The Guardian gods-Chapter 523

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Chapter 523: 523

The effect was immediate and devastating. The spider phantom shrieked again, a sound of pure agony that seemed to tear at the very fabric of the forest. Its movements became erratic and uncontrolled, its shadowy form flickering violently. The Ogre, sensing his victory, prepared to disengage.

But the effort of maintaining the phantom had taken its toll on Chief. A surge of his own will, fueled by a primal need to reclaim his body and horrified by the carnage, began to push back against the entity. The spider phantom, having expended a significant amount of its shadowy energy in the fight, began to waver, its form becoming translucent.

Just as the Ogre landed back on the ground, the spider phantom roared, a sound filled with pure, unadulterated fury. The sound wasn’t physical, but it resonated directly within Chief’s mind, a psychic backlash of pure rage. Clutching his head, Chief stumbled forward, his own will now peaking. The spider phantom, unable to maintain its hold against Chief’s awakening consciousness and weakened by the Ogre’s assault, began to dissipate, its phanthomy form dissolving into nothingness.

The Ogre, stunned by the phantom’s sudden disintegration and the raw mental force that emanated from Chief, hesitated for only a moment. But a warrior’s instinct took over. He lunged towards the weakened Chief, his runed weapon raised for the final blow.

The Ogre lunged, his runed weapon a descending arc of lethal force aimed at Chief’s unprotected head. His focus was absolute, his victory seemingly assured against the disoriented and weakened prey. He hadn’t accounted for the grotesque, yet now instinctively weaponized, appendages that sprouted from Chief’s torso.

In a blur of unexpected motion, one of Chief’s newly grown arms, tipped with surprisingly sharp claws, lashed out. The movement was swift, almost serpentine, betraying a primal instinct honed in the heat of survival. The Ogre, his attack committed, had no time to react. The unexpected appendage, guided by a desperate surge of Chief’s will and the lingering echoes of the spider’s predatory instincts, pierced through the gap in the Ogre’s helmet, directly into his eye.

A guttural cry of shock and agony erupted from the Ogre. His weapon clattered to the forest floor, his massive body convulsing. He staggered backward, his hand clutching at his ruined eye, dark blood seeping between his armored fingers. The surprise attack had been swift, brutal, and utterly unexpected.

Chief, still reeling from the mental backlash of banishing the phantom, stared in horrified disbelief at his own appendage, now slick with the Ogre’s blood. The act had been instinctive, a desperate flailing of a body pushed beyond its limits. The lingering predatory instincts of the spider, coupled with his own will to survive, had combined to deliver the fatal blow.

The Ogre stumbled again, his breathing ragged, before collapsing to the forest floor with a heavy thud. Silence descended once more, thick with the stench of blood and the weight of the brutal encounter.

Chief stood there, trembling, his body a canvas of wounds and blood. He had survived, against all odds, but the cost was mounting.

A deep unease settled over Chief, even stronger than the shock of the Ogre’s death. He trembled, not just from being worn out and hurt, but from a strange feeling of being disconnected. He stared at his bloody hand, a gruesome reminder of how desperate he’d been, when a cold feeling washed over him. His eyes widened in horror as he felt himself losing control of his body.

His mouth fell open wider than it should, and sounds started coming from his throat – rough clicks and hisses that formed words he didn’t understand. The air around him felt thick, and the bright flow of magic he could now see was swirling faster and getting stronger, reacting to the weird sounds coming from him. Even the forest seemed to be holding its breath, the leaves still in an unnatural way. Whatever his body was doing, it was powerful, pulling on unseen energy.

As the last hissing sounds left his strange mouth, his body went limp, falling like a puppet with cut strings. Right then, a strange feeling of lightness came over him. His awareness, his spirit, separated from his body, floating upwards. He hung in the air, watching from above like a detached observer.

