Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 86: The Cathedral of Death

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Chapter 86: The Cathedral of Death

It was a massacre site.

The words felt inadequate in Zeph’s mind, too clinical, too detached for what lay before them. It wasn’t just a massacre site—it was a monument to violence, a cathedral of death, a space where horror had been committed with such thoroughness and brutality that the very air seemed poisoned by it.

The chamber was large, perhaps thirty meters across, with a high vaulted ceiling that disappeared into darkness above their light sources, swallowed by shadows so absolute that Zeph couldn’t tell if the ceiling was ten meters up or a hundred. The architecture suggested this had once been something important—possibly a barracks, possibly a gathering hall, possibly something else entirely. Whatever its original purpose, it now served only as a tomb. And it was filled with corpses.

The bodies were recognizable as human, but only barely, shredded and torn apart by something with immense strength and terrible violence, by something that had treated human beings like paper dolls to be ripped apart for amusement. There was no dignity in these deaths, no peaceful passing, no mercy. Just destruction. Pure, absolute, methodical destruction.

Bioluminescent blood was everywhere—splattered across the walls in arterial spray patterns that painted abstract art in purple luminescence, pooled on the floor in quantities that suggested multiple creatures had bled out completely. The purple glow filled the chamber with sickly light that made everything look diseased, turned shadows into things with depth and weight, created the illusion of movement in every corner. But this blood was from the attackers, not the victims—that much was clear from the placement and patterns. The human bodies showed normal red blood, now brown and oxidized, crusted into their torn clothing and pooled beneath their remains. The purple, glowing blood told a different story—the story of whatever had killed these people being wounded in the process, being hurt badly enough to bleed in quantities that suggested mortal injury. Yet there were no corpses of the attackers. Whatever had done this had either survived its wounds or been carried away by its companions. 𝑓𝘳𝘦𝑒𝑤𝑒𝘣𝘯ℴ𝘷𝘦𝓁.𝑐𝑜𝑚

"Oh god," Seris whispered, her hand going to her mouth as if she could physically prevent the nausea rising in her throat, as if covering her mouth could somehow unsee what her eyes had already registered. "Oh god, there are so many. There are so many of them."

Her voice broke on the last word, and Zeph saw tears tracking down her cheeks, cutting paths through the grime and dust that covered all their faces.

Zeph counted automatically, his analytical mind processing information even as his stomach churned with nausea he refused to acknowledge, even as some part of him that still felt human things wanted to vomit and scream and run from this place and never stop running. Twenty-three bodies. All human. All adults, based on the size of the remains. All wearing armor and carrying weapons that marked them as professional soldiers, not civilian explorers, not academics, not the kind of people who joined expeditions for glory or discovery. The equipment was better than what the expedition members had worn, more standardized, more military—proper combat gear designed for war, not exploration. These had been warriors, and warriors had died here like children before whatever had killed them.

Whisper moved into the chamber with careful steps, avoiding blood pools and body parts. They knelt beside one of the more intact corpses—a relative term, as "intact" here meant merely "identifiable as having once been a single person"—examining the armor and weapons with practiced efficiency, touching the equipment with gloved hands that didn’t tremble.

"These aren’t expedition members," Whisper said, their voice flat and certain, stripped of emotion in a way that was either impressive control or psychological damage. "Look at the equipment—this is Authority military gear. Standard issue for reconnaissance units. The patches on the armor... these are from the First Scout Battalion. Elite troops. The best of the best."

Tank moved closer, his boots squelching in something wet that none of them wanted to identify, recognition dawning on his face like a sunrise illuminating something terrible. "The reconnaissance teams. The thirty B-rank scouts the Authority sent before our expedition. The ones who all died in the first week." His voice carried the weight of realization, of understanding that what they’d been told were "acceptable losses in hazardous exploration" had actually been thirty trained soldiers torn apart by something the Authority either didn’t understand or had deliberately concealed.

"This is where some of them ended," Whisper confirmed, standing and surveying the chamber with new understanding, their eyes moving from corpse to corpse, counting silently. "The official report said ’lost to facility hazards.’ This is what that actually means. Not traps. Not environmental dangers. Not accidents. Murder. Systematic, brutal murder by something that killed them all and left them to rot."

Kael had pressed himself against the wall near the entrance, his face green, his breathing shallow and rapid in a pattern that suggested he was either going to hyperventilate or vomit or possibly both. "What did this? What could do this to B-rank scouts? These aren’t amateurs. These are professional soldiers. Veterans. People who’ve survived dungeons and raids and actual combat against things designed to kill humans. What could—" He cut himself off, looking like he might be sick, his hand pressed against the stone wall for support.

"Don’t touch the wall," Seris said automatically, her instincts overriding her horror. "You don’t know what’s on it."

"Right now, I don’t care," Kael replied, but he moved his hand anyway. "I just need something solid to hold onto while I process the fact that we’re absolutely, definitely, one hundred percent going to die down here just like these poor bastards did."

"We’re not dead yet," Tank said, but even he didn’t sound convinced. "We’re still breathing. Still armed. Still moving. That counts for something."

"Yeah, it means we get to experience the terror for longer before something tears us apart," Kael muttered, his voice climbing toward hysteria. "Yay for us. Really drawing out the experience. Making the most of our last hours on earth."

