Chapter 120: The Ghost of Suzu - I Can Easily Defeat SSS Ranks... This World Is Already Mine - NovelsTime

I Can Easily Defeat SSS Ranks... This World Is Already Mine

Chapter 120: The Ghost of Suzu

Author: Knight_Plot
updatedAt: 2025-09-22

CHAPTER 120: THE GHOST OF SUZU

The sun was setting, painting the sky in hues of blood and fire. It was still uncomfortably bright, but I bore it with a kingly stoicism.

I sat on a hastily conjured throne of black stone, watching my dysfunctional family of monsters and legends eat.

Yori, my wise and cunning old strategist, sat beside me, sipping a cup of tea.

"You should join them, my Lord," he said, his voice a quiet, reedy sound. "It is good for a king to share a meal with his people. It builds... camaraderie."

"Camaraderie is for people who aren’t secretly sleeping with two of their top commanders and trying to prevent a civil war," I muttered under my breath. But I knew he was right.

With a sigh that was only slightly dramatic, I stood and walked towards the fire.

I accepted a simple, wooden bowl filled with steaming white rice and a rich, fragrant curry.

The smell was... familiar. A complex, fragrant cloud of spice and warmth that tickled a part of my brain that had been dormant for a long time.

I took a bite.

And the world seemed to stop.

The taste exploded on my tongue. It was rich, savory, with a hint of sweetness and a slow, creeping heat.

It was... delicious.

And with the taste came a flicker of something else.

A ghost of a memory.

A warm kitchen. The sound of a woman humming a tune I couldn’t quite place. A feeling of... safety. Of home.

The memory was gone as quickly as it came, leaving only a strange, hollow ache in my chest where my heart used to be.

I looked at my army.

At Grak and Setanta, who were having a contest to see who could eat the most, a contest that was threatening to cause a localized food shortage.

At Isabelle, who was eating with a quiet, dignified grace, a small, genuine smile on her lips.

At Sarah and Kevin, who were arguing about the proper way to appreciate the "complex bouquet" of the curry.

This was my life now.

This was my home.

This was my family.

And I was, for the first time in a long, long time, content.

The quiet, peaceful moment was, of course, too good to last.

A sudden, frantic flapping of leathery wings cut through the twilight air.

A Giant Bat, one of my most trusted scouts, swooped down from the darkening sky.

It landed on the table in front of me with a clumsy thud, a small, sealed message capsule tied to its leg.

Pixia, ever the efficient aide, took the capsule and opened it with a delicate, precise motion.

She read the small, rolled-up piece of parchment.

Her tiny, academic face went pale.

"My Lord," she whispered, her voice trembling with a fear I had never heard from her before.

"It is a report from our northern scouts."

"It is about the human city."

"It is about a place called Suzu."

The name hung in the air like a death sentence.

Suzu.

It meant nothing to me. It was just a place on a map, another piece of the world I was inevitably going to conquer and probably rename something cool, like "Ragnarville" or "The Glorious Empire of My Magnificent Dick."

But the reaction from my advisors was... unsettling.

Pixia was trembling, her tiny wings a blur of pure, academic terror.

Yori, my wise old strategist, had gone so pale he was almost translucent. The cup of tea in his hand rattled against its saucer.

"Suzu is not a place you can simply conquer, my Lord," Yori whispered, his voice a dry, reedy sound filled with a profound, ancient dread. "It is not a town. It is a fortress. A graveyard of Demon Kings."

I sat back on my stone throne, my bowl of half-eaten curry forgotten. The pleasant, nostalgic warmth was gone, replaced by the familiar, cold thrill of a new challenge.

"Explain," I commanded.

"Suzu is a human stronghold, my Lord," Pixia explained, her voice a high-pitched squeak of statistical horror. "The largest in this entire prefecture. While we were consolidating our power, while we were fighting Gorgon and Alyssa, the humans of Suzu were doing the same. They have not just been defending. They have been... cleansing."

She projected a holographic map into the air. It showed the northern peninsula, my next intended target. It was dotted with small, insignificant red icons, the domains of weak, squabbling Demon Kings.

But in the center of the peninsula, there was a vast, solid block of blue. Human territory.

"They have liberated every single Domain in their territory," Yori said, his voice grim. "They have an army. They have walls. And they have a leader."

"A hero?" I scoffed. "I eat heroes for breakfast. Sometimes literally."

"Not a hero, my Lord," Yori corrected. "Not in the way the System defines them. He is... something else. They call him the Sword King. An old man, a master of a forgotten style of swordsmanship. They say he can cut down a high-level Ogre with a single strike. They say his will is so strong, he can resist the mind-altering effects of a Lilim’s charm."

"A raid boss," I murmured, a slow, predatory smile touching my lips. "I love a good raid boss."

I stood up, the last vestiges of the peaceful feast forgotten. The time for quiet contentment was over. The time for war was back.

"This changes things," I declared, my voice echoing across the now-silent riverside camp. "Our slow, methodical conquest of the north is on hold. We cannot afford to have a fortress of this magnitude at our back."

I looked at my commanders. Their faces were grim, their earlier levity gone, replaced by the sharp, focused attention of predators who have just scented a worthy prey.

"We will focus all our efforts on Suzu," I announced. "We will break their walls. We will shatter their army. And I will personally have a little chat with this so-called ’Sword King’."

But as I looked at the map, at the solid, defiant blue of the human city, a new, unsettling thought pricked at my mind.

Isabelle.

My First Sword. My secret lover. My former hero.

She was from this prefecture.

She had never spoken of her home. Never mentioned her family. My memory-wipe had taken my past. What had her new life taken from her?

I turned to her. She was staring at the map, at the name ’Suzu’, her expression unreadable.

"Isabelle," I said, my voice softer than I intended. "Do you know this place?"

She was silent for a long moment. The firelight danced in her eyes, reflecting a pain I had never seen there before.

"I was born there, my Lord," she said, her voice a quiet, hollow whisper.

The air grew heavy.

My gaze flicked to Chloe, who was watching Isabelle with a new, sharp, and deeply suspicious intensity.

A weakness. A connection to the enemy.

The thought was a cold, sharp blade in the back of my mind.

"My grandfather was the master of a small kendo dojo in the city," Isabelle continued, her voice a monotone, as if she were reading a history report. "He taught me everything I know about the sword."

She looked up at me, her eyes, for the first time since she had sworn loyalty to me, filled with a raw, human vulnerability.

"His name is Sayama Kotetsu," she said.

The name meant nothing to me.

But then, Pixia, who had been frantically cross-referencing data streams, let out a tiny, horrified gasp.

"My Lord," she whispered, her voice trembling. "According to the most recent, high-level hero intelligence reports... that is the name of the Sword King."

The world seemed to stop.

The fire crackled, a lonely sound in the sudden, ringing silence.

Isabelle stared, her face a mask of pure, dawning horror.

The leader of the human resistance, our greatest enemy, the man we were about to march an entire army to kill... was her grandfather.

My perfect, brilliant, and beautifully brutal invasion plan had just become a catastrophic, emotionally charged family reunion.

And I was in the middle of it.

This was a new, fresh, and exquisitely painful kind of hell.

I loved it.

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