Below, his lifeless body lay among the dead Ogres. The blood on his new hand started to flow, not out, but in, tracing invisible paths across his skin. It dripped onto the forest floor, pooling and swirling, guided by something unseen. The red liquid came together, forming complicated lines and symbols that glowed with a faint, evil light. A magic circle, clearly like a spiderweb in its design, appeared around the fallen Ogres.

A heavy feeling came down, a real weight in the air that pressed on his spirit. A sudden dread washed over him, a basic warning that screamed he shouldn’t be experiencing this in his current state. Without thinking, his spirit recoiled, snapping back into his body with a jolt.

He gasped, his eyes flying open, his view back on the ground. He watched in horror as the blood drained from the Ogres’ bodies, flowing along the glowing lines of the magic circle, feeding its dark energy. A tremor ran through his own body, a gut reaction to the draining life force.

Then, a new feeling overwhelmed him. The unseen demonic spider that had been in his thoughts all the time, the constant whisper in the back of his mind, started to shiver. It wasn’t a physical shaking, but a mental one, a wave of terrified recognition that went deep within Chief.

His own senses twisted, changed by a strange awareness. The tall trees around him seemed to shrink, the whole world seeming to warp. In his mind, a huge spider leg appeared, so big that the Ogres’ bodies looked like tiny bugs caught in its hairs. A crushing wave of dread washed over him.

Somehow, without being told, he knew. This was the creature his people, in their ignorance and fear, had worshipped. This was the power that had enjoyed his suffering, the silent watcher of his pain. The sheer size of its presence was overwhelming, a terrifying horror that made his own existence seem tiny. He was a toy, a speck of dust in the presence of a very old being. The chanting, the blood magic – it had been a summoning, started by something within him, something connected to this terrifying god.

A voice, huge and with a cold amusement in it, echoed not in the air, but right inside Chief’s head. "Well done, my little rat," it murmured, the words dripping with a possessive joy that made his skin crawl, even though he couldn’t move. "For that, you’ll get a great reward."

Chief’s jaw moved uselessly, his throat tight, his mind a mess of terror and disgust. He wanted to scream, to fight this monster, but his voice wouldn’t work. He was stuck in his own body, forced to watch the horror unfold.

The giant spider leg in his mind seemed to shift, and the heavy feeling got stronger. Then, in a flash, the ghostly shape of Vorenza, the spider goddess, seemed to appear above the bloody clearing. Her form kept changing, a mix of shadows and sharp lines, her many eyes shining with cold amusement as she watched Chief’s silent struggle.

Thin, shadowy threads, impossibly fine but feeling incredibly powerful, stretched out from her, hooking onto something unseen above the dead Ogres. Chief’s confused senses felt a faint tug, a pulling feeling as if something invisible was being taken from the lifeless bodies. Souls. She was taking the souls of those who had chased him.

Then, as quickly as she had appeared, Vorenza’s ghost-like form vanished, leaving behind a lingering sense of dread and something real that pulsed with dark energy. It floated in the air in front of Chief, a blood-red crystal, its sides catching the dim light from above, giving off a clear feeling of power and corruption.

A feeling deep within his changed body, a basic craving he couldn’t ignore, longed for the crystal. It promised strength, power, a twisted kind of food. But Chief’s mind recoiled in horror. He knew where it came from, the price that would surely come with it. A wave of sickness, both in his body and spirit, washed over him.

But his disgust didn’t matter. His will wasn’t his own anymore. The crystal shot forward with unnatural speed, a red blur against the green of the forest. It hit him in the center of his chest, going through skin and bone as if they weren’t even there. A burning heat exploded inside him, followed by an overwhelming feeling of being invaded as the crystal dissolved, its energy flooding his veins, becoming part of him.

Chief gasped, his body shaking as the energy flowed through him. The spider inside him stirred, no longer afraid, but excited, its presence growing bolder, stronger, mixed with the power of the goddess’s gift. He had been rewarded, yes, but the reward felt like another twist of the knife in his horrifying change, tying him even more to the monstrous being that watched him with such chilling amusement.frёeweɓηovel.coɱ

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