Nobody answered, because what could you say to that? The evidence was painted across every surface, written in blood and torn flesh and shattered bone. The bodies were shredded, torn apart by something with claws and strength that exceeded human capability by orders of magnitude, by something that had rendered armor useless and training meaningless. Some were missing limbs, arms and legs ripped away at the shoulder and hip, the tears showing not clean cuts but ragged edges where flesh had been pulled until it separated. Others were opened from throat to groin in long vertical tears that had spilled their contents across the floor, organs and viscera now unrecognizable masses of decay. A few were simply... separated into pieces, as if something had grabbed them at multiple points and pulled in different directions until flesh and bone gave way under impossible tension, until humans came apart like poorly constructed toys.

The positioning of the bodies told a story, if you knew how to read it. They’d formed a defensive perimeter in the center of the chamber, backs together, facing outward—standard military formation for facing multiple attackers from unknown directions. They’d died in that formation, overwhelmed from all sides simultaneously, pulled down like wolves pulling down prey too large to kill cleanly. The blood patterns suggested they’d fought back, had wounded their attackers repeatedly, had made the creatures pay for every death. But in the end, they’d all died anyway, and their attacker had survived or been carried away by companions.

"We need to search them," Tank said, his voice heavy with grim necessity, each word forced out like he had to physically push them past his revulsion. "I know how it sounds. I know how it feels. But we need equipment, and the dead don’t. They’d want us to use their gear if it means we survive. Any soldier would."

It was horrible work. Necessary, but horrible. They moved through the chamber systematically, searching bodies while trying not to look too closely at faces or think too hard about the fact that these were people, were humans with families and lives and dreams that had ended in this dark place far from home, were someone’s son or daughter or parent or lover now reduced to meat and bone arranged in unnatural configurations.

Zeph found better weapons scattered around the corpses—three B-rank quality swords that still held their edge despite weeks of exposure to the facility’s environment, all clearly crafted by master smiths with skills that showed in every line and angle of the blades. One spear, miraculously undamaged, with a point that gleamed with enchantments he could sense but not identify, magical properties that made his fingers tingle when he touched the shaft. Armor pieces, damaged but still functional, better protection than the basic gear most of the expedition had worn—chest plates that would actually stop a blade, greaves that could withstand impacts that would shatter bone. Emergency supplies that the scouts had never gotten a chance to use—medical kits with actual healing potions in unbroken vials, rations sealed in packages that wouldn’t taste like cardboard, water purification tablets, emergency flares that might actually work in this lightless hell.

And a data recorder, clutched in the death-grip of a corpse that wore captain’s insignia, held so tightly that Zeph had to break fingers to retrieve it. The corpse had been protecting it even in death, had considered it important enough to hold onto when everything else had failed. That suggested the recording contained something valuable, something worth preserving even as life ended.

Tank took one of the B-rank swords, testing its weight and balance with the competence of someone who’d trained with weapons their entire life, making practice swings that cut the air with whispers of displaced atmosphere. His old sword he left on the ground—inferior equipment discarded without ceremony. Whisper claimed twin daggers, both enchanted with something that made them shimmer when light hit the blades, made them seem to vibrate at frequencies just beyond perception. Kael upgraded from his starting blade to something that actually looked capable of cutting through armor instead of just annoying it, a proper combat weapon instead of what amounted to a very sharp stick. Seris found medical supplies that made her gasp with relief—actual professional equipment, real healing potions and bandages and surgical tools, not the basic first aid kit she’d been working with that was basically glorified band-aids and hope.

Zeph took... nothing. He looked at the weapons, assessed them with his analytical mind, noted their superior craftsmanship and obvious advantages in weight distribution and edge retention and magical enhancement. And then he secured his crude goblin axe back on his belt and moved on, leaving the better weapons for his companions.

"You’re not taking anything?" Tank asked, genuine confusion in his voice, pausing in his looting to stare at Zeph like he’d lost his mind. "There are literal upgrades here. That spear alone is worth more than everything you’re carrying combined. Why would you not—"

"The axe is sufficient," Zeph replied, which was objectively untrue but felt correct in ways he couldn’t articulate, in ways that bypassed logic and spoke to something deeper. The goblin axe felt right in his hands in a way these beautiful, perfectly crafted weapons didn’t. It felt like his, like it belonged to him in a way that had nothing to do with ownership and everything to do with connection.

Tank opened his mouth to argue, looked at Zeph’s face, and apparently decided it wasn’t worth the effort. "Your funeral," he muttered, returning to his systematic looting of the dead.

Seris had retrieved the data recorder, her technical skills—learned from years of supporting expedition teams, from maintaining equipment in hostile environments—allowing her to bypass the damage and coax the device back to partial functionality. She worked in silence while the others finished their grim looting, her face illuminated by the soft glow of the recorder’s screen, her fingers dancing over controls with practiced efficiency. The device was old model, military grade, designed to survive conditions that would destroy civilian equipment. But even military grade had limits, and whatever had happened here had pushed past those limits.

"I’ve got something," she said finally, her voice tight with tension and something else—dread, perhaps, or the knowledge that whatever the recording contained would make their situation worse, not better. "Final recording. Dated six weeks ago. It’s corrupted in places, but most of it is intact."

They gathered around her in a tight circle, their lights creating an island of illumination in the vast darkness of the chamber, their backs to the corpses but unable to forget they were there. Seris held up the recorder so they could all see the small screen, and she hit play.