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Now reading: Chapter 160 – Messy Eater from Mother of Midnight, a Action novel by SupernovaSymphony.

Rava moved with practiced efficiency, quickly unfastening the harness that bound Vivienne to the wagon. Vivienne stretched her long, monstrous limbs as she stepped forward, her dark eyes fixed on the six figures erging through the swirling snow. Their cloaks, a mottled off-white, seed to lt into the frozen landscape, making them ghostlike against the backdrop. Yet Vivienne’s sharp senses cut through their camouflage. She noted the glint of steel—swords, axes, and spears—and her tongue flicked briefly into the air, tasting the faint, charged hum of aether.

Two of them stood out, their aether more potent, denser than the rest. They stayed at the rear of the group, like wolves watching over their pack, their presence radiating quiet nace.

Rava stepped forward, her stance solid, her voice cutting through the howling wind like a blade. “Halt! State your business!”

The group slowed, their movents deliberate. They didn’t raise their weapons, but their grips were tight, and the readiness in their postures was impossible to miss. The figures exchanged glances, their faces shadowed beneath their hoods. A mont passed, the tension thickening in the air.

Finally, a feminine voice rang out from the group. It was smooth and clipped, with an edge of disdain. “We have business with them,” the speaker said, her tone sharp and dismissive as she pointed toward the refugees huddled behind the wagon. “Be on your way. We have no quarrel with you.”

Rava’s eyes narrowed, her tail flicking sharply behind her as she took a step forward. “Funny how that works,” she said, her voice steady but cold. “You see, they’re with us now. So, if you’ve got business with them, you’ve got business with .”

Vivienne’s lips curled into a sly smile as she stepped into view, her massive form towering behind Rava like a living shadow. The cloaked figures hesitated, their heads turning slightly toward one another as they assessed the new threat. Vivienne tilted her head, her black eyes glinting with dark amusent. She said nothing, letting her presence speak for itself.

The silence lingered, heavy and brittle like ice ready to crack. Then the feminine voice broke through again, her sneer audible even over the wind. “They are traitors and criminals,” she spat. “This is your last chance. Leave now.”

Rava exhaled slowly, her breath visible as a curling plu in the frigid air. Her expression was unreadable, her sharp eyes locked on the figures before her.

For a mont, no one spoke. Then, Vivienne stepped forward, her towering fra casting a long shadow over the snow. Her monstrous presence was calm, but the glint in her fathomless black eyes betrayed a restrained savagery. She tilted her head, her voice low and smooth as silk. “I don’t think children can really be traitors,” she said, almost conversationally. Her words cut through the tension like a razor. “Can’t speak for the adults, but I don’t care either way.”

The cloaked figures shifted, unease rippling through their group like a stone dropped into water.

Rava nodded, her lips curling into a faint smirk. “I agree,” she said simply, her voice steady. Then her smirk faded, and her tone grew sharp. “Alright, Viv,” she said, with a calmness that belied the danger of her words. “Feel free to make it ssy.”

Vivienne’s smile widened, revealing her sharp, needle-like teeth. Her tail swayed behind her, carving deliberate lines into the snow as she stepped forward, her movents fluid and deliberate. She cracked her knuckles, the sound echoing like the snap of brittle branches. “Oh, sweetheart,” she purred, her voice a dark lody. “You know I’ll enjoy that.”

The figures braced themselves, their weapons rising instinctively, but hesitation clung to their movents like frost. The two at the back, the ones radiating potent aether, exchanged glances, their hands glowing faintly as they prepared to channel their power.

Rava rolled her shoulders, loosening the tension in her muscles as she prepared to strike. “You’ve had your chance to walk away,” she said, her voice carrying an icy finality. “Now, let’s see what you’re really made of.”

The snow beneath Vivienne’s claws hissed as she advanced, her aura palpable, oppressive. The air seed to grow colder around her, the faint hum of her power pressing against the senses like a storm about to break. She paused for a brief mont, her gaze locking onto the woman who had spoken. “Run, and I might not chase you,” she said, her voice low and full of wicked promise.

