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Now reading: Chapter 281: Sculptor of the Grotesque from Warrior Training System, a Action novel by Jazzy.

The scene shifted to a well-lit room, its stone walls lined with eerie, flickering lanterns. At the center sat a wrinkled old man, his gnarled fingers tracing the faded ink on a dark scroll. As his eyes road over the last of its twisted inscriptions, the scroll crumbled into dust, dissolving into the air like whispers of sothing long forbidden.

A slow, twisted smile spread across his face, deepening the cracks in his aged skin. His robes, once a pristine white, were now stained with layers of dried blood, so old it had turned nearly black. The thick scent of iron still clung to the fabric, a testant to countless sacrifices made in the na of his dark pursuits.

He exhaled in satisfaction, his yellowed teeth glinting under the dim light. "So… it's finally beginning," he muttered, his voice a rasping whisper filled with delight. His blood-soaked fingers curled into fists, trembling with anticipation.

The room was adorned with grueso displays—bodies carefully arranged across tables like pieces of macabre art. Not just animals, but humans as well. So bore unusual features—elongated limbs, sharp ears, and unnaturally smooth, glistening skin.

Even in death, they possessed a strange beauty, but it was the hands that had butchered them that truly elevated their allure. Each cut was deliberate, each incision a masterful stroke, transforming their once-whole forms into a grotesque yet srizing masterpiece of flesh and bone.

Anyone who had lived past their thirties in the Kingdom of Andharta would imdiately recognize the work behind these grotesque yet masterful creations. There was only one man capable of turning slaughter into art—none other than the infamous Artistic Butcher, Charles Morvain.

Though he wasn't exactly famous for his art.

No, Charles Morvain's na was whispered in fear, not admiration. His works never hung in galleries, never received grand unveilings. They were found in abandoned villages, in noble estates where an entire bloodline had been erased overnight, in hidden chambers beneath cultist hideouts where sacrifices had been transford into unholy sculptures. Those who saw his handiwork didn't linger to appreciate it; they fled, retched, or lost their minds trying to comprehend the sickening beauty.

Charles, however, was nothing short of delighted.

He stepped back, wiping his bloodstained hands on his already blackened robes. The air in the dimly lit chamber reeked of iron and decay, but to him, it slled of creation. His latest work—six bodies, each one stripped and stitched together into sothing new—stood before him. The arms of an elven maiden were interwoven with those of a beast, fingers elongated into talons. A human torso rged seamlessly with the lower half of sothing reptilian, the scales and flesh fused perfectly, as though nature itself had sculpted them together. And the head… ah, the head. A masterpiece.

A man's face, still frozen in the last mont of agony, but his eyes—oh, the eyes were new. Morvain had taken them from a young priest, their glow still flickering with the last remnants of divine power, casting faint golden light across the room. It was exquisite.

He sighed, satisfied, before turning his gaze to the dark spellbook on the table. The final words of the ancient script had turned to dust the mont he had uttered them, but their effect was already beginning to take hold. The bodies before him twitched. Jerked. Breathed.

Charles smiled, admiring his latest masterpiece, but a flicker of confusion crossed his face. He muttered to himself, "Why has the High Harbinger chosen to go to war now?"

It didn't make sense. The cult had been so close to completing their preparations—just a little more ti, and everything would have fallen into place. But then again… perhaps it was complete enough.

His lips curled into a knowing smirk. Soon, the world would witness his art.

Charles ran a bloodstained finger over the edge of his desk, deep in thought. The cult had suffered setbacks in the final phase of their war preparations. So crucial sacrifices had been lost, a few key rituals had failed, and the interference of outsiders had disrupted their careful planning.

If they had waited any longer, their position would have only weakened. Their enemies were growing wary, and soon, the cracks in their secrecy would widen. The ti for patience had passed. Now was the mont to unleash everything they had.

He turned toward the massive arched window of his office, looking out over the grand hall below. The view never failed to fill him with dark satisfaction.

The cavernous space stretched endlessly, lined with towering iron pillars covered in intricate carvings of twisted flesh and bone. The dim, flickering glow of enchanted lanterns bathed the area in an eerie, shifting light. And at the heart of it all…

The tanks.

Rows upon rows of towering glass containers lined the chamber, standing like silent sentinels. Each was filled with a pale blue liquid that shimred unnaturally in the dim light. Suspended within were four-limbed, furless creatures—disturbingly humanoid, yet grotesquely distorted. Their forms were eerily familiar, yet undeniably wrong.

So were massive, others small and wiry. So bore jagged, elongated teeth jutting from their mouths, while others had sharp bone spikes protruding from their limbs and spines, their grotesque forms a nightmarish blend of flesh and mutation.

The eerie glow of the pale blue liquid cast shifting shadows across the stone walls as the creatures floated in unnatural stillness. So had additional limbs fused to their torsos, others had gaping maws where no mouths should be. A few twitched slightly, their grotesque forms not entirely lifeless—just waiting. Waiting for the mont they would be unleashed.

Beyond the rows of glass containers, massive slabs of flesh and bone lay spread across bloodstained tables, half-ford monstrosities in various stages of completion. The scent of iron and sothing fouler filled the air, mixing with the low hum of arcane sigils glowing along the floor. The laboratory, if one could even call it that, was a temple of horrors, where life was not born but crafted.

Charles Morvain ran a gloved hand over one of the glass tanks, his reflection warping in the liquid's surface. A deep chuckle rumbled in his throat as he admired his growing army.

"Ah… such beauty in ruin," he murmured, his eyes gleaming with satisfaction. "And soon, the world will bleed with the first strokes of my masterpiece."

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