Imp to Demon King: A Journey of Conquest

Sat Jun 28 2025

Chapter 443: The Symbol of Wrath

He reached into Vinéa’s chest, his hand passing through flesh and bone as if they were water, and withdrew something that pulsed with the same ancient light as the symbol. It was small—no larger than a human heart—but the power contained within it made Baal’s own considerable might seem like a candle flame before the sun.

The fragment of Ira’s essence. One of nine seals that kept the unspeakable locked away from the cosmos. And now it was loose, one of its guardians dead.

"Baal." The voice came from behind him, respectful but urgent. He turned to see seven figures materialising in the ruined throne room—the remaining demon kings, each arriving in their own spectacular fashion.

Asmodeus stepped through a portal of crimson mist that reeked of desire and forbidden pleasures, his form shifting between masculine and feminine beauty with each step. Belial emerged from shadows that seemed to move with deliberate laziness, his handsome features marred by an expression of bored contempt for everything around him. Paimon descended on wings that sang with the whispers of secret knowledge, golden coins falling like rain from his ornate robes.

Beleth materialised in a whirlwind of barely contained fury. Purson rose from the castle’s stone floor itself, emerging as if the very foundations had given birth to his form, draped in shadows that held untold secrets. Balam appeared through a mirror that reflected not the throne room but the deepest envies of every soul that had ever lived. Finally, Zagan stepped through an alchemical circle that transmuted the air itself into golden mist, his corpulent form radiating the satisfaction of endless consumption.

"Brothers." Baal rose to his full height, carefully concealing the pulsing fragment within his armor. "We have a problem that transcends our usual squabbles."

Asmodeus was the first to speak, his forked tongue tasting the air around Vinéa’s corpse. "The ascended imp did this? Impressive. I hadn’t thought him capable of—"

"Look closer," Baal interrupted, gesturing toward the barely visible mark on Vinéa’s chest. "Tell me what you see."

The assembled demon kings leaned forward, and one by one, their expressions shifted from curiosity to horror as they recognised the ancient symbol. Paimon’s golden coins stopped their endless cascade. Beleth’s perpetual rage cooled to something approaching fear. Even Belial roused from his characteristic indifference as he comprehended the implications.

"The seals," Purson whispered, his voice carrying the weight of secrets that should never be spoken aloud. "They’re still active."

"They are, and more eager to escape than you can imagine," Baal confirmed grimly. "Adam’s threat has reached a level we can no longer ignore. The pawns we gathered—the gods we’ve manipulated, the schemes we’ve set in motion—all of it is insufficient."

He turned to face his fellow demon kings, the fragment of Ira’s essence pulsing against his chest like a second heartbeat. "We need the crushing power of all pantheons brought to bear. No more subtlety. No more manipulation from the shadows."

Belial stirred from his characteristic torpor, actually showing something resembling interest for the first time in millennia. "You’re suggesting we reveal ourselves? Break the ancient accords?"

"I’m suggesting we survive," Baal replied sharply. "Because we die and the seals come undone, if what we’ve kept locked away breaks free..." He gestured at Vinéa’s corpse. "Accords will be the least of the cosmos’ problems."

Asmodeus stepped forward, his ever-shifting form settling into something darkly beautiful and terrible. "What do you propose?"

"A gathering." Baal’s voice carried the weight of absolute certainty. "I will request an urgent meeting with the pantheon heads—Odin, Marduk, the Jade Emperor, Zeus. All of them. We tell them the truth about what Adam represents. About what happens if he continues to grow in power."

"And if they refuse to cooperate?" Paimon asked, his golden coins resuming their endless dance around his form. Searᴄh the NovelZone.fun website on Google to access chapters of novels early and in the highest quality.

Baal’s smile was sharp enough to cut divine flesh. "Then we remind them that some threats are too great for any single pantheon to face alone. Adam has already proven capable of killing demon kings. How long before he sets his sights on Asgard? Olympus? The Celestial Court?"

The assembled demon kings fell silent, each lost in contemplation of a future where their careful balance of power crumbled beneath the boots of a single ascending mortal. Finally, Asmodeus nodded slowly, his voice carrying the weight of seduction turned to purpose.

"Make your calls, brother. Arrange your meeting. But remember—once we take this step, there will be no returning to the shadows. The old games end, and something far more dangerous begins."

Baal clutched the fragment of Ira’s essence tighter, feeling its ancient power pulse against his palm like a caged beast testing its bonds. "Then let it begin. Because the alternative is an end to everything we’ve spent eons building."

Above them, through the shattered ceiling of Vinéa’s throne room, the stars that had been hidden by eternal storms now shone with cold, indifferent light. They had witnessed the rise and fall of countless civilisations, the birth and death of gods beyond counting.

Soon, they would witness something else entirely—a war that would determine whether the cosmos continued under the rule of divine hierarchy, or if something new and unprecedented would rise from the ashes of the old order.

Yet far from this scene of divine panic, bathed in starlight while sipping the most exquisite wine the demon realm could offer, Astaroth raised his crystal goblet in a toast. His loyal followers mirrored the gesture, their smiles sharp with anticipation. The first domino had fallen exactly as planned. The other demon kings would follow, one by one, and with each death, the ancient shackles would shatter. Soon, the true rulers would return—the cosmic horrors that had once preyed on gods and primordials alike.

The age of hidden strife was ending.

The age of open wars had begun.

Soon, the time to resume the oldest war the universe ever witnessed—the very same that shook its foundations—would come.

And no one was ready for it. No one.

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