Using World Destruction
Before I knew it, he had drawn back his sword, both hands gripping the hilt as he pulled it back to his right shoulder. Probably intending to end it in one strike, he chose a thrust over a slash.
That was right. If the goal was to end the fight in one strike, then a narrow, concentrated attack was the correct choice.
So I would do the same. Since we had agreed to exchange single strikes, wouldnât it be best to use the same attack?
As soon as I took my stance, I made all the mana in my body go berserk. Until now, I never dared try this for fear of destroying my body, but this was the last attack. It didnât matter if my arm broke or my organs burst.
Besides, I couldnât hold back when I saw the madman before me going all out.
I was certain as I felt the energy emanating from him. When that energy collides with what Iâm wielding, someone will definitely die. We might both die, but there was no way weâd both survive. There wouldnât be an embarrassing conclusion like âit was a draw, even with World Destruction.â
For a moment, I felt grateful to Tala. Without that pioneer, the idea of exchanging World Destruction blows would have been impossible, and my end would have been far off.
âCarl Krasius!â
Carl Krasius answered my cry wordlessly.
âItâs been fun all this time!â
And with those final words, we both struck. I felt my bones twisting and muscles melting, but I ignored it.
Then, Carl Krasius alsâ
***I jolted awake. A flood of memories rushed in, only to crash into a wall and scatter. I mustâve passed out, but I almost died this time.
Lying flat on my back, I saw the sky horribly ripped apart. Even though it was aimed at a person, that impact was far beyond what a mere human could handle. The shockwave had torn into the sky itself once more.
And if the sky was in that state, then the ground was even worse. As I forced myself to lift my head, I saw the earth literally melting.
And it seemed to still be melting.
Well, Dorgon and I probably surpassed Tala in using Sky Cleaver. We survived for years after Talaâs death, after all.
After taking a few deep breaths, I tried to push myself upâ
That familiar sense of emptiness hit me. I adjusted my stance and forced myself up with my legs and core instead. After throwing everything into that last strike, my arms were completely ruined.
My right arm below the shoulder was completely gone, and my left arm hung useless with a few fingers missing. Surprisingly, it wasnât a bad price to pay for the price of a full-power Sky Cleaver without considering the side effects. Plus, these wounds didnât have any permanent healing debuff. If they can be fixed, then that was good enough.
Anyway. As soon as I stood up, I started walking. I could feel, very, very faintly, the mana of someone else.
It was barely perceptible, a weak and precarious energy. I already knew who it was.
âHeh, you can still walk?â
Dorgon, sprawled in a strange place as if heâd been thrown far by the impact, let out a hollow laugh as soon as he saw me approach.
âLook whoâs talking in that state.â
From my perspective, it was amazing that this bastard could speakâno, that he was alive at all.
His arms, which should have taken the biggest impact, were either cut off or exploded, and I couldnât tell which. Everything below his waist was gone. Seeing him like that made me feel like a miracle for losing just one limb.
âI overdid it with the spells. The fact that Iâm still breathing just means my sorcerer was too good at his job.â
Seeing that grotesque sight, Dorgon chuckled, even complaining that the excessive doping had prevented instant death.
âAh, donât you worry. Itâs not an injury I can recover from.â
âI can see that.â
He was stating the obvious when it was clear heâd barely avoided instant death.
âBy the way, itâs disappointing. To think that after all that struggle, all those yearsâone strike, and itâs over. We should have done this from the start.â
Dorgon muttered, gently closing his eyes. But contrary to his words of disappointment, he sounded relieved.
âAt least it was you who finished me off. Itâs only right, after all. In the end, there was only one person fit toââ
âHey.â
I cut off Dorgonâs words as he was about to slip into his own eulogy time and sat down on the ground. Now that this guy was still alive, I had a lot to ask.
âYou, what were you thinking when you rebelled?â
Dorgon closed his mouth and silently stared into my eyes.
âYou knew the empire considered you dangerous and that you hadnât fully united the North. More tribes chose to surrender to us than to fight. And yet, with that kind of army, you still waged war against us?â
I just couldnât understand. This bastard wasnât reckless or thoughtless. If anything, he could be classified as cunning and quick-witted. Wasnât that how he alone survived the last war and started a second one?
So why had he built an army with fractured loyalty? Why hadnât he used every advantage to weaken the Empire? Why had he thrown away command just to fight me one-on-one?
