Chapter : 941
The battle instantly shifted from a one-on-one duel to a brutal, chaotic three-on-one assault. Jager, who had been a master controlling a single, powerful piece, was now utterly, completely overwhelmed. He tried to command Kroth to focus on the Doppelganger, but Ken’s relentless, earth-shattering blows were forcing it to constantly rebalance. He tried to have it swat the annoying gnat that was Habiba, but its every move was met with a new pit of quicksand or a spike of rock erupting from the ground, her own Void powers now being used with a desperate, tactical brilliance.
His control, his elegant artistry, shattered. This was no longer a duel; it was a street fight, a chaotic, desperate mugging. The Doppelganger, freed from the relentless pressure, pressed its own attack, its spectral jaws tearing at the real alligator’s throat. Ken was a force of pure disruption. Habiba was a ghost inflicting a thousand cuts.
Jager screamed in frustration and rage. His perfect trap, his beautiful kill-box, had become his own personal hell. He was a grandmaster being beaten to death by a trio of relentless, unpredictable pawns and a ghost of his own queen. His control was gone. His spirit was being torn apart. And he knew, with a cold, terrifying certainty, that he was about to lose.
The chaos of the three-on-one assault was a symphony of beautiful, brutal efficiency. The Doppelganger, no longer on the defensive, fought with a renewed, savage ferocity, its spectral form a relentless mirror of the real alligator's own rage. Ken was a living earthquake, his every blow not just inflicting damage but fundamentally destabilizing the very ground on which the massive beast stood. Habiba was a phantom, her blade a constant, irritating distraction, her control of the earth a tactical nightmare that turned the entire clearing into a shifting, unpredictable trap.
Jager, the self-proclaimed artist of death, was reduced to a frantic, desperate commander trying to plug a dozen holes in a rapidly sinking ship. His connection to his spirit was a maelstrom of conflicting sensations: the tearing pain from the Doppelganger's bites, the bone-jarring impacts from Ken's fists, the stinging agony from Habiba’s precise strikes. His mind, once a serene command center, was now a cacophony of pain, rage, and the rising, icy tide of pure, unadulterated panic.
He saw the inevitable conclusion laid out before him with a horrifying clarity. His spirit would be overwhelmed and destroyed. The psychic backlash would leave him crippled, and the three vengeful warriors would tear him apart. His elegant hunt had devolved into his own ugly, ignominious execution.
But Jager was, above all else, a professional. And a professional knows when to cut their losses. In a final, desperate act of self-preservation, he made the pragmatic choice. He abandoned his art, his pride, and his partner, and chose to survive.
"Kael!" he screamed, his voice a ragged, desperate command. "To me! Now!"
He executed a forbidden technique, a last-ditch escape mechanism taught only to the highest-ranking operatives of his order. He bit his own tongue, drawing blood, and channeled a massive surge of his own life force, his very soul, into a single, explosive act.
A blinding, cataclysmic explosion of pure, dark energy erupted from his body. It was not an attack; it was a diversion. A wave of concussive force and disorienting shadow washed over the battlefield. The Doppelganger was thrown back, its ethereal form flickering violently. Ken was forced to brace, his arms raised to shield his face. Habiba was knocked from her feet.
In that single, chaotic moment, Jager recalled his spirit. The battered, bleeding form of Kroth dissolved into black smoke, returning to its pocket dimension. Jager himself, now ashen-faced and visibly diminished from the sacrifice of his own life force, did not hesitate. He turned and ran, not towards the forest, but directly at the shimmering, purple wall of the Soul Catcher.
He hit the barrier, and for a moment, it seemed he would simply bounce off. But he held a small, dark object in his hand—a secondary shard of the artifact that had created the cage. He pressed it against the wall, and the forbidden magic recognized its master. A small, temporary rift opened in the energy field. Without a backward glance, Jager plunged through it and vanished, the rift sealing behind him.
He had escaped. His mission was a catastrophic failure. His pride was in tatters. His spirit was wounded. But he was alive.
Kael, however, was not so lucky.
He had heard his master’s call and had tried to disengage. But he was not fighting a professional who valued retreat. He was fighting a force of nature, and the ocean does not simply let its prey go.
