Episode-498


Chapter : 995


They stood on the edge of a vast, hidden, caldera-like valley. It was a perfect, circular depression in the heart of the mountain, a secret, verdant world shielded from the harsh winds by a ring of sheer, granite cliffs. And in the center of the valley lay a lake. It was a body of water of such impossible, crystalline clarity that it seemed to be a piece of the sky that had fallen to the earth. The surface was as smooth and placid as a sheet of polished glass, a perfect, flawless mirror that reflected the bruised, angry clouds above. A thick, ethereal mist clung to the surface of the water, swirling in slow, lazy currents, giving the entire scene a dreamlike, otherworldly quality.


And in the very center of the lake, rising from the placid, mist-shrouded water, was a single, large, and perfectly smooth rock of what looked like pure, white crystal. And upon that rock, growing in a small, perfect cluster, were the lotuses.


They were not the pale, delicate flowers of the mortal world. They were luminous, their petals a vibrant, jade-green that seemed to pulse with a soft, gentle, and divine inner light. The air itself hummed with the life-giving, spiritual energy that radiated from them in palpable, intoxicating waves.


It was the Heavenly Jade Lotus. It was real. The myth, the legend, the impossible prize at the end of their insane, suicidal quest, was right there, a hundred yards away, floating in the heart of a secret, forgotten paradise.


For a single, beautiful, and triumphant moment, a wave of pure, unadulterated hope washed over them. They had done it. They had faced the mountain, they had survived its guardians, and they had found their miracle.


But on Mount Monu, hope is a fleeting, dangerous, and utterly foolish indulgence.


As they took a hesitant, hopeful step towards the shore of the lake, their brief, beautiful triumph turned to cold, hard dread.


The placid, mirror-like surface of the water began to churn. Not violently, but with a slow, sinuous, and deeply unsettling purpose. One after another, a series of sleek, elegant, and utterly terrifying heads broke the surface of the water. They were the heads of colossal serpents, their scales a shimmering, emerald-green that was a perfect, deadly match for the lotuses they guarded. Their eyes were not the slitted, reptilian eyes of normal snakes. They were large, round, and the color of molten gold, and they were utterly, completely soulless.


At least a dozen of the monstrous guardians materialized from the depths, their long, sinuous bodies, each one as thick and as powerful as a warhorse, moving through the clear water with a silent, hypnotic, and absolutely lethal grace. They did not roar. They did not hiss. They simply… watched. They formed a silent, patrolling perimeter around the central, crystalline rock, their cold, golden eyes fixed upon the two small, warm-blooded intruders on their shore.


The message was clear. The prize was in sight. But the serene, beautiful lake was not a paradise. It was a serpent’s garden. It was a moat, filled with an army of silent, scaly, and very, very hungry death. And the harvest, they now realized with a chilling, sinking certainty, was not going to be an easy one.


The hope that had bloomed in their hearts just moments before withered and died, replaced by the cold, hard frost of a new and far more complex tactical reality. The serene, beautiful lake was a kill-box, a perfectly designed natural fortress. The water was their enemy’s domain, and the guardians were an army of silent, patient, and utterly lethal assassins.


Lloyd’s mind, the relentless engine of strategic calculation, immediately began to process the new variables. A direct, physical assault was suicide. He was a formidable warrior, but he was not a swimmer, and to enter that water would be to cede every possible advantage to the enemy. He could, perhaps, take on one or two of the serpents on land, but in their own element, he would be overwhelmed and torn apart in seconds.


Rosa, her own analytical mind working in a parallel, silent track, came to the same grim conclusion. Her ice-based Void power was a formidable tool, but it had its limits. She could, perhaps, freeze a small section of the lake’s surface, but to freeze the entire, vast body of water was far beyond her depleted capabilities. And a partial freeze would be useless; the serpents could simply smash through a thin layer of ice or swim beneath it.


They were in checkmate. The prize, the beautiful, life-giving, and utterly essential prize, was a mere hundred yards away, tantalizingly close, and yet, it might as well have been on the moon.


