I Got My System Late, But I'll Become Beastgod-Chapter 127: A Warrior’s Echo

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Chapter 127: A Warrior’s Echo

The battlefield lay quiet.

Haider Ali’s lifeless body remained upright — still kneeling, unmoving. His sword shattered. His armor cracked. Blood painted the stone beneath him in deep reds and browns. And yet, his posture... unbroken.

The wind whispered across the charred fields, rustling torn flags and broken spears. Even the crows did not dare approach.

The soldiers of Aryavrata stood frozen, their weapons slack in their hands. A silence fell so thick, it crushed every war cry that had echoed before. One by one, warriors lowered their blades, bowing their heads.

Some dropped to their knees, weeping openly. Others saluted silently — not as an order, but as instinct.

A general had died.

But a legend had risen.

A young soldier, barely out of his teens, dropped his spear and fell to his knees. His lips quivered.

"He saved us all..." he whispered. "He stood alone... and he saved us all."

Another warrior, one of Haider’s old battalion mates, placed a firm hand on the boy’s shoulder.

"That was the General. Always ahead. Always the shield."

The murmurs spread like wind:

"He trained us."

"He raised us from cowards into warriors."

"He was a wall we never thought would fall."

Even among former enemies, there was silence. A Valkorian captain, helmet in hand, bowed his head.

"That man... deserved to die with a crown."

Afreen walked forward slowly, her steps heavy with grief. Her eyes trembled as she reached Haider. She knelt down beside him, brushing her hand gently across his face, and then, with shaking fingers, closed his eyes.

"Rest now, old lion," she whispered. "You’ve roared your last."

A gentle sob escaped her lips, but she didn’t let it grow. She pressed her forehead against his and breathed out a final farewell.

Behind her, King Veerendra stood tall, face stoic, hands clenched so tightly the leather of his gloves cracked.

From amidst the gathering crowd, one man stepped forward — tall, lean, clad in old Aryavrata war robes worn with age and honor.

Shinroku.

His face bore lines of battles long past, his silver-streaked hair tied in the warrior’s knot of the old era. He approached with calm reverence.

He reached Haider’s side, kneeling beside the body, and gently placed the broken remains of Haider’s sword across his lap like a sacred offering.

"He never bowed..." Shinroku murmured. "...not even in death."

The entire field bowed their heads in unison.

A warrior was gone.

But his echo remained.

A gust of wind stirred the ashes.

Shinroku rose slowly, lifting his eyes to meet the storm clouds above. Then he turned. His gaze fixed on the figure standing at the far end of the battlefield — dark, regal, monstrous.

Zorwath.

The dark god stood among the wreckage, blood staining his robes, a twisted grin still lingering on his face. His sword pulsed with energy — alive, almost breathing.

But then... he blinked. Just for a moment. His grin faltered.

A presence.

A weight.

Shinroku was walking toward him — calm, unhurried, every step a whisper of old steel and forgotten honor.

The soldiers parted instinctively as he passed.

Zorwath tilted his head. "Another one?" he muttered. "So many lions in this land... and yet, still they charge."

As Shinroku closed the distance, a flash of memory crossed his eyes:

Two young men in a sun-drenched courtyard — blades clashing, sweat flying.

One grinning. The other silent.

Haider and Shinroku — back when war was still a lesson, not a scar.

Now, standing beside Haider’s body once more, Shinroku knelt.

He placed a hand on his brother’s shoulder. His voice low. Steady.

"My friend..."

"...you held the line."

"Now let me finish what you started."

He stood.

Drew his katana — long, simple, unadorned — yet every inch carried weight.

"Zorwath."

"Face me."

Zorwath’s smile returned... but it twitched. His hand trembled briefly before steadying.

He stepped forward, raising his sword.

"Your Friend was valiant," he said. "But dead."

Then—he lunged.

The two clashed — a single, blinding strike. Sparks flew. Air cracked.

Zorwath blocked Shinroku’s blade... but his feet slid back. His hand trembled. He winced — and dark veins pulsed along his wrist.

Shinroku looked Zorwath straight in the eyes.

"I carry the weight of every fallen comrade. Your blade will not make me falter."

He leapt away quickly, landing a dozen paces back, breathing heavier than before.

"Tch..." he muttered under his breath. "That cursed general... pushed me further than expected."

The chaos inside him stirred — magic leaking from unsealed bonds. His strength was still rebuilding, and each moment here was costing him more than he expected.

"Not yet," he realized. "Not against this one."

