Chapter 126: The Lurking Shadow
Corbin snarled, his bulging muscles flexing as he raised his colossal greatsword overhead. His veins pulsed with raw power, glowing faintly against the charred atmosphere. ar.
"Earthshatter Quake!"
The ground trembled violently as a fissure exploded outward, swallowing meteors, skeletons, and anything unfortunate enough to be in its path. Rocks the size of carriages were flung skyward, their trajectories cutting through the burning skyline.
Guzen leaped onto a piece of flying debris, laughing maniacally as he balanced atop the spinning rock. His jagged blade gleamed in the firelight. "That's more like it, brute! Show me what you've got!" With a deranged roar, he launched himself off the debris, spiraling like a human missile.
Their weapons collided midair. The impact reverberated like a thunderclap, sending shockwaves that obliterated nearby meteors into flaming shards. Guzen twisted his blade, locking it against Corbin's greatsword in a grinding, screeching contest of strength.
"No wonder they call you The Beast, Iron Juggernaut," Guzen hissed, his blood-red eyes blazing with wild glee. "You may have strength, but it counts for nothing!" Guzen's smile widened, his eyes gleaming with a dangerous mix of bloodthirstiness and playfulness.
With a sudden burst of agility, Guzen broke the lock and spun, his blade slicing at Corbin's side. Corbin pivoted on his heel, his greatsword meeting the attack in a cascade of sparks.
"Titan's Cleave!"
Corbin's counterattack was a devastating horizontal slash that cleaved through three falling meteors. The massive debris exploded into a fiery rain, casting a hellish glow across the battlefield. Guzen darted between the fragments, his movements like a phantom, before lunging forward with a wild grin.
"Crimson Spiral!" Guzen howled, spinning into a whirlwind of slashes that battered against Corbin's blade.
Corbin's muscles tensed as he absorbed the relentless assault, his feet grinding into the fractured ground. With a roar of defiance, he swung his greatsword in a powerful arc, unleashing a shockwave that tore through the battlefield.
The force blasted Guzen backward, sending him tumbling through the air. He landed atop a meteor just as it crashed into the ground, riding it like a surfer before leaping back into the fray.
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Elsewhere, Violet stood amidst the chaos, his silver mask gleaming as he surveyed the battlefield. His Observation Haki flared, allowing him to sense every subtle movement, every shift in the air. His twin blades gleamed ominously as he turned to his comrades.
"You," he said coldly, his voice cutting through the noise like a knife, "handle the rest of the Black Flame pirates. Leave these two to me and Corbin."
The Black Seraph Pirates nodded, their expressions grim as they fanned out to face the remaining Black Flame crew.
Violet's aura darkened, an oppressive energy radiating from his lithe frame. His blades danced in his hands, their edges shimmering faintly with a deadly light. As his crew mates surged forward, he turned to Laffitte, who stood a few paces away, his silver cane spinning lazily in his hand.
You should have left while you had the chance," Violet said, his voice low, a predator's growl before the kill.
Laffitte smirked, his eyes sharp and mocking. "Oh? And miss the chance to face the Phantom of the Black Seraphs who has a bounty of 145 million berries....I wouldn't dream of it."
"Well you won't be having anymore dreams from today onwards, here is where you die Demon Sheriff." I'll show you what happens to those who mess with the Black Seraph pirates," Violet replied in a cold and stern voice as he slightly moved the curved blades in his hands.
Their clash began, the sound of steel meeting steel ringing out like a symphony of death. Violet's blades moved with blinding speed, each strike calculated to kill, while Laffitte's cane danced through the air, deflecting the blows with almost lazy precision.
The battlefield trembled beneath their feet, the sheer force of their battle sending shockwaves rippling outward. Violet's strikes were as swift as a shooting star, deadly and precise, while Laffitte's movements were fluid and serpentine, a deadly dance of evasion and counterattack.
"Impressive," Laffitte admitted, parrying another of Violet's strikes. "But I wonder—how long can you keep up this pace?"
