Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 855: The Winter in Vain (1) from The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort, a Action novel by Arkalphaze.

The large pale wolf stepped into the snow and stopped like it had always owned the clearing.

It did not bare its teeth.

That was the first wrong thing.

The others stayed between the trees, half-hidden by black trunks and white breath. Eyes glimred, disappeared, then glimred again from a different angle. They did not circle in hunger. They arranged themselves. One held the left tree line. Another took the shadow behind a low drift. A third stayed deeper where the moon-pale snow blurred into the dark trunks, almost invisible unless a person already expected to be watched.

Mikhailis felt that at once.

Too patient. Too neat. Too aware of where we would run.

A normal pack would have moved differently. Faster. Hungrier. Less interested in exits and more interested in panic. These wolves were not trying to make prey break formation.

They were trying to understand what stood in front of them.

Rhaen's hand tightened around her weapon. He could see the exact mont her body wanted to choose the simple answer and strike first. Wolves in a ring, exhaustion in the bones, a hut at their back, winter in front. In any other world, that was enough to make steel honest.

Not here.

Her shoulders lowered by a fraction. Not surrender. Readiness. Her weight shifted to the leg she trusted more. Her eyes tracked not only the pale wolf in front, but the two half-hidden shapes to the right, then the snow beyond them, then the tree line again.

Good.

Still tired. Still sharp.

Then the clearing changed.

Not through sound. Not through movent.

Through obedience.

One wolf at the far right lowered its body until its chest touched the snow. Another took one backward step, not fleeing, but yielding space. Frost spread in a fresh thin line over a stone marker near the clearing edge, a new white skin crawling over old black rock in a way that had nothing to do with ordinary cold.

A low scraping moved through the trees.

Rhaen's eyes narrowed. "That is not the dragon."

"No."

The scrape ca again, longer this ti. Sothing heavy dragging over ice. Then another sound from a different angle, wet and rough, like frozen reeds being bent slowly by a giant hand.

The forest did not grow louder.

It grew more careful.

Between two trunks, one narrow head slid into view.

Not wolf.

Not serpent exactly either.

Its jaw was too wide, the scales layered with pale frost and dark blue-black lines beneath, like winter itself had grown armor. One eye opened, glassy and cruel, scanning the clearing with the lazy patience of sothing that did not need to rush because ti belonged to it.

Rhaen inhaled sharply.

A second head passed behind one of the standing stones.

Then a third rose from lower down, where Mikhailis had thought there was only drifted snow.

The body was worse because they could not see all of it. It moved behind the trees and beneath the frost, too broad and too deep to fit the first shape the mind wanted to assign it. Thick necks moved at different heights. Frost clung to the scales and dropped in brittle flakes as it passed. One head watched the clearing. One watched the tree line. One tilted slightly toward the hut, slling, tasting, deciding.

Mikhailis's mind clicked into a fast cold line of thought.

Not the Leviathan. Good. That matters. The dragon ruled through pressure and reality. This thing rules through territory, scent, movent, line of sight, killing angles. Worse locally. Better globally. Which ans—

"This one can be avoided," he said quietly.

Rhaen kept her blade low but ready. "That's the good news?"

"It's the only good news."

The winter hydra moved another length into the clearing, and the wolves did not challenge it.

That told him enough.

Outer warders.

Inner authority.

The wolves controlled the boundary. The hydra controlled what mattered inside it.

The lead pale wolf lowered its head once and went still again. Not submission. Recognition.

Mikhailis caught Rhaen's sleeve and pulled her down behind the broken interior stone of the hut just before one of the hydra's heads turned fully toward their side of the clearing.

Snow hissed softly under their boots as they dropped into cover.

"Don't move unless I do," he whispered.

"That was already the plan."

"Good. I hate inventing new ones under winter reptiles."

They stayed hidden at the hut threshold while the hydra crossed the clearing.

It was not loud the way a battlefield beast would have been loud. That was what made it worse. The heads moved separately, but not chaotically. One drifted near the ground, tasting the snow and old tracks. Another checked the upper lines—the roof, the standing stones, the higher tree branches. The third lingered longest near open space, as if it preferred where panic could be seen clearly.

Mikhailis watched everything.

How the heads overlapped.

How long one stayed fixed before another took over.

Which head seed to trust scent more than sight.

Which one lingered over the doorways.

Whether the body was coiled in one place or distributed under the snow in a looped line.

The answer ca slowly and uncomfortably.

Not fully centralized. Not fully spread either. Enough bulk under the clearing to make direct escape stupid. Enough reach in the necks to make corners untrustworthy.

Rhaen leaned just close enough to murmur, "Left head checks height first. Middle one likes openings. The one nearest the snow keeps following old blood-lines."

Mikhailis glanced at her once.

Good.

She was doing what he needed. Not just enduring. Reading.

"And the safest mont?" he asked.

"When the upper head looks right and the low one lifts. The center takes half a breath longer to decide."

He almost smiled.

Instead he looked past the hydra and noticed what sat beyond it.

