The hours bled away, and with each passing minute, the tension thickened, stretching across the city like a steel wire ready to snap.
Dawn's dim glow crept toward the horizon, painting the streets and white towers of Nova in a cold light, and every soldier felt its weight.
Along the walls and throughout the rings of the city, dread and courage mingled into a single trembling breath. Even the bravest hearts felt the press of fear, but none stepped back.
So soldiers clutched small charms or worn photographs, running their thumbs over the faces of loved ones they will never see again. Others knelt with bowed heads, whispering prayers to God.
A few stood frozen, staring blankly at the ground as if questioning every decision that led them here, wondering if they had chosen correctly by staying.
But not everyone surrendered to fear. Laughter broke out in pockets, raw, too loud, brittle at the edges but defiantly human.
"Place your bets," one man roared from atop a barricade. "Who lasts longer, or that scrawny tall neck next to ?"
"Long as you don't faint before the demons arrive." The tall neck, jeered back.
Others joked about how many devils they would cut down, how many mutated beasts they would kill, and how much glory they would claim before the end.
Their laughter wasn't joy; it was armor, a shield against despair.
And through it all, the airships humd overhead, the shield glead softly, and the wall-top guns crackled with restrained power, as the city waited for a final showdown.
Hastan stood at the very front of the city walls, standing behind the battlents. His heart felt strangely steady, too steady, as if it had accepted a truth his mind refused to voice.
Like the others, mories rose unbidden.
He rembered being a thin, hollow-eyed orphan, naless and directionless, surviving day to day in the underbelly of Farsfin city by begging or stealing, using any ans he could.
Everything changed the day he was chosen for the Imperial Youth Program, Emperor lvin's own initiative to give purpose to the talented children, and from that day forward, he had a path, a structure, a future.
He rembered the trials, his hard work, and the opportunity he was given to challenge the legacy trial. He rembered clearing the trial and hearing the voice of the third Emperor's spirit echo in his mind as the ancient power accepted him.
He had walked out of that chamber as an SS-rank legacy holder, one of the rarest and most honored warriors in the empire.
He had been destined to join the Royal Guard, a dream every child in the empire carried in their heart at least once in their life.
Fate, however, had other plans.
Hastan knew he would not beco a royal guard, since he would die here, on the city wall. Yet he felt no regret, because dying in service to the Emperor and to the empire that gave an orphan like him everything was a privilege.
And still… Still, his heart twisted.
Because his mind wanted nothing more than to stand here, blade in hand, and et the invaders head-on, to fight, to bleed, to die as a soldier of the White Fla.
But his heart…His heart scread for him to run. To flee. To protect his wife. To live for his child and wife, even if it ant abandoning duty, honor, and the oath he had sworn.
Duty had won, for now. Duty held him to these walls.
But he feared that when the first horn sounded, when the first friend beside him fell, when the shadows of the enemy victory felt inevitable, his heart might overpower his resolve.
So Hastan forced himself to focus, as he fixed his gaze on the horizon, and poured every shred of attention into the coming war, and waited in silence to perform his duty.
As the sun rose, its first rays pushed aside the dying remnants of night and painted the world in streaks of crimson and gold.
Light washed over the plains before Nova, gleaming off the steel of airships and settling across thousands of armor plates lined along the walls.
The human army held its breath.
Silence rolled over the city once more, thick and suffocating. Only the low hum of grav-engines and mana reactors broke the stillness.
The tension in the air had solidified into sothing almost physical, so heavy it felt as though a knife could carve through it.
Seconds stretched unnaturally, and minutes crawled. And as the stillness lingered, so soldiers began to trade uncertain glances, wondering if the demons had played yet another cruel trick.
They had done so before, empty threats, illusions ant to break morale, false alarms ant to scatter defenses.
But then, as if to silence their doubts, a crack tore through the world. It was sharp, deafening, like thousands of glass shattering at once. The sound didn't just echo across the plains, it vibrated through the earth, rattling weapons, teeth, and souls.
The air itself scread as reality ca undone, making every soldier freeze in place. Before their horrified eyes, three massive tears ripped open in reality just beyond the city's defensive range.
Each was nearly a kiloter tall and just half as wide, split existence apart like jagged wounds cut through the fabric of creation.
The rift yawned open like monstrous maws bleeding darkness, their edges writhing with black tendrils that reached outward as though searching for sothing to drag into their abyss.
