《By The Sword》Chapter 63
Advertisement
I noticed the changes all too slowly.
Around me, the air itched at my skin. It raised hairs on the back of my neck while simultaneously forcing sweat from my pores. It dried out my throat and heated up to almost sweltering within the space of a few seconds. It distracted me from whatever Keris had done.
I coughed, noticing the grey tinge to the world around me. Squinting, I tried to wave it away, but it seemed ever-present. A thick, smoky fog had descended upon the temple. One that grew thicker and thicker the further up it went. As I raised my head, I even saw a tinge of slight red when it collected near the top of the—
Screams. Horrible, haunting, unfathomable screams.
I jolted, blood hammering against my ears as my mind spun to catch up. I tried to figure out what was going on—to understand all of the changes that had suddenly taken place. But the source of the terror put my understanding on hold.
My eyes dragged over to the middle of the room. Looked through the thickening smoke and at the massive group of knights and cultists who’d been fighting only moments before.
They weren’t fighting anymore.
All of them appeared frozen, in fact, but some were even worse off than that. A few of them were doing what I’d almost done. They were staring directly up at the ceiling of the temple. It would be the last thing they ever saw.
Slowly, their eyes widened. And it looked, for a moment, that their muscles had been rendered completely useless.
At the same time, they all screamed again.
I winced, taking a step back as the terrifying sounds echoed out through the room. Unconsciously, I threw my hand out to the side. My thundering heartbeat calmed as I brushed over Kye’s shoulder. She turned to me with her eyes wide and her lips pressed shut as the screams faded away.
Their absence didn’t mean our respite, though.
Another piercing noise followed the screams of knights and cultists alike. It came in slowly as if rising from the base of my ears. Traded off with the echoing screams in waves. Eventually, it won out and crescendoed, leaving a high-pitched, screeching sound to tear through all of our minds.
Gritting my teeth, I shook my head. I tightened my grip again and again to ground myself. To try and to push back on the sound. The white flame lent me some of its energy for the endeavor, but it was useless. No matter what we did, the noise stayed. It emanated from inside of my own mind as though making sure it had my attention.
Like a warning of some sort. One that I didn’t particularly want to ignore.
Eventually though, the piercing sound subsided. It faded from my skull and let my thoughts unscramble for a moment.
In the corner of my eye, Kye bent over and gasped. She leaned forward on her knees and tried to prevent from falling to the stone. Lazily, I stepped toward her. I tried to console her or support her, but even that was interrupted.
A flash of light from above. It seared my vision and sent me grimacing. I coughed, wheezing smoke out of my lungs as my vision adjusted again. As I had to spend even more time and energy simply figuring out how to stand in a stable position rather than figuring out what the fuck was going on.
Kye didn’t have as much luck. She stumbled backward in a similar way as I had, but she slipped as well. Her form slid to the ground despite all efforts to stay up.
Advertisement
I froze and turned. Clarity rolled in on a wave of fear as I pushed toward her myself. Only the single goal of helping her was what kept me thinking properly. It was all I had energy for as the confusion mounted higher and higher.
Reaching down, I grasped Kye’s wrist. The huntress wheeled, jerking her head backward and trying to scramble away. I shook my head and kept my grip, coughing out even more smoke. A soft grunt even slipped between my lips in hope that she’d recognize my voice.
It worked. Or, something worked. But it didn’t matter as she relaxed and let me haul her upward. Despite the flashes of red fire I could see in the corner of my vision—small sparks falling from the thick cloud of shifting smoke above—I focused on making sure Kye was alright.
Once she was, I turned to let more horror cascade through my mind.
I shuddered. A hitch caught in my throat. The scene made the backs of my eyes itch, my mind rebelling against the sight. The fire of battle receded from my blood. Reason started fleeing from my mind. And even the white flame doubted itself between frustrated flickers of fury.
