Chapter 235 – Storm Against the Gate - Elven Invasion - NovelsTime

Elven Invasion

Chapter 235 – Storm Against the Gate

Author: Respro
updatedAt: 2026-01-26

POV 1: REINA MORALES- USS ROOSEVELT

The ocean was restless that night, its dark surface shimmering with the unnatural glow of the still-open Gate. Lightning flickered in the clouds above, though no storm brewed in the natural sky. The air was heavy with static and dread, as if the world itself held its breath.

Beneath that oppressive silence, shadows cut across the waves — a multinational strike group moving with disciplined precision. Submarines glided at depth, releasing sleek drones that swam toward the Gate’s perimeter. Above, stealth bombers circled at altitude, their weapons bays loaded with experimental warheads designed not merely to destroy, but to disrupt dimensional stability itself. And at the center of it all was Reina Morales, standing on the deck of the USS Roosevelt, armored in a matte-black suit rigged with both nanotech and enchanted alloys smuggled from captured Elven artifacts.

Her voice crackled over the encrypted comms.

“Strike Team Alpha, this is Commander Morales. Our objective is clear. We sever the Gate, no matter the cost. If we succeed, reinforcements never reach this world. If we fail… well, you’ve all seen what failure looks like.”

A grim silence followed. These were veterans of Antarctica, survivors of the South Pacific slaughter, men and women who had watched entire fleets sink beneath fire and moonlight. They needed no reminder.

“On my mark,” Reina continued, “we strike as one.”

POV 2: THE FIRST BLOW

The sea erupted with human ingenuity. Submarine-launched drones raced forward, their warheads packed with anti-mana payloads. At the same moment, the bombers opened their bays and unleashed precision ordnance that streaked like falling stars. Guided by satellite and sorcery-resistant algorithms, the strike was aimed not at the leviathans — destroyed weeks before by nuclear fire — but at the base of the Gate itself, the shimmering foundation where ocean met impossible light.

For a heartbeat, the world seemed to hold still.

Then the Gate screamed.

A pulse of blue-white energy surged outward, flattening waves and rattling hulls. Drones winked out of existence, their circuits fried. Two bombers lost control, spiraling into the sea. Yet amid the chaos, Reina saw something — fractures rippling along the Gate’s edges, spiderweb lines of instability.

“It’s working!” shouted one of the technicians in her ear. “We’ve destabilized its lattice! Another volley could—”

The voice cut off. Across the water, a column of silver fire erupted, and from it emerged Elven warships — sleek, crescent-shaped vessels, their prows glowing with divine runes. Shields of moonlight spread outward, intercepting the next barrage before it reached the Gate.

Reina swore under her breath. “They knew. They were waiting for us.”

POV 3: ELARA’S COUNTERMEASURE

Far away, in the throne-city of Lunaris, Queen Elara stood upon her balcony, her silver hair catching the light of twin moons. Her expression was serene, but her eyes burned with cold purpose. Before her, the High Priestesses chanted, their voices weaving into the great spell she had commanded.

The Gate had shuddered under human assault — she had felt it across dimensions, a tremor in the weave of Luna’s gift. But she had prepared. She always prepared.

“Bring forth the Anchor,” Elara commanded.

Servants wheeled forth a crystalline obelisk etched with runes so ancient they predated the Empire itself. When her hand touched it, the obelisk flared, linking directly to the Gate across the sea of stars.

Through her bond, Elara poured divine energy into its foundation, knitting closed the fractures humans had forced upon it. And more than that — she expanded it. Where once it was a circle of light rising above the ocean, now it grew, its edges flaring outward, stabilizing into a towering arch that dwarfed even Earth’s largest carriers.

Through its heart, the vanguard of her true invasion stirred. War-drakes, aerial fortresses, and legions of Sun Knights prepared to march. The Gate would not fall — not tonight, not ever — not while she lived.

Her voice was calm, but it carried the weight of destiny.

“Let them throw themselves against our storm. They will drown all the same.”