Chapter : 996


“There are too many of them,” Rosa stated, her voice a low, clinical whisper, her mind already cataloging the threat. “At least twelve that we can see. Their movements are coordinated. They are not simple beasts; they are a pack. A hunting party.”


“And the water is their world,” Lloyd added, his own gaze sweeping across the lake, mapping the serpents’ patrol patterns, looking for a flaw, a gap, a weakness in their perfect, fluid defense. “We cannot fight them there. It’s a battle we would lose before it even began.”


A long, heavy silence stretched between them. The beautiful, mocking light of the lotuses pulsed in the center of the lake, a silent taunt, a testament to their own powerlessness.


It was in this moment of absolute, strategic despair that a new, and utterly insane, idea began to form in the chaotic, unconventional depths of Lloyd’s mind. It was a plan born not from the cold, hard logic of the soldier, but from the audacious, reality-bending creativity of the engineer. A plan that was so risky, so fraught with a thousand different ways to fail, that it was a work of pure, unadulterated, and perhaps suicidal, genius.


He turned to Rosa, a new, and slightly manic, light in his eyes. “You said your power was one of control,” he stated, his voice a low, urgent hum. “Of stasis. Not of force.”


She looked at him, her expression a mixture of confusion and a dawning, wary suspicion. “Yes,” she said slowly. “That is its nature.”


“Good,” he said, a slow, predatory smile spreading across his face. “Because I don’t need you to fight them. I need you to build me a boat.”


Her eyes widened, her mind struggling to process the sheer, breathtaking absurdity of his words. “A boat? Here? Now? Out of what?”


“Out of the only building material we have,” he replied, his gaze flicking to the crystal-clear water at their feet. “Out of your ice.”


The plan, when he laid it out, was a masterpiece of high-risk, high-reward audacity. It was a gambit that hinged, completely and absolutely, on their new, untested, and brutally forged partnership.


He instructed her to focus her power not on a wide, thin sheet of ice, but on a small, dense, and incredibly thick circular raft, right at the lake’s edge. She would not be trying to freeze the lake; she would be forging a vessel, a solid, buoyant platform of pure, compressed ice, thick enough to bear his weight against the cold, dark water.


While she poured every last, remaining ounce of her Void energy into creating and, more importantly, maintaining the integrity of this fragile, temporary craft, he would be the passenger, the engine, and the warrior. He would push off from the shore, using his Steel Blood to manifest a long, sharp-tipped pole, a makeshift gondolier’s oar, to propel himself across the frigid, serpent-infested water. Thɪs chapter is updated by NoveIF


The moment he entered their territory, all hell would break loose. The serpents would attack, and he would have to fight them, alone, from the unstable, slippery surface of a melting boat. He would be a whirlwind of desperate, brutal motion, his Void-empowered pole a weapon to deflect snapping jaws, to crush skulls, to keep the horde of monsters at bay.


And she, from the shore, would be his only support. She would not be a passive observer. She would be his artillery, his battlefield controller. She would have to divide her focus, maintaining the raft with one part of her will while using the other to harry their attackers, to freeze small sections of the water to trap and slow the beasts, to send sharp, distracting shards of ice hissing through the air to create the precious, fractional openings he would need to survive.


It was a plan that required a level of trust, of synergy, of perfect, unspoken coordination that they had not yet earned. It was a blind leap of faith into a sea of hungry monsters.


He looked at her, his eyes asking the unspoken question.


Rosa looked at him, at the mad, brilliant, and utterly confident light in his eyes. She looked at the lake, at the army of silent, scaly death that waited for them. And she looked, in her mind’s eye, at the serene, sleeping face of her mother.


She gave a single, sharp, and utterly determined nod. The decision was made. The gambit was accepted. She knelt at the edge of the lake, the air around her growing cold, her hands glowing with a pale, blue light, and began to build their impossible boat. The battle for the Serpent’s Garden was about to begin.


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