Chapter 148: Lamair's Death. A Primogenitor's Wrath.
Silence. Absolute silence blanketed the forest in the wake of the beast's triumphant roar, a sound that seemed to mark the land itself with its dominion. The echoes of its victory faded, leaving only an oppressive stillness that pressed down on all who remained. Trees swayed weakly, their battered forms bearing witness to the destruction wrought by the battle. The air hung heavy with dread, thick with the aura of a ruler who had claimed its throne.
It was undeniable now—this beast was no mere creature. It was a Tyrant.
How ironic, Lamair thought faintly as consciousness slipped from his grasp. A Tyrant had fallen to another Tyrant so effortlessly. He had fought, yes, harder than he ever had in his life, pouring every ounce of his strength and will into the battle. But in the end, it wasn't enough.
The beast had utterly crushed him.
It stood there now, towering over the battlefield's remnants, its glowing yellow eyes surveying the carnage with a predatory glint. Broken trees and shattered boulders lay scattered like discarded toys. The ground was scorched and torn, a testament to the fierce struggle.
And yet, the Tyrant stood unscathed, its massive form emanating an aura of absolute power. Its scaled body glistened in the faint moonlight, while its four tails swayed lazily, each movement exuding a casual menace.
Lamair's broken form lay crumpled in the dirt, his pale skin now ghostly white, his blood pooling beneath him in stark contrast to the dark earth. His spider legs were mangled beyond recognition, twisted and shattered like brittle twigs. His severed arm lay a few feet away, a grim reminder of the price he had paid.
The beast let out a low growl, almost as if acknowledging the effort of its fallen opponent. Then, it turned, its colossal form retreating into the depths of the forest. Its roar of triumph had been enough. There was no need to linger.
And so, silence reigned once more.
The forest seemed to mourn the loss of its defender, the air heavy with sorrow. The faint glow of Lamair's puppeteer sigil flickered weakly above his body before fading completely. The battlefield, once alive with motion and energy, now lay eerily still.
The only sound was the faint rustle of leaves, carried by a breeze that swept over the broken land as if nature itself was trying to soothe the wounds left behind.
Lamair's breathing was shallow, his chest barely rising and falling. His mind was a haze, his thoughts fragmented. He didn't even have the strength to whisper. In his fading consciousness, he clung to a single thought—a desperate hope that his sacrifice had bought them enough time.
"I did… my part," he thought before the world went dark.
Lamair had died.
...
A sharp, searing pain tore through Ethan's mind and heart as he pushed himself to the limit, doing everything in his power to reach Lamair in time. His body screamed in protest; fatigue was setting in, and his control over his telekinetic flight wavered. Flying at this speed for three straight hours had drained him, but he didn't care. He couldn't stop—not now, not when every second counted.
The pain intensified, sharper and deeper, like a jagged blade twisting in his chest. It wasn't physical, but something far worse, a premonition of despair. Ethan clenched his teeth, forcing his body to keep going even as his vision blurred. He barely avoided crashing into a towering tree in his path, swerving at the last second.
And then, it happened.
The system's chime echoed in his ears like a death knell.
Quest Failed!
Your Subordinate…
"No... no... nooo!!!" Ethan's scream tore through the still night, a sound drenched in fear, anger, and grief. His heart shattered, each word of the system's cold message slashing at his very soul.
It couldn't be true. Lamair couldn't be gone.
He wouldn't believe it.
Tears blurred his vision as he spiraled into despair, losing focus. His body slammed into a thick tree trunk with a sickening crash, sending him tumbling to the forest floor below. He lay there, the wind knocked out of him, staring up at the pale moonlight filtering through the trees.
The moon, serene and indifferent, bathed the forest in its soft glow as though trying to comfort him. But it failed miserably.
Ethan didn't care for its light. He didn't care for anything anymore.
"How could this happen?! Why?! Why?! Why?!"
He slammed his fist into the ground, the force cracking the earth beneath him. His aura flared violently, a chaotic swirl of crimson energy that tore through the surrounding area. Trees snapped and fell like brittle twigs, the forest trembling under his unrestrained power.
"What did he do to deserve this?! Tell me!!!" Ethan's voice broke into a feral roar, the raw anguish in his tone echoing into the night. His crimson eyes clouded over with a wild, dangerous gleam as his aura burned brighter, hotter, consuming everything around him.
