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Now reading: Chapter 1752 Liusar from Lord of the Truth, a Action novel by TruthTeller.

"Enter!"

BAM!

The guard hurled a prisoner through the tiny hole in the thick wall- a male whose clothes hung in tatters, body painted in bruises, cuts, and dried blood. He crashed onto the filthy floor, gasping, trembling, his skin slick with sweat and gri. The guard followed him inside, the faint glow from the corridor dying as the door shut, leaving them in oppressive darkness.

"Mmff! Aaammm!!!" the prisoner scread through his gag, his voice cracking with terror and disbelief.

The air in that chamber was thick, choking, as if alive with decay. Heat radiated from unseen vents, wrapping around him like the breath of so buried beast. The stench-of rotting flesh, blood, and sweat-was unbearable. It clawed at the back of his throat until he gagged. In that darkness, stripped of sound and hope, he felt he had fallen into the deepest layer of hell itself.

Yet even that was rcy compared to the psychological tornt that festered here. Every prisoner had seen the true faces of the Crimson Soldiers-

rciless, ravenous things draped in armor and sin. They had watched their companions dragged away, heard the screams echo, slled the blood... until they learned the truth: those taken were eaten alive.

Every soul here knew why they still breathed. Two reasons kept them barely alive-the first: their blood was valuable, harvested drop by drop every few weeks. The second: they were living reserves of fresh flesh for the upper ranks of the Red Plague, delicacies to be consud whenever hunger called.

The prisoner had tried to escape this fate. He had tried to stand, to fight, to crawl his way to freedom-but the iron spike embedded in his chest pulsed with suppressive energy, sealing his power, stealing every ounce of strength. "My Lord, the guard said at last, forcing the man onto his knees. He grabbed a fistful of the prisoner's hair, jerking his head up until his neck was fully exposed to the flickering torchlight. "This one's a fine catch-Peak Martial Emperor Realm. Used to be an aide to a general in the Alliance Army. Shall I start the carving? Or would you prefer a clean cut? Though I should warn you... when we fed the cub fresh at before, it refused to swallow"

"Stop!" Sakaar's voice cut through the air like thunder.

He moved forward in two long strides, seizing the prisoner before the guard could strike. His claws curled around the man's face with frightening ease. Then, without a word, Sakaar turned, his massive fra casting a long shadow as he walked toward the shivering figure in the corner-the white cub.

"Gghhh! Aaaghhh!!" the prisoner thrashed helplessly in Sakaar's grip, his nails scraping against the beast's armored arm. The claws digging into his cheeks drew thin lines of blood that ran down to his jaw, but it was futile-Sakaar's strength was that of a mountain. A mont later, the man was lifted like a broken doll and thrown onto the pale, trembling body of the cub.

Sakaar's voice ca again, deep and commanding. "Don't move."

"...!!" the prisoner gasped, trembling so hard his knees rattled. He froze instantly, not daring to breathe too loudly.

Sakaar stood beside them, motionless, his sharp senses fully awakened. His soul perception expanded through the room like invisible tendrils, feeling every shift, every heartbeat.

The demons had reported sothing strange before: that the white mutant had once tried to do sothing to them-an attempt to affect their minds, perhaps -but had failed and been restrained ever since. So Sakaar had decided to test it, to bring the creature a living sacrifice... and see what would happen this ti.

And indeed, after a full minute of silence, sothing began to stir. "...?!"

Sakaar narrowed his eyes. The cub's small nose twitched faintly, like a newborn rabbit catching the scent of fresh grass. Then ca a flicker-a weak, trembling pulse of soul force rippled from its head, faint yet undeniable, aid directly at the prisoner.

"Ughhh!" The man shuddered violently, a wave of agony striking through his skull. He shook his head once, grimacing as if pierced by an invisible blade, but the mory of Sakaar's command chained him still. He didn't move, didn't dare even blink.

The cub's attack waves were feeble, scattered easily like smoke in the wind- but they didn't stop. Slowly, stubbornly, the little creature gathered itself again, drawing in the thin currents of spiritual force within the air. Its trembling fra shone faintly for a mont... as it tried, once more, to release another wave.

"?!"

Before the second wave of the cub's attack could even form, Sakaar's instincts acted faster than thought. His massive, clawed hand lashed out, striking the prisoner at the base of the skull. Crack! The sound echoed through the narrow chamber like a whip, and in that single motion, the man's body went limp. The faint light of life drained from his wide, terror-filled eyes, leaving them glassy

and vacant.

