The Extra's Rise-Chapter 467: Chaos (2)

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Chapter 467: Chaos (2)

Li’s eyes narrowed as he leaned back in his chair, his gaze locked on Daedric. The Lord of the Southern Sea Sun Palace was radiating smug confidence, his voice dripping with self-satisfaction as he rattled off an increasingly absurd list of demands for compensation for what he smugly called their "failed investigation."

There was something about the man’s demeanor that set Li on edge, the oily triumph in his smile as if he’d already won a game the rest of them hadn’t realized they were playing. Li didn’t need to be told; something on this island reeked of deceit, though every lead they had pursued so far had yielded nothing.

Li’s knuckles tightened on the armrest of his chair as he bit back the urge to lash out, his Immortal-rank senses flaring as he tried to pinpoint the source of his unease. fгeewёbnoѵel.cσm

And then it happened.

The ceremonial gongs that had been ringing throughout the Festival of the Red Sun suddenly fell silent. In the unnatural quiet that followed, Daedric’s smile froze, his smug words caught in his throat as his body shuddered. The color drained from his face, leaving him pallid and wide-eyed, as though he’d just seen the hand of death hovering over his shoulder.

"It’s time," Daedric whispered, seemingly to himself.

Li was on his feet in an instant, astral energy flaring to life around him in sapphire brilliance. "What have you done?"

Before Daedric could respond, screams erupted from the festival grounds below. Not the playful shrieks of celebration, but genuine terror, cutting through the night air like knives.

"You dare hide vampires?" Li said, his voice low and dangerous, every syllable heavy with menace. His gaze burned into Daedric, who recoiled slightly under the weight of it.

For a moment, Daedric’s mouth opened as though he might deny it. But he stopped himself, his lips pressing into a thin line. The pretense was useless now.

Li took a step forward, his astral energy humming ominously around him. "I asked you a question, Daedric."

Without a word, Daedric raised his hands. His expression twisted into something between desperation and fury as he unleashed a torrent of red divine flames, the raw power of the Southern Sea Sun Palace’s Legendary-grade artifact bursting forth like a tidal wave of fire.

Li didn’t flinch.

His astral energy expanded in an instant, a shimmering barrier that collided with the flames. The room shook violently as the two forces clashed, sending crackling energy and flickering shadows dancing along the walls.

"You’ve betrayed your own people," Li growled, his voice cutting through the chaos like a blade. "Do you think your flames can save you now?"

In the central courtyard of the Palace, the Festival of the Red Sun had transformed from celebration to nightmare in mere moments.

Professor Nero Astrellan had been observing a traditional dance performance when he felt it—a sudden, sickening shift in the mana currents flowing through the Palace grounds. The dancers faltered, their graceful movements stuttering as they too sensed the wrongness permeating the air.

Then they came.

Figures in crimson robes emerged from the shadowed corridors, their faces hidden behind grotesque masks depicting screaming visages. At first, festival-goers mistook them for part of the ceremony—until the staffs they carried erupted with blood-red energy, cutting down the nearest attendees with brutal efficiency.

"Shields up!" Nero roared, golden mana surging from his palms to create a protective barrier around the nearest group of students. "Academy students, defensive formations! Protect the civilians!"

Across the courtyard, Professor Callier was already moving, her hands weaving complex patterns as she summoned walls of elemental force to funnel non-combatants toward the exits. "This way! Move quickly!"

But escape routes were rapidly disappearing. From the shadows between buildings, pale figures with inhuman grace and blood-red eyes emerged—vampires, their very existence a violation of history itself. They moved with predatory precision, cutting off retreat paths and isolating groups of terrified revelers.

"Impossible," gasped a senior student as he witnessed a vampire tear through a Palace guard with casual ease. "They’re supposed to be extinct!"

"Focus!" Professor Esther snapped, her normally reserved demeanor replaced by battle-hardened authority. "Form up and follow protocols! This is not a drill!"

Academy students rallied to their professors’ commands, years of training kicking in despite their shock. Healers established triage points, already working on the injured. Mana specialists coordinated to reinforce barriers.

But they were outnumbered and caught completely unprepared.

A vampire elder appeared at the edge of the great fountain, his aristocratic features and elegant bearing at odds with the carnage around him. With a casual gesture, he froze the water mid-spray, transforming it into crimson ice that shattered into thousands of deadly shards flying toward a group of cornered students.

