Chapter 680
There was a presumption that the Gates of the Earth had based their sect name off of whatever sect Aoibhin had stolen her cultivation from. Presumably, something with heaven in the name- but the alliance wasnt familiar with every sect from the Trigold Cluster. It could also be rted how it was meant to funnel attackers to that sect- but the formations were only capable of directing people following the tides of the world, who were limited in how they could approach a system and itss. When bringing ships or people capable of fully independent interster travel, their formations had simply done nothing to redirect anyone.
But they were still an obstacle that needed to be ovee to win the war- as if anyone could actually <em>win</em> a war. In reality, both sides would lose, unless one side was a dominant attacker only interested in extracting resources. They could certainly consider that they won wars.
General Gabri looked down on the sect once more. She hadnt set out with the intention of fighting Aoibhin, but ever since the first battle with the Independence it seemed like Ruterras ships would eventually be the best suited for the cause. Now they had experience- and adapted shields. Of course, Aoibhin would be attempting her own ways to ovee their defenses. But could one person outpace a fleet? Certainly, Gabri expected a wily cultivator toe up with a technique given ten years, or even a single year. But a matter of busy weeks and months? It would be much more difficult. Especially if Transferral truly limited learning or developing new techniques. But supposing she <em>did</em>e up with a counter, Gabri had cultivators from Weos and Ceretos among the fleet as well.
The opening assault was a series of shots from the main cannons of the Wayfarer, starting all the way up in the high atmosphere. They also employed specially made kic projectiles for the project- basically just durable lumps of metal that would survive reentry so they could impact with the momentum of the cannons that shot them plus that from gravity. Drag limited the absolute energy they could arrive with at a certain size, but they were rtively efficient to fire.
The barriers of the sect had faced a simr barrage before- minus their new patched-on cannons. But they had been broken through before, and they hadnt yet been brought back to their full potential. By the time the shorter range ships were in ce, the barrier had nearly copsed.
Sensors picking up Aoibhins energy signature, informed one of the operators.
Good. Shes more important than some fancy buildings, Gabri said. Neven-
Were on it, came the reply from the lead gunner.
Sometimes Gabri wondered if her position mattered- but even if the various positions on the ship were capable of acting independently to great effect, someone had to be guiding their core vision. She wasnt any worse than the other choices, so just because she couldnt break a mountain in half with her bare hands didnt mean she wasnt useful. And she wasnt weak enough to be <em>easily</em> assassinated, so at least she had that going for her.
Those thoughts upied her for a few moments because she had no important information to request or orders to give. She watched sensors piped through to her screen, rying not a visual image of the battlefield but one more focused on natural energy. Distance and atmospheric scanning made visual targeting at such a distance almost useless.
Aoibhin danced around the battlefield like usual. It was frustrating how wounds never seemed to stick long on her- though perhaps she was consuming a great quantity of medicine or had simply looked more wounded. It didnt matter much because she was supposed to die today. That might depend on whether or not Otakar showed up, but making him fight after thest incident might be a victory. Could he still destroy the Wayfarer by himself? Probably. But it waspletely certain he was seriously wounded or he would have doubled back to take them out during thest incident. And Anton shouldnt be dead. But he also couldnt be expected toe to anyones aid at the current time.
Fast weapons were the key for Aoibhin. Tightly controlledsers swiveling, ultra high velocity small arms, and the like. That included small ships, though they had to fly in particr formations to shoot at a human sized target while not getting in each others lines of fire. Aoibhin jumped from ships to ship- but not all of them were destroyed in a single blow, or even at all. They had the maximum amount of data, adapting their shields to her lightning energy as well as her unattributed energy. Only brute force could ovee that, and she couldnt keep it up forever. Gabri didnt <em>want</em> to sacrifice people to wear her down, so she was pleased when Aoibhin made the determination that there were too many ships to handle and came for them.
It was a reasonable decision. Last time theyd met, Otakar had nearly melted the ship in half. The Wayfarers barriers were <em>mostly</em> intact, but there was still significant structural damage. If she could find a weak point, she might be able to destroy it.
With each sh of movement, Aoibhin covered kilometers of distance, zig-zagging back and forth to avoid iing fire. Then, her spear lit up pretty much every warning sensor, even the ones focused in other directions. Gabr had no time to react to the attack, not that she could have given useful orders. Anyone focused on augmenting the barrier was already paying attention to that.
Aoibhin rebounded off the barrier, but Gabri saw that the defensive capacity had dropped by a good twenty percent. It was entirely possible she would break through on the next blow, if she targeted a weak point- and there were ships from Ekict joining the battle properly. The ships came from the Gates of the Earth as well as other nearby locations.
Gabri wasnt sure what she could do. Yelling kill her would <em>at best</em> distract people. They were already trying that. Maybe she could provide her energy somewhere. Wheres the barrier weakest? Gabr asked.
Near the new construction, came the report.
Gabri nodded, picking up a headset. Im going to lend my energy to the generators there.
Fortunately, very few people were actually moving around inside the ship, so she could run down the corridors with ease. Likewise, while the ship was quiterge it was still a practical size- there werent long hallways for no reason. She was still a Life Transformation cultivator, and a soldier trained to run. It didnt take long to approach her destination, and Aoibhin couldnt repeat the same sort of attacks in an instant. So it seemed, at least.
Just as she was about to reach the generator, Gabri heard a creaking. She looked to see an open section of ship- mostly just the internal skeleton of the ship where hull had burned away. She felt Aoibhin battering the barrier just outside.
