I Only Summon Villainesses - Chapter 204: Clash of Titans

Chapter 204: Clash of Titans
Over the vast and seemingly endless dunes on the far side of the town, two figures clashed in a cold spray of pale blue light and white radiance. The desert had become their arena, the sky their ceiling, and every grain of sand a witness to powers that should not have been wielded so freely.
One was a tall, full-figured woman wearing what looked like an overflowing dark-blue dress with cloud patterns rippling across its surface. Her considerable frame carried her tremendous breasts naturally, her body built with the kind of generous proportions that made such abundance seem inevitable rather than unusual. Her every movement spoke of ages spent growing stronger, perfecting the art of her own devastation. She moved in clean synchronization with her garments, every gesture precise despite her size. Even her breasts, when they swayed with her movements, seemed to beat the air into submission.
Silver hair cascaded around white foxy ears that sprouted from her skull. Three tails extended from behind her, curling around one another as if commanding the wind itself to obey.
She landed on the dunes and the entire desert trembled. Sand scattered in waves radiating outward from the impact. Her claws extended as she curved her hands into weapons, each nail catching the light like polished blades. Her tails spun behind her, and her stance made it abundantly clear she was ready to strike.
Her opponent presented a stark contrast. Where the first woman ran warm-toned and voluptuous, this one was pale as bleached bone. Glowing floral tattoos coiled along her arms and body like living ink, pulsing with spectral light that seemed to breathe with her. Long black hair fell in straight strands and braids, heavy and disciplined, framing a face that remained eerily calm.
She wore layered wrappings of dark, fitted armor at the waist and hips, bound with cords and beads in overlapping patterns that spoke of ritual as much as function.
She held a katana glowing with blue ghastly light. Her eyes glowed as well, reflecting something not entirely human lurking behind them.
“How presumptuous,” the massive lady said, a dark smile spreading across her face, “that you think that fragile blade can stop me.”
The thin lady’s response came without hesitation.
“I’ve stopped you before. And I can do it again.”
The fox woman threw her head back and laughed, voracious and unrestrained, the sound rolling across the desert like distant thunder. Her enormous breasts shook like two mountains caught in an earthquake.
Then her expression shifted. Ruthless. Settled into something cold and merciless.
“You wretch.”
She moved. So did her opponent.
As the thin woman surged forward, three more swords materialized behind her, each one glowing with that same ghostly light. They moved in perfect synchronization with her main blade, trailing her like predators following the hunt. As the two ladies clashed, steel singing against claw, the trailing swords changed direction sharply, as if guided by an invisible hand with its own intentions.
They lashed at the fox woman from the side.
Her tails swung in response, and a ferocious wind blasted the spectral blades off their attack trajectory. The displaced air screamed past with enough force to strip bark from trees, had any trees been foolish enough to grow in this wasteland.
The dunes scattered as they fought. The atmosphere suffered for it. The pressure they exerted with each onslaught caused the air itself to grow heavy and thick, difficult to breathe even from a distance. And when they collided with force, the weighted atmosphere collapsed to the ground and carved a colossal groove into the desert floor. Sand turned to glass in places where their energies concentrated.
The violence of their clash sent sand spraying across the landscape in great plumes that blotted out the horizon. The settlement beyond the dunes stood at risk of burial, its citizens unknowing of how close they stood to oblivion.
Both of them continued to fight like pillars of wind slamming against the storms of the sky. They were armed not just with ferocious power but with a will that shook the earth, a pressure that terrified the very elements of the world. The clouds above twisted in response to their battle, forming spirals centered on their clash.
It would not have been an understatement to say that the desert itself feared for its own dear life.
They tore apart from each other, flying back across kilometers as easily as most people would hop a single step. Each of them landed at a great distance from the other, yet they saw each other clearly, as if no distance existed between predator and prey.
They were breathing heavily now.
The fox woman straightened, rolling her shoulders. Irritation creased her brow, pulling at the corners of her mouth. She looked like someone who needed to be somewhere else, but found herself held in place by an opponent who refused to be convenient about dying.
The thin lady stood with no expression on her face. Calm. Indifferent. As if the exertion meant nothing to her, as if she could continue this for hours.
The fox woman scoffed, her voice carrying effortlessly across several kilometers of empty sand.
“And what? What do you want from this? What does that man have to offer you? I could give you double.”
“He offers me nothing.” The thin lady paused, considering her words with the same precision she applied to her blade. Then added: “Actually, he offers me chances like this. Chances to tear down vile sluts like you.”
“Vile?” The fox woman scoffed again, the sound dripping with theatrical offense. “Goodness, I merely want to attain immortality. The Warlord you worshipped did it too, but I’m not allowed to?”
“I don’t care what you want to attain.” The thin lady’s voice remained flat, factual, as though discussing the weather rather than genocide. “But if you are left alone, you will kill half the population of the continent at this rate.”
The fox woman laughed again, throwing her arms wide as if to embrace the accusation.
“Oh my, oh my. You really are a child, aren’t you? Medo, that man thoroughly sowed the seeds in you.” She spat in irritation, the gesture somehow elegant despite its crudeness. “I’m so sick and tired of seeing everyone controlled by one thing or another. What is it with you humans? Aren’t you even supposed to be an elf? I thought your lot was blessed by the wisdom of that damn tree.” Her lip curled with disgust. “Look at you. You hide yourself on his orders, forsake your identity, all for what? A man who can’t even satisfy your womanly needs.”
The thin lady’s face reddened for a moment. She exhaled slowly, visibly releasing the heat that had crept into her cheeks.
“I see you continue to prove yourself vile over and over again. You speak as though you’re any different from others.” Her voice remained steady despite the flush, controlled despite the provocation. “No matter how many of your tails you try to awaken. No matter the height you try to reach. You’re still cursed with a hole that can never be satiated.”
The fox woman’s teeth clenched with enough force to crush stone beneath them.
Both of them lunged.
However, both pairs of eyes widened mid-flight as they registered another presence entering the battlefield.
A lone figure wearing a dark jagged armor and holding a greatsword over her shoulder, stood in the middle of the desert, positioned directly between their trajectories. Her crimson hair flowing behind her in a wind that seemed to answer to her alone.


