Chapter 228 – The Gate of Leviathans - Elven Invasion - NovelsTime

Elven Invasion

Chapter 228 – The Gate of Leviathans

Author: Respro
updatedAt: 2026-01-27

The sea boiled. The Second Gate, shimmering like a silver wound in the sky, widened with each pulse of blinding lunar light. It twisted the South Pacific horizon, dragging clouds into its orbit like a black hole.

From across fleets and armies, humans and elves alike ceased their fighting for a heartbeat. Even cannons, jets, and magic stilled, all eyes locked on the anomaly above the waves.

And then the sound came.

A hollow, abyssal moan rolled across the ocean. It was neither thunder nor storm, but the mournful groan of something ancient being forced into the world. The water beneath the gate began to rise unnaturally, as if a mountain of the deep was rising to greet the sky.

POV 1: DYUG’S PERSPECTIVE

Dyug von Forestia, son of Queen Elara, clung to the railing of the battered flagship that had survived only by his own magic in the previous battle. His silver hair whipped in the gale that howled from the Gate. His body, still frail from wounds, trembled—not from pain, but from awe.

“Mother… what have you done?” he whispered.

Around him, elven captains and surviving knights stared upward, their faces lit by silver fire. Some wept, some prayed, some roared in triumph.

The Gate widened again, and from its light emerged the first silhouette: a beast the size of a city block, scaled and plated like an armored god. A leviathan from Forestia’s oceans, summoned across worlds by Elara’s command.

Its roar tore across the battlefield, so loud it rattled Dyug’s bones.

The young prince felt both pride and terror. He had sought glory to prove himself to the Empire and to Mary, but how could his deeds matter when his mother commanded powers that bent the laws of reality? His knuckles whitened on the railing.

If she can call forth monsters from the abyss, what need has she of me?

POV 2: MARY’S PERSPECTIVE

Mary’s Sun Knights, perched on enchanted skiffs across the waves, faltered as the leviathan’s head rose from the foam. Its golden eyes burned like miniature suns. A single sweep of its tail sent a wall of water crashing over a squadron of Chinese destroyers, capsizing them like toys.

“Knights!” Mary shouted, her voice carrying with the force of magic. “Steady yourselves! This is not the end—it is the beginning!”

Her words steadied them, though doubt flickered in their eyes. She could not show fear. She had chosen to fight under Elara’s banner for Dyug’s sake, and her resolve would not waver now.

Yet in her heart, she feared this new path. The leviathan was not an ally; it was a weapon barely leashed. She remembered Dyug’s gentle smile, his earnest dreams, his desire to make his mother proud. What would become of those dreams if the war turned into a storm of monsters no one could control?

She raised her sword high, sunlight dancing across its edge. “With Luna’s blessing, we ride the tide! Forward!”

Her knights roared in answer, charging toward the chaos with spears of flame and light.

POV 3: REINA MORALES’ PERSPECTIVE

Aboard the USS Independence, Admiral Reina Morales clenched her fists until her knuckles turned white. The leviathan’s arrival had thrown the entire Pacific command structure into disarray. Radios screamed with panicked chatter:

“This thing’s bigger than anything we’ve faced!”

“Do we have authorization for nukes?!”

“All squadrons regroup! Keep firing!”

“Silence that chatter,” Morales barked.

Her staff obeyed, but their faces were pale.

She stared at the Gate, now birthing a second shape—this one serpentine, wings unfurling with a span wider than a carrier deck. Her mind raced. The United Nations council had not yet authorized nuclear escalation, but every instinct in her screamed they had already crossed the threshold.

If they waited, these leviathans would crush fleets, topple cities, and shatter nations.

“Prepare the codes,” she said quietly. “If Washington doesn’t authorize, we may have to act anyway.”

Her second-in-command stiffened. “Admiral… you mean to break protocol?”

Morales didn’t flinch. “If humanity waits for consensus, we’ll drown before we decide to swim. Get me the strike package.”

Her order was met with grim silence. The weight of responsibility pressed against her chest, heavier than any enemy. She thought of her daughter back in San Diego, and her voice hardened.

If these creatures reach the mainland, she’ll never know peace again.

POV 4: QUEEN ELARA’S PERSPECTIVE

Far across the dimensional veil, Queen Elara of Forestia stood at the apex of the Moonlit Spire, her arms raised to the night sky. Silver light poured from her palms, feeding the Gate that now bridged worlds. Her voice sang with ancient incantations, each word resonating with Luna’s divine pulse.

She saw through the Gate as though gazing from heaven itself, watching her leviathans stride into Earth’s waters. She laughed, her beauty terrible, her pride unshaken.

“At last, the tide has turned,” she murmured. “The humans thought their machines could rival the children of Luna. Now they will know despair.”

Her advisors knelt behind her, their heads bowed. But among them, whispers of doubt already stirred. Could even their Queen bind such titans for long? Were they weapons of conquest, or omens of catastrophe?

Elara dismissed their fears. She had sacrificed much—her empire’s resources, her own bloodline, even Dyug—to ensure Forestia’s survival. She would not falter. The leviathans were proof that Luna favored her above all.

“Forward, my children,” she whispered across the veil. “Crush them. Break them. Make Earth tremble before the Elven Empire.”

POV 5: THE TITAN’S PERSPECTIVE

The first leviathan’s thoughts were slow, vast, alien. It had slumbered in the deepest trenches of Forestia’s oceans for millennia, dreaming of endless dark. Now it had been torn across the veil, its slumber shattered.

It felt hunger. Rage.

Chains of lunar magic bound its will, forcing obedience. Yet deep within its core, resentment stirred. The elves were small. Fragile. Not fit to command its kind.

As it crushed another destroyer beneath its bulk, it wondered—not if—but when the bindings would weaken.

And when they did, the seas themselves would drown in blood.

FINAL POV: THE ESCALATION

The battlefield dissolved into chaos.

Jets from America, China, Japan, and India swarmed the leviathans, unleashing missiles and cannon fire. Explosions dotted the sky, but the creatures shrugged off the assault as though stung by insects.

Elven Sun Knights rode beams of light across the waves, slashing apart fighters with spears of fire. Lunar Priestesses sang from their barges, weaving spells that cloaked ships and silenced comms.

Human destroyers and submarines fired in desperate volleys. One lucky torpedo tore into the side of the winged serpent, making it shriek in fury—but it did not fall. Instead, it dove beneath the waves, sending up whirlpools that swallowed frigates whole.

Dyug, watching from his ship, felt his throat tighten. Pride warred with dread. His mother’s power was undeniable, but could she truly control such forces? And if she could not, what would become of them all?

Mary, standing on the prow of her skiff, cut down a flight of drones with a sweep of her blade, but her eyes never left Dyug across the waves. She prayed silently: Hold fast, my prince. Survive this storm.

And in the command room of the Independence, Reina Morales made her choice.

“Transmit to Pacific Command,” she said coldly. “Authorization code: Black Ice. Prepare tactical nuclear launch.”

Her officers froze. The room filled with silence heavy enough to break bones.

But Morales did not waver.

If humanity was to endure, the ocean would burn.

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