her thoughts.
It was distant, a booming echo from high above, hardly louder than far away thunder, but both she and Lord Oboro managed to hear it over the cultists' song.
Robin.
âIntruders?â her teacher asked with a look of false concern.
âToo little, too late,â the cultist guide declared, his hands joined. âThe promised time has come!â
The hooded men sang louder than ever, and the hill of gold appeared to vibrate in response to their prayers. The coins flickered and undulated, their gleaming substance merging together into a gilded mountain of white-hot blinding light. A little lava began to spill out of the ring containing the pit and nearly melted a screaming captive alive.
Soraseo tensed up, as did her allies. The essence in the air thickened until it became unbearable and suffocating. Crimson, skull-shaped steam arose from the golden hill; Soraseo had no idea how long it would take for the coins to merge together into a Devilâs Crown, but she knew the process was fast underway.
Then she felt it.
That familiar sensation of recognizing a fellow Hero.
Her eyes immediately pinpointed its source: a duo of hooded cultists singing in front of the statue, their backs turned on Soraseoâs group. Her power granted her enough understanding of motion and body language to recognize Chronius among them. How had he managed to infiltrate the gathering?
If so, then his other companion had to beâ
âNow,â Soraseo heard the disguised Rubenzo whisper at her side, uttering the signal.
She reacted instantly, knowing that hesitation would spell their doom.
Soraseo drew her weapon faster than the wind and turned her blade on her teacher.
Her power caught a glimpse of his genuine surprise written all over his face, while Rubenzoâs hand moved to grab him from behind and Lady Mersie grabbed daggers hidden under her armor. The entire sneak attack took place in the span of a second.
If Soraseo had miscalculated, she would stop within an inch of Lord Oboroâs neck before she could land a killing blow. Part of her hoped that she had been mistaken, that her instincts had deceived her.
The thing wearing her teacherâs face caught her sword in midair at inhuman speed.
Soraseoâs hand immediately became lighter, her sword teleporting straight into Lord Oboroâs palm. His bodyâs limbs and neck then twisted in an unnatural way, the joints snapping like twigs like a ragdoll. Rubenzoâs hand barely missed its chest by an inch.
Soraseoâs heart sank in her chest. She barely had time to see the ghastly smile stretching on her teacherâs humorless face and hear the two words he whispered under his breath.
âGood try,â he said.
The Shadow of Envy slipped through their grasp and ran straight for the Devil of Greedâs treasure.
The room erupted into screams of chaos and confusion in an instant. The impostor wearing Lord Oboroâs face threw the stolen sword at Mersie with inhuman strength before she could retaliate with knives of her own, forcing her to dodge. By the time Soraseo and Rubenzo raced after him, the Shadow was already shedding their disguise and running on all fours. Their limbs stretched out into long and thin stick-like appendages with too many joints.
Their cultist guide had the misfortune of standing in the Shadowâs way; he barely had time to open his mouth and shout a warning before âLord Oboroâ pushed them aside with an elongated arm. The Knot memberâs body immediately turned to dust in the blink of an eye as all their years of life were stolen from them.
The Shadow didnât slow down, their attention was entirely focused on the hoard of souls they sought to steal for themselves.
Soraseo cursed her slowness as she picked her sword off the ground. She should have struck earlier. She had had a gut feeling something was wrong when her teacher had so readily agreed to help them. Lord Oboro always argued that a true swordsman knew when to unsheathe his sword, and he never did anything without cautious consideration. The real one would have investigated Soraseoâs story and delayed before giving anything more than information.
He had been simply too eager to act decisively. His reluctance to discuss the adamantine maskâwhose details he likely shared because the Heroes could have easily confirmed the story and earned their distrust otherwiseâhad only confirmed her suspicions.
The impostor must have murdered or even stolen him a mere few hours before their visit.
Her teacher would be avenged.
Chronius turned around with daggers in his hands while his hooded allyâwho had to be the Spyâthrew runestones hidden inside their sleeves into the magma pool. An enormous burst of icy essence erupted from it instantly and unleashed a cloud of steam across the chamber that swallowed panicked cultists, angry demons, and hostages alike. A thick mountain of ice swallowed the coins and plugged up the magma pit before it could overflow.
Chronius threw a volley of knives with lethal accuracy. Dozens of projectiles flew across the air, each of them nailing a cultistâs head or a demonâs eye. The Shadow alone dodged them easily enough, their Archer power granting them inhuman accuracy and reflexes. Yet when their elongated arm reached for the Devil Coins, they found a thick wall of ice in the way. Their inhuman screech of frustration echoed with hundreds of voices, while their mouth stretched into a maw filled with fingers and eyes. Their body began to undergo an even ghastlier transformation as melting ice shrouded the chamber in thick mist.
Undeterred, and with her power allowing her to pinpoint its movements, Soraseo prepared to charge after the abomination with her sword when her brotherâs scream reached her ears. The danger of the Shadow, the ritual, and the threat of Knots and demons alike faded from her mind as her head snapped in Doggotaroâs direction.
Her brother stared at her with abject fear, while the statueâs hands had moved to seize him like a mother with her child.
The Devil of Greedâs marble lips had stretched into a smile.