I Enslaved The Goddess Who Summoned Me

Chapter 390 - 390: Alexandria's conquered (1)

In the heart of Alexandria, the situation was beginning to spiral beyond control. Chaos didn’t erupt from blades clashing or siege weapons thundering—it was far more insidious, far more unnerving. The wails and anguished screams that echoed through the cobbled streets of the ancient city were not the cries of people under attack, but rather of civilians caught in the merciless currents of war, collateral in a game played by rulers and kings.

And yet, no enemy swords had been raised against them.

Not a single spear had been pointed at the people. No torches were hurled, no homes intentionally burned by either side. Cleopatra, Amun Ra’s luminous queen-in-waiting, had issued an uncompromising command: not one soldier—neither Roman nor Egyptian—was to harm her people. Not even Caesar, her formidable Roman ally, dared defy it.

She was beloved by the people. Adored, worshipped even. Their faith in her had not wavered, even after her exile. Cleopatra was not merely a queen to them—she was their future Pharaoh, their symbol of Amun Ra’s pride and defiance. It was unthinkable for her to allow any blood of her subjects to be spilled. But the cruel irony of war is that even without intention, destruction finds its way.

The military presence in Alexandria—mighty Roman legions marching through narrow alleys, the weight of Amun Ra civil tensions simmering just beneath the surface—had created a storm of unrest. Commerce had stalled, homes were deserted, and fear coiled tightly around every heart. The disruption itself became a weapon.

And that weapon had been wielded by none other than Pothinus.

The cunning regent, once a close observer of Cleopatra’s rise, had underestimated her only once. He had believed that once dethroned and cast aside, she would retreat into obscurity—bitter perhaps, but harmless. He could not have foreseen the boldness that lay coiled behind her intellect. He could not have imagined she would return with a Roman fleet at her back and none other than Julius Caesar at her side.

It had been a staggering blow to his pride and his plans. But Pothinus was no fool. He studied his enemy, and what he saw was not just a queen with ambition, but a woman whose true strength lay not in armies or gold—but in the unwavering devotion of her people.

So he hatched a plan. A cold, calculating scheme: use the very people she cherished as tools against her.

If their suffering could not break her, perhaps it could slow her down.

And the plan worked—at least in part.

Cleopatra, moved by duty and affection, had ordered immediate relief for any of her citizens caught in the chaos. Makeshift clinics were set up, injured civilians were pulled from rubble, given food and care, often at the expense of her own soldiers’ lives. The move only deepened her people’s admiration for her—but it sowed quiet discord among her allies.

Notably, Octavius—young, proud, and fiercely loyal to Caesar—watched the unfolding events with clenched fists and narrowed eyes. The sight of Roman soldiers bleeding, dying, and sacrificing themselves for Alexandrians—people he considered foreign and unworthy of Roman valor—gnawed at him.

But he held his tongue.

For now, he remained silent, watching from the shadows like a wolf waiting for weakness. He didn’t trust Cleopatra, not truly. And even less so, he distrusted the man she had brought into her inner circle—Septimius. There was something unsettling about that man, something unreadable.

“Caesar, we have completely surrounded the castle,” reported Octavius.

Julius Caesar sat high on his towering, coal-black warhorse, the beast’s breath curling in the morning chill. His armor shimmered under the pale sun, polished bronze plates etched with scenes of past triumphs. But it was not the armor that gleamed the brightest—it was the expression of cold satisfaction on his face as he gazed upon the golden fortress before him.

A city of dreams, carved in hubris and gold, now stood moments from collapse.

The castle glistened in the horizon like a beacon of divine craftsmanship. Its towers, capped with sun-kissed domes, shimmered with opulence. Every stone seemed to bleed wealth, its very walls whispering the legacy of dynasties past. It was a sight that might inspire awe in any man—except Caesar. To him, it was a prize, a monument soon to be bent under the weight of Roman steel.

From the outside, peace lingered—like the silence before a storm. The gates stood tall, dignified and still, but within, chaos had already begun to unfurl. His legionaries had infiltrated the inner sanctum. Every hallway echoed with the clash of swords, the screams of resistance crushed beneath the boots of imperial order. All escape routes were severed. No corridors left to run. No secret doors to slip through unnoticed.

And soon, very soon, Pharaoh Ptolemy himself would be dragged before him in chains. And if fortune favored him further, the grand jewel ofAlexandria—would fall next, a seamless conquest wrapped in the red silk of war.

But the word seamless suddenly rang hollow.

A disturbance had crept into the chessboard he believed he had mastered.

