Episode-584 - My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife! - NovelsTime

My Anime Shopping Tree & My Cold Prodigy Wife!

Episode-584

Author: LordNoname
updatedAt: 2025-11-03

Chapter : 1147

They left the carriage and their driver hidden in a dense copse of woods a mile from the city walls. From there, they proceeded on foot, two dark figures moving with a ghostly, predatory grace through the dead, silent landscape. They did not approach the main gate. They moved along the western wall, their feet making no sound on the damp earth, until they came to a section of crumbling masonry, a forgotten scar from a long-ago siege. It was a blind spot, a weakness that only the most detailed of archival maps—maps that Lloyd had spent the night memorizing—would reveal.

Without a word, Ben placed a hand on the thirty-foot stone wall. There was no grand surge of power, only a subtle, almost imperceptible hum. The iron ore embedded deep within the ancient stones answered his call. With a soft, grinding sound, a perfect staircase of solid iron handholds and footholds extruded from the wall, a silent, elegant solution to an otherwise impassable obstacle.

They ascended the wall like spiders, their movements economical and silent. At the top, they looked down upon the city of Ashworth. It was just as the survivor had described. A hollow place, filled with the shuffling, empty shells of its former inhabitants. But they were not their concern.

Their gaze was fixed on the fortress at the city’s heart, the Unholy Palace.

As they watched, a new, chilling phenomenon began. From the alleyways and doorways, a new army was assembling. The skeletons of the unholy legion, their red eyes burning in the pre-dawn gloom, began to pour into the main square before the fortress. They were not a shambling horde; they moved with a disciplined, silent purpose, forming ranks, their corroded weapons held at a perfect, uniform angle.

It was a trap. Their arrival had not been as secret as they had hoped.

"It seems our host has prepared a welcoming committee," Lloyd murmured, his voice laced with a dry, almost amused sarcasm. He felt no alarm, only a professional's mild irritation at a complication.

Ben’s one good eye scanned the assembling legion, his mind performing a cold, swift calculation. "Five hundred units. Standard infantry. No commanders visible. This is not the main force. This is a screening element. A tripwire."

"A very noisy tripwire," Lloyd countered. "He wants to draw us into a fight, to pin us down here in the open."

As if on cue, the great gates of the fortress groaned open, and a single figure strode out to stand before the army. It was Sir Raghav, his face the same mask of serene, zealous calm. He raised his head and looked directly at the section of the wall where they were hidden, his gaze piercing through the shadows as if they were not there. He raised a hand in a slow, almost welcoming gesture.

The game was up.

Lloyd let out a soft sigh, a sound of weary resignation. "So much for the subtle approach. It seems a loud entrance is the only one on the menu."

Ben simply grunted in agreement. There was no further need for stealth. The enemy had issued a formal, and very public, challenge.

They didn't descend the wall. They leaped. Two dark figures dropping thirty feet, landing on the cobblestones of the city street with a barely audible thud, their bodies absorbing the impact with preternatural grace. They walked out of the shadows and into the main square, two lone figures facing down an army of the dead.

Raghav’s smile was one of genuine, pitying warmth. "Lord Lloyd. Lord Ben. We were expecting you. The Master is so pleased you came."

The legion of five hundred skeletons, in a single, chillingly synchronized movement, raised their swords and shields.

"Allow me," Ben said, his voice a low, flat command. He took a single step forward, placing himself between Lloyd and the charging horde.

He raised his right hand, his perfectly crafted steel prosthetic. He did not summon a weapon. He did not take a combat stance. He simply held his hand open, palm facing the oncoming tide of death.

And then, the entire city of Ashworth began to sing.

It was a low, resonant hum, a sound that seemed to come from the very bones of the earth. The iron grates over the sewers, the steel bands on the barrels, the iron lampposts lining the square, the very nails in the wooden buildings—every piece of ferrous metal in a half-mile radius began to vibrate, answering the call of its true master.

The air itself grew thick, heavy with a contained, terrifying power. Ben’s one good eye began to blaze with a light so intense it was like a shard of a blue star.

