Global Islands: I'm The Sea God's Heir!-Chapter 83: After the King Fell
The Primordial Battlefield screamed. It was not a sound that traveled through air, nor a vibration that shook stone. It was a visceral, metaphysical reaction embedded into the fabric of the world itself, as if the land had just witnessed a sacrilege it was never meant to record.
The Titan Lord’s corpse lay sprawled across the shattered badlands, its once-immense body slowly crumbling into inert stone and dust. Segments collapsed inward, dissolving into ash-like debris that was immediately swept away by invisible, hungry currents of mana. The massive horns, which had once reached for the heavens, cracked; fractures spiderwebbed across their surfaces before they disintegrated into nothingness.
At the center of the devastation stood Aegis.
His breathing was steady, but it was far from effortless. The Sea God’s Crown full form faded to its headband form, yet a residual pressure lingered around him.
The God-Killer Trident rested against the ground, its surface dimmer than before, though still humming with a low, satisfied vibration.
Bella approached him with cautious, deliberate steps. She did not fear him, but she feared the transformation he was undergoing.
"You’re still standing," she said worriedly. "I honestly thought the backlash would have buried you alongside that thing."
Aegis glanced at her, then back at the shifting mound of ash that had been a King.
"Barely," he admitted in a raspy voice "Every joint feels like it’s been fused with lead. But the trident... it’s still hungry. That’s the part that worries me."
"That thing was a King Rank existence, Aegis," Bella replied with a mix of awe and concern. "A true king of the earth. You didn’t just fight it; you tore its authority out by the roots. Do you have any idea what that does to the local causality?"
"No. I just know it died," Aegis said, his tone devoid of pride. "And I know that for a few seconds, I wasn’t just a player. I was a disaster."
Bella studied the haunted look in his eyes for a moment longer. "Arlan, You don’t sound like a man who just won the greatest victory in the history of the game."
"I’m not," he answered. "Winning implies the game is over. This just moved the goalposts into a different dimension."
Before she could press him, the sky darkened abruptly. Not with clouds, but with light so blinding it felt like a physical weight. Golden system notifications tore across the heavens, so vast that even distant armies and isolated survivors in the furthest reaches of the battlefield were forced to bear witness.
[ GLOBAL EVENT UPDATE ]
[ A KING-RANK EARTH TITAN HAS BEEN SLAIN ]
[ CAUSE OF DEATH: DIRECT ELIMINATION BY SKYLORD AEGIS ]
[ TITAN HIERARCHY DISRUPTED — ENVIRONMENTAL STABILITY: SEVERELY AFFECTED ]
After the announcement, the air became heavy. Gravity fluctuated for a brief, stomach-churning moment before stabilizing again, though the ground felt fundamentally less solid than it had minutes prior.
[ WARNING: PRIMORDIAL BATTLEFIELD ENTERING SECONDARY PHASE ]
[ SYSTEM OVERSIGHT INCREASED — NEW RESTRICTIONS MAY APPLY ]
Bella exhaled a breath of relief. "Well, there goes the neighborhood. The System is officially looking for a destruction."
"It’s not just oversight. It’s a declaration of war from the architecture itself. We just became the primary error in the code." Aegis agreed.
The moment the announcements appeared, the Liberation Cult camps erupted, not in celebration, but in a stunned, suffocating silence. Soldiers stopped mid-task; healers froze with glowing hands hovering over wounds that suddenly seemed insignificant.
One veteran Gravenian commander broke the silence first, his voice a gravelly whisper.
"A King Titan. Slain by a Duke. Our ancestors spent centuries just learning how to hide from those things. And our Sage just killed it."
"It’s impossible," an adventurer whispered, his knees shaking.
"Say It was impossible," his companion corrected, his face equally pale. "Now it’s just a Friday for him. God, what have we signed up for?"
Faith in Aegis deepened that day, but it was a faith tempered by a new kind of dread. If their leader could kill a King, what kind of monster would the battlefield manifest to restore the balance?
Queen Gloriana stood atop the command platform, gazing toward the distant, smoking badlands. Her expression was composed, but her hands were clenched white behind her back.
"Sage Aegis has crossed a line," she said softly to the general beside her. "He didn’t just win a battle; he insulted the natural order of the Titans. Something big is coming, I can sense it."
The general nodded solemnly. "Yes, Your Majesty. But it was a line that would have crushed us eventually. Better to be the ones holding the blade when the world breaks."
"True," Gloriana replied. "Still, I can’t help but feel that the world does not like being reminded it can bleed. And when it bleeds, it usually tries to drown the one who cut it."
Deep beneath the battlefield, far from the reach of scouts, something ancient shifted. The Titan’s Unity did not speak, but it felt. The death of a King rippled through its network like a blade plunged into a lung. Titan nests went silent; lesser Titans locked into defensive postures. The Unity was recalculating. The loss was unacceptable, and the response, while not immediate, would be absolute.
High in the stone spires of Ruthenia, Ann stood motionless before a massive window. The golden notifications reflected in his pupils like dying stars. Gaia stood behind him, his usually relaxed demeanor absent.
"A King was slain outright. No seals, no group raid, no environment exploit. Just Aegis and a trident."
Ann did not respond at first. His fingers tightened around the stone railing until hairline cracks spread outward.
"So it’s true. He wasn’t just bluffing about his growth curve. He can actually touch that level of authority."
"He did it temporarily, but that’s enough," Gaia added. "The players see him as a god now. And the system sees him as the enemy."
Ann laughed once. It was a short, humorless sound that lacked any trace of his usual arrogance.
"I told them, Gaia. I told the Council that we were focusing on the wrong monsters. I told them Aegis was the real threat to our divinity, and they called me a paranoid child."
"This changes our entire timeline," Gaia’s voice was grave. "We can’t afford to let him consolidate this momentum."
"No, we can’t. Summon the Council. Every elder, every bloodline heir, even the ones hiding in the deep vaults. I don’t care if they’re sleeping."
"You’re accelerating the ’Ascension’ plan, aren’t you?" Gaia frowned. "If we do this now, the casualties among the Primordials will be staggering."
Ann turned, his face illuminated by the flickering light of his own mana.
"I don’t have a choice anymore, Gaia. If I don’t move now, I’m just a footnote in Aegis’s biography. We either become the storm, or we get swept away by it."







