Chapter 66
Chapter 66
sildra had been impressed with jensen's work. he was quick, decisive, and devastatingly accurate with that bow of his. when the monsters had threatened to overwhelm them, he'd magically pulled something out of nowhere to turn the battle around. she'd been quite taken by his performance.
then she'd accompanied torwin to beldrit the night he'd returned. he'd needed her [eye of the moon] skill to confirm the corrupted seed bearers were entirely purged, and her quest had evolved from saving deshir to encompassing the entirety of the frontier. it was immediately obvious what the difference was between a gold-ranked monster hunter and his young apprentice. he had arrows in the air even before she could open her mouth to let him know a monster was approaching.
how high is this man's mental stat to not only hear everything around him, but to be able to track them through the brush? he has to have at least a couple of skills helping him along.
they reached beldrit after a short hour of travel, and sildra caught her breath upon coming in range. "there are at least twenty or thirty monsters inside the walls," she informed torwin.
"probably more under the roofs," he said. "we'll have to drag everyone out house by house to make sure we've got them all."nôv(el)b\\jnn
that wasn't going to go well, but then again, the people of deshir had been far more pliable than she'd expected after she and jensen had rescued them. she expected that had more to do with the more recalcitrant elements of the town being dead than anything, either because they'd resisted the invaders or because they'd been part of the attack.
beldrit was in better condition, but things were still tense. they'd survived the initial assault, but a quarter of the town had been killed and they had no way to know how many monsters still lurked among them, no way to know if a man who'd been on the side of humanity yesterday was still himself now.
sildra could tell, though. it was only a question of whether they'd believe her. no woman wanted to hear that her son had been killed and replaced by a monster. no husband would believe that his wife was working with the body snatchers, not even in the face of overwhelming evidence. that, more than anything, was what made it so hard to quell the invasion. people just wouldn't do what was needed when the victims were their families.
at least, that was how things had gone in deshir. when they walked through the open, unmanned gates of beldrit an hour or two before midnight, they immediately found a crowd gathered in the middle of town, loudly arguing.
"i'm telling you, you're wrong! i think i'd know if my own brother had been replaced by a monster!"
"then what was he doing in my house!" another man yelled back.
torwin turned a questioning gaze to sildra, and she shook her head. there were indeed seven corrupted seed bearers in the crowd, but the man in question wasn't one of them. whatever it was he'd been up to in his neighbor's home, it wasn't to spread more corruption through beldrit.
"which ones?" the old monster hunter asked.
it seemed impossible that torwin could have heard her, but somehow, impossibly, his bow snapped up and a new arrow manifested, its tip held in line with his finger. a fresh round of screams went up, but too late to warn the imposter. the arrow flew true, lacing its way through the startled faces of the crowd to sink into the monster's face.
it took him between the eyes, sending up a gout of blood and dropping the monster straight to the ground. "the whole village will assemble in front of me so that i might sift out the monsters among you," torwin yelled, his voice pitched to be heard over the crowd. "every last one of you, and if anyone thinks to hide in their cellars or attics, know that i will drag you out myself."
despite any protests to the contrary, torwin bullied the entire town into doing exactly that. after the first few kills, he answered calls to prove he wasn't just killing random citizens by claiming a machete and shoving it into the mayor's hand. "there," he said. "this man here is a monster in human skin. execute him yourself and see the system message."
despite protests to the contrary, torwin had no mercy for the man and bullied him into it. at the same time, a group of six monsters burst out of the inn, axes raised overhead as they charged the crowd. sildra started to draw on her power, to use [lunar flare] to cut them down, but torwin put arrows through them all. his eyes shifted to sildra for a moment and took in her slight nod.
his features hardened and he gestured to the group. "there are six more for you. kill them and see for yourself."
"no! not my boy!" a woman cried, rushing forward. she was older, perhaps forty or fifty, and attempted to throw herself in front of a young man in his early twenties who was clutching at an arrow lodged firmly in his leg, just above his knee. his face was twisted up in a grimace of pain. "mom," he gasped out. "we can't let him... he's the monster... must stop him."
more protests rang out. more townsfolk rushed to defend the monsters wearing the bodies of their loved ones. torwin was merciless, so much so that he pulled a dagger from his belt and demanded a random man hold one of the monsters up. forced to comply, he held his struggling neighbor while torwin slit the monster's throat.
"you have helped slay a corrupted seed bearer, level 15," the man who'd restrained the monster said, his voice breaking halfway through. "gods, he was right."
despite any cries of protest or attempts to stop him, torwin did his job. it was a grim, bloody harvest, one no one thanked him for, but in the end, every last man, woman, and child was examined thoroughly. those that tried to hide failed to veil themselves from torwin's senses and were dragged out under the moonlight for sildra to covertly examine.
beldrit hated him for it, just as he'd told her they would. there were some who understood the necessity, maybe even most, but sildra knew it would be weeks and months before they accepted the reality of the tragedy, that these monsters were no different than the ones who dragged their victims off into the trees to eat them alive, that their family members were already dead.
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and then it was over, in just two short hours. it was like a nightmare she hadn't realized she was trapped in until she woke back up. for a few brief minutes, she was just thankful that the job was done. then she remembered the truth.
beldrit was only the first town on their run tonight.
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