The echoes of triumphant cheers died abruptly, strangled by a silence more profound, more terrifying than the preceding chaos of battle. Where the colossal Undead Host had crashed down moments before, a victory hard-won, something stirred within the grotesque, rapidly decaying mountain of amalgamated flesh and bone. Not the twitching of residual necromantic energy, but a deliberate, sickening movement from deep within the carcass.
Slowly, obscenely, a new figure began to extract itself from the Host's ruined torso, pushing aside fused ribs and tearing through layers of putrid tissue. It emerged slick with gore, draped in viscous fluids and crimson remnants of its 'birth' matrix. The creature was unnervingly small, barely reaching a meter and a half in height, its frame emaciated to the point of skeletal fragility. Its limbs were unnaturally long, thin, dangling loosely as if stretched and broken on some infernal rack.
It paused, standing unsteadily amidst the wreckage of its progenitor, seemingly orienting itself to the world outside the corpse-womb. Clumps of gore still clung to its narrow back, bony shoulders, and gaunt face. With a slow, almost contemplative motion, it raised one elongated, skeletal hand and dragged its fingers across its face. A soft, wet ripping sound accompanied the gesture as gore sloughed away, revealing features that defied natural law: a horrifyingly gaunt visage, skin stretched paper-thin over sharp bone, and deep, empty sockets where eyes should have been. From within those sockets, however, burned faint points of dull red light, like the dying embers of a malevolent consciousness. Its mouth stretched impossibly wide, a lipless gash revealing elongated, wickedly sharp fangs that clicked together softly, experimentally.
No one moved. No one breathed. Time itself seemed to warp, stretching agonizingly thin around the diminutive horror. The cheers, the relief, the exhaustion of moments before - all evaporated, replaced by a primal, suffocating dread that clamped down on every heart. Soldiers who had just faced down a Rank 5 monster now found themselves paralyzed by the sight of this frail, gore-drenched creature. Its very presence radiated an aura of death so pure, so concentrated, it dwarfed the ambient necromantic taint of the graveyard.
Jacobs, his hand still tight on his greatsword, felt it instantly - a dense, roiling storm of dark aether surrounding the creature, vastly more potent and focused than the Necromancer or even the Host had possessed. Henry's Mystic Sense screamed warnings, depicting not just ambient malice, but a tightly contained core of incandescent crimson energy deep within the creature's chest, pulsing with a slow, deliberate rhythm that felt utterly alien. Harold, the Paladin, instinctively clutched the holy symbol at his neck, feeling the divine light within him recoil, faltering as if before an ancient, intrinsic opposite. Priest Bern, standing near the now-fading Holy Pressure circle, his face pale with exhaustion, gasped, recognizing an energy signature spoken of only in the most forbidden, apocryphal texts.
The creature's head tilted, the red embers in its sockets scanning the frozen ranks of Zephyros soldiers. Its gaze moved slowly, deliberately, lingering on individuals, seeming to weigh their fear, their life force. It passed over the trembling recruits, the hardened veterans, the weary commanders. Then, its gaze fixed. Not on Jacobs, the strongest Ranker present. Not on Harold, the conduit of holy light. But on the two figures standing closest to where the Holy Pressure ritual had been centered - Shield Captain Nathan, his massive shield still raised defensively though his knuckles were white, and the exhausted Priest Bern.
The creature's lipless mouth stretched wider, pulling the taught skin back from its fangs in a horrifying rictus that might have been a smile.
"NATHAN!" Jacobs roared, raw instinct screaming danger.
"FATHER BERN!" Harold echoed, lunging forward.
"PROTECT THE PRIEST!" Henry yelled, already moving, sword flashing.
The three commanders reacted with the desperate speed born of countless battles. They surged forward, weapons raised, aether flaring, attempting to intercept, to shield. Nathan, already in position, braced himself behind his massive tower shield, pouring his remaining energy into its defensive enchantments, forming a bulwark before the vulnerable clergyman.
Tch... Tch... Tch...
Three distinct moments in time, yet compressed into an interval so brief it defied perception. To the paralyzed onlookers, reality seemed to stutter. One instant, the commanders were charging forward, Nathan was bracing, the Priest was beginning a hasty prayer. The next…
Henry, Jacobs, and Harold found themselves inexplicably thrown back, tumbling violently through the air as if struck by an invisible force, crashing heavily amidst the graves yards away. They looked up, dazed, to see Nathan and Priest Bern still standing where they had been. Perfectly still.
For two heartbeats.
Then, with horrifying synchronicity, both bodies - the stalwart Shield Captain and the venerable Priest - crumpled bonelessly to the ground. Their heads were simply… gone. Vanished in that imperceptible instant of violence, leaving only spraying arcs of blood momentarily painting the air before soaking into the corrupted earth.
A collective gasp hitched in the throats of over a hundred soldiers. The speed. The lethal precision. The utter effortlessness of the execution. It was incomprehensible.
Then the screaming began anew, louder this time, laced with utter despair.
Thump.
Something small and wet landed in the center of the disintegrating Zephyros formation. Nathan's severed head. Eyes wide with the final instant of shock, skin already paling, devoid of blood. It hit the ground and split like rotten fruit.
The fragile remnants of morale shattered completely. Terror became a tangible entity, gripping the soldiers in its icy fist.
Amidst the rising tide of panic, the three remaining commanders struggled to their feet, ignoring their own pain, their gazes instinctively snapping upwards. Other veterans followed their lead, their terrified eyes drawn to the skeletal branches of the tallest, most ancient tree overlooking the battlefield.