He straightened his back and raised his voice.

"I, Zorwath, do not fear defeat — but I do not waste my rise on scraps of strength."

"This world trembles at my return, and now I offer you a choice —"

His voice boomed like thunder across the battlefield.

"Serve me and live... or stand against me and die."

All eyes turned to him.

A swirling, dark portal began to open behind him — a vortex of void energy that sucked the very light from the air.

He locked eyes with Shinroku.

"Your death is postponed. Not canceled."

Then to the rest of the world:

"I shall return when my blade remembers its thirst. Until then — remember today... as mercy." "But next time, I won’t be bound by mercy... or weakness."

He stepped back, shadows swirling.

And vanished.

His elite guards followed, the portal swallowing them one by one.

The rest of his monstrous legions — Calonian, Valkorian, and Navarra — were left behind.

For a moment, confusion reigned.

Then panic.

The enemy troops, now leaderless, staggered. Some dropped weapons and fled. Others fell to their knees, unsure of whether to fight, run, or surrender.

Aryavrata’s generals gathered quickly. King Veerendra raised his voice.

"No more bloodshed."

"Let the wounded bury their dead. Let the enemies who remain throw down arms or be captured without violence."

Haider’s death had ended a war — not in victory, but in pause.

Some commanders from Calonia and Navarra surrendered openly, tossing weapons and kneeling. Others were rounded up.

Soldiers from both sides began helping the wounded — binding limbs, lifting bodies.

The battlefield — once a furnace of rage — now cooled with quiet sorrow and exhaustion.

But all knew... this was not the end.

It was a breath.

A moment of silence before the storm returned.

Two Aryavratan soldiers carried Aamir’s unconscious body on a stretcher. Blood had dried on his cheek. His breathing was shallow.

Beside him, Seenu walked with a limp, clutching his ribs. His other hand gripped tightly onto Riya’s for balance. Her eyes were red from tears she refused to let fall.

As they passed through the ruined paths of the battlefield, Aamir stirred.

His fingers twitched.

His lips moved.

"Haider... sir..."

The whisper was soft. Barely audible. But the ache in his chest was deafening. freёnovelkiss.com

A memory pierced through his dazed mind:

Haider’s voice, quiet by the fire:

"The weight I bear... someday, it will be yours."

That day had come.

And it had crushed him.

Seenu looked down at his friend, his jaw tight. He turned to the soldier beside him.

"How long till Nalanda?"

"We’re close. Hold on."

The gates of Nalanda rose in the distance — battered but still standing. Trivnal Tower stood like a lighthouse through the storm.

Guards opened the gates slowly as they approached.

A hush fell over the crowd at the gates as they saw Aamir — bloodied, barely conscious.

They stepped aside.

"Make way."

"Champion returning."

"Let him through."

Inside, the soldiers carried Aamir straight to the central healing chamber of the Trivnal Tower. A marble room with crystal veins glowing beneath the floor.

He was gently placed into the sacred basin.

In his unconscious mind, Aamir stood alone — in a field of silver grass. A ghostly figure emerged from the mist.

Haider.

But younger. Proud. Smiling.

"Still think you were just a student?" he said, walking closer.

"Still think the world won’t come for you?"

Aamir tried to speak — but his voice wouldn’t come out.

Haider’s hand rested on his shoulder.

"I never taught you to win."

"I taught you to carry on."

The wind around them howled. The grass turned to fire. Shadows loomed.

"My time’s over, Aamir."

"Yours... is just beginning."

A thunderclap roared through the dreamscape, shaking the sky.

Then — silence.

Aamir gasped awake in the healing basin.

Mages surrounded him, chanting healing spells. Light bathed his body.

But his mind was elsewhere.

Far beyond pain, beyond exhaustion.

He saw a vision.

Haider standing tall, sword in hand, smiling at him.

"You’re not ready yet," the general said.

"But you will be."

As the vision faded, Aamir’s eyes fluttered open slightly — tears tracing down his temples.

Outside the tower, the clouds parted.

A soft breeze swept through Nalanda.

Somewhere in the sky, thunder rolled once — not of war, but of remembrance.

The storm had passed... but the thunder in Aamir’s heart was only just beginning.

A faint shimmer of golden mist curled through the chamber.

From the shadows stepped a hooded figure, cloaked in ancient runes and divine presence.

The temperature dropped, yet the air pulsed with raw spirit energy.

The healers stepped back instinctively.

"I’ll handle it from here," the figure said, voice echoing like a forgotten song.

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