The group faltered when Vivienne spoke, her words slicing through the tension with casual cruelty. Their fear was palpable, a thick, tallic taste on the air that Vivienne relished. It clung to her senses like honeyed venom. Then, one of them seed to take a closer look at her, and recognition flickered like a spark catching fla.

“Wolf woman and her beast,” the feminine voice said, her tone now edged with wariness. Everyone froze, the sneer from before was gone, replaced by a sharp, calculating undertone. “What are you doing here?”

Rava’s frown deepened as she scrutinized the cloaked figures, piecing together the puzzle. Then her eyes widened, realization washing over her features. “You,” she said slowly, her voice tinged with disbelief. “You were the group we spent a night with.”

The leader of the opposing group, a woman with a jagged scar running down the side of her cheek, pushed her hood back. Her face was gaunt but fierce, frad by wild strands of red hair that had escaped her braid. Her eyes narrowed. “You rember, then.”

“I rember you being a pain in the ass,” Rava shot back, her tone sharp as ice. Her fists clenched at her sides as she stepped forward, putting herself squarely between Vivienne and the group. “What’s your ga? You’re hunting these people like dogs. You didn’t ntion anything about traitors or criminals when we t before.”

The scarred woman’s lips curled into a bitter smile. “Things change. Circumstances demand it.” Her gaze flicked to Vivienne, lingering uneasily. “And you—you should know better than to ddle. Not everyone fears the wolf, no matter how many teeth she bares.”

Vivienne chuckled low in her throat, the sound a deep, rumbling growl. “Sweetheart,” she said, her voice dripping with condescension, “you’ve already shown your fear. It’s delicious, by the way.” Her black eyes glimred with amusent. “You’d do well to rember who you’re speaking to.”

The group shifted uncomfortably, their weapons still raised but their confidence clearly faltering.

The scarred woman’s jaw tightened, but she held her ground. “You don’t know what these people have done,” she said, her voice gaining a desperate edge. “They’re a danger to everyone—children or not. If you protect them, you’re making yourself complicit.”

Rava’s eyes hardened, her gaze unwavering. “And what, exactly, have they done? Spit it out, or stop wasting our ti.”

For a mont, the woman hesitated, as if weighing her words carefully. “They stole supplies—food, dicine, weapons. They’ve endangered our camp. People have died because of them.”

Rava folded her arms, her expression skeptical. “And yet, sohow, your ‘justice’ involves dragging children into the wastes and hunting them like animals. You expect to believe you’re the heroes here?”

Vivienne’s tail swayed lazily, cutting faint lines in the snow as she watched the exchange, her amusent evident. “Rava,” she said with a sly grin, “you do have a way of cutting to the heart of things.”

The scarred woman’s face darkened. “If you’re not going to help, then stay out of our way.”

Rava took a deliberate step forward, her voice low and nacing. “Let make this clear: if you want them, you’ll have to go through us. And I don’t think you’re ready for that fight.”

Silence fell, the wind howling through the open expanse around them. The scarred woman’s group exchanged uneasy glances, their resolve cracking under the weight of Rava’s defiance and Vivienne’s looming presence.

The scarred woman’s sneer faltered as she raised her wand, the runes along its length beginning to glow. Frost crackled along the air where her breath mingled with her chant, the words a harsh, guttural rhythm that carried power in every syllable. She pointed the wand forward, tracing precise symbols into the frigid air, each one hanging for a mont before fading, leaving only a faint shimr behind.

“Fine,” she spat, her voice sharp with restrained fury.

Vivienne didn’t wait. The mont the word left the woman’s lips, she surged forward. Her hulking wolf form was a blur of black fur and rippling muscle, paws tearing through the snow in great strides. Her claws left deep gouges in the frozen ground as she propelled herself forward with blistering speed. The cold wind whipped past her ears, carrying the stench of fear that poured off the group ahead. That sll—their terror—made her heart race with dark exhilaration.

The six figures scrambled into action, their weapons lifting with frantic haste.

“She’s too fast!” soone shouted, their voice cracking with panic.

Vivienne grinned, teeth flashing as she closed the distance. This would be quick.

Then the air ignited with light.

