Chapter 524: Chapter 524

The interior of Ra’s bark was a maze of divine machinery that hummed with deep, resonant tones. Golden gears the size of wagon wheels turned, their brass teeth clicking together in steady rhythm. Glass tubes filled with liquid sunlight ran along the walls, carrying glowing fluid to engines that kept the massive vessel moving through the sky.

Luna crouched behind a massive cogwheel, her emerald flames dampened to barely visible flickers as she surveyed their surroundings. The air felt heavy and oppressive, like being trapped inside a furnace.

"This place reeks of order," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the mechanical noise surrounding them.

Garduck emerged from behind a pillar of polished gold, his silver hair dulled in the yellow light. His frame was tense, muscles coiled like steel cables as he gripped his broad two-handed sword.

"Monument One is struggling," he said quietly, his green eyes fixed on the ceiling where tremors from the battle above shook the bark’s frame. "The construct is powerful, but it won’t hold against all of them much longer."

Luna nodded, her gaze turning to the complex machinery that surrounded them. "The bark’s power is what’s holding Monument One back."

A particularly violent tremor shook the vessel as Monument One’s lightning sword clashed with divine weapons above. Dust cascaded from the ceiling, and several of the smaller gears stuttered in their rotation.

"Then sabotage it is," Garduck said grimly. "If we can break the bark’s systems, maybe we can level the playing field."

"More than that," Luna added, her lips curving into a predatory smile that revealed gleaming fangs. "Ra will have to send someone to fix any damage to his precious vessel. That’s when we strike."

They moved through the mechanical maze with predatory grace, Luna’s serpentine fire carefully controlled to avoid detection while Garduck’s colossal strength was applied with surgical precision. They targeted critical junctions—places where multiple pipes and gears connected, where a single break could cripple entire sections.

Luna’s emerald flames licked at the glass tubes, the divine materials resisting her touch but gradually succumbing to the persistent heat of demonic fire. She worked methodically, her flames melting specific joints to disrupt the flow of liquid light. "Break enough of these, and the whole system shuts down."

Garduck focused on the mechanical components, his hands gripping gear teeth and wrenching them out of alignment. He bent a crucial drive shaft just enough to create grinding friction in the system. "Even small damage should spread."

Another tremor shook the bark, this one strong enough to make both demons stagger. The battle above was intensifying, and they could hear the distinctive crack of Monument One’s dimensional khopesh cutting through divine armor.

"Time’s running out," Luna said urgently, moving to the next cluster of pipes. "Monument One can’t keep this up much longer."

They worked with desperate efficiency, their sabotage spreading through the bark’s systems like fire through dry wood. Warning bells began to ring in corridors they hadn’t even reached yet, and the steady mechanical rhythm that had run perfectly for eons started to develop grinding, discordant notes.

Then they felt it—a shift in the bark’s motion, a subtle change in the way the vessel rode the winds. Their sabotage was working.

On the deck above, Ra’s falcon head turned sharply as alarms began to sound throughout his vessel. The sun god’s golden crown flared with sudden heat as he sensed problems in the engines that powered his divine authority.

"The power lines are failing," he said, his voice carrying divine concern for the first time since the battle began. "Someone is sabotaging the bark’s engines."

Thoth appeared beside his master, the god of wisdom already unrolling scrolls covered in detailed diagrams of the vessel’s layout. His ibis head tilted as he studied damage reports written in hieroglyphs across the papyrus.

"The damage is systematic," Thoth reported, his voice carrying absolute certainty. "This isn’t random destruction—someone knows our engineering well enough to hit the weak points."

Ra’s golden eyes blazed with fury as the implications became clear. "The demons. They’re inside the bark."

Another alarm sounded, this one indicating complete failure in the right-side engine network. The bark’s shields flickered, and for a moment, Monument One’s attacks struck with their full force.

"Go," Ra commanded, his voice brooking no argument. "Fix the damage before they can shut down our main engines. I cannot spare the others—they’re needed to keep the construct busy until I can attack again."

Thoth nodded, already moving toward the maintenance hatches that led to the bark’s engine room. "I will restore order, as I always have."

Luna and Garduck felt the god’s approach like a pressure wave moving through the divine machinery. The air itself seemed to grow heavier, saturated with the weight of ancient knowledge seeking to undo their careful sabotage.

"He’s coming," Luna whispered, her emerald flames flaring brighter as adrenaline flooded her demonic essence. "And he’s not alone."

Scrolls floated around Thoth like paper shields, each one covered in repair instructions that could fix anything. The god of wisdom moved through the machinery with perfect knowledge, his hands already beginning to repair the damage they had so carefully inflicted.

"There," Garduck pointed to a narrow passage between two massive gear assemblies. "We can corner him there, away from the main engines where he might call for help."

They positioned themselves with predatory patience, Luna coiled behind one gear while Garduck crouched behind another. The god of wisdom approached, his attention focused on a cluster of broken pipes, completely unaware that two demons would dare to ambush him.

The moment Thoth bent to examine their sabotage, they struck. Thıs text ıs hosted at 𝗻𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗹·𝑓𝑖𝑟𝑒·𝗇𝗲𝘁

Luna erupted from concealment with a shriek of pure fury, her emerald flames exploding into a dozen serpentine forms that filled the narrow space with deadly fire. Each serpent was the size of a war elephant, their fanged maws dripping with liquid fire.

"Burn, god of knowledge!" She screamed, her green eyes blazing with the accumulated rage of every humiliation she had seen Adam endure.