The man didn’t hesitate.
He lunged again, faster this ti, dagger crackling faintly with corrupted mana. It was now glaringly clear which side he belonged to. The cult, just as Damien had thought.
Damien sighed. "Wrong target."
Luton surged forward. The sli moved like liquid shadow.
Before the cultist could react, Luton expanded explosively, splitting into thick tendrils that wrapped around the man’s wrists and ankles. The dagger clattered uselessly to the ground as his limbs were yanked apart mid-motion.
"Arghhhh!!" The cultist scread.
Luton lifted him off the ground, suspending him in the air, limbs stretched outward, his body held aloft like a grotesque crucifix.
The Stellar Sli didn’t crush him, it absorbed just enough to immobilize, tendrils partially sinking into flesh and clothing, holding him firmly in place.
Damien stood slowly, brushing dirt from his gloves.
"You picked a bad mont," he said calmly. "I was hungry."
The cultist laughed.
It was a thin, cracked sound—more hysteria than humor.
"You think this changes anything?" the man rasped through the mask. "You’re already too late."
Damien stopped a few steps away, eyes cold.
"Talk," he said. "Or you’ll wish I hadn’t caught you alive."
The cultist’s head tilted.
"Alive?" he echoed softly. "Oh, rcenary... that was never an option."
Damien felt it then.
A faint pulse of unstable mana deep within the man’s chest—tight, compressed, wrong.
A self-destruct core.
"Speak," Damien ordered. "Now."
The cultist inhaled sharply, chest rising with effort as Luton tightened slightly in response to Damien’s will.
"The Gates are weakening," the man said quickly, words spilling out now. "Not one. Not two. Many. Across the world. And we aim to break the seals on all of them the mont we find them!"
Damien’s gaze sharpened.
"Gates," he repeated. "So Delwig wasn’t unique."
The cultist laughed again. "You saw one crack and thought you’d stopped it? That was just a portion. A failed project you may call it."
A cold weight settled in Damien’s gut.
"How many?" he asked.
The cultist shook his head weakly. "Even we don’t know. So are buried. So forgotten. So... sealed so long even history forgot they existed. However, we’re looking for all of them as I speak."
No records.
That explained it.
"And the variants?" Damien asked. "The demons you’re creating."
"Creating?" The cultist scoffed. "No. We’re refining. Accelerating what was always ant to happen."
His breathing grew labored.
"The ones you’ve seen are only the beginning," he continued. "Test subjects. Proofs of concept. When the Gates open wider... you won’t recognize what cos through."
Damien’s jaw tightened.
"And Twin Disasters?"
That got a reaction.
The cultist went still.
Even through the mask, Damien could feel it—the shift. Fear. Awe. Obsession.
"Sothing ancient stirs there," the man whispered. "Older than demons. Older than us. We don’t know if it’s salvation or annihilation... only that it’s ancient."
Damien’s mind flashed with images—the cracked seal, the unnatural silence, the pull he’d felt even after leaving.
"Why there?" he demanded.
The cultist shook his head again. "We don’t know. That knowledge was lost long before our ti. Even the founders... even they only know fragnts."
The pulse in the man’s chest spiked.
Luton reacted instantly, tightening its hold.
Too late.
The cultist’s laughter turned wet and broken. "You can’t stop it," he gasped. "You can’t guard every gate. You can’t be everywhere at once."
His head fell back.
The core detonated inward.
There was no explosion.
Just collapse.
The cultist’s body convulsed once, then went limp as blackened veins spread across his chest. The energy annihilated him from the inside, leaving nothing but a charred husk suspended in Luton’s grasp.
Damien stared at the corpse for a long mont.
Then he exhaled slowly. "Release him."
Luton obeyed.
Thud!
The body fell to the ground in a lifeless heap, already beginning to crumble into ash.
Damien ran a hand through his hair, eyes dark.
Multiple Gates but no records and locations.
Also, there was no ti to go around checking for gates.
And Twin Disasters... awakening.
He looked north. Then east.
Then back, in the direction he’d co from.
Apnoch. Arielle. Lyone.
He clenched his fist.
"I don’t have the luxury of chasing ghosts," he muttered. "I have people waiting for that I’ll have to return to. So the sooner I get this over with, the better for and them."
The world was moving faster now. Too fast. Whatever ga was being played had progressed beyond preparation and into execution.