Violet's eyes narrowed behind his mask, his blades glowing faintly as he unleashed a flurry of strikes, each one faster and more devastating than the last. "Long enough to see you dead," he growled.
Above the chaos, Violet and Laffitte moved like ghosts among the falling meteors. Their forms blurred in and out of visibility, each reappearance marked by the clash of steel on steel.
With a burst of speed, Violet vanished, reappearing behind Laffitte with his twin blades flashing in the air.
"Phantom Blade: Crescent Divide!"
A pair of crescent-shaped energy waves ripped through the battlefield like twin harbingers of annihilation, carving through meteors as effortlessly as a blade slicing air. Their trajectory howled with the fury of an unchained tempest, shaking the heavens and earth alike as they barreled toward Laffitte.
Laffitte stood unmoved, a figure of unyielding poise amid the chaos. With a theatrical flourish, he spun his cane, its arc like the stroke of an artist's brush painting defiance on the canvas of destruction. The crescents clashed against his defense, their furious energy scattering like wild, untamed beasts meeting the wall of an indomitable fortress.
The redirected crescents plummeted into the earth with a detonation so fierce it felt as though the battlefield itself wept in despair. The ground convulsed as if gripped by an earthquake born of gods' fury, cracks spreading like veins of molten fury. The very air trembled in awe, as if the universe itself paused to witness the grandeur of his defiance.
"You'll have to do better than that!" Laffitte taunted, leaping onto a falling meteor. He balanced effortlessly as it hurtled toward the ground, his cane striking out like a viper.
Violet met the strike with a cross block of his twin blades, the impact sending a piercing shockwave that scattered nearby debris. The two clashed in rapid succession, their movements so fast they appeared as blurs of light streaking through the chaos.
Laffitte slowly but surely , released an arc of dark energy that sliced through the air like a guillotine.
Violet ducked and countered with a spinning slash, his Observation Haki guiding him through the onslaught. He struck back with lightning precision, his blades moving like a pair of predatory fangs.
"Spectral Fang Barrage!"
The flurry of strikes came so fast they seemed to blur into a single, continuous attack. Each slash left streaks of silver light in the air, their combined force generating shockwaves that rippled through the battlefield. The meteors around them shattered into fragments, and the ground below cracked under the sheer pressure of Violet's assault.
Laffitte parried each strike with his cane, his movements a blur of deadly precision that defied the chaos clawing at the battlefield. Each counterattack was like a conductor guiding the symphony of carnage, every motion deliberate and devastating. "Impressive," he mused, his smile unwavering, as constant as the shadows that clung to his form like loyal servants. "But you'll find I am not so easily overwhelmed."
With a theatrical flourish, Laffitte spun his cane, and the air itself seemed to shudder as he unleashed a pulse of dark energy. The surge erupted outward like the exhalation of a dying star, a force so immense it seemed to drain the very light from the world. The blackened energy coalesced into a monstrous wave, its jagged edges shimmering like the blades of spectral scythes. It carved through the battlefield with merciless precision, splitting the earth open as though it were a fragile shell. Deep, jagged scars stretched across the land, leaving behind a desolate wasteland of ash and ruin.
Violet moved like a phantom cloaked in grace, each step a masterpiece of agility and foresight. His Observation Haki was a guiding star, steering him unerringly through the storm of destruction. He danced through the chaos, his fluid movements mocking the ferocity around him. His twin blades ignited the air as they flashed, their arcs resembling silver comets streaking through a dying sky. The retaliatory shockwave they unleashed screamed like a wrathful banshee, slicing clean through a nearby meteor. The massive rock split apart, the two halves plummeting toward the island with a deafening roar.
When the meteor struck, the impact was cataclysmic, erupting into a cascade of fire and ash. The ruined landscape of Dead Island became a fiery canvas of destruction, the explosions painting it in hues of despair. The sky above was a dome of choking darkness, thick with smoke and embers that drifted down like the ash of a funeral pyre. Every breath carried the stench of scorched earth and death, a reminder of the carnage consuming the once-proud island.