In the smoky air ahead—the air directly above the main group of knights—red sparks were falling. Slow. Painfully slow. They were following some sort of predefined path and seemed to be pushed on by… something that my mind just felt incapable of detecting.
The observation registered somewhere in my mind. In some fresh memory that I should’ve been able to access. But I couldn’t. All I could do was stare.
Seconds bled together in a smoke-filled blur as the red sparks fell. But eventually they did reach the ground. Though, none of the knights in their path had moved in that time. They couldn’t have—that was what my rationality told me, at least. It was impossible for them to escape for some reason. It had to be.
Squinting in disbelief, I almost questioned my thoughts. Almost.
The red sparks stopped falling as soon as they moved within range of fresh bodies. They leapt instead. A whole plethora struck through the smoke and latched onto both knights and cultists alike.
They killed unconditionally—burning through metal and bone with ease and then enveloping each body they touched in a burst of red flame.
Any shrieks that escaped were stifled before they could even echo out.
My stomach rolled, curling into knots. Charred bodies fell onto stone, some even piling on top of each other as nobody in the entire crowd moved. None of them could move, I reasoned again. It was impossible. It had to be.
The anger that I had felt before came back. It rushed up through my mind only to morph into disgust. Into a sense of revulsion so deep and core to my being that it didn’t even qualify for thought. It just was. I felt it in each and every one of my bones. The same sort of resistance that I held against the reaper itself.
Because even though I couldn’t figure it out, I knew one thing. Whatever was happening was wrong. It was unnatural. Warped and terrifying like some sort of fever dream. But I was in too much aching pain for it to be a dream.
Whatever it was... it was real.
Tears formed at the corners of my eyes. Eventually, it became too much. Watching the charred bodies continue to drop was too horrifying for me to even process. So instead, I latched onto one of the only other feelings even worth considering. I latched onto the burning curiosity that wanted to understand exactly the world had forsaken us with.
Advertisement
I looked up.
At once, weight pressed down on me. It imposed itself against my eyes as though trying to dissuade me from perceiving. But I ignored it and pushed on, flicking my eyes back and forth over the red-tinged smoke at the top of the room.
Slowly, I gathered sights. One after another and each accompanied by pricks of mental pain. They each came as if someone had stuck a new needle into the back of my eye in a way that was just dull enough to make me not pull away.
Swirling, shifting smoke that moved on its own. Two separate maws of fire on either side of the cavern’s ceiling. A glimpse of reflective scales. A round, catlike eye staring directly at me.
I wheeled back, gasping. The dull needles at the back of them stabbed in all at once and forced me to fall into a crouch. Beside me, Kye murmured something out of concern, but I didn’t hear.
I couldn’t hear, really. My brain didn’t work. Sound registered, but I didn’t translate it. No. I needed help. It was pure pain. I didn’t understand it. I couldn’t understand it.
White flame flickered in my head. Warmth spread out over the inside of my skull and forced the mental pain to recede a little bit. The vision in my left eye sharpened again and stopped sending me fractured images. I could breathe again. I could think.
And as I did, I almost wished that I hadn’t been given the opportunity. Because while the swirling, fiery smoke above us thickened ever-more, I got closer to an idea. I started putting the pieces together to form a puzzle that I didn’t want to exist. But remembering the temple around me—the sweltering heat, choking smoke, and terrifying rain of fire that rendered all of us useless—I couldn’t ignore it.
Whatever was up there, it was larger than us. It was stronger and it had access to more power than any of us could muster. It went as far as to damage the inner workings of our minds without even breaking a sweat.
It lived up to the kinds of overblown destructive conceptions I kept deep in my mind. Except this wasn’t a story—this wasn’t a myth.
“Kye,” I muttered as I forced myself up on shaky legs. Blinking lazily, I tried to keep my brain moving. “Kye.”
The huntress didn’t turn. She stood frozen in place with her shoulders twitching and her lips trembling. Her gaze was transfixed on the blackened bodies that kept collecting in the center of the room as hell rained from above. She stared at the lives that kept being taken away almost without effort, as though the oppressive power we’d mustered was truly insignificant on some sort of grand scale.
