Demonic Pornstar System

Chapter 725: Refusal to Disappoint



Chapter 725: Refusal to Disappoint

The stampede hit the basin like a wall of teeth and noise.

Vaelira, the A-tier Arcane Puppeteer, rising star of Nova Circuit, heard it before she saw it. A rumble that climbed through the soles of her boots and settled in her ribs, deep enough to make her fillings ache. Then the horizon moved. Creatures poured through the natural corridors between feeding grounds in a flood of scales and chitin and blind, shrieking panic, predators running alongside prey, the ecosystem of the upper elevations emptying downward into the zones where the rookie-track guilds hunted.

Her interface flickered. The competition standings pulsed with updates. Iron Halo dropped ten thousand points. Then another ten thousand. Silver Talon hemorrhaging.

People were dying.

"Form up!" Vaelira’s voice cut across the panic like a blade. She lifted her wand and the air around her shimmered with arcane energy. "Shields forward, ranged behind, nobody moves until I say so!"

Jack was already in position, his massive frame planted at the front with his mace-shield combo raised. Sasha nocked an arrow. Diaz had vanished.

The other nine Runewoven rookies were not as composed. Several of them were staring at the approaching wave with the frozen, white-faced blankness of people whose bodies had decided that standing still was preferable to making a decision.

"Did I stutter?!" Vaelira snarled. "Formation! Now!"

They moved. Fear of what was coming broke them loose, but it was fear of her that put them in the right positions.

"Arise. [Summon Legion]!"

The air split with arcane light. A hundred spectral soldiers materialized across the basin floor in staggered ranks, bronze armor gleaming, shields locked into overlapping walls, spears bristling outward in every direction. They formed a layered defensive perimeter around the thirteen fighters, three ranks deep, each row covering the gaps of the one ahead. The ground trembled beneath their synchronized footfalls as they locked into position.

The stampede hit the shield wall and the mountain became noise.

Creatures slammed into the perimeter from every angle, scrambling over each other. The outer rank absorbed the charge. Shields buckled and spears drove through hides, and the creatures that broke one soldier met two more behind it. Vaelira conducted them with sharp gestures of her wand, orchestrating a hundred bodies at once, shifting entire sections of the perimeter to absorb pressure surges, collapsing one flank inward to funnel creatures into a killing corridor where spears waited three rows deep.

Then the second wave arrived. Bigger. The predators that normally claimed territory in the upper elevations. They hit the perimeter like battering rams, and the outer rank shattered. Fifteen soldiers dissolved in seconds, then twenty, bronze fragments scattering into fading mana as the larger creatures simply trampled through them.

Vaelira resummoned. Twenty soldiers blinked into existence where the gaps had opened, and the mana cost made her vision pulse. She resummoned again. Thirty more along the eastern flank where the stampede was thickest, pouring reinforcements into the line faster than the creatures could chew through them.

Blood ran from Vaelira’s nose.

A hundred and fifty summons now. Her reserves were draining faster than she could track and her body was screaming the tax through her sinuses, behind her eyes, a sharp wet heat that told her she’d blown past what her core could comfortably sustain three dozen soldiers ago.

But she did not care.

’If even one of them dies,’ she thought, ’he’ll know.’

The thought cut through the pain and the fatigue. It wasn’t courage that straightened her spine. It wasn’t pride, or professionalism, or love for the people she was protecting.

It was the deep-seated, crippling fear of a wrathful Kaiden Grey.

The spark in her heart pulsed. A phantom reminder, cold and heavy behind her sternum. The gluttony parasite sitting dormant inside her cardiac muscle, waiting. The wrath that could ignite her blood from any distance. The glyph of authority branded on her heart like a signature on a deed of ownership.

She could still feel it. Every hour of every day since he’d pressed his claw into her chest and rebuilt her understanding of her own mortality. His face above her in the hospital bed, eyes burning red, the flat certainty in his voice when he’d told her that every beat of her heart was a gift he’d chosen not to rescind.

Yet.

Vaelira would rather bleed out through her nose and ears on this mountainside than give Kaiden Grey a reason to activate what he’d put inside her. But that wasn’t the worst of it. The spark could kill her. She’d made peace with that possibility.

What she couldn’t survive was being on his bad side again.

He had trusted her with this team. Looked her in the eyes and told her that these thirteen fighters were her responsibility, he made her promise that she would look after them. That promise was the first thing Kaiden Grey had ever trusted her with, and it was the only currency she had left.

If she broke it, the spark wouldn’t matter. He wouldn’t need to ignite her blood or devour her from the inside. He would simply look at her the way he’d looked at her in that hospital bed, and she would know that the one chance she’d been given to prove she was worth keeping alive had been wasted.

Dying to monsters was quick. Earning Kaiden’s contempt again was forever.

Another spectral soldier shattered. She replaced it. Another fell. She replaced that one too, fresh soldiers stepping into the line as fast as the old ones broke, and the shield wall held because Vaelira refused to let it fold.

The stampede passed.

It took twelve minutes. It felt like twelve hours. The wave of creatures thinned, broke into stragglers, then stopped. The basin settled into an eerie quiet punctuated by distant screaming from the sectors where other guilds had collapsed.

Vaelira lowered her wand. Her arm was shaking. Blood had soaked through her collar and her vision was pulsing at the edges with each heartbeat.

She pulled up the competition standings.

Runewoven: zero point loss. Full roster intact.

Iron Halo: minus thirty thousand. Silver Talon: minus forty thousand. Bodies still being counted.

Vaelira wiped the blood from her upper lip with the back of her hand.

"Report!" she ordered. Her voice was hoarse. "Every member, confirm you’re alive. Now."

They did just that.

"Then we continue," the blonde decreed.

"We just survived a stampede and you want to keep hunting?!" A rookie whose name she still hadn’t learned, a boy barely out of his teens, pale and trembling.

Vaelira fixed him with an ice-cold look. "Yes. We continue until the job is done."

The boy went quiet. They all did.

’Thirteen out of thirteen,’ she thought. ’You’re welcome, you... wonderful man.’

She didn’t even dare raise her internal voice at him.

Instead, the puppeteer raised her wand.

"Ten minutes. Then we hunt."

...

Magnus Ashborn sat behind his desk with his hands flat on the surface and his knuckles pale.

The broadcast feed was playing before his mind’s eye.

His children broken on the ridge. His wife standing over them.

The footage of the stampede had already been clipped, timestamped, and circulated across every major platform. The crescent that took the girl’s arm, the transformation, the doubled voice. Every second of it captured from Kaiden’s own feed, from his own first-person POV, broadcast to an audience of millions who had watched his guild’s veteran-track fighters hunt a rookie team across a mountain range and call it assistance.

Magnus’s jaw worked.

They should be dead. That was the point.

The stampede, the blocked corridors, the attacks disguised as friendly fire. Kaiden’s team should have lost members, taken the ten-thousand-point penalty per death, and dropped far enough in the standings that New Dawn could win.

Instead every single one of them had survived. The purple-haired speedster had lost an arm and kept fighting with it clenched in her teeth. The boy himself had turned into something with horns and a doubled voice that made the monsters on the mountain scream.

All of them alive. All of them streaming.

He stood. The chair rolled backward. His children had failed to kill a single member of a rookie team. Three veteran-track fighters against seven rookies on a mountain full of monsters, every advantage in their favor, and the body count was zero. Selena had aimed to kill and missed. The twins had panicked and crumbled the moment the boy’s mana pressure hit them.


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