Harem Points System: Every Touch Counts!

Chapter 113: Guardians Of The Spire...



Xavier rolled his shoulders, the faint blue sheen of mana coiling around his arms. Despite his calm expression, his eyes gleamed faintly—sharp, predatory.

He crouched slightly, dagger poised in reverse grip, his reflection flickering on the molten glow of the nearest golem's chest.

"They resist blunt force," he murmured. "But they shatter under precision."

The nearest golem let out a grinding roar, its arm smashing down like a meteor. The impact exploded the ground, dust erupting into a cloud that obscured everything in an instant.

When it cleared, Xavier was already gone from sight—only a faint trail of disturbed dust marking his movement. In the next instant, he appeared on the creature's shoulder, dagger flashing once in a crescent arc. Sparks flew as the blade bit into a seam between the basalt plates, drawing a faint, glowing crack. The golem staggered, turning sluggishly to swing again, but Xavier had already leapt off, landing smoothly with his cloak swirling behind him.

He exhaled, calm as water.

"Good defense," he muttered. "But predictable."

Around him, the other golems began to move—six of them, each dragging their enormous frames out of the ground, their molten eyes locking on him.

The sound of their movement was deafening now—like an army of boulders rolling downhill. Yet Xavier stood unmoving, dagger held low, his stance firm.

The wind shifted, carrying the scent of sulfur and iron.

Somewhere in the distance, thunder rumbled—a promise of what awaited him deeper in the Silver Spire's domain.

He smirked faintly to himself.

"Guess this is where the fun begins."

Then he blurred forward—his form melting into motion, a streak of silver weaving between giants of stone as the first sparks of battle ignited beneath the darkening sky.

The air thundered with movement. The first Basalt Golem's roar reverberated across the cliffs, and the others followed in unison — the sound like a dozen boulders collapsing down a mountain. Xavier's dagger gleamed faintly, a flicker of polished silver amid the storm of dust and rock.

He dashed forward again, his body weaving through the gaps of their heavy strikes. The ground split wherever their fists landed, shattering the rocky terrain into craters. Dust clouds burst outward, filling the air with choking gray haze — but Xavier didn't slow. He was a phantom between giants, his movements sharp, unpredictable, and precise.

A fist the size of a carriage slammed down just behind him. Xavier pivoted off one foot, twisting his body in midair. The dagger in his hand glowed faintly as he poured a thread of mana into it, and he brought it down in a flash. The blade cut through the molten vein running across a golem's arm — and in the next second, the limb exploded in a burst of orange shards and fire.

The creature bellowed, stumbling backward, magma spilling like blood from its wound. But before it could fall, Xavier spun midair, landing on its chest and driving his dagger downward into the glowing crack that pulsed just beneath its core.

"Break."

The blade pierced true. The golem convulsed violently, its body fracturing with a deep rumble before it collapsed into a heap of molten rubble. Steam hissed from its corpse, and Xavier rolled off its falling remains, hitting the ground in a crouch.

Before he could rise fully, the earth behind him erupted again — two more golems forcing their way up, their enormous heads snapping toward him like hounds sensing prey.

"So they're linked…" he muttered. "Destroy one, summon two more."

He flicked his dagger to the side, scattering molten dust from its edge, then steadied himself.

The golems advanced, every step shaking the ground. A wave of dense mana rippled outward from their cores, and for a moment, Xavier's expression hardened. He could feel the pressure growing heavier — the dungeon was alive, reacting to him. His presence was drawing them in.

He dashed forward again, slipping between the legs of the first golem as its arm came crashing down. The shockwave of the impact tore open the ground, sending fragments of basalt into the air like a storm of blades. He grabbed one of the fragments midair and flung it upward. The moment it distracted the golem's gaze, he kicked off the shattered ground, closing in and slashing across its knee joint.

The dagger sliced through molten seams — sparks flew as the monster's leg cracked, buckling under its weight. Xavier didn't stop; he used the momentum to spring upward, twisting midair, his dagger glowing faintly blue as he infused it with mana. He slashed downward across its head — a clean, decisive strike that left a glowing line from crown to chin.

