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Demon God's Impostor: Leveling Up by Acting-Chapter 104 - 8 Hours
The religious fervor in her voice created slight discomfort among conventional military commanders. But none objected.
The Fourth Order had proven effective enough that their zealotry was tolerated as price of competence. ๐ฏ๐ง๐๐๐ฌ๐๐๐ฃ๐ค๐๐ฎ๐ต.๐๐ค๐ข
"Once we reach Sanctum Lux," Liam continued, "three-pronged assault commences immediately. No siege. No prolonged engagement. We breach first wall within six hours or withdraw entirely. This is surgical strike, not conventional warfare."
"Surgical strike with two hundred thousand troops and catastrophic casualties." Patriarch Mordainโs rumbling voice carried skepticism that had never entirely disappeared. "You keep using that phrase, but thereโs nothing surgical about this assault."
"Surgical in objective. Apocalyptic in execution." Liamโs correction was precise. "Weโre not conquering territory. Weโre destroying specific infrastructureโthe Cathedral of Divine Light where hero summoning occurs. Everything else is secondary to that objective."
He pulled forward schematics of Sanctum Lux that Fourth Order intelligence had compiled.
"First wave breaches outer wall. Second wave advances through breach to middle wall. Third wave penetrates to central district where Cathedral stands. Fourth wave provides rear security and prevents encirclement." His finger traced assault paths. "Each wave has specific objective. Each commander has explicit instructions. Success requires perfect coordination and willingness to accept that most participants in early waves wonโt survive to see final objective achieved."
The brutal honesty created heavy silence.
"Iโm not going to pretend this is anything except what it isโapocalyptic gamble that costs more lives than any military operation in demon history. But Iโm also not going to pretend we have better options." Liamโs voice was firm.
"Defensive warfare fails. Negotiation failsโLord Arcturus proved that through his betrayal. Hoping prophecy doesnโt fulfill itself is delusion. This offensive, brutal as it is, represents our best probability of preventing extinction."
He looked at each commander directly.
"Tomorrow we march. Seventeen days from now, we attack. Some of you will die. Most of you will die. But those who survive will have accomplished something unprecedentedโbreaking prophecy that ordained our destruction." His grey eyes blazed. "Thatโs what weโre marching for. Not glory. Not conquest. Survival of our entire species."
"What if the summoning canโt be stopped?" Veridia Zarthus asked, her venomous beauty sharp even in formal military context. "If we lose two hundred thousand demons and the Radiant Empire still completes hero summoning?"
"Then we failed trying rather than succeeded at nothing." Liamโs response was immediate. "But I donโt operate from assumption of failure. I operate from understanding that success requires sacrifice. That survival costs blood. That sometimes the only path forward requires walking through hell and hoping you emerge on the other side."
He gestured broadly to the assembled commanders.
"Every demon in this room is veteran. Youโve all made impossible calculations. Youโve all commanded soldiers who died executing your orders. You know that war doesnโt offer clean choicesโonly terrible ones with varying degrees of necessity."
His voice was steady. "Tomorrowโs choice is march toward probable death with chance of preventing extinction, or stay home and guarantee it. Iโve made my choice. Each of you makes yours. But understandโanyone who marches tomorrow does so knowing the mathematics. Knowing the casualties. Knowing this might be suicide mission dressed as military strategy."
Silence fell absolute.
Then Commander Torven stood. "Legion One marches at your command, Lord Azra. Weโve calculated the odds. We accept them."
One by one, the other legion commanders stood. Pledged their forces. Accepted the catastrophic mathematics.
Not through blind faith. Not through naive optimism.
Through cold recognition that terrible choices were all that remained.
---
The briefing concluded near midnight. Commanders dispersed to their legions for final preparations. Equipment checks. Troop formations. Last letters to families who might never see their loved ones return.
Liam remained in the command hall with Lilith, Koth, Zara, and Kaelโthraโhis forming inner circle.
"Well," Koth said finally. "That was appropriately grim. Very โweโre probably all going to die but letโs do it anywayโ energy."
"The queen is right, they needed honesty," Liam said. "Inspiration is for recruits. Veterans need acknowledgment of what theyโre facing."
"You gave them that." Zaraโs analytical mind was processing everything. "Question is whether honesty maintains morale or undermines it. Hard to march enthusiastically toward eighty-five percent casualty rates."
"Theyโre not marching enthusiastically. Theyโre marching grimly because alternatives are worse." Lilith moved to the maps, studying assault vectors theyโd refined over three months. "The disinformation campaign should give us tactical advantage. If it worked. If Lord Arcturus didnโt somehow warn them. Ifโ"
"If doesnโt matter now." Liam cut through the speculation. "March begins at dawn regardless of whether every variable is perfect. We execute the plan because itโs the best available option given impossible constraints."
"The Fourth Order is deployed," Kaelโthra reported, her professionalism unaffected by the casual atmosphere. "Advance scouts are already moving toward Sanctum Lux. Counter-intelligence teams monitor for Radiant Empire observation. Assassination specialists are positioned to eliminate any heroes who respond during march."
"And Lord Arcturus?" Lilith asked carefully.
"Under constant surveillance. His communication channels are monitored. Heโs been... cooperative since understanding his survival depends on useful service." Kaelโthraโs voice suggested cooperation had required encouragement. "The disinformation he provided appears genuine. Radiant Empire repositioned forces exactly as predicted."
"Appears being operative word." Liamโs skepticism was evident. "We wonโt know if his cooperation is real until weโre committed to assault."
"By which point, adjusting strategy is impossible." Zaraโs analysis was characteristically grim. "Weโre trusting intelligence from admitted traitor because alternatives require more time than we possess. Thatโs concerning."
"Everything about this offensive is concerning." Lilithโs voice carried exhaustion of someone whoโd spent three months preparing for this gamble.
Silence fell.
"Get some rest," Liam said finally. "Dawn comes quickly. Weโll need energy for beginning what might be civilizationโs final gamble."
They dispersed. Koth to his legion. Zara to intelligence coordination. Kaelโthra to Fourth Order operations. Lilith to handle political matters that couldnโt wait.
Leaving Liam alone in the command hall, staring at maps that represented so many lives about to be risked.
Somewhere in the city, two hundred thousand demons prepared for march.
Somewhere in barracks, soldiers wrote final letters to families.
Somewhere in the Cathedral, eight hundred faithful prayed for divine victory.
Somewhere in Sanctum Lux, the Radiant Empire prepared defenses against assault they supposedly knew was coming.
And somewhere between all those points, dawn approached with inevitability that couldnโt be stopped.
The eve of apocalypse passed slowly.
Morning came anyway.
And with morning, the march began.
[Time Until March: 8 hours]







