Chapter 88: A War Demon's Instruction
The cave system rested in a crevice of Greed Territory's western border, nestled behind overgrown briars and ringed by steep, jagged cliffs. In the day, natural mist wreathed the stone like smoke from a hidden hearth; at night, the wind howled through the tunnels like a lullaby of ghosts.
Inside, a fire crackled gently. Stew bubbled in a bronze pot suspended over the flame. Children huddled in blankets woven from thorn-hide and beast fur, watching the three veiled women move like ritual dancers through their quiet roles.
Rose stood at the cave mouth, back straight, saber sheathed. Her eyes scanned the terrain beyond. She hadn't slept in two days.
Penelope arrived shortly after dawn, dropping a skinned horned beast at her feet. Blood still clung to the blade strapped to her back.
"Five miles out," she reported. "No scouts. No tails. No sky-trackers."
Rose nodded, kneeling to inspect the carcass.
"Good size. Lily will have it boiling by sundown."
Penelope stretched her shoulders, the leather of her gear creaking softly.
Her eyes swept across the interior of the cave.
Dozens of freed slaves, former auction lots, convoy victims, and indentured debtors, were scattered across the cavern. Some wrapped wounds, others shared laughter, a few prayed. Most simply stared at the three demon women with a complex mixture of hope and awe... and an undertone of fear.
They had no name for them.
But rumors were fast in becoming reverent.
Lily sat cross-legged by the fire, humming softly as she stirred her cauldron.
Her apron was stained, her veil damp with steam, but her hands moved with elegance and care.
Three children watched her from a safe distance. One brave girl crept closer and whispered.
"Miss? Are you... a real demon?"
Lily paused, blinked once, and smiled.
"Only on days when the fire boils too fast."
The girl giggled at the words as she continued to watch with curiosity and wonder.
That night, Rose rotated watch with Penelope. They barely spoke.
Silence had long become their language.
But suddenly, the wind changed.
A shadow passed across the wall. Slow, silent, deliberate.
Rose's eyes sharpened.
Penelope was already moving, blade unsheathed, a sigil of pain law pulsing on her palm.
The presence was inside the cave before either could fully react.
Lily stood, ladle still in hand.
The children rushed behind rocks.
"Intruder!" Penelope hissed, lunging.
A tactful hand caught her wrist mid-swing with casual precision.
Then, without a glance, without even shifting his stance, the tall figure punched her once in the gut, a fluid motion more like swatting a bug than throwing a blow.
Penelope grunted, flew backward, and smashed into the wall with enough force to shake the stewpot near her.
The pot didn't tip.
And neither did the man's posture.
High society butler Hans stepped into the firelight, brushing a leaf from his dark waistcoat. His black tie hung perfectly straight, despite the wind outside. His hair was slicked back, his fake glasses spotless.
"Now that's no way to welcome an old instructor," he said smoothly, voice like chilled wine. "Sneaking up on me in such a dark place shows a lack of manners, Miss Penelope."
Rose didn't sheath her saber.
Lily's hands kept her sigils active.
Penelope groaned as she peeled herself off the wall, wheezing.
"You could've just... said hello."
"I did," Hans replied, flicking his cuff. "Twice. You were too busy being dramatic."
He stepped further into the chamber, casting a calm, measured gaze over the crowd of onlookers. Slaves, refugees, children, all frozen by his arrival.
His eyes narrowed, just slightly.
"And what," he said with a faint note of reprimand, "is all of this?"
Hans strode past the fire, hands clasped behind his back, eyes flicking between the cots, the makeshift medicine alcove, the half-built barricades along the cave's mouth. He moved like a man in a dream where everything was slower than him.
"A whole encampment," he murmured. "Cooking. Hunting. Childcare. Ah, even small tunnels dug for latrines. Very charming."
He stepped over a girl's sleeping form with the grace of a seasoned attendant.
"Tell me… did you remember to assign a night watch?"
Rose clenched her jaw.
"Of course."
"And yet I was able to walk through your perimeter wards, past your lookout, and into your firelight without you so much as blinking."
Lily looked away.
Penelope, still rubbing her ribs, scowled. "We're not here to impress you."
Hans turned on his heel.
"That's precisely the problem."
He gestured with the broad sweep of a disappointed teacher.
"This isn't a mission anymore. This is a fairy tale. A self-indulgent fantasy where the wronged turn into saviors and forget they were meant to become weapons."
Rose stepped forward, jaw tight. "We're not just blades. These people-"
"Are not your burden." Hans cut her off gently. "Not yet. You don't have the power to carry them, not properly."
"We're much stronger than before. You know that."
"Stronger, yes. Focused? No."
He walked slowly back toward the fire, adjusting his tie as he went.
