As the strange person with a bloated belly ran at us, I took so distance, and so did the mutant, unsure of what to do.
The magic flowed as I prepared for defense.
Around halfway to us, the creature turned in the direction of the mutant, and I could sense what it was. A zombie. A very weak one, but an undead nonetheless.
So, Mr. Cuddles was a necromancer.
The creature wouldn’t be much help, though. I could sense it was almost at the second tier, probably created by a ritual, not a threat to the mutant. And as if to prove my point, Peter just swung the hooked hand, tearing the creature from belly to head, releasing the animating construct as the undead’s flesh fell to the forest floor.
“Use fire magic!” scread the cat.
I furrowed my eyebrows, but seeing the desperation on the feline’s face, I cast a simple Fla spell and threw it at the mutant, not knowing what to expect.
And I didn’t see what happened next coming. The mont my fire made contact with the creature, the torn-apart body burst into flas, a sizable portion getting on the mutant.
I looked to the cat as it got closer, the question clear in my eyes.
“I had them drink gasoline until they were full…”
My eyebrows shot up. It was an interesting tactic, to say the least. The mutant rolled to the side, extinguishing a large part of the flas that stuck to it.
“I’ll get you a distraction, so get them to jump onto it when I give the signal,” I shouted.
I needed the faces distracted. I had the lower one dealt with, but I needed ti for the next curse. The fire was perfect.
I used Silent ssage to tell Rey what to do, hoping he would believe that they were undead and shoot the creatures.
Casting Pierce at the eyes of the soul mage’s face, I restarted the battle. It worked. The creature turned to and prepared for a ranged attack as I hid behind the trees.
It started approaching.
The thunder armour was almost see-through. I just needed one good strike. I then looked from behind the tree, only to duck back as a bolt of lightning flew by .
A little closer.
Finally, hearing the mutant right behind the tree, I dropped my remaining ice potions and ran forward, exposing my back. The mutant was within striking distance as it swung the hook.
Force pushed out of its way as the ice exploded.
The cat didn’t need a signal as two more zombies ran in. The creature struck one of them, causing its head to burst like a waterlon in the process. But that one managed to jump, while the other one hugged Peter as strongly as it could.
Rey then looked from behind the tree and aid.
There was a split second of hesitation, but seeing the body without a head, he shot at it, and I dual cast Fla with Pierce. The piercing spell got blocked, but the mutant didn't pay attention to the small fla that passed by it at the sa ti.
The zombies exploded into a ball of fire to the inhuman screech of the faces etched into Peter’s flesh. It used a simple thunder armour spell to keep the fire off it, but heat still did its work, and the gasoline mixed with flesh stuck to the armour spell.
I could see the creature’s body burn and regenerate. Apparently, the healer was doing his best.
Good—now, while they were distracted.
I raised my hand with the tattoo. I didn’t have a conduit for the mind, so I needed to set the anchor manually. Choosing the proper spot, I extended myself toward the hook.
And there they were, like wild animals caught in an ocean of tar, their minds, or what remained of them, clinging to the hook, their twisted faces barely above the dark surface. I was looking for the one controlling the hand with the hook.
From the description, he would be the youngest one. After a few seconds, I located the mind and began weaving the curse.
I needed imdiate execution, short but potent. Adjusting the spell, I started to drop it into the consciousness. I couldn’t guide it deep into the mind of another. I could just give it directions.
So I directed it into the part responsible for trauma. A deep one, defining the creature’s actions, fueling the rage it felt.
The mutant fought with the flas as the gasoline stuck to it, the smoke and fire blocking its vision. I could hear a shot as Rey was still going. I risked pushing a bit harder.
But then the mutant stopped its thrashing, freezing in the roaring fire. I was afraid it sensed the curse, but I saw it ignore the flas and turn around, looking for an enemy.
“Shit.”
It cast another armour, this ti using so sort of soul spell. Next, I felt a wave of energy emanate from it in all directions, so of it sticking to .
It wasn’t an attack. It was so sort of soul sensory spell. The creature, even with flas still raging on its body, easily turned right to . It could sense my position. The upper face scread sothing, and mana covered the flesh as it used the movent technique.
The curse blinded the face, but it could still hear, apparently.
I was running out of spells. I couldn’t dodge indefinitely. The soul-wave attack could kill . It was now or never.
I weakened my cast. Instead of showing a complete vision, it would layer it over what the face was seeing. I hoped that was enough.
Stolen novel; please report.
The creature arrived in front of as the curse clicked into place.
Bestow Visions.
There was a big problem now. The vision should show a person, layering the features over what the mutant saw. And there was only one human close to fill that role for the spell.
And that would be .
Taking that bargain and ignoring the heat from the flas still clinging to the monstrous body, I stepped closer, not raising any defenses.
The mutant swung the hook at my head.
The curse activated.
From between the flas, I could see a look of triumph on the face peeking over the shoulder.
I paid it no mind as I silently weaved a third-circle spell.
The hooked hand t my skin as I broke my own armour spell.
And then it stayed there as the hook delicately dragged across my skin, as if trying to hold my cheek with the mutated flesh. The scene was haunting in a strange, sad way. I saw the face through the flas—a look of sadness, relief, and deep love etched into the inhuman features.
It still rembered.
I saw the mouth move, trying to say the na of its daughter. But no matter how cruel, I would need to break that vision.
Before the rest of the body realized sothing was wrong, a Bone Spear materialized right over the outstretched wrist and fell with all the force I could muster.