And there was only one place that mattered anymore.
Twin Disasters.
If sothing ancient was laying in there, sothing powerful enough to draw these cultists and their founders towards the island, then it couldn’t be left alone.
Not even for a mont.
Damien turned toward the darkened horizon.
"If it’s good," he said quietly, "I’ll protect it."
His eyes hardened.
"And if it’s not..."
Luton pulsed beside him, eager.
Damien stepped away from the fire, letting it die behind him as he disappeared into the night—already moving, already planning, already returning to the place that had nearly broken him once.
The Forest of Twin Disasters was calling again.
This ti, Damien intended to answer on his own terms.
~~~~~
After riding on Aquila for over twelve hours without a single stop, Damien could finally feel and even see it.
The Seaport he was after. He’d arrived.
He stopped a few miles away though. Descended from Aquila and made his way to the city with his legs. He didn’t want to draw attention right from the start.
The first thing Damien noticed about the port city was the sll.
Salt, fish oil, wet rope, old wood—and beneath it all, the sharp bite of alcohol and smoke. It was nothing like the fortress cities he’d passed through before. This place lived and breathed with the sea.
Every street sloped subtly toward the docks, every building leaned as though shaped by years of coastal wind, and every face bore the weathered look of people who’d learned long ago that tomorrow was never guaranteed.
Ships crowded the harbor like resting beasts. So were sleek rchant vessels with polished hulls and bright banners. Others were scarred warships, their sides pitted and repaired countless tis. And then there were the old ones—dark, creaking things that looked like they should’ve sunk decades ago but stubbornly remained afloat through sheer refusal to die.
Damien liked the city imdiately.
He entered on foot, Fenrir dismissed hours earlier to avoid unnecessary attention. Luton, however, remained perched lazily on his shoulder, its form compressed and inconspicuous enough that most people mistook it for an odd familiar or magical accessory. It pulsed faintly, content, its appetite having only grown since the last few encounters.
Damien adjusted his cloak and blended into the flow of dockworkers, sailors, rchants, and rcenaries moving through the streets.
He had questions.
And ports were where answers congregated—especially the kind soaked in alcohol.
The first pub he entered was called The Split Mast, a low-ceilinged place built almost entirely from salvaged ship wood. Nets hung from the walls, along with cracked compasses, rusted harpoons, and a jawbone that might once have belonged to sothing very large.
Damien ordered a mug of beer and a plate of peppered beef without ceremony. He paid upfront, tipped lightly, and sat where he could hear the most voices.
Sailors talked loudly. They always did.
"...telling you, I saw it with my own eyes," one man slurred. "Storm ca out of nowhere. Clear skies one mont, black clouds the next. Like the sea itself didn’t want us going that way."
"Toward where?" another asked.
The first sailor spat into a bucket. "You know where."
Damien’s ears sharpened.
"The Forest of Twin Disasters," the sailor continued, voice dropping despite the drink. "Doesn’t matter which route you take. Every sea path leading there gets swallowed by storms. Not normal ones either. Lightning that twists sideways. Winds that scream like living things."
Soone else snorted. "Old wives’ tales."
The sailor slamd his mug down. "I lost two ships proving it wasn’t!"
That got attention.
Damien took a slow sip of his beer, letting the bitterness settle on his tongue.
Storms blocking every path.
Not ships.
Paths.
That distinction mattered.
He finished his al, thanked the barkeep, and left without drawing attention.
The second pub was larger, noisier, and significantly rougher.
The Drowned Coin sat right on the edge of the docks, its windows fogged with condensation and smoke. Here, the crowd skewed heavily toward rcenaries and veteran sailors, the kind with scars that hadn’t faded and eyes that never fully relaxed.
Damien ordered peppered beef again. And another beer.
This ti, he didn’t even need to listen carefully.
"They don’t sink," a woman with a hooked nose was saying. "That’s the worst part."
"Don’t sink?" soone echoed.
"They just disappear," she replied flatly. "Ships, crews, cargo, all gone. No wreckage. No bodies. No floating planks. One mont they’re there, the next mont, nothing. They just vanish."
"Roaring shadows," another man muttered, crossing himself. "That’s what my captain called them."
Damien’s fingers tightened slightly around his mug.
"What kind of creatures?" soone asked.
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