Chapter : 1148

The front rank of the legion was a mere twenty yards away, a charging wall of bone and steel.

Ben closed his hand into a fist.

The world exploded into a dance of steel.

The cobblestones of the square erupted. Not in spikes or walls, but in a thousand individual, fist-sized chunks of iron-rich stone that shot into the air like a swarm of angry hornets. Simultaneously, every loose piece of metal in the vicinity—discarded horseshoes, the steel rims of wagon wheels, the iron bars on windows—tore free from its moorings and joined the swirling, chaotic cloud.

But it was not chaos. It was a symphony.

Under Ben's absolute, silent command, the cloud of metal and stone became a storm. A swirling, screaming vortex of a thousand self-guiding, razor-sharp blades. It was not a clumsy, brute-force attack; it was a masterpiece of multi-vector warfare. Each piece of shrapnel was an intelligent projectile, moving with a fluid, predatory grace, seeking the weak points in the skeletons' armor, the joints at the knee and elbow, the gaps in the helmets.

The front ranks of the charging legion did not just stop. They were disintegrated. The blade storm hit them like a solid wall of grinding, shredding death. Bone and corroded iron were pulverized into a fine, grey dust. The first fifty skeletons were erased from existence in a single, brutal heartbeat.

Lloyd watched, his own formidable power feeling like a child's toy in comparison. He had mastered the art of the chain, a precise and lethal weapon. But Ben… Ben did not wield a weapon. He wielded the world itself. This was not the simple manifestation of steel from the void. This was a level of control, of creative, overwhelming power, that was not just a rank above his own. It was an entirely different art form.

Ben’s face was a mask of cold, serene focus. This was not a strain for him. This was breathing.

As the blade storm chewed through the ranks of the legion, he made his second move. He raised his other hand, and the ground itself answered. Two massive, vaguely humanoid shapes began to rise from the cobblestones, forged from the very iron and steel of the city. They were not the clumsy, shambling golems of a lesser mage. They were magnificent, twelve-foot-tall constructs of polished, interlocking steel plates, their forms echoing the sleek, articulated design of Ben's own prosthetics. They moved with a silent, impossible grace, their featureless heads turning to survey the battlefield.

With a silent command, Ben sent them into the fray.

The two steel golems were not mindless berserkers. They were master martial artists. One moved with the fluid, defensive grace of a swordsman, its arms flowing to parry and deflect the clumsy attacks of the skeletons, its every move creating an opening. The other was a brawler, its massive steel fists crashing down with the force of siege hammers, shattering every skeleton that came within its reach. They worked in perfect, deadly tandem, a hammer and an anvil of pure, forged steel.

The battle for Ashworth square became a one-sided slaughter. Ben stood at the center of it all, a still, unmoving god conducting his orchestra of annihilation. The blade storm was a constant, grinding whirlwind of death on the flanks, while his two golems systematically dismantled the core of the legion.

Lloyd had not moved a muscle. He had not summoned a single spirit. His role, for now, was that of a stunned, humbled, and deeply impressed observer. He was witnessing a true grandmaster at work. The power Ben was displaying was so far beyond his own B-Rank Steel Blood that it was almost a different kind of magic. This was what a true, untethered master of their shared bloodline could do.

In less than three minutes, it was over. The last of the five hundred Curse Knights was crushed under the steel heel of a golem. The blade storm subsided, its thousands of projectiles falling to the ground with a soft, metallic rain. The two golems returned to Ben’s side, standing as silent, magnificent sentinels.

The square was a ruin, a carpet of pulverized bone and shattered, rusted metal. Not a single enemy remained standing.

Sir Raghav, who had watched the entire, horrifying spectacle from the fortress gate, had lost his serene, pitying smile. His face was a mask of ashen, disbelieving shock. He had sent an army to deal with two men, and one of them had just single-handedly, and without breaking a sweat, annihilated it.

Ben let his hands fall to his sides. The blue fire in his eye dimmed, but the cold, focused fury remained. He looked at the fortress, at the stunned figure of Raghav.

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