ShadowBound: The Need For Power-Chapter 383: Fall Of The Green Calamity (1)

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.

Chapter 383: Fall Of The Green Calamity (1)

Arriving in Solara, Lucy’s expression darkened the instant her boots touched Solarian soil. What greeted her wasn’t just the aftermath of battle—it was devastation on a scale even she hadn’t anticipated.

Zones 17 and 19 were gone.

Not conquered but erased.

Entire cities had been leveled. Ash filled the sky like snowfall. The streets were lined with rubble and red. Knights lay broken in alleyways, mages slumped beside their shattered staves. The scent of scorched stone, blood, and despair wafted through the wind like a funeral hymn.

Civilians had died by the hundreds, perhaps thousands. Unlike Tempest or Crescent, Solara had been attacked earlier, harder, with almost surgical cruelty. Their evacuation systems hadn’t stood a chance. Yet, despite that, the resilience of Solara’s people had shone through. Through sheer grit, the surviving knights and mages had managed to shepherd most of the remaining population to the underground shelters.

That, in itself, was a miracle.

Back in the capital city of Ilis, nestled in Zone 15, two swirling portals unfurled within the royal palace’s battered throne hall. Out of one stepped Queen Lucy, regal even under stress. From the other emerged King Valemir, cloaked in midnight-blue, his silver hair dim under the smoke-stained light.

Both monarchs took in the sight before them—the grand hall, once an emblem of Solara’s proud flame, now darkened with soot, debris littering its golden floor tiles.

Waiting for them, resting upon a curved seat lined in deep velvet and supported by a brace of royal healers, was King Tharion.

He looked weathered—his dark armor scraped, his long white cape stained with dirt and blood. A thick bandage was wrapped tightly around his ribcage, and he leaned heavily to one side. Still, his eyes burned bright with the fire of a man who had been on the front lines.

He rose—barely—as their footsteps neared, his form swaying like a half-felled tree. "Your timing is..." he exhaled shakily, "...better late than never."

"You should be resting," Lucy said at once, stepping toward him. Her tone remained measured, but a flicker of worry crossed her face.

"And leave my kingdom headless while monsters chew through our walls?" Tharion replied with a tired smirk. "I’ll sleep when the dead stop walking."

Valemir’s gaze was that of a war-hardened strategist—dispassionate, sharp. "What’s the current state of your defenses?"

Tharion signaled to a nearby aide. The man rushed over and rolled out a charred parchment on the nearest table. "We’ve secured survivors from Zones 15 and 16 beneath the city in the main shelter. Zones 17 and 19... they’re gone. Nothing left to salvage, but we did manage to evacuate most of the civilians before the collapse. Zone 18 is still contested—civilians are trapped, demons are roaming freely. If it’s not reinforced within the hour, it’ll be another smoking crater."

Lucy’s fists clenched by her side. "Any generals?"

Tharion’s face darkened. "Two confirmed in Zone 16. Both locked in battle with my son—Tharionson. He’s been holding the line since this chaos began, keeping both of them at bay. But he’s wearing down. One general’s already near-lethal; two? He’s being pushed far past his limit."

"No need to worry about that now," Valemir said coolly. "Caelum’s in Zone 16. He’ll have joined Tharionson by now. I trust his blades will even the odds."

"And as for Zone 18," he continued, "my elite knights have already engaged and the Tempest elites are with them as well."

"Magnus and Mystica are in the field as well," Lucy affirmed, steel in her voice. "We won’t lose Zones 15, 16, or 18. Nor this kingdom."

A breath escaped Tharion—half a sigh, half a prayer. "That might be the first real light I’ve heard all day."

He looked to both of them, his voice low but firm. "I mean it. Thank you. Your presence here... it means more than you know."

"There’s no time for gratitude," Valemir cut in. "We must move now."

Suddenly, the ground beneath them trembled, a low rumble rippling through the palace floor like the growl of something waking beneath the stone.

