Chapter : 817
Lloyd was not just training; he was rehearsing. The Jahl Challenge was a play, and he was the director, the lead actor, and the scriptwriter. Every move, every feigned moment of weakness, every triumphant, last-second recovery, was being choreographed with a level of meticulous, obsessive detail that would have terrified Sumaiya if she could have seen it.
He designed the narrative of the fight with the precision of a master storyteller. Act One: The Defiant Stand. He would enter the arena, a humble, unassuming figure. The Demon would attack with its signature wave of fire. He would shock the world by summoning his own, magnificent Ascended-level fire spirit, meeting the inferno with an inferno of his own. The crowd would roar. The impossible underdog had a fighting chance.
Act Two: The Brutal Reversal. The Demon, enraged, would unleash its true power. It would be faster, stronger, more cunning than anticipated. It would overwhelm his spirit, battering Iffrit, cracking his armor, forcing him back. He, the master, would be forced to engage directly, using his own “warrior-healer” skills to support his struggling spirit. He would be wounded. He would be thrown across the arena. He would be on the brink of a fiery, heroic death. The crowd would fall into a stunned, horrified silence. Hope would be lost.
Act Three: The Miracle. At the very last moment, when the Demon is moving in for the final, triumphant kill, he would dig deep. He would call upon his last, desperate reserve of strength—a miracle fueled by his unwavering will and his selfless dream. He would unleash a single, final, impossibly powerful attack that would exploit a tiny, momentary weakness he had “discovered” during the fight. The Demon would fall. The crowd would erupt. The saint would collapse, wounded but victorious, a living legend forged in the heart of the flames.
It was a perfect, beautiful, and utterly fraudulent story. And he was drilling every single line, every single movement, until it was second nature.
This intense, compartmentalized existence began to change him. The lines between his many personas, which had once been so clear and distinct, began to blur at the edges. The quiet compassion of the doctor began to genuinely temper the cold, ruthless calculus of the Major General. The lord’s innate sense of authority and vision began to inform the humble healer’s dreams.
He found himself, in the middle of a brutal combat drill in the Soul Farm, thinking about a new, more efficient way to organize the patient queue at the clinic. He would be discussing alchemical theories with Sumaiya and would subconsciously be analyzing the structural weak points in the clinic’s roof beams.
He was no longer just wearing masks. He was integrating them, forging them into a new, complex, and dangerously potent single identity. He was becoming a being who possessed the compassion of a saint, the mind of a genius inventor, the strategic brilliance of a grandmaster, and the cold, lethal soul of a slayer.
He looked out from his small clinic window, his gaze no longer just on the distant Royal Arena, but on the entire, sprawling city of Zakaria. To Sumaiya, he was the gentle, selfless healer she was desperately trying to save. But inside, Major General Lloyd Ferrum, the man who was so much more, had already finished his planning. He was no longer just the doctor. He was the cure for this city’s, and this kingdom’s, stagnation. And he was about to administer a dose of progress that would be as violent, as painful, and as ultimately cleansing as a raging fire. The hunt was over. The stage was set. And the slayer, cloaked in the robes of a saint, was ready for his grand debut.
The city of Zakaria was a city transformed, drunk on a potent cocktail of bloodlust and festival fever. The annual Jahl Challenge was more than just a gladiatorial spectacle; it was a pilgrimage, a national holiday, a week-long explosion of commerce and chaos that drew people from every corner of the kingdom. The city’s population had swelled, its streets choked with a vibrant, noisy river of humanity.
Armored knights with the crests of a hundred different noble houses swaggered through the avenues, their squires trailing behind them, their expressions a mixture of arrogant confidence and a barely concealed, youthful terror. Grizzled, scar-faced mercenaries, hoping to win a fortune that would allow them to finally hang up their swords, sharpened their blades in the city’s countless smoky taverns. Ambitious young mages, convinced their new, untested spells would be the key to taming the Demon, practiced their incantations in the secluded courtyards of their rented inns.
