I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me - Chapter 683: Ryo Vs Daimyo Sadamasa

Chapter 683: Ryo Vs Daimyo Sadamasa
The doors came open.
Not slowly — completely, both of them swinging wide and hitting the walls on either side with a crack that filled the room beyond and silenced everything inside it in a single instant.
The throne room was occupied.
Not just Sadamasa in his chair — a council. Eight men seated at a long table that had been arranged in the space before the throne, documents spread across it, cups at their places, the clear arrangement of a meeting that had been in progress for some time and had been going well until approximately this moment.
Every face turned toward the door simultaneously.
The lamplight fell across Nathan standing in the entrance with Kyōmei dark and dripping in his hand and Yasumasa a barely-conscious heap in the grip of his other fist, the blood trail behind them both extending back through the open doors into the corridor where the lamplight caught its color and made it very visible.
Sadamasa was already moving before the doors had finished their full swing.
He was on his feet and around his chair in the same motion, his eyes going immediately to the figure Nathan was holding — the crumpled, blood-soaked shape of his son — and he looked at it several times in quick succession, his mind apparently requiring multiple confirmations before it would accept what it was seeing.
Yasumasa on the floor of his own throne room.
One arm.
“F…Father…” The sound that came from Yasumasa was barely a voice — a thin, broken exhalation with the word sitting inside it, produced by a man running very low on what was keeping him conscious.
Sadamasa’s face went through several things in rapid succession.
“The Prince—!”
“How dare you—!”
“Kill him!”
The soldiers inside the hall moved simultaneously — not the two door guards, these were the Daimyo’s personal retinue, better armored, better positioned, drawn blades in their hands before the shouts had finished echoing in the high ceiling.
Nathan raised Kyōmei.
He held it out in front of him, the black blade level, and the darkness that had been seeping from it in quiet threads gathered itself — not dramatically, not with any visible buildup, simply with the quality of something that had been patient long enough and was now done being patient.
The ground trembled.
A low vibration that came up through the floor into every boot sole in the room, through the chair legs, through the table, through the walls — a tremor with no geological explanation.
Then the air trembled too.
Nathan slashed.
Not at any of them directly — through the air in front of him, a vertical cut that the blade completed in a single motion.
The cut opened.
What came out of it was not light.
Darkness exploded outward from the line of the slash in a spray — countless needles of pure black, each one moving faster than the eye tracked, spreading in a fan that covered the full width of the soldiers’ formation before any of them had completed their rush. They went through armor the way a needle went through cloth — not breaking it, not stopping against it, simply passing through it as though the metal had agreed to offer no resistance.
Every soldier dropped.
Not in sequence. Together — the simultaneous collapse of a formation that had been moving one moment and simply wasn’t the next, their bodies finding the floor.
The blood spread slowly across the throne room’s polished wood.
Silence arrived completely.
Behind the council table the nobles — eight men who had been in the middle of their meeting and had remained frozen through all of it — were now discovering that their legs worked after all. They scrambled. No ceremony, no protocol, no concern for documents or cups or the appearance of dignity — they moved for the open doors.
The doors had been left open.
They were gone through them without pausing and the sound of their footsteps in the corridor diminished rapidly and then disappeared entirely.
The throne room held three people.
Nathan. Sadamasa. And Yasumasa bleeding on the floor between them.
Sadamasa looked at the bodies of his soldiers spread across the room. He looked at the darkness still seeping from Kyōmei’s blade in the aftermath of the slash. He looked at the man standing in the center of it all holding that blade with the flat, patiently.
“I should have never allowed a ronin into my palace,” Sadamasa said.
His voice was controlled. The shock was present but he was working on top of it.
He came down the steps from the throne platform. Heavy footsteps.
“Or perhaps I should never have trusted Norihiro in the first place.” He stopped at the base of the steps, his brown eyes level on Nathan. “I assumed he wanted weapons. And now he sends a ronin to do what — kill me?”
“There’s a misunderstanding,” Nathan said.
He stepped forward and placed his boot on Yasumasa’s chest, applying pressure. The Prince made a choked sound beneath it, coughing blood, his one remaining hand scrabbling weakly at the floor.
“I cut off his arm and left him like this because he tried to rape a defenseless woman,” Nathan said.
Sadamasa’s hard eyes moved down to his son.
Yasumasa was crying — genuine, broken crying, the kind that pain and blood loss and terror produced in a person when all the other layers had been stripped away. He wasn’t looking at his father. He was staring at the ceiling with wet eyes and making sounds that had stopped being words some time ago.
“Was it the Princess?” Sadamasa asked, his voice carrying something difficult to read beneath its surface control. “Is that why? Because you were paid to protect her?”
“Not exactly,” Nathan said.
He kept his boot where it was.
“I have threatened women myself to get what I needed from them,” he said, his voice carrying no particular weight on the admission — stating a fact rather than confessing one. “But they were women who had threatened my life first. Women who wanted me dead. There is a clear line between a woman who has aimed for your throat and a woman who has done nothing to you whatsoever — who is full of innocence and fear and has not given you a single reason.”
