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Chapter 29 - Vol7.10

Chapter 10:

The Demon Lord

A HUGE SHIP SAILED through space toward House Banfield's domain

—Liam's new flagship, to be precise.

This ship was a superdreadnought more than three thousand meters

long. As a specially commissioned, bleeding-edge ship constructed by the

Imperial Army's talented Seventh Weapons Factory, it was a frighteningly

capable vessel. It was also ludicrously expensive, crafted to Liam's

exacting specifications from a truly staggering amount of rare metal.

On the ship's bridge, an engineer cavorted with wild abandon. She

was collecting data during their flight to deliver the craft, and she couldn't

hide her excitement at the readouts displayed on the monitor in front of

her. Tears flowed from her twinkling eyes as she rejoiced over the

technological marvel she had seen to creation.

"Amazing! I want to show these numbers to everyone who ridiculed

me saying they were only theoretical! Just look at this data! It's exceeding

even the expected values! The energy conversion efficiency is outrageous!

And the performance! I doubt I'll ever see a more capable ship than this!

Ahh, my own talent frightens me sometimes!"

As she rubbed her cheek against the monitor, the House Banfield

soldiers who had come to collect the finished ship looked on. Even among

the top soldiers, they were the cream of the crop, the most elite of Liam's

fleet. They took the important delivery they'd been entrusted with very

seriously, but they watched Nias's antics with exasperation.

"Is she aware of the position she's in?"

"She's a perfect example of talent being unrelated to personality."

"Look. She's rolling around on the floor. I can't watch this.

Shouldn't somebody stop her?"

Displaying this unbearably eccentric behavior was Engineering

Major Nias Carlin of the Seventh Weapons Factory. She was a highly

talented individual who had known Liam a long time, but there were

several drawbacks to her personality. It was hard to criticize her

excitement, however, despite how cringeworthy it seemed to those around

her. After all, the completed ship's functionality exceeded even her

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expectations.

The ship's owner, though, was still missing.

Unbothered by that, Nias kept observing the monitor's data with a

dopey grin. In the process, she noticed something unusual. She

immediately began tapping the keyboard with a much more serious

expression.

As she investigated the strange readings, tilting her head left and

right in confusion, Nias eventually discovered the source of the curious

data. "Oh! It's picking up a distress signal. Looks pretty far away, too. My

baby's so talented, picking up a weak signal like this! Mommy's so proud

of you!"

No one commented as Nias cooed to the battleship, kissing the

monitor. They likely didn't want to get involved. The captain, however,

shot from his chair and rushed to scrutinize the monitor, bowling Nias over

in the process. As she hit the floor, she made a sound like a squashed frog.

Again, no one commented.

The captain checked the signal's source and exclaimed, "Contact the

home planet about this distress signal immediately! Tell them to gather

every friendly ship they can!"

Set on edge by the captain's attitude, the bridge crew scrambled into

action.

***

One of the Elite Four, Nogo, had been defeated.

Seated upon his castle's throne, the demon lord Gorius was a

wavering black flame with a vaguely humanoid shape, but no physical

form. Two sharp lights in his head of black fire—his eyes—narrowed

hatefully. "I share my power with him, and he lets the humans take him

down? Pathetic."

He had sensed Nogo's death without even receiving a report. Gorius

had imbued each member of the Elite Four—not just Nogo—with a

fragment of his power, so the death of one of the four meant losing that

power. A trifling amount of power, compared to the demon lord's full

might, but its loss was frustrating all the same.

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"In the end, beastmen are worthless. At least Nogo's troops did their

part terrorizing the humans. His loss matters not, since his campaign

yielded far more power than I entrusted to him."

Gorius did not eat to sustain himself; he absorbed negative emotions

like malice, despair, and fear. When the humans grew too numerous, he'd

left it to the beastmen to wage war on them and gather their negative

energy. The humans' terror filled Gorius's belly, so to speak; he'd long

since recovered the strength he'd passed on to Nogo. Still, that didn't make

him less annoyed.

"I didn't think the humans had anyone capable of defeating Nogo,"

he mused.

As Gorius fell into thought, his subordinates kneeled before him,

heads bowed. One spoke up, hoping to improve the demon lord's foul

mood.

"Please allow me to rectify this, my lord!"

"No, give me this chance!" another cried.

"I'd be better suited! I will defeat the human who bested Nogo!"

Gorius's gathered subordinates clamored over who would slay this

human.

