Chapter 132: The Predator Reclaims Its Place
Chapter 132: The Predator Reclaims Its Place
Chaos. If Sara had to distill the scene before her into a single word, that would be it—pure, unrelenting chaos. And yet, she could do nothing but watch, a prisoner in her own body, as it danced to the tune of another’s will.The young guard she’d been eyeing earlier suddenly , letting out a high-pitched, animalistic squeal before turning his crossbow on his comrades. Then another succumbed—eyes wild, movements frantic—as he unleashed a volley from his own damn enchanted weapon.
And those crossbows were no joke. Their enchantments were top-tier, each bolt carrying enough force to leave wounds even on mid-tier yellow-cored warriors. The soldiers faltered, blood splattering across the battlefield. She and Igor, both high yellow-core, weren’t immune either. And she——had been so close. So close to breaking through to red-core lightning mastery, to reaching enlightenment. And now? Now it was all for nothing.
Trapped inside herself, she could only as her body moved with unnatural grace, like a marionette in the hands of an unseen puppeteer. Mana surged within her—not at her command, but at —lightning bolts tearing through her own allies.
A crossbow bolt came her way, but her stolen reflexes were heightened beyond belief. Electricity crackled through her veins, and her body out of the way, effortlessly avoiding the strike.
The guards weren’t fools. Battle-hardened and well-trained, they weren’t about to die without adapting. They sensed something was off—something . And through sharp, silent commands, they fell into formation, moving in practiced rhythm.
Sara understood.
It had to be . The same one controlling her. But something about her method was different. It was , . Not the same raw madness affecting the others.
The rest? They lost their minds with a feral , turning rabid before attacking their comrades. It was almost as if they against whatever force was clawing into their skulls, resisting through sheer willpower—something Sara hadn’t been able to do.
And in that struggle, they had found their own defense. The moment one of them succumbed, the rest reacted instantly—raining bolts onto his hands, crippling him before he could fire or swing his weapon. Formation tightened. Shields interlocked. Crossbows aimed not at possessed comrades, but at their .
CRACK.
A bolt sheared through Zyan’s trigger finger mid-lunge. He howled, madness and pain warring in his eyes. Another guard’s saber shattered mid-swing, enchanted steel exploding into shrapnel that spared the victim’s throat.
It was still brutal.
One thing Sara noticed—there was a cooldown. A delay between possessions.
But whoever was pulling the strings? .
A mop materialized out of thin air.
Then—so did .
An ethereal maid shimmered into existence atop one of the guards, a spectral figure clad in prim, proper maid attire—if one ignored the snarling, badger-like head. She , swinging her mop in a wide arc, releasing a sickly green fog.
Guards staggered. One dropped to his knees, gagging. Another clawed at his eyes, shrieking as his pupils into milky sap.
And just as quickly as she had come, the ghostly maid vanished, leaving only confusion and the lingering stench of whatever cursed concoction had been on that mop.
Three players.
The doll.
The ghost maid.
And—
Sara’s breath caught.
The girl they had kidnapped.
She was near Igor’s corpse.
Sara watched, a slow, creeping horror twisting in her gut as the little Drakkari whelp—grinning like a child caught up in some private joke—tilted Igor’s head back and poured a potion down his throat.
“Oh, Thalador,” the girl sighed, almost wistful, before licking her lips. “Never thought I’d have to use this poison. But this is perfect. But at least it’ll be pretty.”
Sara’s stomach .
And— them?
A slow, sickening dread curled in her chest as she watched the seemingly innocent, flail-wielding Drakkari gleefully tip a vial of something very down Igor’s still-bleeding throat.
Her eyes snapped forward just as her body again—twisting, ducking, sliding past another crossbow bolt before retaliating with a crackling arc of lightning.
They were still fighting back.
Whatever method the doll was using to control her, it had . She could feel them—her body still responded to instinct, still channeled basic magic. But the finer, more advanced spells?
Small mercies.
Nearly forty guards had been standing at the start of this slaughter. Now? Between her forced assault and the ghostly maid’s eerie interference, their numbers had thinned. But not . These weren’t green recruits. They were seasoned, disciplined, .
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And she—
Panic? Rage? She should be inside her own mind, thrashing against the unseen hand puppeteering her. But instead, a cold, unnatural settled over her like a thick fog.
Wrong.
She be panicking. She be afraid.
Then she felt it.
The doll’s threads weren’t just moving her. They had her fear response.
Lightning surged from her fingertips, spearing another guard.
The defense was crumbling.
But too slowly.
And then—
Laughter.
The silver-haired girl , stepping back from Igor’s unmoving form, admiring her handiwork.
Igor's skin—bloated.
Red patches stretched and ballooned, flesh , as if something inside was pushing to get out.
Sara felt a deep, gut-wrenching certainty settle in her bones.
Then—
Boom.
Flesh ballooned. Igor’s stomach distended into a translucent sac of . His ribs skyward, jagged and splayed like a broken umbrella. And then—
He burst.