He looked down at Yasumasa briefly.
“He was on the wrong side of that line.”
Sadamasa looked at him for a long moment.
“A ronin speaking of morals,” he said. The scoff in his voice was genuine rather than performed — real contempt, directed at the apparent contradiction. “That is quite hypocritical, wouldn’t you say?”
His whole body changed.
The magic came off him like heat — not building gradually but simply present, suddenly and completely, filling the room’s air with the particular pressure of power that had been contained and was now choosing not to be. The lamplight shifted in response, the shadows moving in directions they hadn’t been moving before.
Nathan’s lips curled slightly upward.
“I surprise myself sometimes,” he said. “But I became a father.”
The slight smile left.
His expression returned to its flat baseline — the cold and clean mask.
“I have daughters now,” he said. “And when I see men like your son I think perhaps my daughters will be somewhere someday and a man like this will be nearby.” His eyes went to Yasumasa once more. “I find I have very little patience for that.”
The thought was new. He had noticed it becoming true in the weeks since fatherhood had arrived and rearranged certain parts of him — the parts that had been indifferent had not become soft, exactly, but had become selectively ruthless in a way they hadn’t been before, aimed at specific targets now rather than general ones.
Yasumasa on the floor was a very specific target.
Sadamasa absorbed all of this silently.
Then he chuckled.
It was a short sound but genuine.
“A father,” he said.
He raised his hand.
A hammer appeared in it.
Not summoned from a rack or pulled from a holder — simply present, arriving in his grip from nowhere with the immediate solidity of something that had always existed and had simply chosen this moment to be visible. It was large, proportioned for a man of Sadamasa’s size, and it trembled with the magic running through it — not the seeping darkness of Kyōmei but a different quality entirely, hot and present and building.
Then the head of it ignited.
Fire wrapped the hammer’s striking face in a complete burning sheet — not the yellow-orange of ordinary fire but something deeper, more sustained, the specific color of heat that had been concentrated and maintained rather than simply lit. It threw the throne room’s shadows in new directions, reaching the ceiling and the walls and the bodies on the floor with its moving light.
Nathan kicked Yasumasa’s body to the side without looking down.
A single motion — his boot connecting with the Prince’s side and moving him clear of the space between the two men, Yasumasa rolling with a pained groan and coming to rest against the base of the throne platform steps, out of the way.
Nathan raised Kyōmei.
He looked at Sadamasa across the space between them.
“I don’t condone my son’s behavior,” Sadamasa said. His voice had gone cold and flat, stripped of everything except what was underneath it — the iron that had kept a man alive and powerful in the lawless south for thirty years. “But he is my son. My blood. A daimyo’s blood.” His eyes moved from Yasumasa to Nathan, and they were not the eyes of a grieving father. They were the eyes of a lord whose property had been damaged. “You may have had your reasons. It doesn’t matter. You touched him, and you will pay for it with your life.”
Nathan swung Kyōmei at his side.
The blood on the blade flew off and hit the floor beside him in a short dark spray. He looked at Sadamasa across the throne room with the flaming hammer burning between them and the bodies of the soldiers spread across the polished wood, and he smiled.
“Make me pay for it,” he said.
Silence held the room for one full breath.
Then they moved.
Sadamasa came forward with a cry that filled the hall from wall to wall — not the cry of fear or pain but the raw battle shout of a large man who had been carrying enormous physical power for his entire life and was now releasing it without reservation, the hammer coming down in an arc that carried his full weight and the magic burning through it and the thirty years of the south’s particular education behind it.
Nathan brought Kyōmei up and met it.
BADOOOOM!
The collision was not a sound so much as a physical event — heat and darkness erupting outward from the point of impact in a shockwave that swept across the throne room floor and rolled over Yasumasa where he lay, lifting him and sending him tumbling across the boards until he crashed against one of the hall’s great pillars. The pillar cracked. Not at the base, not at the top — in the middle, a jagged line running through the stone from the force that had arrived at it.
Nathan stood in the aftermath with Kyōmei locked against the hammer’s face, the fire pressing down and the darkness pressing back, the two forces running against each other in the narrow space between the blades.
He looked up at Sadamasa over the crossed weapons.
“You aren’t just an ordinary daimyo,” he said.
Sadamasa stared down at him, his teeth set, his arms straining, the veins at his neck standing. He was putting everything into the push and the thing below him was not moving.
“And you,” he said through his teeth, “are not an ordinary ronin.”
“I am not,” Nathan agreed.
He put more into his hands.
BADAM!
Sadamasa’s feet left the floor. Not high — an inch, two — but the force behind it sent him skidding backward across the throne room in a long scraping arc, his boots fighting for purchase on the smooth boards and finding none, until the back of his legs hit the throne and he went through it, the chair collapsing under his weight, the lacquered wood splitting apart beneath him as he crashed down into it.
He sat in the wreckage of his own throne for a moment.
Then he stood.