"You were sent here to gather real combat experience. Refined application of pain law. Real world engagements. Rotating environments. Practice restraint, escalation, execution. All within one year."
He paused.
"Six months remain."
None of them spoke.
He continued.
"When you were handed over to me, you were not warriors. You were trauma survivors with a contract and a vendetta."
"And now?" Penelope asked, folding her arms.
"Now," he said, "you are evolving into true demons. But you're soft. You glow too brightly in front of these people. You confuse relief with righteousness."
Lily turned away, suddenly very still.
Hans's voice lowered as he looked at the people behind them, so many eyes staring at them like ghosts watching over gods.
"They fear you. And worship you. That makes it a problem, a dangerous one. To them… and to yourselves."
Rose stepped forward, defiant. "What's wrong with them fearing us? We are dangerous."
Hans nodded. "You are, but not to the right people."
He looked to each of them in turn.
"The slavers were easy. The convoy guards, the grunt enforcers, they were predictable. You've begun to think you're finished products."
"We're not." Lily spoke softly. "But they needed us."
Hans actually smiled at that. A gentle, faint curve of his lips. Almost approving.
"I don't disagree. But that wasn't the mission."
He turned back toward the cave mouth.
The story has been illicitly taken; should you find it on Amazon, report the infringement.
"When the year ends, your young miss will be leading a faction. A real one. With influence, enemies, politics. You're not here to save the broken. You're here to become strong enough to serve her, to shield her."
Rose's mouth parted slightly.
Hans continued.
"In six months, you are expected to rank among the A-tier demons. You are only B-tier. Your bodies are growing, yes. Your abilities have awakened. But it is discipline, not rage, that defines an elite servant."
He paused in front of Penelope.
"You've grown fast. But your strikes are still driven by insult, not function."
He passed Lily and offered a subtle nod.
"You are the quiet edge, the unseen thread. But your kindness slows your reaction time."
Finally, he stopped before Rose.
"And you…"
Rose didn't flinch.
"You lead well. But you think like a survivor, not a general."
He stepped back.
"You were not chosen for how much you've suffered. You were chosen because Lady Hannya saw potential. And if you're still warming soup and bandaging peasant ankles six months from now…"
He let the sentence trail off.
They understood the rest.
Rose said nothing for a long time.
The cave crackled with the low sounds of fire and breath. Somewhere near the rear of the cavern, a child coughed. Outside, a chill wind pressed softly against the stone like a forgotten whisper.
Lily sat back down by the fire, her ladle resting idle across her knees. She didn't look at Hans, but her veil drooped slightly.
Penelope stood off to the side, arms crossed tightly, jaw clenched.
Hans remained centered, hands behind his back, posture flawless as always.
"We're already B-rank," Penelope muttered. "We've won every battle we fought. We cleared enforcer patrols, intercepted convoys, dismantled auction rings-"
"You've shown promise," Hans said evenly, "but potential is not fulfillment."
He didn't say it cruelly, but the words pierced.
"B-rank is a fine plateau," he continued. "But it is only that, a plateau. It's not where your Mistress will stand when the world begins to turn."
Rose finally spoke.
"You've seen her future, haven't you? She showed you?"
Hans paused.
"No."
"But you have guesses."
"Yes."
That was all he gave.
And silence returned. Thick. Uneasy.
Until the sound of small, bare feet shuffled forward.
A young demon, barely twelve years old by appearance, stepped timidly toward the firelight. His skin had a faint green tint, like moss touched by moonlight. His eyes glowed gently with subtle conviction.
He carried a small bundle of leather cords and trinkets in his hands.
"Um… Miss Maids?"
All three women turned.
The boy bowed awkwardly, too fast, nearly tipping over.
"I made these for you."
He held out the bundle, three pendants, each different but built around the same crude structure, fragments of demonic beast cores, shackles shattered by force, and bits of rock etched with protection runes. Not complex spells. More like scratched prayers.
One looked like a misshapen fang encased in bone.
Another had a single red string tied in seven coils.
The third shimmered faintly, like it still remembered heat.
"They're not strong," the boy said quickly, "but I carved them with the sigils I remember from my dad's old scrolls. Um, they're supposed to, uh, reflect… spells? Once? I think? Maybe twice? I'm not sure if I carved the right lines-"
He talked fast. Nervous, hands shaking.
Hans stepped forward to quiet him.
"Thank you, boy. That's very kind."
He gently ruffled the boy's hair.
The boy smiled, white canines flashing. "I just… wanted to help. You saved us, you gave us our lives back."
Penelope knelt to take her pendant, her fingers brushing the crude metal.
"They're ugly," she muttered. "I like that."
