Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 78: Ch : When the Ancient Kingdom Rose
The earth suddenly trembled, like a deep and visceral thrumming that originated from the very marrow of the world. At first, the adventurers of the Liberation Cult thought it was another Titan herd, perhaps a migration of Duke-ranks drawn by the scent of their growing numbers.
Many instinctively reached for the hilts of their weapons, mana flaring in jagged bursts as formations tightened into defensive shells.
Then the ground parted. It did not tear violently or shatter into chaotic chasms. Instead, it opened with a perfect, chilling symmetry. Ancient gates of polished basalt and obsidian rose from beneath the battlefield, their surfaces etched with runes that ignited one after another like stars being born in the dark.
Colossal stairways unfolded from the depths, wide enough for entire legions to march abreast without breaking step. War horns echoed from the subterranean hollows, deep and resonant, carrying a tonal weight that pressed against the lungs of every living thing on the surface.
And then they came.
Rows upon rows of soldiers marched out from the shadowed throat of Gravenia.
About two million.
The number alone was a physical blow to the psyche, shattering any previous comprehension of scale.
They moved in absolute, terrifying order. Shields were aligned so tightly they formed a continuous wall of steel; spears were angled at a uniform degree that turned the horizon into a forest of needles. Heavy infantry advanced with footsteps so perfectly synchronized that the ground pulsed in a rhythmic heartbeat.
Behind them came mages in disciplined ranks, their skin marked with elemental runes that glowed with a steady, neon intensity even in the harsh daylight.
Siege units followed as massive ballistae and mana-cannons pulled by beasts bred for war, creatures that had never seen the sun but knew exactly how to kill beneath it.
These were not desperate refugees or a ragtag militia. These were veterans of a war that had lasted longer than human history.
The adventurers stood frozen, their mouths agape.
A veteran scout whispered, his voice barely audible over the clatter of armor,
"Is this real? Tell me I’m hallucinating from the mana-burn."
Beside him, a seasoned mercenary swallowed hard, his hand trembling on his shield.
"An army this big... it shouldn’t be possible. The logistics alone... where have they been hiding?"
A third adventurer laughed weakly, "We thought we were recruiting an army. We weren’t. We were just waiting for the real one to show up."
Silence followed as the realization settled like ash.
Aegis stood at the cliffside, his expression unreadable, though his eyes reflected the glow of the rising runes.
At the forefront of the marching legions rode Queen Gloriana. She wore no crown of gold today. Instead, she was clad in battle armor forged from abyssal steel and ancient crystal that seemed to absorb the light around it. A heavy crimson cloak flowed behind her, embroidered with the silver sigil of Gravenia. A sword rested at her hip, its aura restrained but pulsing with an unmistakably lethal intent.
She dismounted the moment she reached the front of the line, her boots hitting the dirt with a definitive thud.
Then, she knelt.
As if connected by a single nervous system, two million Gravenian soldiers followed her lead. They knelt as one.
The sound of two million armored knees hitting the earth was not a noise; it was thunder that shook the clouds.
Gloriana raised her head, her crimson eyes locking onto Aegis.
"Sage Aegis, The Kingdom of Gravenia has spent an eternity in the dark. We have watched our ancestors turn to dust while we waited for a sign. Today, the hiding ends. Gravenia marches under your command."
The battlefield went deathly silent. Not a whisper of wind, not a breath of air moved. Then, as if a dam had burst, chaos erupted among the adventurers.
"What the hell did we just witness?" one shouted, grabbing his comrade’s shoulder. "The Queen of an ancient civilization just knelt to a player!"
"Did you see the discipline?" another cried. "Look at the mages. Their mana density is off the charts. They aren’t just high level; they’re optimized."
"This isn’t a army anymore," a team leader muttered, his face pale. "It’s a nation. Aegis just inherited a world power."
Aegis walked forward, his footsteps the only sound in the vacuum of the Queen’s gesture. He stopped before Gloriana and spoke quietly, his voice intended only for her:
"You didn’t have to kneel, Gloriana. We are allies. You are a sovereign."
She met his gaze without a flicker of hesitation.
"I chose to. A queen kneels to the one who provides the vision her people lacked. My father died to buy us time, but you are the one who has given us a reason to use that time. I do not kneel out of weakness, Sage. I kneel because a leader who cannot follow a greater cause is no leader at all."
A murmur of profound respect spread through the adventurers as they overheard her words.
Aegis exhaled slowly, the weight of two million souls settling onto his shoulders.
"Rise," he said simply..
Gloriana stood. Behind her, two million soldiers rose in a wave of clanking steel. The adventurers stared, mesmerized.
One veteran adventurer, a man who had fought in the previous world event, stepped forward and cleared his throat.
"Your Majesty, if you don’t mind me asking, are these soldiers truly from this world? Their equipment... I’ve never seen anything like it in the shops."
Gloriana turned to him instead. "We are Primodials. We are the first inhabitants of this battlefield, the ones who built kingdoms and mastered the ley lines before the Titans even learned to walk. We have lived in the veins of the world while the surface became a graveyard."
Another adventurer clenched his fists, a look of sudden empathy crossing his face.
"So you’re the ones who suffered under them all this time. You’ve been down there, listening to them stomp on your ceiling for millennia."
A Gravenian captain standing near the Queen answered:
"Yes, For millennia. We heard every footstep. We felt every tremor of a city being leveled above us. We lived in silence because noise meant death. Do you know what it’s like to teach your children to cry without making a sound?"
Silence followed his question. Many of the adventurers looked away, shamed by their own complaints about the difficulty of the event.
Then a young girl, a healer who had joined the Cult only days prior, spoke up, "I’m sorry. I’m so sorry you had to go through that alone."
The Gravenian warriors exchanged glances. Some nodded solemnly; others offered faint, grim smiles.
"No wonder you’re all so strong," a young adventurer muttered, looking at the intricate runic etchings on a soldier’s gauntlet. "You didn’t just rank up through a System prompt. You all have survived hell."
The Gravenian captain chuckled, a dry, raspy sound: "And you surface-dwellers learned fast. To fight alone in this hell with nothing but your ’Ranks’ takes a different kind of courage. We have the weight of history; you have the fire of the new world."
Conversations began to ripple across the lines. Weapons were compared, runes were analyzed, and stories of survival were exchanged between two groups that had, until this moment, been strangers on the same planet. An adventurer stared wide-eyed at a Gravenian tower shield.
"This thing... I’m looking at the stats through my Appraisal skill and it’s reading ’Error’. It’s tougher than my S-rank artifact."