I swallowed dryly and stepped toward her. “Kye. Please…” My eye twitched. Her name was the only thing I could think to say. “Kye. Kye.”
Finally, she turned. She ripped her attention away from the horror at the recognition of my voice. Her features softened a sliver as she saw my face.
“Agil…” she said. “W-What—”
I shook my head, stopping her right there. The next word rose to my tongue, but it almost felt wrong to say. It felt impossible. It had to be. Yet…
“Dragons.”
The word fell away from my mouth and clattered through the smoke. At once, a weight lifted from my shoulders and I felt a little more clear. I felt a little more capable of conducting motor function without falling flat on my face.
Kye paled, but she nodded. “I…”
“Do. Not. Look. At. It,” a voice yelled from across the room. It was strained yet surprisingly stern for the situation. Both Kye and I glanced at Lady Amelia.
She stood firm, her head shaking in struggle and her heels digging into the stone. But as per her order, she wasn’t looking up. She wasn’t even looking at the group of dying knights. No. She was staring directly at Keris.
The pyromancer wasn’t smirking anymore by the time I looked his way. Instead, he was struggling to even keep a straight face. The crazed look in his eyes, however, was still there.
“Rik,” Lady Amelia said. The hammer-wielding knight turned, fighting back a grimace and locking his teeth. “If you…” She gasped. “If you will.”
One heartbeat later, the two of them erupted into action. The stone underneath Keris’ feet grew up and wrapped around his ankles. It morphed to Lady Amelia’s will and shackled him in place. Except this time, she didn’t just let him sit to break out.
The two knights ran with abandon. They raised their weapons and charged the pyromancer to make sure we had one less problem to deal with. Faintly, I registered the smirk growing back on Keris’ face. By then it was already too late.
A flash of light. Orange fire tinged with red at the edges. An explosion of rock and dust followed by screams and shouts. Scuffling, scraping, and sliding over the stone.
Their forms moved like rag-dolls as the three fought each other.
I blinked, shaking my head and trying to track the fight more clearly. But by then, they weren’t even brawling. At some point, Keris had pushed himself back and started laughing again. Even among the chaos, the terrifying cackle wormed its way into my mind.
A moment later, he rose into the air. Not a jump. Something slower. He ascended through the smoke as fire enveloped him like a phoenix. Blood poured from his nose and his fingers trembled in pain, but he didn’t stop.
After a few seconds, he froze. An indescribably horrible image took shape in flame behind him, and sparks started flying through the air. As if he was tearing energy from its natural state, waves and waves of embers rose out of thin air behind him and floated into his hands. It was like he drew power directly through the wide stone wall on the far side of the temple.
Somehow, that felt important. For the life of me, I couldn’t place why.
Without waiting any longer, Keris screamed one last time and grasped the energy right into his gauntlets. A second of quiet followed, one that I was sure would break into fire and fury.
But it didn’t.
Instead, Keris fell from his place suspended in the air and crumpled. I watched as his body collapsed on the ground, hacking up blood the entire way. Even as his muscles went limp, though, the demonic smirk didn’t die.
It grew even wider as he laid there, in fact. As his body slumped and his eyes glossed over, he somehow looked as smug as ever.
I opened my mouth and tried to ask what he’d done, but it was pointless. I knew my answer quickly enough.
Keris’ head fell to the floor.
A loud, ethereal growl seeped through the space.
It left only silence in its wake. Every single note of noise was killed in its presence, and all of my lingering doubts were as well as my lips slid shut.
I knew what he’d done. We all did.
Rath. The queen of the dragons. The mother of destruction. The mythological, incomprehensible entity of pure fury. It didn’t matter what name was used.
We’d come to attack her temple.
Now she’d come to defend it.
