Saeya dashed out, wings shining and rainbow sword flashing. She zipped from one Underlord opponent to another, engaging them in the air. They struck at her with her own techniques, but she was already gone, moving to the next target. With her speed and senses, if she kept that up, she might be able to tie up five or six opponents.
While musing, Eithan casually slapped aside a ball of wheeling golden energy that would have crashed into Cassias’ back.
The Underlords on either side would avoid bloodshed as much as they could, but there were many Blackflame Truegolds onboard. Accidents happened, and Akura Charity would not hold a handful of deaths against anyone.
So Eithan had to hold those accidents back, at least until the Sage herself intervened. And she would.
After his students finished their business.
~~~
As Fisher Gesha told it, she’d been working in her foundry some months ago, working on ways to get extra output out of Gold bindings. It was a known fact in Soulsmithing that some techniques would resonate with one another when activated together, producing a result greater than the sum of its parts. However, it was a rare enough phenomenon that it was difficult to count on.
The Fisher had, on paper, worked out a plan for a launcher construct that relied on this effect. And not only one pair, but three pairs, all working together.
It was only viable in theory. A fun but impractical thought experiment. Until Eithan had found it and helped her make it real.
His bloodline legacy had been invaluable for tracking down the right Remnants, his connections had given her the materials, and weeks of experimentation had produced one workable prototype.
Made of six Truegold bindings, linked together by a Fisher Soulsmith, washed in soulfire, and activated by a Highgold, it had scored a deadly hit on a Redmoon Hall Underlord.
She had told him that she couldn't have been the first Soulsmith to think of such a method, but the practical considerations were too great. First, finding six bindings and linking them all with not just each other, but with the Soulsmith's madra and the user's...it was exponentially more difficult than creating a regular launcher construct. Second, the weapon was 'loud,' spiritually speaking. The enemy would sense it coming. Third, the six bindings put a heavy strain on the construct's physical form, so it could only be used a few times. Three shots, if you were lucky. One if you weren't.
So three days ago, when Lindon had discovered what Dross could do for a Soulsmith, Gesha's resonance cannon was among the first projects he'd turned his mind to.
He'd expected to fight Kiro again. And if he did, he wanted to have something to punch through that shield.
The cannon he pulled from his void key was made entirely of Remnant parts. It looked like it had been created from slick bones of black light; it was too big to be used in one hand, and it had a rounded, organic appearance that came to sharp points. Its mouth was the snarling maw of a dragon's skull, and it was made of black madra with ripples of dark red.
Blackflame dead matter. He'd raided the Skysworn foundry for a Blackflame Remnant; if it hadn't been for his status as a Truegold in the top one hundred, he would never have been allowed to take it.
This was his solution to the second problem of Gesha's. It was easy to sense coming? Not if he kept it in a separate space.
Now that he pulled it out, it practically screamed in his spiritual sense, and the aura around him screamed with it.
It sounded like a dragon's roar.
Seishen Kiro put up his shield, the lion facing Lindon, and flooded it with madra and soulfire. The shield expanded immediately into a solid gray dome that protected the Underlord.
For a moment, the world was silent. Then devastation thundered from the cannon.
There were six techniques bound up in Lindon's resonance cannon.
Spear of the Golden Sun, from a Path of light and fire.
Heart-seizing Claw, from a Path of blood and destruction.
Phoenix Wing Burst, from a Path of force and fire.
Song of Falling Ash, from a Path of destruction.
Gravetouch, from a Path of death.
And black dragon's breath, from the Path of Black Flame.
All of those techniques were Striker techniques, all of them lethal, all compatible with one another, and all compatible with the Path of Black Flame.
The combination of techniques was too bright to examine directly, though Dross had shown Lindon its effect in a dream simulation. It was a riot of colors, from ragged thorns of red to a rushing spray of fire, all synchronized to feed on one another.
The madra closed the gap between Lindon and Kiro's shield in a blink of an eye. The floor, which had only heated from the passage of dragon's breath, exploded outward, sending chunks of rock flying to either side. If they breached containment on the wrong natural treasures, all of them would die, but it was too late for caution.
The Striker technique struck Kiro's shield. The soulfire-infused Forged barrier burst like a soap bubble, exploding with enough force to send a roar echoing down the halls and hurl the Underlord backwards, but that was all Lindon saw.
The cannon was under great strain. It could last for another shot or two before it was depleted of its essence and destroyed.
Had Kiro's shield withstood the impact? Had Kiro himself?
If he waited to see the effect, it would be too late. He couldn't let up. He had to assume the prince had survived.
One of the other drawbacks of the weapon was that it took a moment to refresh itself, the bindings drawing new power from the stockpile inside the weapon. In another battle, perhaps he could wait the few seconds it would take.
Lindon dropped his cannon and pulled out a second.
Before the dust had cleared from his first shot, his second was already in the air.
This one wasn't made from Blackflame dead matter—the materials he had used in the first were too rare and valuable to be used too frequently. This one was a sacred instrument, like Gesha's original prototype—it was a construct in a physical shell. Plates of goldsteel restrained the excess power of the bindings, and scripts focused them together. These techniques weren't as compatible or as destructive as the first set.
He blasted Kiro anyway. The force lit up the hallway with another flash and a roar, tearing a groove in the floor.
This time, he caught a glimpse of the Underlord again—the man's body was spinning through the air, his armor chipped and smoking. His shield was nowhere to be seen, but his sword was still in his hand.
Lindon had already dropped the second cannon and picked up the first again. The hallway roared.
Still, he couldn't let up. This battle couldn't take a second longer than necessary, or Yerin would pay for it.
“Dross,” he said. “Battle plan.”
Information requested: combat solution against Seishen Kiro.
Beginning report…
Not to criticize, because it’s nice to be needed, but are you sure you need a plan for this? Sorry, I'll focus.
First, he's hurting, but he isn't dead.
Lindon empties both cannons into Kiro's flying form, driving him back to slam into the wall over the open gate. His body falls from there, crumpled onto the floor, but he pushes himself shakily to his feet.
That is some high-quality armor. Prime stuff. The Seishen Soulsmiths were not playing around with this, I can tell you that much.
The outer plates of gray madra are cracked and split, smoke leaking from the armor, but the broken plates only reveal shifting parts of silver and gold beneath. Kiro activates his armor, and a network of bindings trigger all over the suit, linked by a method that Dross doesn't understand. Gold light shines from within the helmet and through each joint.
You're looking at, oh...Enforced strength and speed, a Forged barrier inside the armor, and a Ruler attack that has its own guidance construct. It will aim straight at you.