Chapter 304 The Enforcer's Verdict
There was no hesitation, no wasted motion. A shadow leaped at him, blade angled for the kill—only for its head to roll across the ground a moment later. The Enforcer didn't even slow. Another came from behind, silent as death, dagger poised for his spine—only to be caught midair, one gloved hand crushing the assassin's throat before tossing him aside like discarded meat.
A third attacker barely had time to blink before a boot slammed into their chest, launching them into a broken column with bone-shattering force.
The Enforcer's blade was no ordinary weapon. It did not merely cut; it cleaved, it obliterated, it consumed the space around it. His strikes were measured, efficient, perfectly placed—not just to kill, but to dismantle.@@novelbin@@
A butcher's work.
Veylan had seen many killers in his time. Assassins. Executioners. Soldiers. But this—this was something else.
The Enforcer was not a man.
He was an execution given form.
Malakar fought beside him, his greatsword a brutal, unrelenting force. He hacked through the infiltrators, armor drenched in the blood of the fallen. To his right, Vasrik barked orders, rallying what remained of the officers, forming defensive lines where they could.
For a moment, it looked as if they could hold.
But then Veylan saw it.
Something was wrong.
The infiltrators fought with precision, with knowledge. They did not attack blindly. They knew exactly who to target, who to avoid. They were not here to win a battle.
They were here for something else.
And then—amidst the chaos—he noticed a figure.
One of their own.
A high-ranking officer.
They did not fight.
They did not run.
They watched.
Deliberate. Calculated.
Their gaze did not flicker between the chaos of battle. Their sword remained sheathed. They stood amidst the bodies, untouched, unaffected.
Veylan narrowed his eyes, his blade cutting through another foe as he moved closer, watching, studying.
Then, the officer's gaze flickered.
Not at him.
At the Enforcer.
It was not fear. Not shock.
Recognition.
Veylan's breath slowed. He felt the pieces click into place.
It was them.
The true infiltrator.
The one who had been waiting. The one who had been guiding this from the shadows, who had pulled every thread, who had watched as the Order tore itself apart.
The figure stepped forward.
Slow. Measured.
And then—
They spoke.
A voice that was both theirs and not.
"You should not have come here."
The voice was wrong. Twisted, layered. A distortion that did not belong to human speech. It slithered through the air, a mocking resonance that sent a shiver down the spine of every soul who heard it.
"The Order was already ours."
Then—
The truth was revealed.
The high-ranking officer's body convulsed violently, his limbs jerking at unnatural angles as his breath turned ragged. A grotesque sound—a wet, sickening crack—echoed through the war chamber as his ribs pushed outward beneath his skin, twisting into grotesque shapes before retreating again. His fingers clawed at his chest, his expression flickering between agony and something else. Something wrong.
His skin rippled, shifting as if something beneath it was alive. Pulsing veins turned an unnatural black, moving like tendrils under his flesh, writhing and searching. His mouth opened, but it was not a scream that came forth—it was a fractured, otherworldly whisper, a sound like a chorus of voices speaking in unison, trapped inside a body that no longer belonged to itself.
Veylan's breath turned cold.
This was not control. This was infestation.
The realization struck like a dagger to his mind. Possession could be countered, controlled, purged by divine magic or sheer willpower. This—this was something else entirely. This was not an external force bending a mind to its will. This was a parasite, a corruption that had festered and grown within its host for who knew how long, twisting flesh and spirit alike.
It had never been about breaking minds.
It had been about replacing them.
The officers closest to the traitor recoiled in horror, scrambling backward as the figure convulsed again, their form distorting further. Shadows pulsed from beneath their skin, spreading like fractures in glass, splitting apart with a sound that was more felt than heard.
A grotesque grin carved itself onto the officer's face, the skin around their mouth stretching far beyond what should have been possible. The thing inside them was trying to speak through flesh that was never meant to form words.
And then, it turned its gaze to the Enforcer.
Not with fear.
With recognition.
"You should not have come here." The words gurgled from a throat that no longer functioned properly, the syllables stretching and cracking. "You are… interference."
The air thickened.
Veylan barely noticed that his own hand had gone to his weapon, gripping it tighter than he ever had before.
The Enforcer did not hesitate.
His stride was slow, measured. His movements were not those of a man preparing for battle, but of something inevitable, something unshaken by the monstrosity before him.