Old winter structures.

Not one hut. Not one shrine.

A pattern.

Farther between the trees stood a broken arch. Beyond that, the shadowed suggestion of taller walls. A little further still, a line of roof edges frozen under snow. The hydra was not wandering. It was pacing between points.

Palace lines.

Gate structures.

Held sites.

The winter zone was not just a forest. It was the corpse of a court.

Lodges. Halls. Shrines. Gate-palaces. Maybe burial gardens. Maybe watch stations built for so procession that no longer had living feet.

The wolves guarded the outside.

The hydra walked the inner circuit.

Rhaen watched the nearest head slide past the standing stone and said, "You want to study it."

"I want to not die first."

"That wasn't a denial."

"It has three heads and territorial intelligence. Of course I want to study it. I also want all my organs to remain in their assigned places."

For the first ti since the hydra appeared, sothing like the edge of amusent touched her face.

Small. Brief.

Real.

The hydra moved on, but Mikhailis did not relax.

It was patrolling. Which ant it would co back.

"We can't stay here," he said.

Rhaen's hand tightened once around her weapon. "I know."

He checked the ant feeds through the lower corner of his glasses. One worker ahead. One testing snow depth. One soldier ant holding farther left where the tree line opened. The signal was better in the winter structure than it had been in the open maze or the mountain, but still not clean.

No Rodion.

No comfortable answer.

Just numbers, distance, instinct, and the fact that dying inside a hut because a hydra rembered its route would be embarrassingly uncreative.

"We move on the next sweep gap," he whispered.

"How long?"

"Not long enough."

The mont ca when the upper head checked the right flank, the lower head lifted from the snow, and the center line paused for exactly the kind of half-breath Rhaen had predicted.

Mikhailis rose first, low and quick.

Rhaen followed without argunt.

They crossed the clearing under the wolves' watch.

Not beside them. Never beside them.

Under judgnt.

A worker ant ran ahead, nearly invisible against the roots. Another tested the snow crust near a marker line and angled back. Mikhailis used the movent to guide his next steps.

Low drift. Stone marker. Frozen root. Half-buried stair. Collapsed wall.

The route was not straight. It had been chosen for them, or at least not closed against them. The wolves remained on the edges of it like living boundaries, appearing and disappearing in white breath and dark pine shadow.

Rhaen controlled their movent through the open parts.

"Freeze."

They froze.

A hydra head passed across the far edge of the clearing, too distant to strike, close enough to make the snow between them feel exposed.

"Now."

They moved again.

Once, Mikhailis almost lost the timing because he was watching the wider pattern—standing stones, track density, the angle of old wall-lines—and Rhaen caught his sleeve and yanked him down before a second head crossed a gap he had mistaken for safe.

"Thinking too much," she whispered.

"Rude."

"Alive."

"Also rude."

The first major winter structure rose from the trees not long after that.

A broken gate-palace.

At least that was the best na Mikhailis could give it before touching it. The outer arch had shattered on one side, but the surviving half still stood with stubborn black stone dignity. A guard tower leaned nearby, its upper section broken open to the snow. Frozen banners hung in strips from iron hooks. Black fittings, old and ugly and strong, held to the doorfra where wood had long ago failed. The steps leading in had once been ceremonial, wide enough to announce arrival, but were now split and half-buried.

"This was an entrance," Rhaen said quietly.

"Not a fort."

"No. Sothing people approached on purpose."

You are reading The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort Chapter 855: The Winter in Vain (1) on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Water Magician cover
Same genre

Water Magician

Kubou Tadashi ·Action

ThisisthestoryofRyo,whowasreincarnatedintheworldofswordsandmagic.Itisa...Readmore ThisisthestoryofRyo,whowasreincarnatedintheworldofswordsandmagic....

Timeless Assassin cover
Trending now

Timeless Assassin

RajShah7152 ·Action

Leoawakensinaworldhedoesn’trecognize,withnomemoryofwhoheisorwhyhe’sthere.Allheknowsisthatsurvivalisn’tjustanecessity—it’shisonlychancetouncoverthet...

I Have a Golden Crow cover
Trending now

I Have a Golden Crow

Great Yu ·Eastern

DuYuhasnoclueabouthowhehastransmigratedtoaworldofdemontaming.HeisalsoinastateofconfusionwhenhecontractstheGoldenCrowthatwasliterallyasun.“Areyoufro...

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Trending now

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

I'm the Culinary God cover
Trending now

I'm the Culinary God

Greedy kitten ·Fantasy

LinXu,whoisabouttograduatefromuniversity,suddenlygetsboundtotheCookingGodsystemandhasbecometheownerofarestaurant.Totastehishandmadenoodles,customer...

Supreme Vision Master cover
Trending now

Supreme Vision Master

Mo Yan ·Fantasy

Cultivationdestroyed,eyespoisonedblindandrobbedofherstatusinthehousehold? LuoQingtongnarrowshereyesandsneers,“Bringiton!Letmeteachyoualesson!” A24t...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.