Chapter : 942
The Water-Knight Lloyd, who had been systematically dismantling Kael’s defenses, saw Jager’s escape. He knew he had only seconds before his own opportunity was lost. He ended the fight.
The vortex of water at Kael’s feet exploded upwards, becoming a swirling, liquid prison that engulfed the Hornet warrior completely. He was trapped in a spinning, disorienting sphere of water, his wings useless, his movements sluggish, his vision a blur.
The Water-Knight then raised its spear. The spinning drill reformed, larger and more powerful than before. With a final, decisive thrust, it pierced the water cage and slammed into Kael’s stinger-lance. The weapon, a masterpiece of enchanted steel, shattered into a thousand pieces.
The merge dissolved. The towering Water-Knight collapsed into a torrent of water, which then coalesced back into the human form of Lloyd Ferrum. He stood over the defeated, disarmed, and utterly broken Kael, who was now coughing up water on the muddy ground, his magnificent chitinous armor cracked and broken.
As Lloyd stood over his captive, the oppressive, purple dome of the Soul Catcher flickered, wavered, and then, with a soft, final sigh, it dissolved. The sterile, dead air was replaced by the fresh, clean scent of the rain-soaked forest. The hum of forbidden magic was gone.
The heroes were battered. They were bleeding. They were profoundly, bone-deeply exhausted. But they were victorious. And at their feet lay a prisoner. A high-value, direct link to the shadowy conspiracy that had been hunting them from the very beginning. The game had just changed, once again.
The oppressive, sickly purple dome of the Soul Catcher had been a perfect cage, a testament to Jager’s arrogant genius. But a cage, Lloyd knew, works both ways. It had trapped his guardians, but it had also trapped the hunters. Now, with one hunter fled and the other broken at his feet, the true nature of the trap was revealed. It had not been a kill-box for the heroes; it had been a crucible.
The Doppelganger, its purpose served, dissolved into a shimmering mist of light and shadow, retreating back into the nascent core of Lloyd’s soul. Its mimicry of the King-Rank alligator had pushed it to its absolute limit, its ethereal form flickering and unstable. It was a raw, powerful tool, but one that was still untempered. It had been a magnificent gamble, and it had paid off.
Ken and Habiba, freed from the seal, felt the warm, familiar presence of their spirits rush back into their cores. The connection was still frayed, the spiritual backlash of the forced severing leaving them with a profound, soul-deep exhaustion, but it was there. They were whole again. They converged on Lloyd’s position, their movements weary but deliberate, their faces grim masks of professional focus. They formed a protective triangle around their captive, their gazes sweeping the clearing, ensuring no other threats remained.
The clearing was a scene of utter devastation. The ground was a churned morass of mud, fractured stone, and smoking, corrosive pools where Kael’s venom had spilled. The air was thick with the scent of ozone, wet earth, and the coppery tang of blood. The rain continued to fall, a gentle, cleansing curtain washing over the carnage.
Kael, the once-proud Hornet warrior, was a pathetic sight. His magnificent chitinous armor was shattered, revealing the bruised and bleeding man beneath. He coughed and sputtered, trying to purge the water from his lungs, his body trembling with a combination of cold, shock, and the dawning, soul-crushing horror of his absolute defeat. His wings, once a symbol of his power and speed, were tattered and broken, twitching uselessly at his back.
Lloyd looked down at him, his face devoid of all emotion. This was not a moment of triumph. It was the conclusion of a tactical problem. The enemy asset had been neutralized and secured. Now, the debriefing could begin.
“Who is your benefactor?” Lloyd’s voice was quiet, almost conversational, yet it cut through the sound of the rain with the sharp, cold authority of a judge passing sentence.
Kael spat a mouthful of bloody water onto the mud. He tried to summon a defiant glare, but his eyes were filled with a mixture of pain and terror. “Go to hell,” he rasped.
Lloyd sighed, a sound of profound, weary disappointment. “I had hoped you would be more professional than your partner. He, at least, understood when the game was lost.” He crouched down, bringing his face level with the defeated assassin’s. “I will only ask you one more time. I have a foreign princess in my carriage and two very tired, very powerful guardians who have just been subjected to forbidden magic because of you. My patience is, shall we say, a finite resource. Who sent you?”