A thunderous crack split the air as the scarred woman’s spell unleashed. A blinding lance of dawn aether erupted from the tip of her wand, streaking toward Vivienne like a falling star. It was too fast, too precise, to evade. The golden energy struck Vivienne square in the chest, punching through her midsection with an impact that sent her skidding back across the snow.

The force of the blow drove her to the ground, her massive form carving a deep furrow into the snow as she slid. Steam hissed from the wound, a gaping hole in her chest where the lance had passed clean through. Black ichor dripped onto the snow, sizzling where it landed, the sll acrid and bitter.

Vivienne lay still for a mont, her body twitching as the searing pain radiated through her. It was unlike anything she’d felt in recent mory—aetheric energy that lingered, burning deep into her core. She gritted her teeth, her breaths coming in short, sharp huffs, visible in the freezing air.

“Did… did we get her?” one of the n asked, his voice trembling with disbelief.

The scarred woman stepped forward, her wand still glowing faintly, though the light was dimr now. Her sharp eyes narrowed, scanning the motionless form of the monstrous wolf. “Stay back,” she warned her companions, her voice cold. “It’s never that easy with creatures like her.”

Vivienne’s ear twitched. Slowly, deliberately, she rose to her feet. The motion was fluid, betraying no sign of the pain still coursing through her. Her black eyes locked onto the scarred woman, unreadable but piercing, like staring into a void.

The hole in her chest was already beginning to close, tendrils of flesh and sinew knitting together with horrifying speed. Steam rose as the aether burn faded, though faint traces of gold still lingered along the edges of the wound. Vivienne ignored the sting, forcing her breaths to even out. Pain was nothing new. She wouldn’t give them the satisfaction of seeing her falter.

“Well,” Vivienne said, her voice a deep, guttural rumble. It carried an edge of mockery, though her tone remained calm. “That was unpleasant.” She took a step forward, her massive paws crunching into the snow. “But I’ve had worse.”

The group froze, their fear thickening in the air. Vivienne could taste it, a sharp tang that only fueled her resolve. She let her lips curl back into a slow, deliberate snarl, baring rows of gleaming teeth.

“What… what is she?” one of the younger n whispered, his hands trembling around the haft of his spear.

The scarred woman’s composure wavered for the first ti. Her grip tightened on her wand, the knuckles whitening. “She’s an abomination,” she said, though her voice lacked its earlier confidence.

Vivienne tilted her head, her gaze fixed on the woman. “Abomination,” she repeated, as if testing the word. “I suppose that’s fair.” She took another step, her claws digging deep into the snow. “But you should have aid for my head.”

With a sudden, explosive burst of speed, Vivienne lunged. The woman’s chant rose again, but this ti, she wasn’t fast enough. Vivienne closed the distance in an instant, her massive fra crashing into the group like a living storm.

The first man went down hard, his sword clattering from his hands as Vivienne’s claws raked across his chest. Blood sprayed in a crimson arc, painting the snow as he crumpled with a strangled cry. Another figure swung a crude axe at her flank, but Vivienne twisted, the blade glancing off her obsidian scales with a tallic clang. She turned on him, jaws snapping shut around his forearm. The sickening crunch of bone echoed as he scread, falling to his knees.

The scarred woman shouted a command, but the chaos drowned her out. Vivienne moved with predatory precision, her massive form darting between the panicked attackers. She didn’t allow herself to slow, didn’t let the lingering ache in her chest show. Each movent was deliberate, calculated to keep them off balance.

Another lance of aether shot toward her, this one smaller but no less deadly. Vivienne dodged, the golden light searing past her and striking the snow with a burst of steam. She glanced back, her gaze locking onto the scarred woman.

“You’re wasting your energy,” Vivienne growled, her voice low and venomous. She advanced on the woman, her towering form casting a long shadow over the battlefield. “But please, keep trying. I’m curious to see how long you’ll last.”

The scarred woman gritted her teeth, her remaining hand trembling as she began to weave another sigil in the air. Her companions had fled, leaving her alone against the towering beast, but she refused to back down. Golden light flared to life once more, gathering at the tip of her broken wand like the dawning sun.

