Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 395: The Last Wave 1

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The thirty minutes passed in silence. Nero sat cross-legged on the scorched earth, his eyes closed, his breathing slow and deep. Each breath drew prana from the air around him, pulling it into his core, cycling it through his body. His wounds had healed—the Earth law working through his flesh, knitting bone, sealing flesh, leaving only faint pink lines that would fade by morning. His stamina returned, slowly, steadily, filling muscles that had been empty.

He reviewed the fight. The white lightning had been good, but costly. He had used too much, too fast. Against the orcs, it had worked. Against stronger enemies, it would leave him empty. He needed to be smarter. More efficient. He thought of the golden lightning, the familiar crackle and roar. It was powerful, but it announced itself. It gave warning.

There was a balance to be found. He would find it.

The notification appeared, soft blue against the gray sky.

Third wave approaching.

Nero opened his eyes. The corpses from the second wave were already fading, dissolving into light, as if carried away by the tower's magic.

The field was empty again, clean, waiting. He rose to his feet, rolling his shoulders, flexing his fingers. His sword was in his hand, the weight familiar, comforting.

The light came. Blinding, white, then fading.

Three figures stood before him.

The first was an ogre, massive even by ogre standards, easily twelve feet tall. Its skin was the color of old iron, scarred across the chest, the arms, the face. In its hands, a bastard sword, the blade as long as Nero was tall, its edge gleaming with a light that was not reflected. Its eyes were small, dark, fixed on Nero with the calm patience of a predator who had never lost.

The other two were orcs. They were not as tall as the ogre, but they were broad, thick, their bodies covered in the scars of a hundred battles. Their faces were identical—twin brothers, their features carved from the same brutal stone. One carried a club, its head studded with iron spikes. The other carried an axe, its blade chipped but still sharp enough to split bone. They stood shoulder to shoulder, their movements synchronized, their breathing the same rhythm.

Green light enveloped them. The Law of Wind. Not the refined control of a master, but the crude, brutal power of creatures who had learned to bend the air to their will through sheer force. It crackled around their weapons, their limbs, their eyes. They were not subtle. They did not need to be.

The ogre nudged his chin toward Nero. The twins moved.

They vanished.

Nero's eyes widened. His body moved before thought, golden lightning crackling around his limbs, his sword rising. The club came from the left, the axe from the right, their timing perfect, their angles calculated. They had done this a thousand times.

Clang.

His sword caught the club, the impact jarring his arm. He twisted, the axe passing so close to his neck he felt the wind of it. He pushed off, slipping between them, his body flowing like water.

They were on him again before he could breathe. The club swept low, aiming for his knees. The axe came high, aiming for his skull. He leaped, the club passing beneath him, his sword deflecting the axe at the last moment. The force of it sent him spinning, and he landed in a crouch, already moving, already countering.

His sword flickered out, a thrust aimed at the left orc's chest. The orc parried with the club, the impact sending sparks into the air. The right orc swung the axe in a wide arc, forcing Nero to duck, to roll, to come up with his sword already swinging.

They met him blow for blow. The club and the axe moved in perfect harmony, each strike covering the other's weakness, each opening a trap disguised as a gap. They had fought together for years, maybe decades. Their alchemy was not something learned—it was something born, something forged in the endless wars of the northern continent.

Nero retreated, giving ground, testing them. He let them push him back, let them think they were winning. His sword moved in arcs, deflecting, parrying, never striking. He was watching. Learning.

The orcs pressed harder. Green light flared around them, the Law of Wind feeding their strength, their speed. The club came faster, the axe swung harder. They were trying to overwhelm him, to break his defense, to end this.

Nero let them. He blocked, dodged, retreated. His feet found the ground, his breath steady, his eyes fixed on their movements. The left orc favored the club, using it to batter, to crush. The right orc used the axe to cut, to slice, to find the gaps in his guard. They were good. Very good.

But they were predictable.

He stopped retreating. His sword rose, golden lightning flaring along its edge, and he met the club head-on. The impact was deafening. The left orc staggered, its arms shuddering. Nero was already moving, his sword sweeping toward the right orc's axe.

Clang.

The axe flew from the orc's hands, spinning into the air. The orc stared at its empty fingers, its eyes wide with shock.

Nero's fist caught it in the face.

The orc fell, blood spraying from its broken nose. Nero was already turning, his sword rising to meet the club as it came down again. He caught it, held it, his muscles straining. Golden lightning poured from his arm into the club, into the orc's hands, into its chest.

The orc's muscles seized. Its grip loosened. Nero stepped inside its guard and drove the pommel of his sword into its temple. It collapsed, its eyes rolling back, its body twitching.

The right orc was on its feet again, the axe retrieved, its face twisted with rage. Green light blazed around it, stronger now, feeding on its fury. It charged, the axe raised, its mouth open in a silent scream.

Nero met it. His sword moved in an arc, golden and fast, and the axe came down. The blade met the haft, and the axe split in two. The orc stared at the broken weapon in its hands, its rage turning to confusion, to fear.

Nero's sword took its arm.

The limb fell, still clutching the broken axe, and the orc screamed. It was a raw, animal sound, pure pain, pure terror. It stumbled back, clutching the stump, its blood black against its green skin.

The other orc was rising, its eyes clearing, its hand reaching for the club. Nero stepped forward, his sword raised.

The ogre moved.

It was not fast. It was not subtle. It simply stepped between Nero and the orcs, its massive body blocking the way. Its eyes, those small dark eyes, fixed on Nero with something that might have been respect.

It nudged its head toward the orcs, then toward Nero. A command. A test.

The orcs understood. The left orc, still dazed, grabbed the club. The right orc, its arm gone, its blood pouring onto the earth, grabbed the broken axe with its remaining hand. They looked at each other, their faces masks of pain and fury, and charged.

Nero watched them come. He was not tired. He was not afraid. He had learned them in the first exchange, had seen the patterns, the rhythms, the limits. They were strong. They were skilled. They were nothing.

He moved.

His sword found the left orc's club, not to block, but to redirect. The club swung wide, carrying the orc with it, opening its guard. Nero's foot swept its legs, and it fell, its head cracking against the ground.

The right orc swung the broken axe, a desperate, clumsy blow. Nero stepped inside it, his shoulder driving into the orc's chest. He felt ribs crack, felt the orc's breath leave its lungs. It fell, and he was already turning, already finishing.

His sword took the left orc's throat. It took the right orc's heart. Two strokes, clean, final.

The orcs lay still. The field was silent.

Nero stood over them, his chest rising and falling, his sword dripping black blood onto the scorched earth. He flicked the blade clean, once, twice, and sheathed it.

He looked at the ogre.

The ogre's eyes gleamed. It had not moved during the slaughter, had simply watched, its bastard sword resting on its shoulder, its face unreadable. Now it took the sword in both hands and stepped forward.

Nero drew his blade again, the steel whispering against the scabbard. He met the ogre's gaze, and in that look, there was no fear, no hesitation. Only readiness.

The ogre's lips pulled back from its teeth. It was smiling.

Nero smiled back.

The fight was not over. The real test of this last wave had just begun.