Warning! Warning! Warning!
Host Is Unstable…
Initiating Neutralization Protocol!
Error! Error! Error!
Cannot Initialize Protocol!
His mind was a haze of fury and grief, a tempest that threatened to destroy him from within. The system's warnings were meaningless to him now, its words lost in the storm of his emotions.
"I will destroy whoever is responsible," Ethan growled, his voice low and venomous, carrying the promise of vengeance.
His aura flared again, the pressure of it warping the air around him, turning the forest into a battlefield of destruction.
"I will kill them all."
The moon's light flickered as if recoiling from the force of his rage, its glow dimming under the shadow of Ethan's wrath. The forest, once alive with the sounds of night, fell eerily silent as if holding its breath, awaiting the fury to come.
Ethan's fury reached a breaking point, and the air around him became suffocating, dense with raw power. His aura spiraled violently, creating a vortex of energy that pulled at the trees, rocks, and soil around him. The ground beneath him cracked, unable to withstand the intensity of his transformation.
He let out a guttural scream, one that reverberated through the forest and beyond, shaking the very fabric of the night. His body convulsed, the pain of change tearing through him as if his very soul was being reshaped.
His crimson hair grew rapidly, wild and untamed, cascading down his back and reaching his knees, whipping in the violent winds generated by his aura. His eyes, once just crimson, became fully crimson—no irises, no pupils, just a void of pure, unrelenting rage and bloodlust.
Ethan's pale skin turned an ethereal white, almost glowing under the moonlight. Vein-like tattoos etched themselves across his body in radiant red, pulsing with an ominous energy. They spread from his neck, winding down his arms, and ending at his hands, which now bore elongated, claw-like nails that gleamed with a deadly sharpness.
His height increased as his frame stretched unnaturally, leaving him towering at 6.9 feet. His vampiric fangs elongated, protruding slightly from his mouth, their sharpness glinting menacingly in the faint light. Then, with a sickening, wet sound, a single blood-red wing burst from his back, spreading wide and glowing faintly with a crimson hue.
The transformation was complete, and the aura around him was no longer chaotic but unnervingly focused, like a blade honed for vengeance. Ethan stood there, his monstrous form casting a shadow that seemed to stretch endlessly in the dim moonlight.
For a moment, the forest held its breath.
Ethan didn't speak, didn't roar—he simply looked ahead, his crimson eyes piercing through the darkness as if locking onto his destination. His rage was no longer loud; it was a silent, suffocating force that hung in the air like a storm about to unleash.
Then he moved.
It wasn't a step. It wasn't a leap. It was an explosion of speed so immense that the forest was left in ruins in his wake. Trees were uprooted, rocks shattered, and the air itself split as a deafening sonic boom echoed behind him. Ethan's form blurred, a streak of blood-red light ripping through the night at a speed that defied comprehension, almost rivaling the light of the moon above.
The system's map floated before him, showing Lamair's location. But he didn't need it—he could feel the faint remnant of Lamair's presence, or what was left of it. His heart raced, not with exertion but with the unbearable mix of desperation and anger.
'Hold on, Lamair. I'm coming.'
But deep down, something inside him screamed the truth he didn't want to face.
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The forest grew darker as Ethan drew closer, the once-faint aura of the beast now oppressive, like a black hole of dread. In the distance, the silhouette of the massive creature loomed, its triumphant roar still echoing in the air.
Ethan's eyes locked onto the scene below—the shattered puppets, the crimson-stained ground, and at the center of it all, Lamair's broken body lying motionless.
A flicker of hope, a cruel whisper in Ethan's mind, told him Lamair might still be alive. But as he shot toward the scene, closing the gap in a heartbeat, that whisper faded into silence.
Ethan landed with a thundering crash, the force shaking the ground and sending debris flying. His crimson eyes bore into Lamair's lifeless form, and for the first time since his transformation, his monstrous rage faltered.
Silence reigned once more, heavier than before, as Ethan stood frozen, his gaze locked on his fallen subordinate, his closest friend.
The blood-red wing on his back trembled, the glowing tattoos on his body dimmed, and a single word escaped his lips, barely a whisper.
"Lamair..."