Goblin King: My Innate Skill Is OP - Chapter 173: Help
A sharp crack split the air, followed by the unmistakable hiss of mana discharging. Blue arcs of lightning burst across her skin, crawling through her veins like molten wire.
Her body seized violently, muscles locking as the jolt rippled through her from head to toe.
She let out a strangled gasp and collapsed, twitching uncontrollably on the ground. The smell of singed fabric and burnt hair filled the tent. šš³šššš¦š£šÆā“š£š¦š.š¤šš
My mouth fell open slightly, not in fearābut in genuine astonishment. I stared for a moment, watching her convulse like a puppet caught in a storm.
"This bitch..." I muttered under my breath, half amused, half incredulous. "Did she just lie to me?"
The crackling energy faded as abruptly as it had appeared, leaving behind a faint shimmer of smoke rising from her arm. She groanedāa mix between a cry and a low whimperāas the pain settled into her limbs.
Her lips moved, her throat strained, yet nothing but a faint rasp escaped. The shock had numbed her nerves, leaving her twitching helplessly on the dirt floor.
I crouched closer, studying the faint arcs of energy still dancing across her skin before they flickered out entirely.
"So," I murmured, almost to myself, "it works even on small lies. Interesting."
A grin crept onto my face. The discovery was... satisfying. This oath wasnāt just a deterrentāit was a leash that could tug at the slightest falsehood. It would make every conversation from now on far more entertaining.
Still, her reaction told me something more important. She truly believed what sheād saidāthat the chief was more terrifying than I was. Terrifying enough that even under the threat of death, her instinct had been to defend his legend.
Understandable, I supposed. Fear was the easiest loyalty to cultivate. He might be scarier, in the way predators are to preyābut that didnāt mean he was stronger.
That was the real question I shouldāve asked. Was he more powerful?
I looked down at Talia again. She was still shaking, trying to steady her breathing, her fingers curling weakly against the cold earth.
Well...it doesnāt matter now.
I pressed my palm against her back, channeling a thin stream of mana until the faint glow of a seal formed beneath my hand. It shimmered for a second before sinking into her skin, leaving no visible mark. Now she was tagged.
With that seal, I could use [Leap] to track her anywhere she tried to run.
I rose and turned toward the unconscious Zivra and the rest of the goblins scattered around the tent. Their small bodies trembled with every breath, fear written plainly across their faces.
What to do with them?
Killing them wouldnāt benefit me; they were too weak, too low-leveled to yield anything useful. Not even enough experience to nudge my stats.
I could bring them into the clan, maybe integrate them, strengthen my numbers. But loyalty? That was something no seal or blade could force. They would need a reason to follow me, something stronger than fear.
I shook my head slowly. Noāthat wasnāt the priority right now.
First things first, I needed to deal with their chief.
Iād heard about the chief from the others. So much talk that curiosity had begun to gnaw at me.
I wanted to see him for myself.
But for that, Iād have to wait.
He was still out there somewhere, making his way back.
Until then, I was stuck hereāwith this frightened bunch huddled near the edges of the tent, watching me as if I were death itself.
Their wide, trembling eyes shifted from me to Talia, who was still recovering from her punishment, and the fear on their faces deepened.
I took a slow step toward them.
That was when I felt itāa sudden shift in the air, subtle but undeniable.
A cold ripple crawled across my skin, raising every hair on my body.
And my instincts sharpened instantly.
Danger?
I stopped moving, scanning the tent. The torches flickered slightly, their flames bending as though disturbed by an unseen wind. Nothing moved. No sound, no presenceājust that invisible pressure building in the air, thick enough to make my pulse quicken.
The feeling intensified, a low, electric tension that coiled at the base of my spine. My heart began to pound, not from fear, but from the unmistakable awareness that something powerful was closing in.
I turned sharply toward Taliaāshe had just managed to push herself upright, her breathing still ragged.
Was it Zivra?
I turned.
The young female still lay motionless, her body limp against the ground, which meant it wasnāt her.
My gaze darted across the others, searching for any hint of movement, any shift in mana, but none of them looked capable of causing the dread that was now creeping through me.
I pressed a hand against my chest, feeling the heavy thud of my heartbeat hammering beneath my ribs. The rhythm was erratic, unnaturally fast, like my body was reacting to a threat my mind couldnāt yet see.
"What... is this?" I muttered under my breath.
It wasnāt panic. Not truly. Iād felt fear beforeāthe kind that crawled up your throat and froze your limbsābut this was different.
It was the kind of instinctive terror that didnāt come from the mind.
Then, was it from somewhere else?
A cold shiver rippled down my spine as my eyes swept the tent again. Nothing moved. No sound, no heat signature, no fluctuation in mana that shouldāve triggered my danger sense. And yet the feeling grew stronger, pressing down on me like an invisible weight.
I wasnāt imagining it.
Whatever this was, it wasnāt mine.
The terror didnāt feel internalāit felt foreign, like someone elseās emotions bleeding into me.
My hand tightened over my chest.
Someone else.
And then it hit meālike a sharp pulse behind my eyes.
Ariel.
The ember fox. Something was wrong.
Sheād gone to hunt down Ingrid earlier, confident as always, and Iād let her.
Ingrid was dangerous, yes, but I hadnāt thought heād be a real threat to her.
A cold realization slid down my spine.
Had I underestimated him?
I took a breath to steady myself, but before I could think further, a faint voice brushed against my mindāso weak and distorted that for a second, I thought Iād imagined it.
Help!
I froze.
"What the hell...?" I muttered aloud, eyes darting toward the tentās entrance.
The voice came again, strained this time, like someone gasping between shallow breaths. Help...
It was Arielās voice.
My stomach knotted, and the air around me seemed to thin.
Then came the last thing I expected to hear.
Ueek... the chief... is... here.
My eyes widened.
And in an instant, I activated [Leap].
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