Chapter : 818
The air itself seemed to thrum with a palpable, electric energy, a mixture of hope, greed, and the thrilling, primal anticipation of a glorious, bloody death. Banners snapped in the wind, merchants hawked cheap, garish souvenirs depicting heroic warriors slaying a cartoonish, fire-breathing beast, and the ever-present sound of the city was a deafening roar of a thousand voices, all speaking of one thing: the Challenge.
In the heart of the Lower Coil, however, the clinic of Doctor Zayn was an island of profound, almost sacred, silence. The raucous energy of the festival seemed to break upon its humble door, unable to penetrate the quiet, serene atmosphere within. Here, there was no talk of glory or gold, only the soft, gentle murmur of a healer tending to his flock.
The day before the Challenge was Lloyd’s final performance as the gentle doctor. He moved through his tasks with a slow, deliberate, almost melancholic grace. He treated the usual collection of coughs, fevers, and infected wounds, his touch as gentle as ever, his voice a low, soothing balm. But there was a new, profound sadness in his eyes, a quiet, tragic resignation that did not go unnoticed by his patients, or by his ever-watchful companion.
Sumaiya was a shadow of anxious energy at his side. The past week had been a blur of frantic, desperate research. She had fulfilled her promise, presenting him with a dossier on the Fire Demon that was a masterpiece of intelligence gathering. She had given him every piece of knowledge, every tactical advantage she could find. But now, with the moment of truth just a day away, she was consumed by a helpless, suffocating dread. She felt like an armorer who had just handed a perfect, shining sword to a beloved friend who was about to charge into a battle he could not possibly win.
As the sun began to set, casting long, mournful shadows into the small clinic, she could bear the silence no longer.
“There is still time,” she said, her voice a low, pleading whisper. “You do not have to do this, Zayn. No one would think you a coward. They would think you sane.”
Lloyd was carefully organizing his small collection of herbal remedies on a shelf, his back to her. He did not turn. “We have been over this, Sumaiya,” he said, his voice quiet but firm, a gentle, unshakeable finality in his tone. “The path is what it is. The choice has been made.”
“It is a choice for a fool’s death!” she shot back, her carefully controlled composure finally cracking, her voice rising with a desperate, passionate frustration. “I have read the accounts, Zayn! I have seen the drawings! This is not a beast to be fought! It is a force of nature, a living inferno! You are a healer, not a slayer of gods!”
He finally turned to face her. His expression was one of profound, almost paternal sadness. He looked at her not as a partner, but as a grieving friend, a man already speaking to her from beyond the grave.
“Every man must face his own fire, Sumaiya,” he said softly, his voice a balm on her raw, frayed nerves. “This is mine. I have asked you to be my eyes. Now, I must ask you for one final thing. I must ask you for your faith.”
He walked to her and gently, for a moment, placed his hand on her shoulder. His touch was warm and steady. “Tonight, I must be alone. I must… prepare. I must meditate. I must pray to whatever gods might be listening for the courage of the champions who will enter the arena tomorrow, and for the strength to do what I must.”
The words were a gentle, noble dismissal. He was cutting her off, creating a sacred, private space for his final hours, and she had no right to intrude upon it. The plea for her faith was a masterful, final stroke, a request so pure and so selfless that she could not possibly refuse it.
Her frustration and her fear collapsed under the weight of his quiet, tragic dignity. She could only nod, a single, jerky movement, her throat too tight to form words. Tears welled in her eyes, and she angrily brushed them away.
“Be safe, Zayn,” she whispered, her voice a broken thing.
“I will do what I can,” he replied, a small, sad smile on his face.
And then, she turned and left, leaving him alone in the growing darkness. The moment the door closed behind her, the moment he felt her presence recede from the street outside, the mask dissolved.
The sad-eyed, martyred saint vanished. The cold, focused, and profoundly excited slayer returned.