A collective gasp rippled across the walls as a vast, hulking silhouette, shaped like so nightmare, stepped out of the central rift, its form outlined against the crimson dawn.
The shadow dissolved as the sun rose, and finally the monster was revealed.
A towering colossus of blackened iron, its surface etched with glowing channels, that pulsed with sickly violet light. Its arms ended not in hands, but in massive pulse cannons large enough to reduce entire city centers to dust.
More weapons sat mounted along its back and shoulders, barrels, energy spears, rotating maws of destruction, all humming with restrained violence.
A shimring aegis shield flickered around its colossal form, a warped bubble of dark energy. It twisted the early morning light into distorted reflections, making the titan appear both there and not there, like a walking catastrophe, an on made real.
It was unmistakable, the thing before them was one of the prized inventions of the Eldravian Empire. A war engine capable of leveling cities, a terror reserved only for continental wars.
A Titan.
From the central rift, the colossal Titan's footsteps shook the plains like distant thunder, but the horror had only begun.
A second later, another silhouette stepped out from the rift on the left side, its massive form tearing its way through the veil of darkness. Though shorter than the first, it still towered over fifty ters, a sleek, predatory machine forged from silver and matte-black alloy.
Its silhouette was far more humanoid, with harsh, angular limbs and a narrower torso. Long-barreled cannons were mounted over its shoulders like watchful eyes, glowing faintly as they charged.
A massive handgun, absurdly large even for the titan, was holstered along its thigh, and a short, heavy blade hung against its back, a weapon ant to cut through entities even bigger than itself, or just unleash unchained destruction.
It was not alone, as from the right rift, another giant of equal size stepped out, followed by a third as a fourth once exited the left rift, making four smaller titans in total, each distinct and equally nightmarish, as the war engine that towered above them.
The second, a towering feminine model, was plated in polished onyx armor, slender yet deadly, with segnted limbs and a faceplate vaguely shaped like a serene mask.
Both of her arms ended in enormous spinning chain-saws that revved the mont she stepped onto the earth, the teeth blazing with crimson heat.
The third lurched forward heavily, each step cracking the ground. It resembled a hulking brute without a faceplate, instead bearing a furnace-like maw where a mouth should be. Its arms bore no guns but instead wielded a hamr the size of a building, its head carved with runes that bled molten light.
The last, another female model, was almost serpentine in design, with sleek lines and whiplike limbs. A tallic tendril hung coiled from one arm, ending in a barbed, glowing whip that writhed as if alive.
Five titans now stood upon the plains, each radiating a different shade of killing intent—five walking calamities, war engines that could level entire cities and go against even Elental Rulers.
But the titans were just the beginning.
A mont later, dark silhouettes shot out, streaking upward like a swarm of black stars tearing across the crimson sky. Their forms twisted in unnatural arcs, wings of shadow carrying them high before they settled into circling patterns over the battlefield.
Then ca the foot soldiers, nurous and endless. The sound of an army marching in perfect, rciless unison filled the air as from the rifts spilled the Demon Duke's forces.
Demons of every caste and shape, all humanoid, so towering and broad-shouldered, others lithe and sharp-boned, their skin painted in shades of deep azure, ember red, rotting gray, and obsidian black.
They were familiar in forms, like elves, beastn, human, rfolk, and so on, but also different. Horns, claws, spikes, each soldier was a monstrous reflection of hatred made flesh.
Fanatical humans were present among their ranks, far more nurous than the demons, cultists draped in dark robes bearing a symbol of a fanged maw that glowed with a dark radiance, a mark of their loyalty to the Great Devourer.
They ford up with military precision, lines upon lines, ranks stretching outward in jagged formations. Their banners rose, stitched with serpents, fanged maws, and the sigil of Envy's royal crest.
Their numbers grew quickly, ten thousand, fifty thousand, over a hundred thousand within minutes, with dozens of Elental Rulers taking command of their own regint.
Their numbers were significant, and their strength was overwhelming, but Nova was the capital of the Human Empire, so even with all their might, they were nothing but bugs who would get crushed if that was all they had to offer.
But that was not all their strength, and that's why no soldiers celebrated the ager numbers, because they all knew the truth.
Numbers didn't matter, nor did strength, all that mattered was the presence of the Sin Duke of Envy, an entity who stood at the peak of power, a being who had grown past the limits of even the Ninth Rank, a power they had recently co to know as Monarchs.
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