She wasnt quite sure why her instincts told her to head towards the skeletal structure, but she followed them. Another creaking, and she at least found <em>a</em> reason. The barrier was supposed to mitigate the impact over arger surface without impacting the physical structure of the ship below. Maybe it was failing, or energy was passing though. Either way, part of the hull was trembling and if it fell apart, the delicate repairs to the formations might copse, leaving the barrier open or at least severely weakened.
Gabri leapt onto a steel beam, crouching down to hold onto it with both hands. From there, she extended her energy to protect its structure as much as she could. She could feel damage. Perhaps some had remained from previous battles and been missed, or it was failing due to some other factor. Either way, this piece of the ship sorely needed help.
The ship trembled. Gabri looked Aoibhin directly in the eye- nothing stood between her and Gabris internal position. Dangerous. But, if she got inside the ship everything was pretty much over anyway. They had a good crew, but not one that could realistically take down Aoibhin. Especially since the vast majority of the ships weapons were externally oriented.
Aoibhin struck again, the same heavier charge she had done before. Gabri saw her impact the barrier, but instead of it smashing apart it <em>stretched</em> inward. Someone in the nearby generator was going all out with their techniques. Impressive. Sadly, even the barrier stretching couldnt prevent it from being broken through, and it snapped apart, most of it springing back into ce with Aoibhin inside, spear held aloft. Gabri already had her rifle off her back.
Gabri took a shot just as Aoibhin began to move, holding the beam steady on the target that simply didnt care about her augmented energy attack. Then a dozensers converged on her in perfect sync- or more specifically her spear. It was the sort of coordination that was only possible byputer- or a single individual controlling multiple things.
There was only a sh. mes. Then Aoibhin hit Gabri directly in the chest- despite her attempt to dodge. She was sent flying backward, mming into a curving beam. She wasnt sure if her back was damaged more, or the beam. Neither was quite right, though.
But as far as Gabri could tell without looking down and taking her eyes off of her opponent, she didnt have a spear-sized hole in her chest. Or worse. As for why, the attack had felt a lot more blunt. It had properly spread out on her defensive energy.
Aoibhin was on fire. And the head of her spear was gone. Yet at no point did thesers- meant for fighting Essence Collection or lower individuals- stop tracking her. Even as she weaved her way around the internal structure, beams swapped with other beams as she left certain ranges and came into line of sight of others. All the while, Gabri could feel the hand of Neven.
Had he really destroyed the head of her spear in an instant? Melted it? Where did he even find the time to gain that inspiration? She knew hed talked about Otakars fire, but it was a quick turnaround.
Gabri did her best to track Aoibhin with her own weapon without destroying any of the exposed structure- but Aoibhin didnt try to kill her. Instead, she was attempting to escape. Because the barrier was attuned to her energy, it also wasnt going to let her out. Not easily.
General, a sound came in her headset. We have iing.
Of course there were iing. They were in a battle. What could she possibly need to be- oh. There he was, then. Too bad they hadnt yet killed Aoibhin.
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One arm carefully stretched forward, then the other. Anton moved them side to side, checking to make sure he wasnt straining his already damaged muscles and bone structure. With a little more practice, he thought he would be functional. Enough to rejoin the war. He was a sniper anyway, so he really should have never allowed himself to get so directly involved with Otakar. On the other hand, he was alive- and the same wouldnt necessarily have been the case even if they leveraged arger portion ofbat power. Perhaps Anton had been the right matchup, or he was just lucky. Apparently even his connection to the sun had been insufficient. But if he could straightforwardly beat an Augmentation cultivator- one fully adapted to natural energy instead of one from the upper realms that was basically in a desert of energy- then he would already <em>be</em> an Augmentation cultivator. And Anton knew he was at least five or ten ranks short. Or nine, if prime numbers still continued to fit the One Hundred Stars. He would have to decide that for himself, since no one had tread this path ahead of him.
He also continued to study the conduit. His gut reaction was that it was wrong, but ultimately he couldnt make that judgment. It was <em>different</em> from his connection, but he couldnt say it was worse than his own. He didnt quite understand how it worked, only that it seemed to feed energy to Otakar. At a steady flow, at first slow and now somewhat heightened.
At least, it had only been those two specific levels until this very moment. But then he felt a sudden change. Having carefully studied it, Anton made a decision. If he thought he could destroy the conduit, he would have done so. However, there was no <em>structure</em> there. Only a flow. He felt the flow ramp up once more, and readied himself. Was Otakar participating in a battle? What else would cause such a change? The flow was still steady. Perhaps it would remain that way. Or perhaps he was merely moving <em>towards</em> a battle.
Patience. He would wait until he was certain Otakar was <em>in</em> a battle, or he might ruin a singr opportunity. He was quite certain he could disrupt the flow- but not if he could keep it that way. He waited. It felt like a century, but was perhaps only minutes. Steady and smooth. Should he just? No. Not yet.
Then, it came. A spike in the pull. Anton reached out, directing the suns energy away, trying to pull back. He immediately understood he was having an effect, as he wrestled with this power. Then the spike faded. Whatever he had been doing was done.
Anton sighed. Just those few moments were exhausting but while he couldnt say hed <em>won</em> that exchange, he also hadnt lost either. He could repeat his efforts in the future, he was certain. But should he wait? Could he do it from away from the star?
For the moment he would wait, until such a time as he felt therger flow dropping, perhaps signaling the end of a battle.