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Now reading: Chapter 446 from The Guardian gods, a Fantasy novel by EmmanuelOnyechesi.

The Juggernaut stepped forward, and the earth quaked beneath him.

His form, imnse and heavy, cast a shadow over Xerosis, his armor etched with the scars of countless wars. Each step he took resonated with power, as if the world itself obeyed his presence.

Xerosis, blind but unshaken, stood her ground.

She raised a hand, her voice an unearthly wail, a dirge of the forsaken. The air shimred, vibrating with the cries of won long forgotten, their agony woven into her very being.

"Rise."

The battlefield shuddered as the corpses of long-dead warriors stirred. From the bloodied dirt, spectral figures erged.

Won wronged, won silenced, won betrayed.

Their translucent hands reached toward the armored bodies of n long fallen, dragging them from their restless slumber with the clanging of chains.

Helts turned. Rusted swords were gripped by skeletal fingers. Eyes, empty and soulless, glowed with unrelenting duty.

The Dead Knights had risen.

They turned their spectral gazes toward the Juggernaut. A hundred warriors. A thousand, perhaps.

But the Juggernaut only laughed "Ah... you bring entertainnt, little goddess."

And then he moved.

His speed defied his massive fra. A blur of destruction.

Before Xerosis could even command them, his fist crashed into her.

Pain.

Her incorporeal body tore apart like mist in a storm.

Xerosis flew backward, crashing into the ground with a force that splintered the battlefield.

The Dead Knights charged.

Blades, rusted but sharp, sang through the air. The Juggernaut laughed.

A war axe appeared in his hand, large enough to cleave a fortress in two, swung once.

A shockwave tore through the dead. Knights shattered like glass. Spirits snuffed out like candlelight.

Their souls did not even have ti to scream. Xerosis, staggering to her feet, felt their presence vanish.

One by one. Her banshee wail rose once more, a desperate attempt to call them back, to bind the fallen anew.

But the Juggernaut was already before her, His armored foot slamd into her chest.

Everything went black. This was not a battle, It was annihilation.

The Juggernaut did not kill her.

He did not need to, She was beneath him., His voice reached her, distant, almost amused.

"You are soft, child. You think justice alone is strength. But strength itself is the only truth." Xerosis did not answer.

She could not, the world around her faded and then, like a whisper on the wind—

She fell. Xerosis gasped.

Her body, or what remained of it, lurched back into awareness.

She felt the weight of the battlefield pressing down on her like an unbreakable chain. Her coporeal body flickered, unstable, on the brink of dissipating.

Yet, she rose. Her blind eyes no longer needed sight.

The battlefield was alive in her mind.

The endless clashing of blades, the guttural roars of warriors and The scent of blood and burnt steel.

The Juggernaut sat upon his throne of war, watching.

Mocking.

His golden-red armor glead under the fires of battle, his fingers gripping the handle of his war axe, still stained with the essence of her fallen dead.

She had never been so outmatched, but this ti, she did not waver.

The dead whispered in her ears, their voices echoing through her being.

They were waiting. Xerosis let out a breath.

Her wail rippled through the air, not in grief, not in rage—but in defiance.

The fallen knights rose again, this ti not to fight, but to beco her armor.

Their souls wrapped around her, binding to her spectral form.

A gauntlet of vengeance, A cloak of suffering and A helm of silent wrath.

She charged. The Juggernaut smiled. "Good."

He t her head-on. Their clash shook the small realm. His axe descended like the wrath of the heavens.

Her scream t it like the cry of the forsaken. The impact sent shockwaves across the battlefield.

Xerosis weaved through the onslaught, her form twisting like a wraith, dodging the axe that threatened to erase her entirely.

She struck, A hundred spirits surged forward, slamming into the Juggernaut’s armor.

The Juggernaut grunted, his movents slowing, if only for a second.

But a second was not enough. His fist caught her mid-dodge.

Xerosis felt herself rupture.

Pain.

The force shattered her spectral armor, the souls bound to her dispersing like ash.

She coughed, her form wavering, her banshee wail turning into a whisper.

