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The Guardian gods-Chapter 524
Chapter 524: 524
The moment the crystal was absorbed felt like being caught in a violent storm inside his own body. Chief’s veins burned as if filled with hot metal, his muscles jerked and twitched uncontrollably. His bones felt like they were being reshaped from the inside, a horrible symphony of cracking and reforming. He cried out, a choked sound that was part human, part something completely different.
Then, just as suddenly as it started, the violent change calmed down. A heavy stillness settled over his body, a feeling of profound transformation. He pushed himself up, his limbs feeling heavier, yet strangely more powerful. His vision blurred for a moment before focusing, showing a world subtly changed. The magic around him pulsed even stronger, its flows and swirls now clearer and more complex.
He looked down at himself, and a fresh wave of horror hit him. His skin now had a faint, hard shine, darker in places, with fine, almost invisible hairs that prickled when he touched them. His two new arms were longer, thicker, their claws sharper and more defined, able to flex with unsettling strength. His chest seemed broader, his posture more hunched, his balance slightly different.
His face, too, had gone through a disturbing change. His features were sharper, more angular, his eyes larger and with many facets, reflecting the light in a creepy, insect-like way. He knew without looking that his mouth now had sharper, more numerous teeth. He could feel a faint twitching around his jaw, as if new mouthparts were trying to come out.
The strength that flowed through him was undeniable. He felt a raw, basic power thrumming beneath his skin, a sense of physical ability he had never imagined. He flexed his new limbs, and a ripple of dark energy ran through them. The urge to test this new power was almost impossible to resist.
He looked at the lifeless bodies of the Ogres, the empty shells now just remains. A cold, detached indifference washed over him, a stark contrast to the horror he had felt moments before. The goddess’s gift had not only changed his body but seemed to be altering his very emotions, dulling his empathy, sharpening his killer instincts.
The demonic spider within him stirred again, no longer a fearful presence, but an eager partner. Its whispers were stronger now, mixed with the thrumming energy inside him, urging him to embrace this change, to enjoy his new power.
Chief clenched his fists, his new claws digging into his palm. He was stronger, yes, but he was also becoming something... else. Something monstrous. The goddess’s reward felt like a curse, tying him further to her will, twisting him into a tool for her unknown plans.
Chief let out a weary sigh, a sound that was now raspier, more guttural than before. His new appendages, twitching with a life of their own, extended outwards. With an almost instinctive grace, they began to extrude shimmering strands of web, the sticky filaments weaving together with surprising speed and precision. In moments, a large, silken robe formed around him, a grotesque yet functional garment that concealed his altered form. The web-silk was surprisingly strong, clinging to him like a second skin, hiding the chitinous patches and extra limbs from casual observation.
He glanced down at the empty husks of the Ogres, a reminder of the power that now resided within him, a power he hadn’t asked for and barely understood. The Empire’s pursuit would intensify. His transformation wouldn’t go unnoticed for long, especially with the demise of two of their elite warriors. Their methods would undoubtedly become more sophisticated, their tactics more ruthless. Mages, specialized hunters, perhaps even more formidable ogres – the thought sent a shiver down his spine, despite the strange dulling of his fear.
Yet, a sliver of grim satisfaction flickered within him. The Empire’s inevitable reassessment of his threat level bought him time. Time to disappear deeper into the wilds, time to understand the changes wracking his body, time to perhaps even learn to control the terrifying power that now coursed through his veins.
With a flicker of his old habits, Chief reached down, expecting to feel the familiar straps of his roller skate boots. His hand grasped empty air. A wave of disappointment washed over him as he remembered. His legs had changed too drastically; his ingenious contraptions were now useless relics, likely scattered in pieces where his transformation had taken hold.
He shook his head, a gesture of weary resignation. Stepping closer to a towering oak, one of his new appendages shot out a thick strand of web, anchoring itself high in the branches. With a powerful, almost effortless pull, he launched himself into the air, swinging away from the clearing, deeper into the shadowed embrace of the old forest.
Hours went by fast since chief was gone, it was at this time a group made an appearance at the place the battle took place.
A figure cloaked in deep indigo robes stood surveying the scene, his hands moving in slow, deliberate gestures as if reading the very air. Runes shimmered faintly around his fingertips, and his eyes, a piercing violet, scanned the carnage with an unnerving intensity. This was the mage.
Behind him lumbered a group of Ogres, larger and more heavily armored than any Chief had encountered before. Their faces were grim, their movements radiating a cold, professional fury. They moved with a disciplined efficiency, their gazes sweeping the area, taking in the drained corpses of their comrades and the faint traces of web-silk clinging to the undergrowth. The lack of any report from the initial pursuit team had clearly prompted a more significant response.
The mage knelt beside one of the fallen Ogres, his brow furrowed in concentration. He ran a hand over the empty husk, his lips moving in a silent incantation. The air around the corpse shimmered, and a faint, spectral echo of the Ogre’s last moments seemed to flicker into existence for a fleeting second before vanishing.
"Something... unnatural," the mage’s voice was low, resonant, carrying an air of authority that brooked no argument. He rose, his violet eyes locking onto the direction Chief had fled. "The energy signature is... chaotic, yet focused. And there’s a residue of something... ancient. Something dark. Our initial team has clearly met with something far beyond their capabilities."
One of the lead Ogres, his face distinct with blood red eyes and his golden armor, grunted, his voice rough. "The rat. It did this."
"The rat has become something else," the mage corrected, his gaze still fixed on the deeper woods. "This wasn’t just brute force. There’s... magic here. Twisted, visceral magic. And something else... something that fed on their life force." He gestured to the drained bodies. "We are dealing with something far more dangerous than we initially anticipated."
He turned to the Ogres. "The tower masters will need to know of this. Their little pet has become a viper. Spread out. Track any sign, any trace. But be cautious. Whatever did this is powerful, and not something we should recklessly follow."
The Ogres moved with swift obedience, their heavy footfalls barely disturbing the forest floor as they fanned out, their senses alert. The mage remained standing in the center of the clearing, his violet eyes scanning the trees, a thoughtful, almost troubled expression on his face. He could sense the lingering echoes of the dark magic, a faint, tantalizing thread leading deeper into the woods.
The indigo-robed mage stood in the clearing, his violet eyes narrowed in frustration. The magical residue left behind was potent, almost suffocating, yet frustratingly vague. It was spread out over a considerable area, offering no clear direction, no easy path to follow. He frowned, a vein throbbing in his temple. This was becoming far more complicated than a simple retrieval.
As a fourth-stage mage, his sensitivity to magical energies was considerable. The raw power he felt lingering in the air, the echoes of something ancient and dark, sent a prickle of unease down his spine. It was a feeling akin to standing too close to a volatile magical nexus, a sense of barely contained danger that belied the creature’s initial classification.
The brief he had received had been infuriatingly inadequate: an escaped rat-man from a low-priority experimental site. A wave of anger washed over him, directed at his oblivious superiors. Whatever reckless experiments they had been conducting had clearly gone catastrophically wrong, unleashing something capable of wielding power that felt... wrong, fundamentally twisted. The sheer audacity of their incompetence was staggering. He clenched his fists, the runes on his fingers flaring momentarily. This wasn’t just about retrieving an escaped subject anymore. This was about containing a potential catastrophe that his own Empire had carelessly unleashed.
The scattered Ogres returned to the clearing one by one, their massive forms casting long shadows in the fading light. Each shook their heads, their expressions conveying a mixture of frustration and a hint of relief. They had found nothing. The rat-man, or whatever it had become, had vanished without a trace.