All eyes turned toward the ruined archways.

From beyond the shattered glass, the sky lit with a flare of blinding green. A moment later, a jagged stone pillar burst from the edge of Zone 15, toppling what little remained of a watchtower.

"There it is again," Tharion muttered, tension threading his voice. "These tremors have been building for hours. Stronger each time."

"Do we know the source?" Lucy asked. "A demon? A hybrid?"

Tharion’s expression turned grim. "Nothing’s been confirmed. No sighted source, no magical residue—nothing. Which is exactly why I’m starting to believe Sylvathar’s either en route... or already here."

"If he is," Lucy replied, "then we’re racing against time and bleeding power. We’ve got warriors who could stand against him, yes—but every one of them is wounded or drained from the last battles. And without Galen..."

She trailed off, the weight of those words enough to silence even the storm outside.

Tharion’s eyes narrowed. "Galen isn’t here?"

"No," Lucy confirmed. "He vanished the moment Tempest was hit. And Galen isn’t the type to run, so if he’s gone—it’s either abduction or something worse."

There was a heavy pause in the throne hall—stillness laced with tension—following Lucy’s final words.

Then Valemir’s voice broke the silence, calm yet firm.

"Well... that’s quite the position we’ve found ourselves in. But we can’t afford to stand still. Just because we lack the raw strength to challenge Sylvathar head-on doesn’t mean we should let despair paralyze us. The strongest warriors of each kingdom may be bruised and bloodied... but if they stand together, if they coordinate, we might yet carve a path through the storm."

"You’re right," Tharion said, nodding slowly, his breath still ragged. "Sitting idle won’t win this war."

Lucy’s gaze narrowed as she turned toward the shattered windows. "Before anything else, we need to confirm Sylvathar’s exact location. Judging from the tremors earlier and the surge of mystic corruption, I’m certain he’s already within Solara. Somewhere nearby. Watching us."

Valemir stepped forward, prepared to offer his own men. "I can send my—"

"No," Lucy interrupted, her voice decisive but not disrespectful. "I’ll assign Magnus and Mystica to track him. They’re both exceptional at navigating hostile energy fields and reading mystic fluctuations. We’ll need your men focused on the battlefield, not distracted by a ghost hunt. Crescent still has the most stamina left among us. With your generals gone, what’s left of Sylvathar’s horde won’t hold out long if your lines stay sharp."

Valemir hesitated. The need to find Sylvathar with his own blade itched deep in his bones, a father’s vengeance screaming within him. But war demanded discipline, not emotion. He closed his fist, then opened it slowly.

"No argument. That’s the wisest course."

"I’ll take Zone 18," he continued, straightening. "Caelum and Tharionson are already holding down Zone 16—if anyone can survive and clear that hellhole, it’s them. Sylas and the Tempest vanguard will secure Zone 15. I trust you to command them, Lucy?"

"Of course," she replied with a slight nod.

"Good. And Tharion..." Valemir looked toward the wounded king. "We need you on your feet. No more than what you can give, but as soon as you’re able."

Tharion offered a strained smile. "Give me five minutes. I may look half-dead, but I’ve got more bark left in me than most of those bastards out there."

"Then we’ll hold the line until you’re back in the fight."

Valemir turned to Lucy once more. "Send the word to Magnus and Mystica. If we’re going to find the serpent in this chaos, it has to be now. Every second we delay lets him root deeper."

A swirling portal opened behind him. Without waiting for further pleasantries, he stepped toward it. "I’ll see you both on the other side... and may the gods favor what’s left of us."

As he disappeared through the portal, Lucy turned sharply, already moving with her four agents. Wyjin summoned a second portal with a flick of his hand, the air bending in rippling arcs of blue and white.

"Recover fast, Tharion," Lucy said, her voice steady as steel but softer than before. "We’ll need you before this is over."

Then she vanished through the portal.

This chapt𝙚r is updated by fr(e)ew𝒆bnov(e)l.com