I just couldnât understand it. For now, I focused on the benefits the empire could reap from Dorgonâs intentions rather than the intentions themselves, but if I could hear the personâs own calculations, then I should address it.
âWhat an embarrassing question.â
After a long silence, Dorgon chuckled and turned his head towards the sky. It looked like he wasnât going to say anything, so I was about to press himâ
âTch. I was planning to take this to my grave, but since Iâm alive, I have no choice. Isnât it the loserâs duty to answer the winnerâs questions?â
At his willingness to confess, I closed my mouth again.
â...As the one left who didnât die, I wanted to take final responsibility.â
Those words made my mind go blank.
***Kagan led 100,000 nomads against the empire. The nomads, who had been unilaterally suppressed by the empire at regular intervals, expressed their anger freely and sought to create their own country free from imperial interference.
But they failed. The 100,000 nomads suffered near-total losses, and the heroes and great warriors who led them died.
Amidst all this, Dorgon alone survived. He was the sole remnant of the nomadsâ dream and hope.
âI was confident. With him leading usâwith all of us fighting as oneâI really believed we could defeat the Empire. We never wanted the land, only to drive them back, force them to negotiate, and claim our own.â
In fact, the empire came close to recognizing a nomadic nation. The nomadsâ dream was almost realized, just as Dorgon believed.
âBut we still lost. So, I couldnât see hope anymore. We lost even with advantages that might appear only once in history, so what about after that? Hope instantly turned to despair.â
They say the higher you rise, the longer the fall. When this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity vanished, the nomads fell into self-loathing and helplessness. If they lost with such forces, what could they possibly do? âOur fate is to live like this and die like insects at the empireâs hands,â they said.
âI wanted to stop that. We failed to create our own country, but I couldnât accept my compatriots, my people dying without even leaving their names behind.â
And so, he gathered the nomads again. Rather than staying put and being wiped out by the empire or becoming a miserable subjugated class, he decided to bring the empire to the negotiating table.
âYou can guess the rest.â
I found myself nodding unconsciously. Knowing Dorgonâs inner thoughts, all the puzzle pieces fit together.
Why he had rebelled so recklessly. Why he had threatened the Empire just enough to be noticedâbut never enough to provoke full annihilation. Why he never truly controlled the tribes beneath him, and why he let so many defect without consequence.
If Dorgon hadnât rebelled, the northern nomads would have lived in tribal units like before Kaganâs appearance. Then, they would have faced the full brunt of the empireâs crazed oppression to prevent a second Kagan and died silently. In that process, the nomads would have become thoroughly subjugated or enslaved.
However, Dorgon united the nomads and threatened the empire. As a result, the empire pulled out the card of co-opting rather than unilateral suppression.
âWas it really worth volunteering for your death?â
It was too extreme and too insane a reason. The empire, having gone through a major suppression war and succession disputes, was reluctant to expend more national power. So why did the guy, who grasped all this and caused the empire to pull out the co-opting card, not know anything else?
He was too intelligent not to realize that the Empire wasnât looking to exterminate them immediately. If nothing else, it would have taken decades, or maybe even centuries for such an expedition to begin.
For something that far off into the future, Dorgon stood before the empire again. If he had simply disappeared, he could have lived out the rest of his days in peace.
It was clear suicide. This guy didnât have Kaganâs power. Even if heâd killed me here, he would have been suppressed by the imperial army someday.
âDidnât I tell you? Itâs the responsibility of the one who couldnât die alone.â
I fell silent again.
âI made promises to my people. I swore I would give them a nation of their own, that I would free them from the Empireâs grip, but I failed. I took on the burden of the Northâs will, but I wasnât strong enough to fulfill it.â
The doping effects seemed to be fading as Dorgon coughed up blood several times before barely continuing.
âHe died while shouldering the will of the North. But I, who am not even His equal, must die crushed beneath that same weight.â
Now, the will of his compatriots should be loyally subjugating the evil one under the empireâs name instead of the rebellious heart that once followed the Rebel to oppose the empire.
After adding that, Dorgon laughed for a long time.
He just kept laughing as if this situation pleased him.
Hearing that laughter, I couldnât help but think so.
The guy who couldnât die with the others and shouldered the responsibility alone, floundering in an unrealized ideal, finally went mad.
Unless he went mad, there was no way he could have come up with such an idea.
1. aka Sky Cleaver