The demon lord was sick of them. Do they hope I will share my

power with them, as I did the Elite Four? Hmph. I've tired of manipulating

these weaklings. I need to hurry and gain control of this world.

Gorius had been defeated by heroes several times, but when he was

vanquished and peace was restored, humans started their own conflicts

anew without his influence. As long as they continued to create strife,

negative emotions would accumulate, and Gorius would use them as fuel

to restore himself. Each time he revived, he only became more powerful.

Have the humans finally summoned a hero? At this point, it hardly

matters. A hero will not be able to defeat me now. I have already

surpassed the abilities of a mere demon lord.

Gorius was no longer anything like the version of himself heroes

had slain in the past. He was confident enough in his current strength that

he did not panic, even after learning of this hero's existence.

Enough of this. I'll kill my minions and decimate the humans myself.

That will create more negative emotions to feed on, further strengthening

me.

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As he decided this, a bloody giant arrived at the audience chamber.

Though he knew his entrance was impolite, he shoved the double doors

open roughly, rushing inside to make a report.

"M-my lord, the beastfolk betrayed us! They've entered the castle

with the hero leading them! Their...charge..." Upon beginning his report,

the giant collapsed and expired.

The demon lord's eyes narrowed to slits. "Oh? He's here to claim

my head himself? What a bold hero."

***

In her castle's audience chamber, Enola wore an anxious look. The

cause of her anxiety was Liam's march on the demon lord's castle.

Acquiring the demon lord's location from the beastmen, Liam had left the

capital heedless of Enola's attempts to stop him. To make matters worse,

he had taken the beastmen with him.

In the audience chamber, a number of the kingdom's key figures

were meeting to voice various complaints about Liam.

"I can't believe he advanced on the demon lord's castle without our

knights!"

"Why didn't he seek our assistance?"

"To fight with beastmen at his side, of all things? This is

unprecedented!"

However strong Liam was, they were sure he would need the

kingdom's help to defeat the demon lord. There was nothing he could do

all by himself; he'd have to acknowledge them eventually.

But Liam had never counted on Erle Kingdom's military strength in

the first place. Three days after defeating Nogo, Liam took some beastmen

and left for the demon lord's castle. He'd left the majority behind, since

the amount of food and water they could take was limited. The group he

led wasn't even one hundred strong. According to Liam, though, bringing

more would be pointless.

That wasn't all that was on Enola's mind. Before Liam left, a

strange woman who identified herself as Liam's servant delivered a bag of

severed heads to Enola's court. Everyone who understood the gesture's

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meaning had gone pale. They were surprised the dead men had taken it

upon themselves to have Liam assassinated, but more than that, they were

frightened of Liam's ability to kill important figures without anyone

noticing. According to his servant—Kunai—these men had been unworthy

of Liam's trust. Kunai had also told Enola's court to prepare for Liam's

return, and that Liam's people were on their way.

Some of the words she'd used had been difficult for Enola and her

court to comprehend. The queen recalled them as she sat gripping her staff.

I don't know what she meant by "intergalactic" or "spaceship," but she

definitely said Lord Liam's companions were approaching.

If Liam's allies were coming here, utilizing strange methods like a

"spaceship," Erle Kingdom should be ready to give them a grand

welcome. Unfortunately, although Enola had originally intended to foster a

friendly relationship with Liam, the assassination attempt had done

irreparable damage to that potential.

"What do we do?" one minister fretted. "If Liam's people come to

retrieve him, there will be war between us!"

"But how can that be true? It's impossible for someone from another

world to retrieve a hero without summoning magic!"

"What if they have abilities beyond what we can imagine?"

Enola glanced at Citasan, the court's wielder of summoning magic.

"Citasan, could Lord Liam's compatriots show up here?"

"There is no way, Your Majesty," Citasan replied confidently. "I

summoned individuals capable of defeating a demon lord from other

universes, and sending them back to their homes is impossible. It was a

one-way trip. That supposed servant of his was bluffing."

The response reassured Enola, but at the same time she thought,

What terrible magic. It's unfair that we can bring them here, but not send

them back.

Thinking about Kanami made Enola's heart ache. She might have

been a failed ruler, but she was a good person, as Liam said.

Suddenly, a soldier burst into the somber meeting. "E-emergency!"

he shouted. "The demon lord's army is floating above our city!"

The demon lord's army was invading—and Liam was gone.

