Chapter 150: Testing the Law with his New Weapon - Primordial Heir: Nine Stars - NovelsTime

Primordial Heir: Nine Stars

Chapter 150: Testing the Law with his New Weapon

Author: FallenMage
updatedAt: 2025-08-30

CHAPTER 150: TESTING THE LAW WITH HIS NEW WEAPON

The clearing had grown still again, bathed in silver moonlight and cloaked in summer’s warm night air. Nero stood in the center, his breathing finally steady, the sword still resting comfortably against his shoulder. He could have ended his training here, satisfied with the rhythm he had found in pure swordsmanship. But as he looked up at the moon hanging heavy in the heavens, something stirred in him.

A hunger.

His Law.

It was foolish to deny it. The Law of Fire was etched into his very being, a flame that had chosen him—or perhaps a flame he had seized with his own will. No matter the truth, it was part of him now. And though he had sworn not to depend entirely upon it, to forsake it in training would be a denial of his own growth.

Slowly, Nero raised his sword again, pointing its steel edge toward the open sky.

"Let’s see how you dance together," he murmured, his eyes glowing unusually tonight.

Prana welled within him. It flowed from the depths of his main core, spreading through his limbs, his veins, his breath. The air grew heavier, trembling faintly as though the world itself recognized the awakening of something primal. His chest grew warm, then hotter, as his will ignited the Law slumbering within him.

The blade answered.

Fswoosh!

Scarlet sparks crawled across the steel, sizzling in the silence. With every passing second, the flame grew stronger, wrapping the blade in crimson light. A faint heat bled into the clearing, warping the air around him. The moonlight above became hazy, blurred by the waves of rising heat.

Nero grinned faintly. "Good, now let’s test it."

He swung.

The sword cut through the night in a blazing arc, leaving a trail of fire suspended in the air for the briefest of moments before it dissipated. The grass at his feet swayed violently, some blades singed at the edges from the passing heat. The insects scattered from the clearing, their chirps silenced as though fearing the wrath of the flame.

Again, Nero moved.

Step. Slash. Pivot. Thrust.

The same self-taught forms he had practiced earlier now carried with them a ferocity beyond normalcy. Each slash became a blaze, each thrust a piercing ember, each movement a fiery stroke against the canvas of the night. The sword no longer hummed—it roared, its voice that of a beast freed from chains, eager to consum anything in its path if his master ever wished.

The clearing brightened with each strike. Fire trailed in the air, forming fleeting patterns that danced like fiery brushstrokes. Sparks rained from his blade as it clashed against the resistance of his own prana, falling like miniature meteors into the grass. Every swing carved heat into the night, the temperature of the clearing rising steadily until sweat poured freely down his face and chest.

Nero spun, his blade carving a wide circle. Flames exploded outward, a ring of fire racing briefly across the clearing before fading into glowing embers. He stepped through it unflinching, his eyes reflecting the crimson blaze, his body moving in relentless rhythm.

For a moment, it was as though he wasn’t practicing swordsmanship at all.

He was dancing with fire.

His movements grew faster, sharper, as he blended the raw heat of the Law with the precision of his blade. Each slash was not wild flame, but controlled fire—directed, refined, purposeful. His thrusts compressed heat into sharp lines, spearing through the air like fiery lances. His steps left faint traces of glowing footprints, each one vanishing quickly as the grass cooled.

The mountain itself seemed to respond. The cicadas were silent, the trees swayed uneasily as the wind caught fragments of fire, and the stones of the clearing gleamed faintly, their surfaces reflecting the wild red light. Above him, the stars flickered as if struggling to shine against the blaze he conjured.

"Faster," Nero muttered under his breath.

He moved again, pushing harder. His blade carved wider arcs, flames surging higher, brighter. The heat lashed at him, biting his skin, testing his control. He gritted his teeth and pressed forward, his will burning as fiercely as the flames.

This was not just training. It was a trial.

Could he command the fire, or would it consume him?

Nero shifted into a low stance. Prana surged violently, flooding into the sword until the steel glowed red-hot. With a roar, he slashed upward, unleashing a crescent of fire that tore through the air, searing the night sky. It climbed upward before bursting apart in a rain of embers that drifted lazily back to the earth, illuminating the clearing like falling stars.

The sight made his chest tighten—not with fear, but with exhilaration.

His blade trembled faintly in his grip, not from weakness, but from raw power straining to be controlled. Nero steadied himself, tightening his stance, calming his breath. Slowly, he let the prana ease, the flames dwindling until only faint embers clung to the steel.

The clearing was scorched. Grass had burned away in patches, smoke rose faintly from the earth, and the stones glowed faintly warm from the heat. The once-silver clearing now carried the marks of crimson fire, a battlefield painted by his will.

Nero exhaled deeply, lowering his sword. His chest rose and fell heavily, sweat dripping down his chin, but his eyes gleamed fiercely in the moonlight.

The Law of Fire was inherently dangerous, difficult to master completely for normal people, it was why only few selected family despite wielding it were renowned, the Samael family being the sole family to be said to have mastered the Law of Fire to a greater degree. It consumed, it destroyed, it demanded control. But paired with his sword... it was magnificent. Well, he was the inheritor of this Law, given enough time he could control like his limbs, reason why he must keep training to further deepens his understanding of each Law to fully display their potential.

"...Not yet perfect," Nero muttered, tightening his grip once more. "But one day..."

He raised the sword again, eyes fixed on the moon above, its pale silver glow shining down upon his crimson flames.

"One day, even the heavens will bow before my fire."

The words lingered in the night as Nero prepared for another round, his blade trembling with eagerness, the fire within him roaring for release.

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