No one spoke for several seconds after Ash said those words.
Then Jacker's laughter broke out, loud and sudden, followed by all of his men. Several of them bent over gripping their knees. Ash did not move, his eyes fixed on Jacker's face. "You killed it." Jacker repeated the words between his laughter, then wiped the corners of his eyes with the back of his hand. "With what, kid? That thing didn't go down from bullets, it even crushed our iron cannon." He paused for a moment, his smile widening. "Did you shove your cock in until it choked to death?" His men's laughter grew louder. One of them squatted on the ground and several others coughed between their laughs. "I drove a sword through its jaw," Ash answered flatly. "From below until it pierced through its head. The thing didn't get the chance to fight back." Jacker waved his hand, his laughter dying down. "Haha, damn. Alright, good enough for a joke, but right now I don't have time for your jokes, punk." "I'm not lying." Jacker's face changed. His laughter was gone and what remained was the expression of someone who had run out of patience. "We've been tracking that pack for four months." His tone dropped, but that was precisely what made the atmosphere suddenly tense. "50 Aegis soldiers dead, 4 of our aircraft destroyed. Now we've lost its trail after it passed through this area." He stepped closer, stopping directly in front of Ash, his breath warm on Ash's face from that distance. "And you want me to believe that a farmer, with only a sword, managed to do what trained and fully armed soldiers couldn't?" His voice dropped to nearly a whisper. "Are you mocking us, boy?" "I'm only saying the truth." Ash still insisted. "If that's the case," Jacker stepped back one step, "show me the body. I don't care if you've buried it, just show me the location." Ash didn't answer right away. He himself didn't know where the creature's body had gone, nothing remained when he regained consciousness except blue blood that had already dried on the ground. Before he had the chance to answer, Elira's voice cut in from behind. "I saw everything!" Elira rose from her position, her voice steady even though her eyes were red. "The pack carried the large Oars' body away toward the northern forest after the fight ended. My husband is telling the truth." Jacker glanced at her briefly, then back to Ash, his teeth grinding, then his hand moved. BANG! A bullet tore through Ash's thigh and the man collapsed to the ground with a cry of pain. Elira immediately knelt beside him, her hands gripping Ash's shoulder, her eyes on Jacker. "Stop! Please, he's not lying, please stop!" But Jacker's eyes weren't on Elira. They were on the ground near Ash's feet, on the spreading pool forming beneath Ash's thigh. His blood wasn't red. Bright purple, nearly blue at the edges, flowing from the gunshot wound and soaking into the ground. The remaining crowd of villagers froze. Jacker's men exchanged glances. Jacker himself stood without moving, his jaw dropping slightly. Then the bullet moved. Not flowing out with the blood, but pushed slowly from within, the metal tip emerging at the skin's surface and falling to the ground. The wound on Ash's thigh slowly closed from the edges inward, until all that remained was a thin line that then disappeared. Jacker's voice came out quietly, only for himself. "Abysswalker." His body trembled slightly. In his mind he already knew what it meant, already knew what had to be done next, and he didn't like any of the remaining options. An Abysswalker created outside laboratory protocols, could not be tamed, could not be commanded, and could not be controlled. The only thing that could be done was to eliminate him before his power fully activated. "Tie him to the post." His voice returned to flat. "Now." Four of his men moved immediately. Ash struggled as his hands were pulled behind him, but his strength wasn't enough against four people at once. His hands and feet were chained to a large wooden post at the edge of the field, his body facing the villagers still kneeling with anxious expressions. Elira lunged toward them but two people caught her from behind. "Let go! He's not lying! You can't hurt him!" "Hey!" Ash's voice was hoarse. "She has nothing to do with this. Let my wife go." Jacker walked closer to Ash, stopping in front of him with his hands in his coat pockets. "Sorry, kid." His voice sounded almost bored. "I've grown tired of your jokes today." One of his men came with a jerrycan and poured its contents over Ash's body from above his head. The smell of gasoline immediately filled the air, the liquid running down his face, over his body, soaking into the ground beneath Ash's feet. "Jacker, don't!" Elira screamed, her voice breaking. "Please! Please don't! I beg you!" Ash didn't scream. He fixed a sharp gaze on Jacker, his teeth grinding. Jacker's pistol rose, fired once into Ash's body, and the spark from the bullet grazing the iron chain was enough to ignite the gasoline on Ash's body. The fire blazed instantly. "AARRGH!" The heat and pain attacked at once. His body tried to regenerate, the damaged tissue trying to close, but