The battlefield was no longer a place for mortals—it was a domain of chaos, a crucible of wrath and ruin. Flames roared as they devoured the remnants of civilization, their flickering tongues casting eerie shadows over the countless lifeless forms strewn across the land. The ground beneath seemed to writhe in agony, cracks spreading like veins on the corpse of a dying world. It was a scene that defied comprehension, a nightmare woven from the fury of titans, where even the heavens seemed to tremble in mourning.
"You're slippery," Violet muttered, his voice cold. "But I'll carve the smirk off your face soon enough."
The two battles raged on, each one shaking the island to its core. Corbin's raw, brutal strength left a path of utter destruction in its wake, his strikes creating massive craters and sending shockwaves that could be felt miles away. Guzen's maniacal laughter echoed as he danced through the destruction, his speed and cunning keeping him just out of reach.
Violet and Laffitte's duel was a symphony of precision and grace, their movements so fast they left afterimages in their wake. Each clash of their weapons sent ripples through the air, the sound like thunder rolling across the battlefield.
The meteors continued to fall, their fiery impacts adding to the chaos. Entire sections of the island were reduced to smoldering ruins, the land itself struggling to withstand the fury of these titanic clashes. Yet through it all, both sides fought as unyielding forces, their power shaking the heavens and the earth alike.
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As the battlefield continued to rage, Motor remained seated on his massive ice throne, carved from frozen debris he had idly molded during the early stages of the chaos. He leaned back, one arm resting on the icy armrest, the other holding a tankard filled with some frothy drink. His massive form radiated an aura of indifference, as if the destruction around him was nothing more than a passing spectacle.
Enel, however, was the opposite of indifference—he thrived in the chaos. Hovering above the battlefield, his body crackled with golden lightning that illuminated the carnage below. His god complex was on full display, his arms raised high as he called down relentless lightning strikes on the Black Seraph Pirates.
"Bow before the might of a god!" Enel bellowed, his voice dripping with arrogance. A bolt of lightning surged from his hand, zigzagging through the air before obliterating a group of charging pirates in a blinding explosion. The ground beneath them shattered, sending fiery debris flying in all directions.
"Your pathetic attacks are just mere futility," Enel sneered, watching as the few survivors scrambled to retreat. His golden eyes flashed with satisfaction as he hovered lower to the ground, taunting them further. "Worms shouldn't even dream of opposing the divine."
Nixon moved alongside him, his steps precise and deliberate. Unlike Enel's theatrical displays, Nixon's attacks were cold and efficient. Every move he made left a trail of frost, freezing everything it touched. His demeanor was calm, almost unnervingly so, as he weaved through the chaos, freezing the Black Seraph pirates into ice sculptures.
One of the Black Seraph Pirates lunged at Nixon with a desperate cry, swinging a battle axe. Nixon sidestepped effortlessly, raising a hand to release a chilling wave of ice that encased the attacker mid-stride. Without even glancing at his frozen foe, Nixon turned and walked away, leaving the statue-like pirate to crumble into frozen shards moments later.
From his ice chair, Motor coughed weakly then said "You two sure like making a show of it," he rumbled. His voice was deep and lazy, carrying over the battlefield like a slow-moving avalanche. "Just don't zap me with one of those bolts, Enel." and try not to damage the treasure.
Enel sneered, his lightning aura sparking as he sent another blast toward a distant group of retreating pirates. "As if I'd waste divine power on you, Motoa. You're beneath my concern even or this treasure for all that matter."
"Alright, alright."
Nixon glanced at Enel, his eyes narrowing slightly as he felt a sting of frustration. Enel's methods were efficient, yes, but they lacked the elegance and poise that Nixon was accustomed to.