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***

Upon storming the demon lord's castle, the hero slaughtered every

soldier, elite or not, who stood up to him. Watching this take place in front

of him, the demon lord Gorius was intrigued by the hero's power. The -

human's single-edged sword wasn't a saber; it was shaped in a way Gorius

had never seen. Its material was what really interested him, however.

"That's not mithril, is it? So, is it orichalcum?"

As the hero stood before Gorius blithely, the demon lord guessed the

material from which his blade had been forged. The hero was dressed only

in casual clothing, not armor, and there was no sign that he was at all

nervous.

"Hunh. You know your stuff," the hero said.

Gorius was impressed that humans could craft weapons from

orichalcum. That rare, precious metal was incredibly difficult to use. "I

applaud the effort obtaining that orichalcum must have taken. I don't know

how you processed it. Humans are capable of surprising things when

driven into a corner, aren't they? Unfortunately, that weapon won't even

scratch me."

Orichalcum was stronger than mithril, but still no threat to Gorius,

who had surpassed his physical form. Mithril actually could harm Gorius,

but there was no reason to tell the hero that.

The hero didn't react to Gorius's words. A moment later, the throne

the demon lord sat on split apart beneath him. Gorius's burning eyes

widened in surprise for a second, but quickly narrowed to bow-like arches

as he chuckled ominously.

"I have no physical form. You cannot cut me!"

The hero stood before him with his head cocked, a curious look on

his face. His sword skills had taken Gorius by surprise, but as long as the

human used physical attacks, the demon lord had nothing to fear. Even

most magic attacks wouldn't work on Gorius. The one type that could

defeat him was holy magic, which humans had a limited ability to use.

Even if the hero cast holy magic, it wouldn't be potent enough to defeat

Gorius—hence the demon lord's supreme confidence.

Gorius stood above his shattered throne, his body of black flames

flickering. "I wonder how long it took to build that power of yours. Such a

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pity. Even with your orichalcum sword and superhuman technique, this is

all for naught."

Gorius enlarged his flame body as he loped toward the hero. By the

time he reached the human, he was a looming giant of black flame at least

six meters tall.

"Everything you've done is to no avail!" Gorius told the hero,

peering down. "Shall I tell you what I feed on?"

The hero furrowed his brow, evidently taking umbrage at the demon

lord's condescension. "I have no interest in you."

After coming this far and learning how powerless he was, he

remained cocksure. Gorius found himself even more interested in the boy.

"Heh heh heh! Quite confident, aren't you? I look forward to seeing

how long you keep that up!"

He brought his fist down swiftly at the hero, but all that did was

smash a hole in the castle floor.

"Oh? You dodged that, eh?"

The hero's athleticism surprised Gorius, but still, the demon lord

didn't doubt his own superiority. It hardly mattered that the boy could

dodge his attacks. Gorius was incorporeal, but the hero was human—

eventually, he would run out of strength and be unable to elude the demon

lord.

As he lashed out, Gorius kept chatting to show the boy how self-

assured he was. "I have fought countless heroes in the past!"

The hero remained calm as he dodged the attacks. He even had the

peace of mind to respond, "Oh yeah?"

Gorius struck with both hands several times per second—dozens of

times per second. Yet the hero dodged every single blow.

Gorius kept up the conversation. "I've been defeated again and

again, but every time, I revived. In other words, I am immortal."

Even when Gorius stated this, the hero didn't react.

The demon lord could only imagine that the boy must be frantically

devising a way to defeat him. "Trying to think of how to best me, hmm?

I'm sorry to say it won't be possible. Neither swordplay nor magic will do

the trick. After all, I'm no less than an amalgamation of pure hatred!"

At that, the hero finally showed some interest. "Pure hatred, you

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say?"

"That's right! Malice itself! So long as negative energy exists, I will

return again and again! Defeat me as many times as you like! Each time I

revive, I become stronger! Weapons, spells... No attack will affect me

anymore! Even if you could defeat me, I would simply come back! Do you

know why? Because I can never be destroyed so long as you humans

exist!"

Gorius brought his hands together and slammed them down on the

hero like a sledgehammer. Delivered with all his strength, the strike not

only shattered the castle's floor, it caused cracks to radiate across the

ceiling and its support pillars. The castle was already beginning to

crumble, but Gorius didn't care. It was worthless to him now.

"So long as humanity exists, I cannot be defeated!" Gorius repeated,

unleashing punches and kicks at the elusive hero.