the fire kept burning faster, making Ash feel the pain slowly and continuously. "NO! ASH!" Elira wept and wailed, trying to break free, but it was useless. The people still knelt, some turning their faces away, some crying, trembling with fear, some grinding their teeth in frustration, but not a single one moved from their position. One of Jacker's men walked toward Elira, his eyes sweeping her from top to bottom. "Boss, what do we do with this woman?" Jacker turned, looking at Elira with a cold and calculating expression. His hand moved, his fingers gripping the fabric at Elira's shoulder and pulling hard until a long tear opened there. "This woman ... her body is decent enough for a village woman." "Maybe we could sell her in the city, boss," said one of his men. Jacker glanced toward Ash still screaming at the post, the fire not yet out and his body still visibly intact. Then his eyes returned to Elira. "No need. Let her follow her husband, I don't want to leave any grudges behind." However, the corner of Jacker's lip rose slightly. "But before that, there's no harm in having a little fun." He turned to his men. "Strip her." The people reacted at once, unable to contain their fury, several rising from their positions. Old women cursed and condemned Jacker. Shouts began to ring out as Jacker's men took pleasure in tearing away every piece of fabric from Elira's body. BANG! BANG! BANG! Jacker fired into the air three times in succession. "I have no more business with any of you!" he shouted at the crowd of villagers. "Anyone who still wants to live, leave this place now!" A barrage of shots from all his men into the air caused panic to erupt, people running in every direction. Several of Jacker's men grabbed the village women they had been targeting as the crowd scattered. Ash watched all of it from the post. His skin peeled and closed then peeled again in a cycle that would not stop. His body was in agony, but what hurt him most was the feeling of helplessness, watching his wife. He watched Elira get pulled one way, shoved another, knocked to the ground then lifted up again, treated like an animal. His mouth kept screaming but no sound came out, his throat could no longer form any clear sound. Then a small stone flew from the direction of the village hall door and struck one of Jacker's men in the face. Ash shifted his gaze toward where the stone had come from. Lyanna stood at the village hall entrance with another stone in her hand. The face that usually made him laugh now looked angry, her eyes red, her teeth clenched tight. "Let my mother go!" she screamed. Inside his mind, Ash screamed louder than anything. "No, don't hurt my daughter. Please run, sweetheart! Run now!" but no sound came out, his vocal cords had burned away completely. "Damn it, my face! This is going to leave a scar, damn it! Who is this child!" the man fumed and walked closer. Suddenly a coil of rope flew from the side, its loop opening in the air and falling right around Lyanna's neck. One of Jacker's men pulled the end of the rope that had been thrown over a wooden beam on the roof frame being repaired, and Lyanna's body was instantly lifted from the ground. Elira saw it. A sound came from her but it held no shape, only a weak and faint murmur, and her already weakened body tried to rise, tried to move toward her daughter, but her legs would not obey. Jacker wasn't looking at Lyanna. He was reloading his pistol, his face cold and looking downward. Ash watched his daughter's legs kick, the small shoes that were her birthday gift, moving without pattern in the air. His eyes could not look away, Ash's eyelids were no longer there to help him close his eyes, and he had to watch everything until the movement of those legs slowed, then stopped. Ash then looked toward Elira, toward his wife's body that no longer moved on the ground. Darkness began creeping in from the edges of his vision, slowly toward the center, and the sounds around him seemed to grow distant. "Damn it, four wasted months. How am I going to treat my cock when I get back," Jacker muttered while cleaning his pistol. Then the darkness stopped. The blood in Ash's veins felt like it was boiling. Jacker loaded his pistol, his lips still muttering indistinctly. Then his eyes shifted, glancing toward the post where Ash was tied, and his expression changed instantly. His eyes went wide. ***Latest Chapter
Chapter 33. Nest
Rynn didn't move from her position.She stood between the roots of a large tree, one hand still on her bow handle, her head tilted up toward the sky through the gaps in the canopy.The sound of wingbeats that had filled the air earlier began to fade, moving farther east, until all that remained was the night wind moving between the leaves.The soldiers around her waited the same way, no one speaking, no one moving without orders."Kyra." Rynn didn't turn, her eyes still on the sky. "Did it work?"A woman appeared from behind a tree trunk to the left, her hair black and thick, cut short and even below the ears, precise as a line drawn with a ruler. Kyra nodded once, brief and certain.Shiva watched the exchange from where she stood. "What worked?" she asked. "What were you waiting for just now?"Rynn turned toward her now. "We were hunting." She spoke in the same tone she used when giving orders, flat and direct. "Not to catch them. To track them.""Track them? To where?""Banshees don