Enel's smirk widened into something almost divine, the soft crackle of lightning around him swelling into a radiant aura of raw energy. "Elegance? Poise? Those are concerns for mortals, Nixon," he said, his voice dripping with condescension and the self-assured grandeur of a god. "I am lightning incarnate—a force of nature, a divine judgment. I do not 'concern' myself with theatrics; I define the spectacle."
He gestured grandly toward the battlefield, where his bolts had reduced another group of enemies to smoldering ruins. "Do you see that? That is efficiency beyond elegance, the work of a deity." Enel paused, his piercing gaze settling on Nixon. "Perhaps, instead of critiquing, you should kneel and thank me for gracing this battlefield with my power."
Enel's grand proclamation hung in the air like a thundercloud, but Nixon simply sighed, brushing off the theatrics. Without a word, he turned back to the battlefield, his cold aura intensifying.
With an elegant flick of his wrist, frost spread like delicate lace across the terrain, ensnaring fleeing Black Seraph pirates in an icy grip. Each motion was precise, deliberate, as if painting the battlefield with winter itself.
"Your 'divine' theatrics may be loud, Enel," Nixon murmured, more to himself than anyone else, "but I find silence infinitely more effective." He didn't even glance back at the self-proclaimed god, his focus entirely on immobilizing the chaos around him with freezing precision.
Suddenly, Motoa shifted his gaze toward Joshua, his tone growing slightly more sharply. "Captain, what about that little one who slipped away earlier? Want me to go after them?"
Joshua stood at the center of the battlefield, his presence commanding despite the chaos raging around him. His crimson coat billowed slightly in the wind, and his eyes gleamed with the certainty of a predator who had already decided his prey's fate. Without looking at Motor, he replied, his voice calm yet cutting through the destruction like a blade.
"No need ," Joshua shook his head, his eyes still fixed on the horizon. "Anyone who steps in our way will meet the same fate as the rest. They'll fall before us eventually, one way or another."
Motora let out a deep, gravelly laugh, the sound rolling across the battlefield like distant thunder, only to be interrupted by a fit of hacking coughs that shook his frail frame. "Well said, Captain," he rasped between wheezing breaths. "This old body of mine doesn't have the strength or the speed to chase after him—let alone take him down. Those days are long behind me." His words carried a tinge of sardonic humor, his eyes glinting with the faintest trace of resignation masked by mirth.
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Deep within the heart of Calamity's Rest Island, where the skies raged with falling meteors that intermittently shook the ground with violent tremors, a shadowed figure wrapped in a dark cloak moved with ghostly silence. The air crackled faintly from distant impacts, each collision sending shockwaves through the fractured land.
In a small, hidden clearing, the figure came to an abrupt halt, his shoulders sagging under an invisible weight. The distant echoes of battle lingered, mingling with the sporadic roars of meteors breaking against the island's surface. Faint but unrelenting, they were a grim reminder of the chaos he'd left behind.
For a moment, he stood motionless, as though the surrounding shadows had claimed him entirely, rendering him an extension of their endless void. The air was heavy, cold, and oppressive, suffused with the metallic scent of scorched earth and the tension of impending calamity. It wrapped around him like a suffocating shroud, a reminder that even the heavens themselves waged war on this cursed land.
With slow, deliberate movements, he reached into his cloak and withdrew a Den Den Mushi. The little snail blinked up at him, its usual liveliness dulled by the gloom that seemed to radiate from its holder. His hand hovered over it for a moment, trembling ever so slightly before he tightened his grip. A sigh escaped his lips—a sound not of relief but of resignation, the kind that comes from someone carrying a burden they know won't soon be lifted.
The device rang, its Peroroo... Peroroo breaking the silence in sharp, discordant tones. He stared at it as if the sound itself was dragging him deeper into the void. When the line connected with a faint click, he brought it to his lips, his voice emerging low, heavy, and tinged with despair, as though the words were being pulled from the depths of a dark well.
"It's me, Captain," he said, the gloom in his tone unmistakable, each word dripping with the weight of unspoken dread. The words hung in the cold, empty air, like a confession uttered in the silence of a graveyard.