There, perched with unnerving casualness, sat the creature. One skeletal leg swung back and forth idly. In one elongated hand, it held the dripping head of Priest Bern. It tilted the grisly chalice, draining the last vestiges of blood into its waiting maw, swallowing noisily. Its ember eyes glowed with satisfaction.
Then, with utter contempt, it tossed the drained head aside. It bounced off lower branches before landing with a soft thud near Nathan's headless corpse. The creature stretched its mouth into that terrifyingly wide, fanged grin, looking down upon the chaos it had wrought.
A voice, rasping, guttural, yet chillingly articulate, slithered through the air, silencing the screams for a moment.
"Tasty…"
The single word confirmed their deepest fear. Intelligence. Malice. This was no mindless beast driven by instinct. This was a predator that savored not only the kill, but the terror it invoked. The decapitations hadn't just been efficient; they had been a performance, a deliberate act of psychological warfare designed to break them utterly.
Hope died. The Holy Pressure formation, their trump card against the Host, was useless against this new entity, its caster now headless at its feet. Speed, strength, cunning - they were outmatched on every conceivable level. They were lambs before the slaughter, their lives subject to the whims of the monster perched casually above them.
The air grew thick with the stench of fear and helplessness. Every soldier felt the desperate urge to flee, yet remained frozen, terrified that being the first to move would make them the next target.
Jacobs clearly understood the mood of the soldiers around him, as he himself was struggling to contain his own fear and panic.
Even Henry, who always maintained his composure in any situation, felt a sense of utter hopelessness washing over him. The only thought that crossed his mind was to shout and order everyone to scatter in all directions simultaneously.
Doing so would shatter the entire army, and the operation would officially fail. But what did success or failure even matter anymore? Survival was the only thing that mattered. This was the only way to maximize the number of survivors.
Many would become gruesome meals for the monster, but at the same time, others would gain the opportunity to escape. Accepting the sacrifice of some to save the rest.
Life or death at that point would become a matter of pure luck, whoever the monster chose would have to accept their fate.
Henry guessed that Jacobs, as the highest-ranking commander of this mission, must have considered this terrible option as well. But with the heavy responsibility on his shoulders, it was difficult for him to make such a painful decision.
For Henry, however, survival was the top priority. He was ready to abandon the mission, accept sacrifices to ensure that at least some would survive. And in his heart, he prayed that he, Sophia, and his close comrades would be among them.
As the atmosphere surrounding the Zephyros army grew eerily silent, with only heavy breathing echoing through the air, everyone waited for the slightest trigger to send them fleeing, seeking their own paths to survival.
The gaunt monster continued to leisurely observe the trembling army, like a shopper selecting the freshest goods.
The creature on the tree suddenly went rigid. Its casual posture vanished. It dropped into a low crouch, its entire being focused intently, not on the soldiers below, but on the empty space behind the Zephyros lines, towards the edge of the graveyard.
A low, guttural hiss escaped its fanged mouth. Its emaciated body tensed, radiating palpable waves of… not aggression, but something akin to agitated fear. The red embers in its eyes flared brighter. Its mouth opened wide, and a complex circle of roiling black energy, far more potent than the Necromancer's violet light, snapped into existence before it. Dark aether condensed violently within the circle.
With a final, piercing shriek that seemed to tear the air, the creature thrust its head forward. A tightly focused beam of pure, annihilating blackness erupted from the circle, lancing across the battlefield, striking towards that unseen point of focus beyond the terrified soldiers.
The beam hit… nothing. There was no explosion, no impact, only the silent absorption of terrifying power into the empty air. For ten seconds, an unnerving stillness held. The creature remained poised, watching intently.
Then, from the direction the beam had targeted, a mist began to form. Not the natural mist of morning, but a swirling, greasy fog of grey-black vapor. It clung to the ground, spreading with unnatural speed, silently engulfing the battlefield, carrying with it a heavy pressure, a sense of profound weariness.
The creature on the tree let out one final, sharp cry - a sound now clearly identifiable as panic. It launched itself from the branch, landing silently despite the height, and then simply vanished, sprinting away into the woods with speed that defied its frail appearance, abandoning the battlefield and its potential prey without a backward glance.
Everyone was stunned, not understanding what had just transpired. The seasoned soldiers realized that the monster had just fled, an unbelievable action for such a powerful creature. What could possibly make a high-ranking Rank 5 monster flee in such terror? Could it be the presence of an even more terrifying Rank 6 powerhouse?
Their questions went unanswered. As the grey-black mist rolled over them, the heavy pressure intensified. Throbbing pain bloomed behind their eyes. Breathing became difficult, labored. A wave of crushing fatigue washed through the ranks. One by one, soldiers slumped to the ground, consciousness fading, succumbing to the debilitating influence of the unnatural fog.
Jacobs, struggling against the encroaching darkness, managed one final act of command, fumbling for the emergency flare, activating it with trembling fingers. A single red spark shot weakly upwards, bursting briefly above the grey canopy - a final distress call, a testament to their fate - before he too collapsed.
Henry felt his own strength failing, the world tilting, fading to grey. He stumbled towards Sophia, saw her eyes fluttering closed as she succumbed beside him. He reached out, his fingers brushing hers just as the darkness enveloped him completely.
Silence descended upon the Bandit Graveyard, broken only by the soft, swirling whispers of the grey-black mist that now blanketed the field of unconscious soldiers. Then, faint but growing clearer, another sound emerged from the fog - the slow, deliberate hoofbeats of a single horse approaching.
Clop… Clop… Clop…
"That damn Laurent. Now I have to do as he says…" The rider muttered - his face concealed behind a mask crafted from a polished human skull, skeletal thin beneath tattered robes, his tone filled with displeasure.