Chapter 32. Banshee Hunt
The talons were halfway to her when the rope around Shiva's body snapped.Not loosened, not untied, but cleanly cut by something that moved fast from the side. Shiva's body lurched forward from the trunk and she caught the branch below with both hands.The swing carried her legs through empty air just as the talons raked across the spot where she had been standing and came away with nothing but splinters of bark.Rynn was on the branch beside her, the short knife in her hand still angled downward from the cutting motion. "You were in the wrong place at the wrong time, elf.""I know that." Shiva pulled herself up onto the branch and stood immediately. "Now give me something to fight with."Rynn looked at her for one second, then threw a spare knife from her belt. Shiva caught it without looking, her eyes already back on the creature that had dove toward her.The Banshee flipped itself in the air with a single hard beat of its wing
Chapter 31. Night Harbinger
Her clothing was a mix of earth tones and deep green, cut in an irregular pattern with woven grass and dried leaves sewn into its surface so that it blended easily inside the forest.Across her face were thick black markings, not wounds, but deliberate strokes forming a pattern that broke the shape of her features so they were hard to read from a distance. Her eyes were dark brown and unblinking.Shiva looked right and left. On the branches of the trees around them, at least four other figures stood in the same posture, each with a bow raised."What is an elf doing in my forest." The woman wasn't asking out of curiosity, more like someone who already knew the answer and wanted to confirm it for herself. "Aren't you playing a little too far from home?""That's none of your business." Shiva didn't move her head, only her eyes, shifting toward the open area below. "Release my friend."The woman looked down, scanning the open area briefly, th
Chapter 30. What's Wrong with this Forest
The fog swallowed her the moment she stepped outside the front door.Shiva leapt from the porch to the nearest tree trunk, her palms catching the damp wood, her feet finding gaps between the large protruding roots, and she descended to the ground the way she had done thousands of times in different forests.Below, the fog reached her waist, and inside it there was no Ash. Shiva stood still and closed her eyes.Her ears searched for sound within the silence of Velkarr. There was no wind, the night creatures were silent, no bird calls, no insect rustling.This forest was quiet in a way that was not natural for this hour, as if everything had chosen to go still and wait.Then she heard it. Heavy and steady footsteps, the sound of shoes pressing down on dry twigs, the brush of trouser fabric passing through wet grass. To the north, about thirty meters away, getting farther.Shiva ran.She found Ash among the larger trees, still walking with the same rhythm, still snoring with a sound that
Chapter 29. Velmara's Fog
Velkarr went to sleep earlier than any village Shiva had ever visited. There were no sounds of conversation from the tree houses around her, no footsteps on the hanging bridges, no children being called inside for the umpteenth time. The moment night fell completely, the village closed itself off, and the only sign of life that remained was the yellow glow of the light creatures that kept shining from behind the transparent nets in front of every door. Shiva lay on the left side of the Arakvein net bed, her eyes open toward the ceiling of the room. Beside her on the right, Ash slept in a way that showed no consideration for the silence of Velkarr. His snoring was heavy and steady, rising and falling in a rhythm that didn't care that there was someone else in the same room. "Disgusting," Shiva muttered, turning onto her side. The bed vibrated faintly every time Ash exhaled too hard. Shiva shifte
Chapter 28. Cold Night
The food was dark in color, almost brownish-black, with a texture she couldn't immediately identify. Its aroma rose to her nose, unfamiliar, not unpleasant but also not something she could judge as a pleasant smell.There was something warm in it, spices perhaps, but the kind was not familiar. Shiva picked up the spoon, directed it toward the food, and stopped halfway.She raised her spoon slowly toward her nose, pretending to blow on it to cool it down, but her nose was working harder than it appeared.She tried to sort through the aromas one by one, looking for something she could recognize, something that could tell her brain this was safe.Nothing was familiar."Hey," Shiva whispered in Ash's direction without fully turning her head. "What do you think?"No answer.Shiva turned and found Ash already hunched over his plate, his spoon moving with a rhythm that showed no hesitation whatsoever. Half of his food was alrea
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