Almost simultaneously, ksshh! - the cub's soul attack was released. This ti, it wasn't deflected or dissipated. It struck the corpse head-on, surrounding it in a thin, ghostlike shimr before piercing straight through its skull. The wave sank into the prisoner's collapsing soul domain, which had already been teetering on the edge of disintegration.

Sakaar could sense it clearly through his spiritual perception: the cub's consciousness-faint, chaotic, yet hungering-extended itself toward the broken fragnts of the man's soul. Piece by piece, the little creature devoured the remnants, dragging them inward as though feeding on sothing far deeper than flesh or blood.

The process lasted nearly ten long minutes. During that ti, the prisoner's spiritual domain shattered completely, dissolving into a fog of formless essence. His initial soul fled into oblivion. And still, the cub worked in eerie silence, gathering the invisible dust of what had once been consciousness. Then ca the most disturbing sight yet-those unseen fragnts began to drift toward the cub's mouth. His tiny lips parted, revealing a row of pearl-white teeth that glead faintly in the dimness, and the creature began to chew as though savoring a al.

"....?!"

Sakaar's eyes widened slightly, a low growl forming in his throat, but he remained still. He needed to understand this thing before him.

After a pause, he reached down, grabbed the corpse by the neck, and flung it toward the guard. "Consider this your reward," he said coldly. "For keeping the cub alive all this ti. Take it-and enjoy it."

"Ah! Th-thank you, my King!!" the guard stamred, dropping to his knees so fast his armor scraped against the bone-littered floor. Soone of his rank would never receive such a fresh, high-quality al. Overwheld by joy and terror, he clutched the body tightly and stumbled out of the chamber, his trembling voice echoing down the dark tunnel.

Then, silence.

Ten minutes later-

A change began. Sakaar stood motionless, his towering figure casting a massive

shadow over the clay floor, while the cub's frail, skeletal form began to shift. At first, the change was subtle-a faint twitch in its limbs, a ripple under the skin. Then suddenly, flesh began to return. Muscle and tissue knitted together unseen hand were inflating it with life.

beneath its pale skin

But it wasn't only the body that transford. The air around the cub trembled

faintly. Its lone heartbeat, once slow and weak, now thundered with sudden strength. Its aura-once faint, sickly, and alien-expanded in intensity, pure and

untainted by the Red Plague.

And then ca the light.

It started as a soft, almost invisible radiance seeping from the creature's skin, spreading across its limbs until the entire chamber was faintly illuminated. The walls, once drowned in pitch darkness, now shimred with a ghostly silver

hue.

"Hmm..." Sakaar murmured under his breath.

The cub lifted one small hand, its bald head tilting curiously from side to side.

With the other, it pushed itself upright and sat there, breathing slowly, as if it had just awoken from a deep dream.

The room was silent save for the sound of that renewed heartbeat. Sakaar stood beside him, massive and motionless, his crimson armor glinting faintly

under the dim new light.

The cub then opened its single, large eye-an eye with a shimring silver

pupil that swirled softly like molten tal, a color both pure and unsettling. It studied Sakaar for several long, tense seconds, its gaze sharp yet oddly calm,

before parting its lips to speak.

"...Are you my father?"

".....?!"

Sakaar's expression hardened instantly. Shock coursed through him. This cub

had supposedly been dying re days after birth, its mother long dead. Who had taught it to form words? Who had given it the concept of what a father

even was?

"I don't know," Sakaar said finally, voice deep and cold. "Mating happens randomly among our kind. I could be your father... or not."

It was the truth. Sakaar had never been one to limit his bloodline; before eting Lord Robin, half his den had been filled with his own spawn.

"You fed ," the cub said softly, his tone quiet but unwavering. "That ans you're my father."

There was no warmth in his voice-just certainty.

Sakaar exhaled slowly, studying the creature more closely. Its logic was

primitive, yet strangely absolute.

"What is my na?" the cub asked next.

"...Liusar," Sakaar replied after a brief pause, his tone heavy with sothing

between curiosity and foreboding. "That's your na." He extended a massive, clawed hand. "As for whether I'm truly your father... co. We'll find out

together"

"Alright." Liusar jumped lightly down from the rough clay table, his movents fluid despite the recent transformation. He landed beside Sakaar and grasped one of his enormous fingers with his small, pale hand. Then he tilted his head upward, his lone silver eye gleaming faintly.

"Can you feed again?" he asked, voice calm and disturbingly innocent. "This

ti... Can you feed one of the crimson ones."

".....?"

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