He looked at Nathan across the hall — at the dark-haired man who had just sent him through his own seat with a single exchange — and his expression was working through something it hadn’t encountered before. Not rage. Not yet. First the shock had to finish its work.
“Where did Norihiro find someone like you?” he asked.
“Nowhere,” Nathan said. “I’m from the capital. The north.”
Sadamasa’s eyes went wide.
The full implication of that arrived visibly in his face — the north, the capital, everything that word carried about what was watching the south and what was not, about who might have been sent and why and what it meant that they were standing here in this hall right now—
“The north — then you are—”
Nathan kicked him.
The boot connected with Sadamasa’s stomach and the air went out of him in a hard grunt and he went backward through the remaining pieces of the throne, the carved wood splintering further under his weight as he crashed into and through it until his back hit the wall behind the platform and he slid down it.
He sat there for a moment.
Then something changed.
He raised the hammer.
The magic that had been running through him in threads gathered itself and his body responded — the fire spread from the hammer across his arms, across his chest, wrapping him until his entire frame was burning, not consuming but containing, the heat held against his skin and riding along the armor underneath the kimono.
“Then I have no reason to hold back,” he said.
He came off the wall fast.
For a man his size the speed was wrong — the south had made him something beyond what his frame suggested, the magic compounding everything underneath it — and he crossed the throne room in three strides and swung with both arms behind it.
Nathan parried.
The force came through Kyōmei into his wrists and arms and drove his sandals back along the floor, the wood beneath him scoring as he slid, the shockwave of it cracking the boards underfoot.
“Die—!”
The hammer came up and down again immediately, no gap between the two swings, the second carrying even more behind it than the first.
Nathan swung Kyōmei to meet it.
BADOOOM!
The hammer deflected. Sadamasa’s grip lurched, his hands fighting to keep hold of the weapon as it rang from the impact, the fire on it guttering briefly before it restored itself.
He had barely steadied when Kyōmei moved again.
Not another parry — a cut. Downward, fast, the black blade tracing a line across Sadamasa’s chest that opened the outer kimono cleanly from shoulder to hip and sent it falling away in two pieces.
“Kraaah—!”
Underneath, armor.
Not the decorative armor of a noble who wore it for ceremony — working armor, well-crafted, layered, the kind built by someone who understood what hit hard things in the south and had planned accordingly. It gleamed in the fire’s light, black-lacquered plates fitted tightly together, the craftsmanship of the forgery domain that had been producing steel for thirty years applied entirely to the single project of protecting its lord.
Nathan looked at it.
“Celestial rank magic,” he said quietly.
Sadamasa felt the change before he could articulate what the change was — a chill that had no relationship to temperature, arriving down his spine from somewhere above the physical, the instinct of a body that had survived the south by learning to recognize danger before it announced itself and was now recognizing something that did not have a category yet.
Nathan’s eyes were on him.
“Dark Spear,” he said.
He thrust Kyōmei.
BADOOOM!
The armor that Sadamasa had spent years perfecting — the layered plates, the fitted joints, the craftsmanship of three decades of the finest forgery in the south — shattered.
Not dented. Not cracked. Shattered — the plates fragmenting outward from the point of impact, the lacquer and the steel coming apart simultaneously, pieces scattering across the throne room floor in a wide radius as the force behind the thrust went through the armor’s resistance as though the resistance were a suggestion rather than a fact.
Sadamasa left the floor.
He crossed the full length of the throne room through the air and hit the far wall at the height of his shoulders, the stone behind him cratering inward, a web of cracks running outward from the point of impact in every direction. The lamps nearby shook on their hooks.
He stayed against the wall for a moment — held there by the force of the impact settling — before gravity found him and brought him down.
He hit the floor face first.
He lay still.
Then he pushed one hand beneath him and turned himself over, slowly, and blood ran from his mouth when it opened — a long line of it tracing down his chin and dropping to the floor. Across his chest, where the armor had been, a cut ran from one side to the other, not deep but present, the blade’s mark made through the shattered metal beneath.
He looked up.
Nathan was already standing beside him.
He had covered the distance without sound — simply present at Sadamasa’s side now where he had been across the hall a moment before, looking down at him with Kyōmei hanging loose at his side, the darkness seeping from the blade in quiet threads.
Nathan placed his boot against Sadamasa’s side and turned him onto his back with a single push.
He looked down at him.
Sadamasa looked up.
He had seen men broken in the south. He had broken them himself. He had watched strong men find their limit and go past it and he knew what that looked like from both sides.
He had never looked up from this position.
He had never expected to.
Nathan’s black eyes looked down at him not even breaking a sweat.
Sadamasa felt something move through him that thirty years in the lawless south had not once produced.
Fear. Real, clean, foundational fear — not the reactive fear of a sudden threat but the deep fear of a man who has been shown, conclusively, the full distance between where he stands and where the thing above him stands.
“Now,” Nathan said.
He crouched down beside him, bringing his eyes level, Kyōmei resting across his knee with its dark blade catching the fire’s dying light.
“You are going to answer my questions.”