Advertisement
- In Serial495 Chapters
The Rise Of A Porter
The novel follows the story of Arnold, a porter, who accompanies warriors and superhumans inside dangerous dungeons, which are distinguished by their colours. The porters were always mistreated by the modern human civilization and even though their job was riskier than that of warriors and superhumans, their existence was never appreciated nor were they paid well.No one knows why these dungeons started to appear all over the world. The only thing they know was the dangers that would find their way into the world if they didn’t kill the monsters. But only a selected few cared about the calamity because for the rest it was all about earning money and gaining power.But nothing in this new world is constant and everything keeps changing, and this time the change would find its way towards an ordinary Porter.After stealing a scroll from the dungeon, he ran off to his home. The scroll gave him powers no one could’ve imagined to gain. But he wasn’t alone. 9 other humans had been granted similar powers… powers of the Gods!What would Arnold do with his newfound powers? Will he kill the other 8 Paladins and rule over the world which had oppressed him for years? Or will he rise against the Gods and make them repent for their crimes?Can the strength lent by the Gods be sufficient to deal with them once and for all? Would he be able to defeat his creator? Or will he join the Gods instead?Too many questions, too little time. The decisions he would make could be the end of humanity Or would an ordinary Porter, become he world’s only hope?Follow me on the journey to the power of this ordinary Porter as he becomes the Savior or the Devil.
8 2719 - In Serial7 Chapters
That one time i was killed then i was Transported to an alternative world where i had to fight in a dungeon to survive
man gets killed then he is enslaved then he has to escape but he is a hero that the world has a story about him saying he will come and he will help humans and monster co-exist
8 148 - In Serial15 Chapters
Search for the Rabbit People
Search for the Rabbit People is a 15-part novella about kids trying to solve an inter-dimensional, worlds-changing crime with the reluctant accompaniment of a Seer going above and beyond his job description to help them.
8 175 - In Serial16 Chapters
Absurd Mage in Another World
Warning: [This Novel Does not take itself seriously. Some times it will. But this is for Laughs, so have fun.] Michael lived his live with the [Dodge Everything] curse. Then God removed it for just a second causing his death. Now he is a Black Mage in another world and Earth. Using his comical behavior, smarts, and magic he will live his life. Here's part of chapter 1 Hi, my name is Michael and I dodged everything in my life. The cops, the FBI, also when I dropped the soap, my harem too, which COULD HAVE HAPPENED. But sadly I dodged that incidentally too. But there was one thing that I couldn't dodge. That was Truck-kun. Yea the guy who reincarnates all those main characters in the light novels, yea that guy. But ya know, what maybe Truck-kun is a female, can't assume gender. If so, then Truck-chan is without a doubt a yandere. Whelp I got raped by that yandere Truck-chan you could say. Damn, my life ended by a yandere Truck. "WHAT THE FUCK, WHY COULDN'T I DODGE!!!" shouted Michael into the white nothingness.
8 166 - In Serial25 Chapters
Dust and Glory
A century after World War III left the planet a nuclear wasteland, earth is nearly unrecognizable. Alien ‘Benefactors’ have taken control of North America’s most populous cities and built indomitable walls around them, defending their inhabitants but trapping them under a totalitarian rule. Outside these citadels, chaos reigns, led by the mutants of the wasteland; cultists, raiders, and canibal clans. Glory, a rogue android, is roaming the wastes after escaping her sadistic “father”. Alone and reeling from the effects of a previously sheltered life, her only ray of hope is Reza City, built upon the ruins of what used to be Phoenix, Arizona. True, the Benefactors have a strict ban on self-aware artificial intelligence in place, but that should only prove an issue if they realize she’s an AI. The real problem is what lurks outside the city: over a million square miles of harsh, unyielding desert. And slinking between the dunes and the fissures are the mutants, looking for an easy victim.
8 410 - In Serial7 Chapters
The BatBoys : get a sister (complete)
book one of The BatBoys what happens when batman adopts a girl
8 177

