Devil Gambit
Chapter 93 : The Final Fang
CHAPTER 93: CHAPTER 93 : THE FINAL FANG
The black fire burned—but it didn’t scorch Dirga’s skin.
It didn’t devour the grass beneath his boots, nor did it consume the exotic trees or vibrant garden around him.
It burned inward.
Not to destroy.
To elevate.
He could feel it—searing not his flesh, but his thoughts, his will. The pressure that had crushed his mind just seconds before... now passed through him like wind through flame.
His mental defenses, once a fragile cage of telekinesis, were no longer necessary.
He could feel the beast’s psychic attack striking him again and again—vibrations meant to shatter a soul—but his mind didn’t crack.
It burned brighter instead.
So this is the next layer of the Black Star Concept...
His body shimmered with smoke that evaporated into stars. His heartbeat aligned with something far greater than himself—pulsing in rhythm with a truth buried deep within his soul.
The fire wasn’t here to protect him.
It was here to break him—and forge him new.
He stopped reinforcing his mind with telekinesis.
Let it come. Let the pain come.
Let the fire rise.
"Hey, tiger," he said, voice low but steady.
His eyes locked onto the floating silver beast, that shimmering bubble still pulsing around it like a womb.
"Let’s finish this."
The black flames erupted—not from his body, but from his hair. It ignited like a solar flare, a crown of obsidian fire twisting toward the sky. Each strand hissed like a whip of burning gravity.
He took a step forward.
Then another.
And with each movement, the garden shuddered—not from his power alone, but from the concept itself trying to reshape the space around him.
The fire wasn’t meant to harm.
It was meant to boost.
To overheat his cells, ignite his neurons, and collapse hesitation into singularity.
He was becoming something faster.
Stronger.
Sharper.
The Black Star wasn’t just an idea now.
It was burning into reality.
And with that clarity, Dirga no longer needed to waste energy shielding his mind.
He snapped his fingers.
The Crimson Core shimmered, shifting forms—and ten swords burst into existence with a howl of black gravity.
Two in his hands.
Eight floating around him, each one wrapped in the invisible grip of telekinesis—hovering like a fleet of blades ready to storm the heavens.
The silver tiger’s golden eyes widened.
Not in fear. In delight.
It bounced inside its bubble like a cub excited for a new game, tail flicking with energy.
"So you want to play?" Dirga whispered, voice low and sharp.
"Then let’s play."
The eight swords launched first—blurring into the air like comets. They tore through the garden sky, slashing at the shimmering barrier surrounding the tiger, each strike ringing out with metallic force.
At the same time, Dirga dashed forward—his two swords intercepting the incoming telekinetic paws.
Each slash he made was clean, swift, decisive—carving through invisible pressure with gravity-imbued edges.
The tiger’s mental attacks—the floating paws made of raw psychic energy—collapsed as Dirga sliced them apart.
His blades weren’t just sharp. They were weighted with a bending force. A distortion of space.
Gravity woven into steel.
The kind of power that could cut through dimensions.
But even then...
Even with all eight flying blades hammering the same point, the tiger’s barrier didn’t break.
It didn’t even crack.
Dirga’s eyes narrowed.
Fine. Then one blade. One strike. No distractions.
The Crimson Core collapsed, its glow folding inward, compressing.
Becoming a single sword.
Dense. Heavy. Crimson-black—like a blade forged from a collapsed star.
Dirga stepped back, boots grinding into the grass as energy surged around him.
The Black Fire screamed.
A roar like a jet engine.
WIIINNNGGGGGGG.
It didn’t burn the world.
It burned him.
Every nerve lit up. Every muscle ignited. His blood felt like magma running through iron veins.
And the fire—once wild across his body—began to concentrate.
It wrapped around his right arm.
Sank into his flesh.
From fingers to elbow, black flame etched itself into him—like living tattoos, whispering heat and pressure and will.
The sword in his hand darkened further, now completely black. Not reflective. Not even matte.
It was absence.
A blade that cut not just space—but meaning.
His telekinesis shifted too—no longer just shields or blades, but now forming a bubble around him, mirroring the tiger’s own. A defense woven from pressure and raw thought, reinforcing his mind for the final clash.
Dirga raised the sword.
The wind died.
The fire screamed silently.
His eyes locked with the tiger’s—golden meeting burning black.
And then—
He swung.
"Sword Style: Black Sword."
A line of oblivion carved through space.
The air warped. The ground beneath him buckled inward as if pulled toward the edge of a black hole. Even the colors around him bent, momentarily drained to grayscale—such was the pressure of the swing.
...
Across the garden, the silver tiger’s golden eyes narrowed.
It didn’t panic.
It smiled.
Curious.
Amused.
Excited.
"Interesting," the tiger thought. Not in words, but in the primal language of intent.
This human... was worth playing with.
And so, in that very breath—
The tiger answered.
Its eyes shone.
Blinding. Blazing. Burning.
Zarion rippled around it—no longer just ambient force, no longer mere telekinesis.
The pressure solidified.
A sword.
No—a fang made of thought, forged from pure psychic weight and refined Zarion.
The beast mimicked Dirga.
And it swung.
...
The two swords collided midair.
One forged from burning gravity and condensed Concept.
The other—a blade of crystallized intent and psychic Zarion.
SLASHHH.
No explosion. No thunder.
Just silence, cut clean in half.
The Black Sword severed the blue blade like paper.
It didn’t clash—it devoured.
Dirga’s eyes locked on the tiger’s shield.
And then—
crack.
A ripple tore across the golden barrier.
It split.
The void-edge sliced through.
But before it could reach flesh—
Tap.
A tiny paw.
A deflection.
The Black Sword was swatted aside like a fly.
Dirga’s vision reeled.
He barely had time to register the tiger’s form blinking—teleporting—before it was in front of him.
Golden eyes. A grin of pure amusement.
Wham.
The paw struck.
Dirga’s body slammed into the ground like a meteor.
His senses cut out.
Mind faded to black.
...
Silence returned to the garden.
The tiger descended from its bubble for the first time—floating no more.
It walked with dainty, curious steps toward the fallen human.
And then, gently, it licked his face.
Once. Twice.
A soft purr followed.
It sat beside him. Tail flicking.
Smiling.
Not as a victor.
Not as a predator.
But as if it had found something... interesting.
Something worth waiting for.