The explosion painted the walls in colors a mortician would weep to name. A thick, gas erupted from his remains, curling outward like a sentient fog.
The moment it touched them, the remaining guards .
Sara’s stomach twisted in dread as the first man staggered, his skin —just like Igor’s had. He , stumbling back from the cloud, clawing at his throat, before—
Boom.
Another detonation. . Blood rained across the battlefield. His breastplate became shrapnel—shrapnel. Another guard took a femur to the throat.
Then another.
And another.
Screams tore through the air.
It spread like a .
One breath. Two. Then——bodies ruptured like overripe fruit. Viscera became , glowing with a faint, sickly green light. Guards , clawing at their faces as capillaries burst, pupils dilating into yawning voids.
Their screams —a grotesque symphony of dissolving vocal cords.
They . They . They .
It didn’t matter.
The moment they breathed it in, it . It .
This wasn’t poison.
This was a plague.
And through it all, only four figures stood untouched.
Sara—likely spared by whatever pill the doll had forced down her throat.
The doll itself, standing motionless, that never faltering.
The wraith-maid, lurking unseen.
And—
The silver-haired Drakkari.
She stood in the carnage with a notebook, calmly like some deranged scientist recording data. Clinical. Detached. Fascinated.
A surviving guard lunged at her, saber raised—
Only to mid-swing.
The wraith-maid’s mop handle protruded from his sternum, leaking gray smoke.
“Squee!” she chirped, yanking her weapon free as if to say,
Sara could only stare.
What the fuck was wrong with this girl?!
Sara had horrors. She had horrors. But this?
The sheer sadism radiating from her…
It was something .
Something .
Something that made Sara wonder—
Was this even a Drakkari at all?
Or just a monster in mortal skin?
***
This time… I wasn’t holding back. Not just because I wanted to test the limits of this brand-new weapon—though, I won’t lie, the results were . It delicious too. Too bad it was costly, and I couldn’t indulge in more than a few drops myself. Practicality demanded restraint.
A crystallized poison, tucked neatly behind my molar for emergencies. And while this situation didn’t quite qualify as a full-blown crisis, it was still a opportunity. These poor bastards were already losing—to Belle, to Alice’s newly hijacked lightning mage, and, well, I hadn’t even joined the fun yet. Still, a field test was in order. A little catalyst, a warm body, and let the show begin.
The screams were…
I crouched behind a toppled crate, stylus scratching across my notepad as chaos bloomed.
Three meters away, a guard erupted—ribcage unfurling like a grotesque bouquet of blackened bone shards. I ducked, shielding my notes from the spray.
Ahh, this was going . So many fresh test subjects, delivering themselves right to my doorstep.
Initially, when these idiots crossed my path, I’d planned to snuff them out then and there. But then I realized they be tied to the same organization that had been meddling with Vasilisa’s business—kidnapping alchemists, interfering where they shouldn’t. And that? That warranted a different approach.
Alice did a divination on my behalf—one of her Aetheric Pendulum readings. No one could see her, which made things convenient. The question? The answer? The pendulum spun clockwise at a mild pace.
Same result we got back at Greg’s house when we cleaned up bastards. Only this time, something was different. The moment I laid eyes on that portal, on the unmistakable elven craftsmanship—something inside me .
The dragon in me .
These people were up to something truly down there. And as for —the way she treated me? Oh, she had this coming.
Just a little twist of fate.
A predator reclaiming its rightful place.
I frowned as the last infected guard twitched feebly, his convulsions more pathetic spasm than proper paroxysm.
Disappointing.
The of a plague in a bottle was thrilling, but in practice? Impractical. Still, I had to admit—this particular recipe of Lotte’s was one of the most poisons I’d ever seen in action.
It had been a while since I last got anything new from her. But now that the weaker, hesitating part of me was long dead and the universe had so delivered an endless stream of test subjects, well... I licked my lips. Who was I to refuse such an opportunity?
Did all of them this? Unclear. But they affiliated with people I considered enemies, and that was more than enough. No loose ends. No mercy.
I glanced down at my notes—finally, some data. But my gaze kept drifting back to the portal. The runes etched along its frame were unmistakably High Elvish, solidifying my suspicions that the elves were involved. That had been my plan from the beginning—wipe out this base, and if the other side of that portal wasn’t drenched in anti-divination wards, Alice could pry out something useful.
I turned to take a closer look—
And then the roof
Not metaphorically.
The warehouse’s rusted rafters in harmonic agony as something colossal tore through steel and stone. A second impact followed—reeking of glacial fury—obliterating what remained of the ceiling.
The war cry died mid-bellow.
Quickpaw hovered in the moonlit wreckage, her ice axe’s haft nearly twice her height. Frost spiraled from the blade, lacing itself across the carnage below. Her foxian eyes darted between the humming elven portal, standing there with my notes, the kidnapper slumped like a hollow-eyed puppet, and the last Rakari guard—who was currently busy
She blinked.
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