Caesar turned his gaze to the west, to where the majestic Pharos of Alexandria had once stood tall, a sentinel of light guiding the wayward home.

It had been demolished by his order—a calculated move to break the spirit of resistance. Yet, what followed had not been part of his designs.

From the ashes of the lighthouse, something else had emerged.

A spiral of darkness—vast and unnatural—had torn through the sky like a wound in the world. Out of that rift, a presence had slithered into being, neither man nor god, but something far worse. He had only glimpsed it—a silhouette barely visible through the veil of shadow—but the sheer force of its aura had sent a rare shiver down his seasoned spine.

Septimius had stood in its path, drawn by fate or foolishness. Caesar had watched as his general confronted the entity. And then—nothing. No sound. No scream. Only absence. The two vanished into the swirling darkness, swallowed like stones into an abyss.

The vortex still lingered, pulsing ominously like a heartbeat from beyond the world.

This… was not part of the plan.

Caesar’s triumphant smirk faltered ever so slightly. He grunted, forcing the unease down into the pit of his stomach, where it could not be seen, where it could not grow.

“Marcus,” he commanded, voice sharp as a dagger’s edge, “bring me Ptolemy.”

Marcus Antonius, standing not far behind, cracked a savage grin. Action. Finally.

Without a word, he spurred his steed forward and entered the castle like a storm clothed in bronze. His reputation preceded him, and the moment his form appeared in the inner corridors, terror rippled through the defenders.

To see Marcus Antonius was to witness a lion let loose among lambs.

He carved through the opposition with terrifying ease. One swing of his blade, and men were cleaved in two, their cries lost beneath the sound of his advance. Stone walls, blood-slicked now, trembled under the force of his battle cry.

“BRING ME PTOLEMY!!”

The shout echoed through the golden halls, shaking chandeliers and rattling windows. Even the bravest of Ptolemy’s guards faltered, knowing they faced not a man, but a force of nature.

Outside the chaos, another figure arrived.

Cleopatra.

She drew her mount to a halt just a few meters behind Caesar, her presence as commanding as any general. Draped in royal silks that flowed like liquid moonlight, her dark eyes shifted between the castle and the distant darkness that still pulsed near the ruins of the Pharos.

Beside her rode Apollodorus, silent, vigilant, his hand never straying far from his blade.

Cleopatra’s thoughts were divided—torn like silk between present and past.

Nathan.

Her heart clenched at the thought of what she had seen—what she hadn’t been able to stop. The darkness that swallowed the lighthouse had also taken him. The memory of his form vanishing into the void still haunted her vision.

But there was no time for grief. Not yet.

There was another matter. Another piece of her poisoned bloodline that had to be cut away.

Ptolemy.

He had to die. No escape. No exile. No more games.

He was a stain on Alexandria, and she would not rest until he was erased.

She sat straighter in her saddle, fingers tightening around the reins as she watched the golden castle begin to burn.

At that moment, as if answering the silent tension that gripped the battlefield, the ominous swirl of darkness suspended in the sky above the ruined Pharos suddenly pulsed—once, twice—and then began to shrink.

It spiraled tighter and tighter, the inky void curling in on itself like a serpent recoiling in pain. Soldiers and generals alike turned their gazes upward, murmurs spreading like wildfire through the ranks. Even Caesar narrowed his eyes, his hand subtly tightening around the reins of his warhorse.

Then, in an instant that stole the breath from every chest, the darkness vanished—snuffed out like a candle’s flame in the wind. Gone. As if it had never been.

But before silence could fully return to the earth, something fell from the sky.

No—someone.

A figure plunged from the empty heavens, cutting through the air with startling speed. The sun caught on his form, revealing lean muscle and a cloak tattered at the edges, fluttering like wings. And then—graceful as a dancer trained by war—he landed on the rooftop of a nearby building, stone cracking slightly beneath his boots.

The wind rose to greet him, brushing through his white hair, making it flow like strands of silk caught in a breeze.

For a heartbeat, no one moved. No one dared to speak.

And then Cleopatra saw him.

Her breath caught, her heart forgetting its rhythm. Heroes widened—not in fear or confusion, but in unmistakable recognition.

Nathan.

He had returned.

Alive. Whole.

A radiant smile bloomed across Cleopatra’s face, soft and trembling with emotion. Relief surged through her like a tide breaking against a long-held dam. For a moment, she was not a queen caught in the chaos of conquest, nor a sister driven by vengeance—but simply a woman who had feared the worst and now saw hope take shape before her eyes.

Nathan was back.

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