Rose accepted hers with both hands, bowing in return.
Lily placed hers around her neck immediately, whispering a soft thank you.
The boy looked between them, then turned to Hans.
"Are you their boss?"
Hans smirked in the most tactful way possible. "Only by divine assignment."
"You fight like you could be a boss."
"Some say I'm a servant. Others say I'm a myth." He said, posturing a bit.
"Oh," the boy said. "That's cool."
Hans chuckled.
"And what's your name, young craftsman?"
The boy's grin widened.
"Sixth Envy."
The group then focused on him, watching him with strange looks.
"...Excuse me?" Hans asked, just a little slower.
"Sixth Envy," he said again. "Sixth Envy Korrith, if you want the personal name. That's what they called me in the village."
A chill ran through the firelight.
Rose glanced at Penelope.
Penelope's brow furrowed.
"That's a devil's name." Rose murmured.
Hans stared at the boy for a long moment.
Korrith just smiled, scratching the back of his neck.
"I know it's weird. They just wrote that on my birth plaque. I think they thought I was part devil. Or maybe they hoped." He shrugged, used to this sort of reaction.
Hans said nothing. Just patted him on the shoulder again and gestured for him to go.
"Sleep well, Korrith."
The boy saluted with a crooked hand and skipped away.
Hans exhaled.
"That one… has something peculiar wrapped around him."
"You think he's dangerous?" Penelope asked.
"I think he's already been marked by fate. Whether he knows it or not."
He looked to the three maids again, now each with a pendant around their necks.
"You've earned your softness. I don't deny that."
Then his voice sharpened.
"But that's not the road we walk."
He stepped toward the cave entrance, letting the wind carry his words forward like a blade sheathed in silk.
"Tomorrow morning, you'll head west. Toward Shatterbone Canyon. There's a cluster of rogue devils operating outside faction control, high volatility, varied tactics, possible nomad influence, excellent for adaptive combat training."
Penelope grunted. "You want us to start hunting devils now?"
"I want you to stop thinking like rescued slaves."
He didn't turn around.
"And start thinking like her knights."
The morning mist clung to the cliffs like breath against frosted glass. The cave behind them had gone quiet, just the soft stirring of coals and the hush of whispers among the newly liberated.
Rose stood in front of the half-rolled hide map Hans had spread across a flat boulder. Inked roads and cursed paths laced through jagged sketches of hills and chasms. A red mark had been drawn just northwest of their location, near the edge of Greed's thinning control.
Shatterbone Canyon.
"You'll cross two dead roads, skirt the ruins near Red Mire, and enter the outer veil of Shatterbone by nightfall tomorrow," Hans said, tapping the map with one gloved finger. "The rogue devils operating there are fractured, no allegiance, no cohesion. Ideal for testing your decision-making and improvisation."
Penelope, standing with her arms crossed, sneered slightly. "So we're glorified exterminators now?"
"You're B-rank," Hans replied. "This is how you become A-rank. You must learn to think like monsters... and act like blades."
Rose didn't respond. Her gaze flicked to the cave mouth behind them.
Inside, the people they'd rescued were still sleeping. Some would wake soon. Others had already risen and begun packing small bundles, expecting their protectors to lead them onward.
"They'll follow us." she said.
"Then make sure they don't." Hans replied.
That stung, but he was right.
Lily folded a blanket near the supply pile. Korrith had already said goodbye, slipping a small, hastily carved charm into her hand with one last crooked smile.
Penelope stood beside her, blade half-drawn, fingers twitching with restrained frustration.
"They'll be fine," Lily said quietly. "We taught them how to hide, how to ration, how to pray."
Penelope nodded, but her jaw remained tight.
"They think we're something holy."
"Maybe we are?" Lily said.
Penelope scoffed. "We're just demons."
"But we are her demons..." Lily murmured.
Behind them, Hans adjusted the clasp of his coat and said nothing.
Rose returned to the main chamber one last time.
A few villagers approached her, an old woman, a girl clutching a torn doll, and a young man with a broken horn who offered a sack of dried mushrooms.
She refused the gifts.
Offered a short bow.
And told them not to follow.
"You'll only get in our way. Hide in the low tunnels until the sun passes the ridge. Then walk south until you reach the crumbled arch bridge. From there, take the buried rail path."
They didn't argue, but they didn't quite understand, either.
To them, this was abandonment.
To Rose, it was a mercy.
When the trio gathered their things, light packs, spare bandages, extra throwing knives, they paused for just a moment at the cave's mouth.
Penelope adjusted her wrist bindings.
Lily checked her pouches.
Rose traced a fingertip across the carved pendant now hanging from her neck, its mismatched cords tight against her collarbone.