The face seeing the vision didn’t move the hand out of the way.
The spell shattered the bone with ease, and a Cut from my staff dealt with the remaining flesh right after.
The hand with the hook fell to the forest floor.
I didn’t know what would happen now.
The boar was alive even though the hook was no longer present, but it didn’t have any intelligence beyond basic instincts driving it. So the faces shouldn’t be able to coordinate now. They should just try to attack on instinct, each soul moving different parts of the body. The opponent would be a sitting duck.
But there was one thing I didn’t think would happen.
Without the direction of the minds, with nothing but basic instincts left, they didn’t try to keep any trump cards to counteract mine.
I felt the magic rise around the creature. The thunder was around the third tier. But the magic of the soul healer seed to be a fifth-tier spell.
And I was right in front of it.
I would not be able to swing my way out of this attack.
I needed it disrupted. I needed a change. And what better to bring change than the definition of entropy itself?
I closed my eyes to the impending doom in front of and looked into myself.
I looked upon the swirling mass of darkness.
Squirming Void wouldn’t be enough. I saw it get ripped apart by a spell before, and this one felt even stronger. No, there was one spell that I needed.
“Azathoth”
I invoked the na of my god and let the energy flow. But this spell was different. I still needed another’s permission, one not contracted to . Getting the eldritch energy was half of the success, but the spell itself invoked the na of the Black Goat of the Woods.
I slightly adjusted the strange magic, making it appear more like the darkness beneath the veil of the black mass I saw in the gifted vision.
Once the energy was close enough to what I wanted, I whispered the na of another god.
“Shub-Niggurath.” I felt the spell react, open to my will.
I then imparted the eldritch concepts I saw in the vision. It was the first ti casting it, and I wasn’t entirely sure what it would do. I just knew it should fling the enemy away. I could feel my will slipping more and more. The fight, and now casting eldritch magic, took its toll.
Finally, once I thought I couldn’t take it anymore, I pushed myself out of the space and arrived in front of the magical bomb.
“Oss’Ygra-Thaal,” I spoke, picking the only na from the Thousand Young I knew.
And then what would happen beca clear to .
The Young would kick the enemy. It wasn’t a powerful attack or one that could kill. But the trick was that the spell was practically unavoidable, as the kick would co from the void right into the soul.
I could hear sothing that sounded like an indescribable cacophony of goat screams, and the energy slamd into the mutant’s soul. The impact on the spirit disrupted the cast as the creature was flung away.
So of the spells still activated, but he was far away by then, crashing through the branches.
I fell to one knee and, looking around, saw that Rey and the cat were frozen in place, eyes wide with fear.
But it was not the ti to ponder. Groaning, I forced myself up and approached the lying enemy, ignoring the pain in my head, ready to deal a killing blow as I wove another Bone Spear with the remainder of my third-circle mana.
The mutant was barely gathering itself, or trying to, as the limbs all wanted to go at the sa ti. Peter’s eyes were also clearer, and the horror in them was indescribable.
Then the face over the shoulder saw . It tried to attack, but barely any mana showed. It must have used up all of its magic in that massive attack. Now, all that was left was a sad creature, moving its limbs without coordination like a bug turned onto its back.
I didn’t know what to do. The thing transford from a deadly mutant to a scared, hurt teenager in a matter of seconds.
I was also in no state to ponder my family code.
After a second of hesitation, I took the sleeping draught from my belt and approached him. Before Peter could say anything, I poured a sizable amount into his mouth. I could see the body relax, the fragnted remains of the mind unable to heal or resist the potion.
I then turned to the scene behind .
To the left, Liz was still trying to stop the bleeding on Victor, while Cecil stopped moving, only his mouth opening and closing like that of a fish out of water.
rcy was still lying in shock next to the cliff.
I then turned to Rey and Cuddles. The cat shook off the effects of witnessing my magic and continued riding the larger zombie.
I saw him look at the hook lying on the moss.
“Curiosity killed the cat,” I shouted, getting his attention.
He looked at , a mixture of emotions in his eyes.
“If you think you can take , be my guest,” I said as I smiled at him.
Honestly, now he might even have a chance… a very slim one.
“I… I’m not here to fight you.”
“Then why didn’t you send the last zombie into the fray?”
“Precaution.”
“Well, there is nothing to be cautious about now, is there?”
We stared at each other. So greed flashed in the animal’s eyes, but as I raised my staff, it dissipated. The cat jumped to the ground and sent the zombie away as it wobbled into the forest.
“I helped with the fight. I want you to have Q’Shar help the doctor get out of trouble when you close this case. Also, our old deal still stands. Everything outside the tomb is mine.”
“That’s fair. You still want to bury your ancestor’s charge in the tomb?”
“Yes,” the cat answered firmly, even though I had to remind him about his supposed main goal.
So it looked like it wasn’t all bullshit, just half of it. Although I’m not sure he ca here purely to help , probably the eldritch spell helped calm any greed for the Butcher’s legacy.
“Deal, then,” said the cat, and, still keeping his eyes on , slowly walked after the zombie, away from the hook.
I looked at the artifact lying in the severed hand. I started approaching it slowly until I finally stood over the hook, gazing at the tallic surface of the ancient weapon.
Before I could pick it up, I heard a scream.
“Cecil!” shouted Rey as he finally regained control over himself.
I looked back at the scene. “That will be hard to clean up,” I sighed.
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