The creature froze.

Then its body split cleanly in half, collapsing with a thunderous crash.

But even before the sound died away, the valley trembled again. Dozens of rumbling growls answered the fall — not from ahead, but from beneath. The ground below Xavier's feet began to bulge and rise, glowing orange lines crawling outward like veins across the terrain.

"Tch…" He exhaled, annoyed. "Persistent bastards."

In the next heartbeat, nearly ten more golems began to emerge — their molten eyes opening one by one, turning toward the lone human standing among their fallen kin.

It was a sight out of a nightmare — the dark valley illuminated by molten veins and towering silhouettes, smoke rising in thick plumes. But Xavier didn't waver. He straightened slowly, the heat washing over his face, and adjusted his grip on the dagger.

The blade hummed faintly in his hand, resonating with his pulse. He could feel the mana in his veins surging in response — a faint vibration beneath his skin, like a quiet storm begging to be unleashed.

"Alright," he murmured. "Let's thin the herd."

The next moment, he moved — vanishing into a blur of speed. His silhouette flickered in and out of existence, each reappearance marked by an explosion of sparks and shattered stone.

He struck vital seams, severed molten veins, redirected the heavy swings of giants with the slightest twist of his blade. Every motion was calculated — not brute force, but rhythm, timing, instinct. The dagger's edge danced across stone and fire alike, and the more he fought, the sharper his movements became, his mana synchronizing perfectly with the weapon in his hand.

Each kill came faster than the last. One golem fell, then another, then another — until the valley floor was littered with broken husks glowing faintly in the twilight.

But still, they came.

The dungeon itself was responding now — the rocky walls vibrating, the spire far ahead glowing faintly like an awakening sentinel. Xavier slowed for a moment, breathing hard but calm, the sweat on his neck glistening against the faint orange haze.

He looked up toward the looming shadow of the Silver Spire in the distance — tall, unyielding, and alive with ancient power.

A smirk tugged at his lips.

"Guess that was just warm-up."

Behind him, another tremor shook the ground — louder, heavier, more deliberate. From the shadow of the cliffs, something far larger began to rise.

The true guardians of the Spire had heard the call.

And Xavier, dagger gleaming at his side, turned toward the sound, eyes narrowing in quiet anticipation.

The wind carried dust and smoke in wide, spiraling waves. The valley had become a furnace of molten earth and collapsing stone.

Everywhere Xavier moved, explosions followed — glowing cracks chasing his shadow, molten shards raining down like embers in a storm. He leapt over a crumbling ridge, his boots landing lightly atop the shoulder of a dying golem, using it as a springboard to vault forward again.

The dagger in his hand had gone from polished steel to a burning arc of light, cutting through basalt flesh as though it were parchment.

Clang! Clang! Clang!

Each strike rang out like the hammer of a god forging chaos itself. The air was filled with the stench of burnt rock and ozone. For every golem that fell, two more rose from the cracking earth, dragging their massive forms out of glowing fissures. Their molten eyes fixed on him in unison, bound by the same eerie, unspoken command — erase the intruder.

But Xavier moved like liquid fire, sliding through their ranks, leaving behind a trail of collapsed titans.

He ducked beneath a swinging arm, spun low, and drove his dagger upward into a golem's knee joint — twisting until the entire leg exploded into rubble. He used the momentum to spring backward, barely dodging the molten fist that came crashing down where he'd been standing.

"Persistent bastards," he muttered, exhaling through clenched teeth. "But at least you're keeping things interesting."

He launched himself forward again — faster, sharper. His dagger hummed louder with each kill, the weapon drinking in the mana that leaked from the broken cores. It was faint, but he could feel it strengthening — a pulsing rhythm in sync with his heartbeat.

Then, amid the chaos, the light dimmed suddenly.

The temperature dropped. The wind changed direction.

Xavier's eyes flicked upward.

High above, a dark silhouette began to form — wide, glinting, and angular, like shards of glass stitched into wings. The sound came a second later: a shrill, metallic screech that echoed through the valley like the tearing of steel.

KRIIIII!


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