Vivienne took a step forward, her black eyes gleaming with amusent. “Still so stubborn,” she purred, her voice dripping with mockery. “Let’s see if you—”

The scarred woman shouted a final word, her voice cracking as the energy released in a blinding, concentrated surge.

Vivienne didn’t have ti to dodge.

The lance of aether struck her squarely in the head, exploding in a violent burst of golden light. The force of the blast echoed across the snowy expanse, scattering snow and ice in every direction. Vivienne’s massive form rocked backward, her towering fra collapsing with a ground-shaking thud. Her headless body sprawled in the snow, dark ichor spilling from the neck in slow, viscous streams.

For a mont, the battlefield was silent.

The scarred woman dropped to her knees, her chest heaving as she gasped for breath. Her face was pale, her eyes wide with a mix of shock and triumph. Slowly, she pushed herself to her feet, staggering as she turned to look at Vivienne’s motionless form.

“I… I did it,” she whispered, her voice shaking. Then louder, with more conviction: “I did it! The beast is dead!”

Her laughter rang out, sharp and brittle, as though the sound could ward off the fear that still clung to her. “You see?” she shouted into the empty storm, addressing no one and everyone. “She wasn’t invincible! She—”

A low, guttural growl interrupted her.

The sound was impossibly deep, resonating through the air like the rumble of distant thunder. The scarred woman froze, her triumph turning to terror as her gaze snapped back to Vivienne’s body.

The snow around the fallen beast began to shift, steam rising where the dark ichor had lted it. The massive form twitched once, then again, as though stirred by so unseen force. A wet, unnatural crackling sound filled the air as muscle and sinew began to reweave, dark tendrils snaking out to repair the gaping wound where her head had been.

The scarred woman took a shaky step back. “No… no, that’s not possible…”

Vivienne’s body rose slowly, unnaturally, as though pulled up by strings. Her neck, once a severed stump, began to shift and split, forming not one head but two, then three. Each head was a nightmare of gleaming obsidian scales and jagged teeth, black eyes glowing faintly with an otherworldly light. More heads followed, until six monstrous jaws lood over the scarred woman, each one dripping with black ichor.

Vivienne’s hydra form was complete, a towering colossus of rage and power. Shadows twisted around her, rising like smoke as the ground beneath her feet cracked and splintered under her weight. Her six heads moved in eerie unison, their movents fluid and serpentine as they fixed their gaze on the trembling woman before them.

“Celebrating a little early, aren’t we?” the central head growled, its voice a deep, resonant echo that seed to co from everywhere at once. The other heads chuckled, their laughter a haunting chorus.

The scarred woman stumbled back, her broken wand slipping from her grasp. “Stay back!” she scread, her voice high-pitched and desperate. “Stay—”

Vivienne didn’t give her the chance to finish. One of the heads lunged forward, its jaws snapping shut inches from the woman’s face. She scread and fell to the ground, scrabbling backward in the snow as the heads lood closer.

“Pathetic,” one head sneered.

“Delicious,” another hissed, its tongue flicking out to taste the fear in the air.

The scarred woman managed to get to her feet, her movents frantic as she turned to flee. But Vivienne’s tails lashed out, the obsidian blades at their tips slicing through the air to block her path. The woman skidded to a stop, her eyes darting around for an escape.

“There’s nowhere to run,” Vivienne said, her six voices harmonizing in a chilling lody. “You wanted a monster, didn’t you? Well, here I am.”

The woman scread again, a raw, guttural sound of pure terror. She turned, throwing her arms up as if to shield herself, but Vivienne’s heads descended as one, jaws snapping shut around her with a wet crunch. The scream was cut off abruptly, leaving only the sound of the wind howling through the frozen wasteland.

The muffled sound of the wind filled the frozen battlefield, silence reigning where chaos had once roared. Vivienne's six heads rose, blood and viscera dripping from obsidian teeth that glead against the stark white snow. Each head moved with eerie grace, scanning the desolate expanse for movent.

The scarred woman was no more, her blood staining the pristine landscape. But Vivienne’s quarry was not yet finished. The remaining figures had fled into the storm, their forms barely visible through the swirling snow.

