SSS-Ranked Awakening: I Can Only Summon Mythical Beasts - Chapter 516 516: The Captains Are Priority
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- Chapter 516 516: The Captains Are Priority

The forest did not interfere in what was happening.
It never did.
Not when blood soaked its roots. Not when screams echoed through its ancient trees.
Damien stood over the restrained intelligent demon, his face calm, eyes steady, as Luton tightened its gelatinous hold around the creature’s limbs.
The demon had already tried self-destruction twice.
Both times suppressed.
Both times denied.
“You should have died earlier,” the demon rasped, black blood trickling from the corner of its mouth.
Damien crouched slowly.
“I disagree.”
Without warning, he grabbed one of the thick scales lining the demon’s forearm and dug his fingers beneath it.
The demon’s eye widened.
Then Damien pulled.
The scale tore free with a wet ripping sound, dark blood spraying across the forest floor.
The demon screamed.
Not a battle cry.
Not rage.
Pain.
Raw and unfiltered.
Damien examined the scale briefly before tossing it aside.
“Continue,” he said calmly.
Luton responded instantly.
A thin tendril slipped forward and pressed against the exposed flesh beneath the removed scale. The slime began dissolving it — slowly.
Very slowly.
The demon thrashed violently, but Luton’s Grade Two strength held it immobile.
“You want to know?” it snarled through clenched teeth. “Fine! We were sent!”
Damien did not react.
“Sent by who?” he asked evenly.
The slime dissolved another thin layer of flesh. The demon howled.
“We don’t speak his name!”
Another scale peeled.
Another slow dissolve.
The forest absorbed the sound.
“Your assignment,” Damien pressed.
The demon’s breathing became ragged.
“To stabilize this zone!” it finally barked. “That was our directive!”
Damien paused.
“Define stabilize.”
The demon hesitated.
Luton tightened slightly.
“We maintain essence flow!” it snapped. “We anchor suppression nodes! We ensure pressure doesn’t rupture prematurely!”
Damien’s eyes narrowed slightly.
“Pressure.”
“Yes!” the demon spat. “You think this forest is wild chaos? It is contained! Structured! Bound!”
Damien grabbed another scale and ripped it off deliberately.
“By you?”
“By design!” the demon screamed.
Luton consumed a strip of muscle from the exposed arm.
The demon convulsed.
“We were assigned to eliminate a threat!” it gasped. “And prevent the rise of another!”
Damien’s movements stopped for the first time.
“Eliminate a threat.”
Its eye locked onto him.
“Yes.”
Silence stretched.
Damien did not need clarification.
The threat was him.
He felt no shock.
No anger.
Just confirmation. From the very first demon he’d slain, he knew it was him. The threat they were here to eliminate had to be him. The first demon said it was a human.
“And the other?” he asked quietly. “The one you must prevent from rising.”
The demon’s expression shifted.
Fear.
Genuine fear.
Another tendril pressed against its chest.
“Something below must not awaken,” it whispered hoarsely.
The forest seemed to still.
“Below where?” Damien asked.
“Beneath the roots… beneath the old stone…” the demon muttered. “There are chambers… older than our kind… older than yours…”
Damien’s mind sharpened.
Ancient stone.
Seals.
Pressure points.
“And you maintain these?” he asked.
“Not exactly but in a way, yes!”
The demon coughed blood.
“If the stabilizers fall, the suppression weakens.”
Damien leaned slightly closer.
“What awakens?”
The demon’s jaw trembled.
“We do not know.”
That answer felt honest.
“We were told only this — the seal must not break before the appointed convergence.”
Convergence.
Another unfamiliar term.
Damien peeled another scale, slower this time.
The demon screamed until its voice cracked.
“You said you were assigned,” Damien said. “Assigned by rank.”
“Yes…”
“What ranks exist here?”
The demon hesitated again.
Luton began dissolving flesh along its shoulder.