His blade hummed, the very air around it distorting with a force beyond mortal comprehension.
Then he spoke.
A single word.
A forbidden command.
And the world reacted.
The stone beneath them trembled. The air turned heavier, suffocating, charged with something ancient and undeniable. A soundless wave rippled through the chamber, pressing into the bones of all who stood there, vibrating through the very essence of their being.
The thing inside the officer shrieked.
It was not a scream of pain. It was not rage.
It was fear.
Black tendrils exploded from the traitor's body, writhing wildly, thrashing against the unseen force that had been unleashed. Their flesh cracked apart, veins rupturing as whatever had nested within them fought desperately to resist. The corruption had been rooted deep—but the Enforcer had reached deeper.
The others—those who had hidden so well, who had infiltrated the Order and burrowed into its very foundation—began to fall.
One by one, they collapsed where they stood, their bodies seizing violently.
Veylan's gaze darted to the fallen officers, the ones who had never been suspected, the ones who had passed every test, every security measure, every mental probe. Their faces twisted in horror as they realized what was happening to them.
They had been puppets all along.
And now, their strings had been cut.
A woman near the edge of the chamber gasped, clutching her stomach as dark veins spread across her hands. A captain, one of the longest-serving officers, staggered back, his mouth moving in silent horror as his own body turned against him. Another fell to their knees, shaking violently, their eyes flickering between human consciousness and something else, something foreign, something wrong.
The entire war room became a battlefield of collapsing bodies, of choked screams and shuddering movements.
The Enforcer remained unmoving.
He had not come to purge.
He had come to destroy.
The figure at the center of it all, the original infiltrator, gasped through shredded lungs, clawing at the ground as their body continued to reject itself.
"You—" The voice gurgled out, thick with agony, thick with something unnatural. "You don't understand."
The Enforcer took another step forward.
His blade did not glow. It did not burn.
It simply was.
A force that should not exist in this world, a weapon that carried judgment itself.
"No." The Enforcer's voice was quiet. Final.
The blade came down.
And the thing inside the officer screamed.
Not in pain.
But in terror.
The moment the strike connected, a surge of force erupted from the impact point. It was not fire. It was not light.
It was erasure.
The darkness that had lurked within the infiltrator was pulled from them, ripped apart at its very core, scattered into nothingness before it could escape.
And then, silence.
The body fell limp. No convulsions, no final spasms of dying corruption. Whatever had been inside them was simply… gone.
Veylan's breath was slow, controlled, but his mind was anything but.
The Enforcer had not used magic. He had not used divine power.
This was something else.
Something far more absolute.
As the dust settled, the war chamber stood in eerie stillness. The remaining officers, those who had not succumbed to the corruption, stood frozen. Some had their hands on their weapons. Others had fallen to their knees, their faces pale with something far deeper than shock.
Fear.
The last of the infiltrators lay dead. The parasites purged from their flesh.
And the Radiant Order was in ruins. Discover more content at My Virtual Library Empire
Veylan slowly turned, his gaze sweeping across the devastation.
Bodies lined the chamber floor. Blood and ash mingled in grotesque patterns where the battle had torn through flesh and mind alike. The banners of the Order, once symbols of unity, hung tattered and burned, remnants of what they once stood for.
The fortress—no, the Order itself—was broken.
And then, finally, the Enforcer turned to him.
His eyes, colder than death, locked onto Veylan's. There was no triumph in them. No satisfaction.
Only finality.
Then he spoke.
"Your war is over."
The words rang through the hollow chamber, a declaration that carried the weight of the Imperial Throne itself.
Veylan felt his stomach tighten. He had expected many things. A rebuke. A demand for answers. Even a command to rebuild.
But not this.
The Enforcer took a step forward, his voice like a blade cutting through the last remnants of what Veylan had once commanded.
"The Radiant Order is no longer fit to exist."
Veylan stiffened. He had expected many things, but not this.
The Enforcer's decree was absolute. "The remnants of this force will be absorbed into the Imperial Army. Those who resist will be treated as traitors."
Veylan had a choice.
Fight, knowing that his men no longer had the strength to win.
Or kneel.
For the first time in years, he did not have control.
So, he did the only thing left to him.
He bowed his head.
He knelt.
The Radiant Order had fallen.
But Veylan was not done.
Not yet.
The game had just begun.
What do you think?
Total Responses: 0