Vivienne’s heads swiveled in unison, her black eyes narrowing. Each breath she took sent mist curling from her nostrils, her monstrous form radiating power and nace. She inhaled deeply, tasting the fear in the air like a hunter tracking wounded prey.

They wouldn’t get far.

Without hesitation, Vivienne lunged forward, her massive form plowing through the snow with unstoppable force. The first figure ca into view, a man struggling to push through the drifts. He glanced back and scread, his voice lost to the storm as he saw the hydra bearing down on him.

“No! Stay back!” he cried, his words tumbling over each other in desperation.

Vivienne didn’t slow. One head darted forward, her jaws snapping shut around his torso. His scream was brief as her teeth crushed him, and his lifeless body was tossed aside like a ragdoll.

The second figure had seen his fate and was running with renewed fervor, his cloak whipping behind him. Vivienne’s tails lashed out, their obsidian blades striking with deadly precision. One tail struck the ground ahead of him, cutting off his path. Another swept his legs from beneath him, sending him sprawling into the snow.

“Please, no!” he begged, his voice trembling. “I’ll do anything!”

Vivienne’s six heads lood over him, their black eyes glowing faintly. “Anything?” the central head purred, her voice a haunting lody. “You can die quickly, then.”

The man’s screams were cut short as her heads descended, tearing into him with savage efficiency. The snow beneath him was soon stained crimson, the storm unable to cover the carnage fast enough.

Vivienne turned, her six heads swiveling to search for the next target. Two more figures were visible in the distance, their shapes flickering like shadows against the blizzard’s fury. She took off again, her powerful legs carrying her with supernatural speed.

The pair had split up, each hoping to escape while the other distracted her. Vivienne laughed, a chilling sound that echoed across the icy expanse.

“Fools,” one head muttered.

“They think they can hide,” another added, its tone almost amused.

She chose the left figure first, her heads snapping at the air as she surged forward. This one tried to fight, spinning to hurl a burst of raw aether at her. The energy struck her flank, searing her scales, but Vivienne barely flinched. The pain was real, but she buried it deep, her predator’s instincts driving her forward.

The unfortunate mage barely had ti to scream before Vivienne’s jaws clamped around his neck. His lifeless body crumpled to the ground, steam rising where his blood touched the snow.

The final figure had stopped running, standing with his back straight and his blade drawn. He was breathing hard, his fear palpable but his resolve unwavering. “Co on, then!” he shouted, his voice breaking but still defiant. “I won’t die like a coward!”

Vivienne slowed, her massive form looming over him. The six heads regarded him with sothing almost like curiosity. “Brave,” one head murmured.

“Foolish,” another countered.

She didn’t rush this ti, circling him with predatory grace. He lashed out with his blade, but it barely grazed her. One head snapped forward, the motion too quick for him to block. The blade clattered to the ground as her jaws closed around his arm, tearing it from his body in a spray of blood.

He fell to his knees, clutching the stump and gasping for breath. “Just… end it,” he choked out, tears freezing on his face.

Vivienne’s heads moved as one, her central jaw snapping shut over his torso. His body went limp instantly, and she swallowed him whole.

The storm quieted, the wind no longer howling as fiercely. Vivienne stood alone in the bloodstained snow, her massive hydra form casting a shadow over the battlefield. She surveyed the carnage, the lingering fear and desperation in the air satisfying sothing deep and primal within her.

Slowly, she began to shrink. Her six heads dissolved into shadow, rging and reforming into one. Her body shifted, obsidian scales giving way to dark grey skin. Within monts, her humanoid form stood where the hydra had been, her long tail swaying behind her.

Vivienne sighed, stretching her arms as if waking from a pleasant nap. She ran a hand through her wavy black hair, slicking it back out of her face. Her five black eyes glimred faintly as she looked around.

Rava approached, her expression an odd mix of disgust and amusent. “Done playing?”

Vivienne smirked, her plump lips curling into a grin. “For now.”

“You made a ss,” Rava pointed out, gesturing to the blood-soaked snow.

“Of course I did,” Vivienne replied, her tone light. “I was told to.”

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