“Soldiers!” it shouted. “And Captains!”
“How many captains?”
“Three!”
Damien stilled.
“Three captains in this forest.”
“Yes! Stronger than us! Commanders of strongholds!”
“Locations.”
The demon’s eye flickered with something like defiance.
Damien’s hand drove forward, piercing through its thigh muscle with brutal precision.
The demon shrieked.
“Northwest ridge!” it gasped. “Deep southern basin! And beneath the hollowed stone grove in the east!”
Strongholds.
Structured.
Commanded.
“So you are soldiers,” Damien said flatly.
“Yes…”
“And the captains?”
“They oversee suppression grids! They ensure stabilization integrity! They monitor essence fluctuations!”
Essence fluctuations.
Like when he killed the previous commander.
Like the pulse he felt underground.
Damien withdrew his hand from the demon’s leg.
“You said there are others like you.”
“Yes.”
“How many soldiers?”
“Variable,” it rasped. “Reinforcements rotate when numbers fall.”
Damien’s eyes sharpened.
“When numbers fall.”
The demon began laughing weakly despite its injuries.
“You’ve already reduced the eastern cell. They know.”
Good.
“Who commands the captains?” Damien asked.
The demon’s breathing slowed.
“Above captain rank… are Overseers.”
Damien said nothing.
“They do not reside here.”
“Where?”
Silence.
Luton began dissolving the exposed muscle along the demon’s ribcage.
The scream this time was shorter.
More broken.
“I do not know!” it cried. “We receive directives through essence imprint!”
Damien studied it carefully.
That, too, felt genuine.
He stood slowly.
The demon sagged in Luton’s hold, mutilated but alive.
“You said you were sent to eliminate a threat,” Damien said.
“Yes…”
“That threat is me.”
The demon’s eye widened.
“You… are the anomaly.”
“And the other threat? The one below?”
“It is not a threat to us,” the demon whispered. “It is a threat to everything.”
Silence settled heavily between them.
Damien’s thoughts moved rapidly now.
Three captains.
Suppression grids.
Seals beneath ancient stone.
A convergence event.
And something sealed below the forest floor that even demons feared awakening too early.
He had assumed he was simply clearing hostile territory.
Instead, he had been dismantling a containment structure.
The demon coughed again, weaker now.
“If the captains fall… the grid fractures…”
Damien crouched once more.
“And then?”
The demon’s cracked lips twitched.
“It wakes.”
Damien studied the creature for a long moment.
Then he nodded slightly.
“That will be all.”
The demon’s eye sharpened suddenly.
“You— you think you are powerful?” it rasped. “You are accelerating what you cannot survive.”
Damien’s gaze remained unreadable.
“Perhaps.”
He stepped back.
“Luton.”
The slime responded instantly.
It engulfed the demon entirely this time — no restraint, no measured dissolving.
Just complete consumption.
The creature’s final scream was muffled and brief.
Moments later, silence returned.
Luton’s body pulsed once — satisfied — before producing the dense black essence core within its translucent form.
Damien stared at it.
A soldier.
One of many.
Three captains remain.
He turned slowly toward the deeper forest.
He knew the threat they were sent to eliminate was him.
That much was obvious.
Which meant the captains would not ignore him much longer.
But the other directive…
Prevent the rise of another.
Something below must not awaken. And by killing the stabilizers, hewas weakening suppression.
Damien exhaled slowly.
He should stop. He should reconsider.
He should investigate before proceeding further.
Instead, a faint smile formed on his lips.
“If they’re maintaining a seal,” he murmured, “then the captains are priority.”
Because if something ancient was buried beneath Twin Disasters…
Then he would rather face it on his terms.
Not theirs.
He turned and began walking deeper into the forest.
The purge was no longer just about dominance.
It was about control.
And if there truly were three captains holding this place together then he would dismantle them.
One by one.
Far beneath the forest floor, cracks invisible to mortal sight widened slightly.