Professor Nero intercepted the attack, his golden barrier absorbing most of the impact, though several shards pierced through, drawing lines of blood across his forearm.

"Ah, the famed tactician," the vampire elder purred, his voice carrying unnaturally over the chaos. "I was hoping to meet you."

Nero’s eyes narrowed as he recognized the vampire. "Cassius," he said. "Alyssara’s student."

Cassius smiled, revealing fangs that gleamed in the festival lanterns’ light. "Someone who is going to die doesn’t need to know names," he replied, "but yes, I learned much from the Chief Advisor."

He moved with blinding speed, crossing the distance between them faster than most eyes could track. His fist, wreathed in blood-red mana, crashed against Nero’s hastily reinforced barrier.

The impact sent Nero sliding backward, his boots leaving furrows in the decorative stones. Around them, similar scenes played out across the festival grounds—professors and senior students engaging vampires and cultists in desperate combat while trying to protect the vulnerable.

"Professor!" A student rushed to Nero’s side, her combat robes already torn and bloodied. "The eastern exit is blocked! At least thirty cultists and three vampires!"

"The western path?" Nero asked, not taking his eyes off Cassius, who circled them with predatory patience.

"Professor Callier is holding it, but she can’t maintain the barrier much longer. Too many attackers."

Nero made a split-second decision. "Get to Callier. Tell her to focus on evacuation. Abandon the eastern and northern sectors—we’ll concentrate our forces on the western escape route."

The student hesitated. "But there are still people in those sectors—"

"I know," Nero cut her off, his voice heavy. "We can’t save everyone. Go. Now."

As she raced off to deliver the message, Cassius laughed. "Such painful choices you make, Professor. Deciding who lives and who dies."

"Unlike you," Nero replied coldly, "I value human life."

"A quaint sentiment," Cassius mused, "soon to be obsolete."

He attacked again, this time accompanied by two more vampires who had finished with their previous victims. Nero found himself fighting defensive battle, his golden barriers straining against the coordinated assault.

Across the courtyard, students fought with everything they had.

Professor Esther stood atop an overturned float, raining elemental destruction on cultists who attempted to breach the western evacuation route. Her normally immaculate appearance was gone—hair wild, robes singed, blood trickling from a cut above her eye—but her magic remained devastatingly precise.

"Keep moving!" she shouted to the stream of people fleeing toward the relative safety of the western gate. "Don’t stop! Don’t look back!"

A child stumbled in the crowd, separated from her parents. Before the cultists could reach her, a young academy student dove through the chaos, scooping up the girl and rolling beneath a swing of a cultist’s staff. The student—barely fourteen himself—carried the child to safety, his own back exposed to attack.

Professor Callier’s wind blade cut down the pursuing cultist just in time, her face grim with determination and exhaustion.

But for every small victory, the defenders suffered multiple losses. The vampires were simply too strong, the cultists too numerous, and the surprise too complete. What had begun as a fighting retreat was rapidly becoming a rout.

In the midst of the chaos, Nero found himself driven back toward the central dais, where the ceremonial artifacts of the Festival had been displayed. Cassius and his fellow vampires pressed their advantage, forcing the professor into an increasingly desperate defense.

"You feel it, don’t you?" Cassius taunted, effortlessly dodging a counterattack. "The futility. The inevitable end."

Nero didn’t waste breath responding. His resources were depleting rapidly, his options narrowing with each exchange. Around him, he could see his students fighting, dying, trying to protect each other and the innocent festival-goers caught in this nightmare.

Pride mingled with despair in his heart. They fought so valiantly, these young people he had trained. But it wouldn’t be enough. Not against this.

As if confirming his thoughts, a tremor ran through the Palace grounds. The ruby crystal decorations that had adorned the festival suddenly brightened, pulsing with synchronous energy. The Red Sun itself, hanging in the night sky, seemed to flare in response.

"It begins," Cassius whispered, his eyes gleaming with fanatic reverence.

And in that moment, Nero understood. The festival, the attack—it was all a diversion. The real purpose lay elsewhere, deeper in the Palace.

Whatever was happening, he prayed some of his students had survived to stop it. Because here, in the blood-soaked festival grounds of the Southern Sea Sun Palace, the battle was already lost.