As the axe neared, she saw death. Not rely her own, but the vast, intricate tapestry of all deaths. A panorama of extinguished lives unfolded before her spectral eyes, a symphony of suffering that resonated with the deepest chords of her being.

She witnessed the forgotten warriors, their nas lost to the sands of ti, their valor sacrificed on the altars of kings who cared little for their sacrifice. She saw the won, their lives consud by the whims of power, their voices silenced, their stories erased. She felt the crushing weight of the strong upon the weak, the relentless march of oppression that had stained the world with endless tears.

She had fought for them, she had been a vessel for their vengeance, but she realized, with a chilling clarity, that she had never truly understood. Justice alone, the righteous fury that had fueled her spectral existence, was not enough. It was a flickering fla in a hurricane, easily extinguished by the relentless winds of reality.

Strength moved the world. Not the strength to oppress, the brute force that crushed the innocent beneath its heel. Not the strength to conquer, the ambition that fueled endless wars and built empires on the bones of the fallen. But the strength to protect, the unwavering resolve to shield the vulnerable, the indomitable will to defend an ideal.

And in that mont, she saw it. The Juggernaut, the architect of her destruction, was not her enemy. He was the embodint of that strength, a force of nature that had shaped the battlefield, a master of power that understood the true cost of control. He was the answer she had been searching for, the missing piece in the puzzle of her existence.

As the axe, a symbol of absolute power, neared, Xerosis did not resist. She did not flinch, she did not cower. Instead, she reached out her spectral hand, her form wavering, her touch as insubstantial as smoke. And, strangely, the axe did not cleave her in two. It paused, suspended in mid-air, its malevolent glow dimming slightly.

She raised her head, the empty sockets where her eyes had once been now twin voids, dark and fathomless. Her voice, a re whisper, carried a desperate plea, a fragile hope amidst the carnage. "Will you be my strength?" she asked, her words echoing through the silence that had fallen over the battlefield.

The battlefield was silent.

The endless clash of warriors had ceased.

The Juggernaut stood before Xerosis, his towering form casting a shadow over her, his axe buried deep into the ground. Yet his eyes—fierce and unyielding—held no resentnt.

Instead, there was acknowledgnt.

A slow, rumbling laugh escaped his lips. "You understand now, don’t you?"

Xerosis, battered yet unbroken, lifted her blind gaze. Her voice was steady. "Justice alone is not enough. Strength is the force that shapes the world. Without it, justice is a whisper in the wind."

The Juggernaut grinned, "And what will you do with this truth, young goddess?"

She took a step forward. "I will not wield strength to dominate. I will not let power blind to justice. I will be both. A force that protects, that punishes, that upholds the balance."

For the first ti, the Juggernaut lowered his head.

Then, he took a knee.

"Then take it. My strength, my will. You have earned them, Young goddess"

Xerosis reached out her weak hand to the chin of the juggernaut as she nodded. The space behind changed with Juggernaut dissipating and appearing behind, hovering behind her like a guardian angel.

The realm of Juggernaut broke to pieces with Xerosis finding herself back in Ikenga’s realm and not in the spirit realm where she was supposed to be.

Coincidentally she found herself under the root of the big tree with the snake wrapped around it. The trail was heavily affecting Xerosis ntally and physically as soon as he found herself in the comfort of the realm, she fell asleep on the root.

Sitting beside her was the Juggernaut who was looking at the tree or more so another arch curse walking out from the tree.

The all knowing oracle looked at Juggernaut "It seems you have found your anchor to ascension"

Juggernaut let out a deep, rumbling chuckle, his massive arms crossed over his chest. His eyes, no longer wild with the hunger for power, instead watched over Xerosis as she lay resting against the roots of the ancient tree.

"Anchor? Hah." He glanced at Xerosis, her chest rising and falling with slow, exhausted breaths. "More like the one who finally broke my chains."

The All-Knowing Oracle stepped forward, erging from the shadows of the massive tree. Draped in tattered, flowing robes that seed to shift with unreadable symbols.

"And yet," the Oracle mused, "she is the one who needed breaking."

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