The demon lord almost landed several blows, but the hero avoided

his fists just in time. Gorius unleashed a kick at the spot the boy fled to,

but he sidestepped that as well.

"I'll revive as many times as I need to, as long as your kind is

around!" Gorius bellowed at the heavens as his castle crashed down to a

hill of rubble around him. "I am evil itself!"

His black flames flickered as he laughed loudly—until a flurry of

thousands of slashes suddenly cut him into fragments. The flames quickly

reunited, however, and Gorius was good as new.

He was impressed by the boy's shocking abilities. Of all the heroes

he'd fought, this was surely the strongest. "I respect you for not giving up

under these circumstances. You are strong, but that is all. Even with an

orichalcum sword, no matter how hard you've trained, you can never

surpass me so long as you remain human." It was impossible for the

demon lord to lose.

Before the supremely confident Gorius, the human hung his head

and appeared to shake. The demon lord believed he was trembling with

fright, but when the boy raised his head, his face was tense with seething

anger.

"You're evil itself? You shouldn't patronize humankind—

weakling!"

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***

"Evil itself"? Who did this guy think he was? It was thanks to

humans' negative energy that he could survive at all, but he acted like he

owned us. Sure, there was likely no one on this planet who could stand up

to him, but he was taking humanity lightly.

"You're too dismissive of mighty humans!" I told him. "We're

sustaining you, so know your place."

"Wh-what?"

I shouldered my sword and glanced down at my bracelet, noticing

its blinking light. "If you'll revive so long as humanity exists, that means

you can't survive without us, doesn't it?"

When the demon lord fell silent, I looked up at the sky. Our battle

had destroyed the castle roof; I could see dark clouds above us.

"An insignificant being like you probably can't comprehend this," I

continued, "but you're not the height of evil—humans are." It's laughable

for you to even speak of evil.

The demon lord didn't seem to understand. "What are you saying?"

Prior to me, he'd probably only fought weaklings. He couldn't

fathom the human civilizations beyond this planet. If he couldn't even take

those into account, he would never go further than this.

"You think you're evil, when you can't even take control of one

planet? The number of people you've killed doesn't amount to a fraction

of those I've murdered!"

How many people had I killed? And how much had I destroyed? I'd

ended so many lives, I couldn't even count. This "demon lord" reminded

me of a neighborhood bully—a small-time chump playing king of the hill.

"Have you killed hundreds of millions?" I demanded.

At that number, the demon lord's fiery eyes narrowed suspiciously.

"How would I keep track? If you're going to lie, be more realistic. There

couldn't possibly be that many humans."

This was his opinion, after coming back to life so often?

"There are hundreds of billions! Even more than that. And I have

killed hundreds of millions."

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I'd massacred pirates and other enemies. A single battleship

sometimes contained over ten thousand people, so when I shot one down,

how many died? Countless people cursed me; I was far more feared and

reviled than the demon lord before me. If anything, I was evil itself. This

wimp had no right to call himself "evil" in my presence!

"Can you hear the voices of the dead?" I snapped. "If you can, listen

closely. I think you'll find out just how brutal a human I am."

The demon lord had a ghostly look. I wondered if he could hear the

voices of the dead. If so, he'd get a real fright learning how many souls

held an eternal grudge against me.

"Wh-what?" The yellow lights that appeared to be the demon lord's

eyes went round in surprise.

I tossed aside my sword and held my hand up to the sky. "Don't

speak of evil to me, weakling! Mighty humans like me are this universe's

wickedest creatures! I am a true villain! Ellen, my sword!" I shouted my

pupil's name toward the clouds.

The demon lord didn't seem to have any idea what was going on,

but I sensed the dark clouds overhead ripping apart as if responding to my

voice, sunlight piercing them.

The demon lord was shocked. "Wh-what is happening? What is

that?"

Breaking through the clouds and descending, bathed in sunlight, was

the Avid. It dropped with its arms folded in front of it and directed its dual

camera eyes toward me, looking positively otherworldly.

The Avid shifted its arms out of the way, and the cockpit hatch

opened. A happily crying Ellen appeared within, my favorite sword

clutched in her arms.

"Master!" she shouted, tossing the sword to me. It sped downward

toward my waiting hand as if drawn there.

I caught the blade by the hilt and drew it from its scabbard. "Behold,

puny demon lord. I'll put you down with my favorite sword. I'll erase you,

so you'll never be able to revive again!"

I would teach a hard lesson to anyone so wrong about humans.

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