SSS-Ranked Awakening: I Can Only Summon Mythical Beasts - Chapter 519: Storming The First Base
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- Chapter 519: Storming The First Base

Chapter 519: Storming The First Base
Damien did not rush into the assault.
He prepared.
For two days after the eastern purge, he hunted mana beasts relentlessly — not for himself, but for balance.
Fenrir tore through a pack of armored direstags, their antlers reinforced with condensed mana. Cerbe incinerated a pair of volcanic-backed lizards whose cores burned hot even after death. Damien made sure each kill fed them directly.
If Luton dominated demonic essence, then Fenrir and Cerbe would dominate raw magical purity.
By the end of the second day, Fenrir’s fur shimmered faintly with condensed frost-mana. Cerbe’s flames burned darker — denser.
Balanced.
Only then did Damien allow himself rest.
He found a river bend carved between ancient stones and had Luton produce spices, utensils, and preserved herbs from its Universal Space. He carved thick slabs of meat from a high-grade mana beast he’d slain earlier and skewered them over controlled flame.
The scent filled the air.
For once, he sat.
Not as prey.
Not as hunter.
But as something in between.
He ate slowly, deliberately. He had warm meat, clean water, and the quiet wind by his side.
Tomorrow would not be quiet though.
After the meal, he stood and stretched lightly.
“Summon Skylar.”
Black fire spiraled into existence as the wyvern manifested above him, wings spreading wide and casting a shadow over the riverbank. Its scales shimmered like polished obsidian beneath moonlight.
Grade Three.
And growing.
Damien mounted without ceremony.
“We go east.”
The weakest stronghold.
The one he had already crippled.
The one missing half its soldiers.
Skylar launched into the sky with a thunderous beat of wings.
They flew high.
Higher than Aquila would’ve preferred.
Skylar’s presence alone intimidated most airborne creatures; even those foolish enough to attempt approach retreated quickly once they sensed the wyvern’s aura.
From above, the eastern sector looked… thin.
Mana density fluctuated irregularly.
Damien could almost feel the grid unraveling. As they neared the stronghold, he leaned forward slightly.
“Descend. Quiet.”
Skylar spiraled down through mist and treetops before landing several hundred meters away from the entrance perimeter.
Damien dismounted.
“Cancel summon on Skylar.”
The wyvern vanished into fading embers.
Silence swallowed the forest.
He approached on foot.
Luton rested against his shoulder, calm and steady.
The stronghold came into view.
Bone structures. Carved suppression pillars. Ritual markings etched into bark and stone.
But—
No movement.
Damien slowed.
No patrols.
No perimeter guards.
No demonic presence radiating outward.
His eyes narrowed.
Trap?
It felt wrong.
Even weakened cells kept at least minimal surveillance.
He extended his senses.
Nothing immediate.
No clustered signatures.
No hidden ambushers pulsing behind trees.
Just faint residual demonic essence lingering like stale smoke.
He stepped into the clearing fully.
Still nothing.
The central pit — once active with green flame — was dark.
The suppression anchor near the eastern edge had cracked completely.
Several structures appeared abandoned rather than destroyed.
He crouched and touched the soil.
It was still warm. The residents were not long gone. Maybe hours.
Or maybe a day at most.
They had withdrawn. But why?
He stood slowly. If this was a trap, it was an exceptionally patient one.
He walked toward the largest bone structure — likely the command chamber for the eastern captain.
The entrance was unguarded.
He paused only briefly before stepping inside.
It was both dark and cold.
The air inside carried dense residual essence.
Not chaotic — structured.
As though something important had once stood here.
He scanned the walls whuch was filled with carvings.
They were not random.
He recognized parts of the forest layout within the etchings.
This was not just a camp.
It was a stabilization hub.
And it had been evacuated intentionally.
A faint ripple passed through Luton.
Damien sensed it too.
Not danger.
But absence.
The kind that followed organized retreat.
He stepped further inside.
At the center of the chamber lay a fractured stone disk embedded in the ground.
Ancient.
Not demonic.
Older.
He crouched again.
Hairline cracks spread outward from the center of the disk.
Recent.
He placed his palm lightly against it.
Faint. Very faint.
Something pulsed below. He withdrew his hand.
So… They had not fled randomly.
They had consolidated which meant the eastern captain had likely retreated to join another stronghold.
Smarter than expected.
Damien straightened.
This wasn’t panic retreat.
It was strategic repositioning.
They had decided the eastern node was no longer defensible.
He walked back outside and scanned the forest line again.
Still no movement.
He exhaled slowly.
“If this is a trap,” he murmured, “it’s well executed.”
Luton shifted slightly.
Damien considered possibilities.
If all remaining forces had merged with either the southern basin or the northwestern ridge, then one of those locations now held concentrated power.
Possibly two captains together.
Interesting.
He felt no anxiety.
If anything, this simplified things.
He preferred decisive engagements.
And Luton… he glanced at the slime.
Now Grade Two.
There was no creature in this forest that Luton could not devour.
Unless…
A Grade One existed.
The thought lingered only briefly.
He had not sensed anything remotely that powerful.
And if something like that existed, it would not hide so passively.
Still… he calculated.
If Luton devoured a Grade Two or peak Grade Two entity, it would require time to stabilize before consuming another of equal density.
Perhaps five minutes.
Perhaps more.
He did not know the exact limit.
Which meant he could not rely on rapid chain devouring in a multi-captain engagement.
He would need controlled pacing.
He stepped fully into the center of the clearing.
“This stronghold is finished.”
His gaze shifted toward the southern horizon.
That one.
The basin.
He had felt denser signatures there even before.
If the eastern captain had retreated, that was where it would be.
He turned away from the abandoned hub.
No ambush triggered.
No hidden strike descended not did any delayed trap activate.
Which confirmed something important.
The captains were not reckless. They were reorganizing.
Preparing.
’Good.’ Damien walked away from the ruins without haste.
By abandoning the eastern stronghold, they had admitted weakness.
They had surrendered territory and territory meant suppression. The grid here was broken.
Pressure beneath this region would now shift elsewhere.
He wondered if the captains understood what that meant.
Or if they were too focused on eliminating him to notice the deeper consequences.
As he reached the tree line, he paused briefly and looked back once more at the empty structures.
A faint smile curved across his lips.
“You’re adapting,” he said softly.
“Good.”
Because so was he.
He stepped into the forest shadows and vanished among the trees.
Next was the basin.
And this time, he would not arrive quietly. If they wanted consolidation, he would give them confrontation.