"We'll come back when we're stronger." she said.
"That's not what he wants." Penelope muttered.
"It's not for him," Rose replied. "It's for us."
Hans cleared his throat lightly.
"You don't need to come back at all."
All three turned to look at him.
"You don't owe them permanence. What you owe… is readiness."
"For her." Lily said softly.
Hans gave a single, solemn nod.
"You were not given a second chance to mourn. You were given a purpose. Your mistress awaits a world that won't forgive her supreme existence. She needs hands that don't tremble when the time comes to destroy the guilty."
He stepped back from the cave entrance, giving them room to pass.
"You are no longer survivors," he said. "You are the first stones in a Grand Court no one will see until it is too late."
They left without another word.
The wind followed them up the ridgeline.
They moved like soldiers now.
No, not soldiers.
Shadows with names.
Penelope, with her rage quiet and disciplined.
Lily, with her calm precision.
Rose, with her burdened silence.
And the pendants swinging at their chests.
Inert.
But waiting.
Back in the cave, Hans lingered just long enough to watch the villagers stir.
Some wept.
Some prayed.
Korrith sat alone with a flat stone and a carving knife, sketching another design no one would see for weeks.
Hans exhaled.
Then turned north toward the deeper parts of Greed's domain.
His job was done, for now.
But Hannya's plan was only beginning.
~~~
The flicker of a paper lantern swayed softly in the quiet of Baku's chamber. A room of low ceilings and worn stone floors, it smelled of old scrolls and dreamwine, of history left alone too long.
He sat cross-legged on a woven mat, spine straight despite the years etched across his shoulders. Eyes half-lidded, brows furrowed in idle contemplation, he listened without listening.
Beside him, kneeling with her instrument cradled gently in her lap, was Noh.
She plucked the strings of her shamisen slowly, each note full of mountain wind and distant storms.
The music filled the silence like mist across the floor.
"A week now." she whispered.
"Mm." Baku reached for his flask, sipping gently. "Seven days... still no signs."
"Do you think it's normal?" Noh asked. "For a six-star?"
Baku didn't answer right away. He swirled the wine in his cup, watching the ripples distort the dream-light reflections on the surface.
"Devil evolution isn't… formulaic," he finally said. "Not like how humans think of growth. It's... inward. The stronger the ego, the deeper the spiral. And she…"
He paused, shaking his head.
"She's something else."
Noh looked up from her strings.
"You're worried."
"No," he said, setting the cup down. "I'm thinking about how little I understand of her... even now."
The music fell into a soft, haunting pause.
They sat together in it. In silence, in stillness.
Until Baku's eyes snapped open mid-breath.
He turned his head slightly..
And stood.
Just as the alarm bell rang.
A deep, guttural clang of rusted bronze roared through the entire upper ring of the Hazy Mountain fortress. It echoed off stone and down spiraling paths, shaking the mist off the banners.
Noh was already on her feet, a frown tightening on her delicate features.
"They're attacking?"
Baku didn't reply. He strode toward the outer balcony, eyes narrowed to the horizon. Fog lifted at his presence, as if the mountain itself knew something was wrong.
"Who would be so stupid...?" Noh murmured, stepping beside him.
Then the haze parted.
And in the distance, below the third terrace wall, a sigil flared in pale blue. Heavy sigils formed midair, burning the cliffside in archaic dream-script.
"Dream Faction," Baku said quietly. "An initiative raid... unauthorized."
He didn't need to say more.
Their forces were coming. Fast, reckless, quietly panicked.
And badly misinformed.
Three five-star enforcers crested the slope. Masked, armored, wielding crystallized dreamsteel and arcanum-blades. Dozens of auxiliary troops followed behind them, they pushed forward to outpace the mountain's full defenses.
Their goal wasn't conquest.
It was a decapitation strike.
Strike fast. Kill Hannya before she could retreat. Seal Baku before he could act.
Take the mountain before the Capital Council could formally intervene.
Dozeuff's paradoxical tenet had been cleared for field use without proper consensus. They were gambling everything on one sudden push. A political coup disguised as a resource raid.
They assumed Baku could be handled with three five-stars. Though no longer sick, he was still old, and his last battle recorded was many decades ago.
And Hannya wasn't a threat yet. With Dozeuff's tenet, he could end things swiftly, regardless of the imp bodyguard.
They assumed many things taking this gamble. Lazmer had no choice but to do so. With the dream council asking questions about the Eversleeper's subtle changes, and the cores needed to maintain his... operations dropping further due to the price hike, he had taken his enforcers' advice and done a swift, preemptive strike on the mountain.
With this decisive action, his assumptions could prove redeeming, lucrative even.
Sadly, his desperate assumptions were wrong.