SSS-Ranked Awakening: I Can Only Summon Mythical Beasts

Chapter 547: Thing Of Ruin I



It was a shard.

That was the closest word for it.

Not a stone or a crystal or a fragment of bone. Not a core stripped from something dead. It was a shard—roughly the size of his palm, irregular at the edges as if it had once been part of something larger and had been separated from it by force rather than design. Its surface was dark. Not the kind of dark that absorbed light the way demon essence did. Something different. Something that seemed to exist slightly outside of the color range entirely, shifting at the edges depending on the angle.

It was cold but not temperature-cold.

The kind of cold that had nothing to do with heat.

Damien held it in his open hand and looked at it without touching the edges. His system had already pulled the contents of the storage construct into his awareness the moment the seal broke, cataloguing everything within it—cores, fragments of information encoded in demonic script, spatial remnants of what had clearly been a larger archive before most of it was removed or destroyed.

Only pieces remained.

But pieces were enough.

He already knew two things about this forest before he found the shard.

The first was the demons had come here for him. That had been established the moment the first group appeared—organized, tracked, deliberate. Not a patrol. Not a territorial response. A directive. Someone had sent them specifically, and that someone had known he was here. The second was they were not only here for him.

That had been the more interesting realization, and one he had filed away quietly without acting on it. Because something else was drawing demonic attention to this forest. Something that required not just hunters but containment. Guards posted not to drive intruders away, but to hold something in.

The Forest of Twin Disasters.

A name with history in it.

He had known for some time now that this forest belonged to the Ancient Ones—those who had built and abandoned Ascension Lands across the known world and left them untouched ever since. Every Ascension Land had a purpose. Every one of them had a prize at its center, something the Ancient Ones had placed or sealed within it as both reward and test for whoever proved capable of reaching it.

No human had ever cleared this one.

The Forest of Twin Disasters had stood longer than any record Damien could find—longer than most of the institutions that kept such records. And because it had never been cleared, whatever was at its center had never been claimed.

He had assumed it was a weapon. Or a living being.

Something powerful enough to be worth sealing, worth guarding, worth building an entire forest of death around.

The demonic record he had just extracted from the storage construct confirmed it. But not in the way he had expected.

He moved away from the center of the base, stepping over fractured roots and scorched earth until he found a section of the clearing that was quieter. Less disturbed. He crouched there, the shard resting in his open palm, and turned his full attention to what the system had gathered.

The record was incomplete.

That much was obvious from the first pass. Large sections had been redacted or simply absent—not destroyed in the fight, but missing from this archive entirely. Whoever had divided this information had done so deliberately, ensuring that no single location held enough to be fully useful on its own.

A sensible precaution.

What remained was still significant.

The demonic record did not use the term Ascension Land. Damien noticed that immediately. Where human documentation referred to these places as lands of growth—environments designed to test and elevate those who entered them—the demonic record used a different designation entirely.

Seals of Ruin.

And what it housed, according to the record, was described with two words repeated consistently throughout every fragment available.

Thing of Ruin.

Not a name. Not a title given to a specific entity. A classification. A category with its own weight, its own history, its own implications that the record seemed to assume any reader would already understand.

Damien did not already understand.

So he read carefully.

What the record explained—fragmented as it was—was this: the Things of Ruin were not simply powerful. Power alone did not earn that designation. The demon race had faced power before and survived it. Adapted to it. Overcome it.

The Things of Ruin were different.

Wherever they appeared, the record stated, ruin followed. Not damage. Not destruction in the measurable sense of structures broken and armies defeated. Ruin. The kind that did not leave enough behind to rebuild from. The kind that reached into the nature of a thing—a people, a civilization, a force—and unmade it at whatever level it existed.

And they had been used, the record made clear, against the demon race specifically.

Used.

That word appeared more than once. More than twice. It was not incidental. The Things of Ruin had not simply appeared near demons and caused harm by proximity. They had been wielded. Directed. Deployed against the demon race as instruments of a specific and deliberate campaign of destruction.

By whom, the record did not say.

Or if it did, that section was among what had been removed.

But the result was documented with a thoroughness that felt almost compulsive—the kind of recording that came from something that had left a mark deep enough that those writing it could not help but be exhaustive. Entire demonic forces reduced to nothing. Strongholds that had stood for centuries erased in periods the record measured not in days but in moments. Bloodlines severed completely.

The demon race feared very little but the record was unambiguous about this.

They feared the Things of Ruin.

Not cautiously. Not strategically, in the way you feared something you were planning to overcome.

Genuinely. They were genuinely scared of them.

At a level that had driven them to dedicate significant resources across centuries to locating every sealed Thing of Ruin they could identify and ensuring it stayed sealed. Guards posted. Containment maintained. Any human who wandered close enough to risk disturbing the seal—dealt with quietly.

Which explained the Forest of Twin Disasters.

Damien muttered to himself. “It seems like they only recently identified the forest as one of the Ascension Lands.”

Which explained the presence of Three demon captains and forty-two others in just this base that should have had no strategic value to them.

They were not here to conquer the forest. They were here to make sure nothing left it.

Damien looked at the shard in his palm again.

He did not know if this was a fragment of the Thing of Ruin itself or simply a key component of the containment array built around it. The record was not specific enough to tell him. What it was specific about was location—the central point of the forest, buried beneath the oldest layer of the terrain, beneath what the record described as a convergence point of compressed essence so dense it had begun to alter the nature of the ground above it.

He had passed through areas like that on his way here.

The sections of forest where the ground felt wrong underfoot. Where even Fenrir had moved more carefully.

He had noted it then.

Filed it away. Now it had context.

The shard was cold against his palm still. Unchanging. It had not reacted to his essence when he first touched it, had not responded to the seal breaking, had not done anything at all that suggested it was active. But it was not inert either. There was something inside it—not essence in any form he recognized, not demonic energy, not raw mana.

Something older than the categories he knew.

He closed his fingers around it slowly.


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