POV 4: DYUG AND MARY – THE COUNTERSTRIKE

On the Elven flagship Seraphis, Prince Dyug stood at the prow, his silver hair wild in the sea wind, his hand resting on the hilt of his moonlit blade. Beside him, Mary — radiant in her Sun Knight armor, her eyes aflame with conviction — rallied their Royal Knights.

“They dared to strike the Gate,” Dyug said, his voice trembling not with fear but with righteous fury. “They think us weak, fractured, desperate. Tonight, we show them otherwise.”

Mary placed her gauntleted hand on his arm, steadying him. “Your mother reinforced the Gate. Now it falls to us to punish their audacity.”

Dyug raised his sword, its edge reflecting the Gate’s glow.

“Then we burn their fleets from the sea.”

The Elven fleet surged forward, their prows cutting through waves with impossible speed. Arcs of solar flame and beams of lunar brilliance lashed out, striking at the human strike group. Destroyers and frigates were ripped apart in the first volley. Reina’s stealth drones blinked off the radar, fried by magical interference.

Admiral Wallace’s voice came over the Roosevelt’s channel, grim but steady.

“All ships, hold the line. Do not let them push us from this fight.”

The ocean became a cauldron of war. Missiles met fireballs, railgun slugs pierced shields of moonlight, and boarding craft clashed in bloody skirmishes. The humans fought with desperation; the elves with divine arrogance. And at the center of it all, Dyug and Mary cut their way across the waves, their Knights forming a spearpoint aimed straight at the Roosevelt.

POV 5: REINA’S GAMBIT

The mission was collapsing around her. Ships burned, comms faltered, and the Gate loomed larger than ever. Yet Reina Morales refused to yield. Standing on the Roosevelt’s command deck, she barked new orders.

“All surviving drones, reroute to me. If the Gate won’t fall to firepower, then we’ll take it apart from the inside.”

Her second-in-command stared at her. “That’s suicide.”

“Then let’s make it count.”

She keyed her armor’s systems, nanofibers shifting as her suit bristled with stolen Elven runes. When the next wave of drones arrived, they latched onto her armor, integrating into a single assault frame — part human tech, part alien sorcery, and wholly unstable.

Reina launched herself into the air, riding the drones toward the Gate itself. Alarms screamed in her suit. The energy field clawed at her body, tearing nanotech apart even as her will drove her onward. For a moment, she glimpsed the impossible: the other side of the Gate, Forestia’s twin moons, armies waiting to cross.

And then the countermeasure struck.

From within the Gate, a blast of silver energy erupted, forcing her back. The drones disintegrated one by one. Reina screamed, her suit locking up as she plummeted into the sea. Only at the last instant did an allied frigate scoop her from the waves.

She had failed. And worse — she had seen how close the invasion truly was.

POV 6: CLASH OF WILLS

Back on the surface, Dyug’s blade clashed against the Roosevelt’s armored hull as he led a boarding assault. Sparks flew, and human marines met Elven Knights in desperate combat across the storm-lashed deck. Mary cut a path through defenders with radiant fury, her blade glowing like the sun itself.

Dyug raised his sword to the sky, channeling both lunar and solar magic in a single, devastating strike. A beam of blinding brilliance shot downward, cracking the deck in half and sending men screaming into the fire below.

Reina, barely conscious, was dragged onto the command deck in time to see him. Her vision blurred, but she recognized him instantly: the Elven prince, the architect of this nightmare.

Their eyes met across the carnage — his filled with conviction, hers with unyielding defiance. Neither spoke, but both understood: this war had narrowed to a point sharper than any blade. One would stand, the other fall, and the fate of two worlds would be decided in blood.

FINAL POV: THE TURNING POINT

As dawn broke over the ruined seas, the Gate still blazed, stronger than ever. Human fleets lay shattered, Elven banners flew high, and Queen Elara’s reinforcements stirred beyond the arch. Yet humanity had not broken. The Roosevelt still floated, scarred but unbowed. Survivors still raised their rifles. And Reina, broken but alive, still planned her next move.

For Dyug and Mary, it was a moment of triumph. For Elara, it was vindication. For humanity, it was a crucible.

And for the world itself, it was the point of no return.

The Gate was no longer a wound. It was a bridge — and the armies of Forestia were about to cross.

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