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Now reading: Chapter 37: Strike! from The Genie's Transmigrated Master: My Lady in Red., a Fantasy novel by QueenSteffie.

The fog split open like a wound in reality.

A single pale eye, massive and unblinking, stared out from the heart of the darkness.

It did not reflect moonlight. It consud it—swallowing the silver and leaving only a suggestion of cold where light had been. Around the eye, the fog churned and twisted, knitting itself into a shape too large, too wrong to be wholly seen in one glance—limbs too long, joints bending where no joints should bend. And from the center of that writhing mass, as if so cruel thing had learned courtesy, sothing smiled.

A slow, knowing curl that promised oblivion wrapped in peace.

The first tendril struck like a tree uprooted, crashing down onto the cobbled street. The sound that followed was not of the living—a grinding, sucking hush that made the hair on Celestia’s arms rise.

Black ichor sprayed where it hit stone. The sll was tallic and old, like buried things unearthed.

Drazeil shoved Celestia behind him.

He moved with the economy of a fighter who never wasted motion—feet finding purchase, shoulders braced, fingers closing around a familiar hilt. Sword Drinker pulsed in his hand, violet runes flaring the mont the shadow touched the blade.

The ancient tal sang—low, vicious—and t the tendril with a thunder that rattled Celestia’s bones.

"Stay behind !" he snarled.

She stayed only long enough to find her footing. The world narrowed to a beat, a pressure in her chest—and then she moved.

Her hand went instinctively to the fan at her waist.

In the next breath, silver fire pulsed along its ribs.

Runes she had never seen flared, weaving across the tal like a living script. The fan unfolded with the softest click, and the air around it snapped.

Moonlight gathered.

The fan beca a sword.

Not illusion—transformation. The fan reshaped into blade and poml and runic grace, as though it had always been ant to be.

The Holy Divine Sword of Balance rested in Celestia’s hand like sothing rembered rather than learned.

Cold as truth. Sharp as judgnt.

She did not hesitate.

The sword responded to sothing older than thought, and her body moved before her mind could catch up.

She stepped past Drazeil and t a tendril in a spinning arc that left a silver wound across the shadow.

Her strikes were a contradiction—fluid yet decisive, like soone who had trained a lifeti and was only now rembering how to begin.

Moonlight trailed her blade like breath in winter.

Drazeil parried another strike the size of a cart axle. His sword drank the impact and shattered the shadow with cold efficiency. Where his blade consud, hers severed.

Where his presence felt like destruction, hers felt like correction.

Together, they circled the creature—violence and balance moving in rhythm.

"You fight like you rember," Drazeil said, breath rough, eyes flicking toward her mid-combat. "Exactly like you rember how to fight."

Celestia did not answer.

Because sothing inside her already had.

A flash—white stone corridors, a distant laugh, a feeling of standing at the edge of sothing divine. It slipped through her grasp before she could hold it.

The sword knew more than she did.

And it lent her that knowing in fragnts.

Tendrils fell. The cobbles ran slick with black ichor that seeped into the cracks as if the street itself feared what it had hosted.

Celestia’s nose began to bleed silver again. Each drop hissed faintly where it touched the dark.

Pain built with every strike—threading into her limbs—but so did sothing else.

A strange, aching satisfaction.

As if each blow restored sothing broken in the world.

The creature scread without sound.

The village seed to stop breathing. Pressure built in the air until even bone felt it—teeth aching, skin tightening.

Then Drazeil felt it shift.

Not with his eyes.

With instinct.

His grip tightened.

"...It’s pulling back," he muttered, watching the mass convulse.

A tendril struck again—but slower now. Hesitant.

Almost reluctant.

That was wrong.

Drazeil’s eyes sharpened.

"No..." he corrected quietly. "It’s not retreating."

Another tremor passed through the creature. The massive eye shifted—not toward them, but deeper into the fog, beyond the square.

Drazeil’s expression darkened.

"It’s being called back."

The words landed like a crack in stone.

Celestia glanced at him mid-strike. "Called back?"

The fog around the creature began to unravel—not collapsing, not dying, but unwinding, as if sothing unseen had hooked it from beyond and begun dragging it away strand by strand.

Drazeil stepped forward instinctively, blade lifting.

"Sothing is pulling it," he said, low, urgent. "And it doesn’t want to leave empty-handed."

The eye narrowed.

For the first ti, it felt aware of them—not as threats.

But as witnesses.

Then the fog tore inward.

Like a wound being stitched shut from the inside.

The bell-like pressure in the air spiked violently. Several villagers collapsed, clutching their heads as the soundless roar twisted into sothing unbearable.

And then—

it chose.

A precise opening ford within the fog.

From it ca a shape like a jaw made of condensed shadow and fractured light.

It moved in a single impossible motion.

Straight toward Theai.

"Elder—!" Tristan scread.

Theai lifted her head slowly.

Not in fear.

But in recognition.

As if she already knew.

The shadow-jaw closed around her shoulder.

There was no sound.

No tearing.

Only a sudden stillness—as if reality itself had been pinched shut.

Then the corruption began.

It did not spread like sickness.

It invaded like judgnt.

Dark frost erupted beneath her skin, branching instantly across her side in glowing fractures. Her body jerked once as a breath was cut short.

A wet, wrong sound escaped her as the force withdrew.

Jagged bite marks—crescent-shaped and unnatural—remained where the shadow had clamped down. The flesh around them darkened instantly, as if sothing inside her had been rewritten.

Tristan grabbed her, but the mont his fingers touched her, they went numb.

"Elder—no, no—!" he cried.

The shadow lingered only a heartbeat longer.

As if confirming completion.

Then it released her.

Theai collapsed into his arms.

And the fog withdrew.

Not fleeing.

Completing.

It folded into itself like a closing wound, as though sothing had been taken—and nothing more was required.

Drazeil’s voice dropped, cold and certain.

"...It marked her."

The eye narrowed once more.

Not in rage.

In satisfaction.

And then the presence vanished into the fog like a tide pulled through a hidden fracture in reality.

Silence returned.

Heavy. Absolute.

One by one, the bells fell silent—until even their mory of sound was gone.

Villagers stumbled from their stupor, coughing, blinking, hands pressed to their chests as if trying to rediscover rhythm.

So wept.

Others simply stared at the black stains in the earth where the tendrils had touched.

Being saved did not erase what they had seen.

Or what they had lost.

A child’s toy lay half-buried in the cobbles like an accusation.

Then a voice cracked through the square.

"You brought this upon us!"

A man stepped forward, shaking, pointing at them. "Strangers! You stirred the old powers!"

Another voice joined.

Then another.

Fear sharpened into accusation.

"Witch!"

A woman near the front pushed through the crowd, eyes wild.

"You talked to Elder Theai! You awakened the curse!"

The square erupted into fractured bla.

Celestia stepped forward instinctively.

Toward the edge of the square where Theai lay broken.

And the village, having survived the attack, began to tear itself apart.

A woman turned back to look at Celestia approaching;

"You, do not co forward any longer" she said tears in her eyes looking down at Elder Theai... soone beside her brutally pushed her back.

Thanks to the fact Drazeil was just right behind her before she could hit her body on the hard ground.

Celestia felt her heart being pricked in tiny pieces, feeling a wave of humiliation, tears threatening to fall.

"I want to go ho!" She said aloud a little, hugging Drazeil as the emotions welling up in her was just too much for her to handle.

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