Chapter 260: Mountain of Doom
Chapter 260: Mountain of Doom
The air was thick with the biting scent of damp earth and cold stone, a shroud that veiled the world as Lyerin and his band reached the foot of the looming mountain.
The massive, dark peak stretched high into the clouds, jagged and unnatural.
In the failing light, it looked as if it had torn itself from the depths of the world just to make a challenge to the heavens, a dark silhouette gnashing against the pale sky.
Lyerin, a man cloaked in robes that absorbed light as if woven from shadow itself, came to a halt.
A smirk played across his lips as he lifted his head, his eyes narrowing at the towering form before them.
"Finally," he murmured, his voice low but edged with an odd satisfaction.
"We have reached the Mountain of Doom, the mountain that appeared out of nowhere."
He lingered over the words, savoring them as if he were tasting the magic in the air.
Around him, the government soldiers and their superiors shifted uneasily.
Their eyes darted between each other, silent questions weighing heavily in the cold, misty air.
Why were they here, so far from home, standing on alien soil that seemed to pulse with an ancient, sinister energy?
The agreement with Lyerin had been simple enough: he would strip away the Families' enslavement magic in exchange for their fleet and military support. And yet… not once had he explained the true purpose of this journey.
Why had he come here? And why had he insisted on bringing them along?
They'd followed, unease growing with each mile as they trekked across unfamiliar land, under strange, ominous skies. But none dared to question him openly.
There was something in his aura, a palpable force that kept their voices silent and their feet moving forward.
As if sensing the quiet apprehension among his reluctant companions, Lyerin lifted a gloved hand, gesturing for them to hold their ground.
"Step back," he said, his voice a strange, silken command that wove through the air and caught their ears like hooks.
There was an unsettling light in his eyes as he turned to face them. "I am going to do something that requires… caution." Experience tales at m v|l e'-NovelBin.net
The soldiers exchanged glances, reluctant yet obedient.
They edged back, shields clinking softly, boots crunching over the frost-laden ground.
No one dared to disobey, not with that glint in Lyerin's eyes—a promise of things they could scarcely imagine.
With a flick of his wrist, Lyerin beckoned forward his horde of pig orcs.
They were hulking creatures, their skin a dull, bruised gray beneath thick layers of grime and scars.
They were ugly beasts, tusks jutting from their mouths, eyes small and glinting under thick, bony brows.
The chains that bound them to Lyerin's will shimmered faintly, a dark magic that wrapped around their bodies like a curse.
They marched forward, obedient but with an air of resignation—as if they knew what was to come.
Lyerin raised his arms, the voluminous sleeves of his cloak falling back to reveal bare, ink-scarred forearms, each line of dark script whispering a secret.
He began to chant, his voice rolling over the rocky terrain in a language both ancient and raw, a tongue that tasted of storms and sulfur.
"Vindra susar az'gath, ul neroth tas'dae," he intoned, his voice growing deeper with every syllable. The language was harsh and guttural, its sounds scraping at the ears of the soldiers as if the words themselves had edges.
He motioned to the pig orcs, and with an obedient grunt, they obeyed, raising daggers chipped and blackened with blood from countless battles.
Each orc held its blade against the tough, leathery skin of its forearm, their faces twisted in grim resolve.
"Ul grah'nas velor, dol'aeth daen!"
Lyerin's voice grew louder, filled with a dark command that seemed to resonate with the very bones of the mountain.
The sound of his chanting was almost a physical force, pressing down upon those who stood nearby, urging them to bow, to submit.
His voice became a storm, words rolling out like thunder and striking against the earth, each syllable a jagged bolt of energy that seemed to shake the very ground beneath their feet.
The first orc dragged its blade across its arm, and the air was split by the sound of tearing flesh.
Shckkk!
The dark blood began to well up, sluggish and thick, as the orc let it drip onto the ground, darkening the dirt in deep, spreading stains.
One after another, the pig orcs followed suit.
Shck, shck, shck!
The sound of their blades slicing into flesh echoed, mingling with the wet patter of blood falling to the earth.
The soldiers grimaced, some turning away, unable to watch the grisly display. But Lyerin's gaze never faltered, his eyes sharp, drinking in every drop as if it were sacred.
Drip. Drip.
The blood pooled around their feet, a circle of sacrifice, forming intricate patterns as Lyerin continued to chant.
His words intensified, growing more complex and foreign, as though they belonged to a language older than time itself.
The sound was magnetic, thrumming with a magic that seemed to coil and pulse in the air, drawing the soldiers closer even as it chilled their hearts.
"Dar'ak duorn grahn sella!" Lyerin's voice was a crescendo now, his arms raised high, fingers splayed as if grasping at invisible threads.
The ground beneath them began to tremble, a subtle quake that rippled outward, carrying his voice, his command, to the mountain itself.
The pig orcs raised their heads, eyes dull and unfocused as they pressed the blades deeper into their flesh.
More blood spilled, gushing now, coating the earth in thick, dark rivulets that snaked out in thin, winding rivers around Lyerin.
The mountain seemed to breathe, its dark face looming overhead as if leaning in to witness the ritual.
The chanting grew louder, rising and falling like the roar of an unseen ocean, each wave crashing against the soldiers' senses.
The sound was relentless, filling every crevice of their minds, pressing against their thoughts, bending them toward the purpose of this arcane ceremony.
"Zorn, ak'riel, mas'ranthe!" The words spilled from Lyerin's lips, each syllable sharp and brittle as shattered glass.
He was no longer a mere man.
He had become a conduit, a vessel for the ancient power that surged through him, lighting his eyes with an unnatural gleam, setting the air around him alive with energy.
The pig orcs grunted and groaned as the blood continued to flow, their bodies swaying, weakened by the loss but held upright by Lyerin's will.
Their eyes grew dim, yet they did not resist; they could not resist.
Bound by magic, by chains woven of dark intent and forbidden words, they offered their blood willingly, helpless under his command.
Plop. Drip. Shck.
The sounds of the ritual melded into a steady rhythm, a heartbeat of sacrifice that pulsed against the mountain.
Blood pooled thickly now, the scent of iron hanging heavy in the air, mingling with the tang of earth and the icy bite of the wind.
The soldiers stood transfixed, torn between awe and horror, trapped in the thrall of a magic far beyond their understanding.
And still, Lyerin chanted. His voice was a relentless wave, each word hammering against the fabric of reality itself, bending it, shaping it to his will.
His arms lowered, fingers splayed, tracing unseen symbols in the air, each gesture releasing a new surge of power that crackled and hissed in the blood-soaked earth.
Hssssss.
The ground hissed where the blood touched, as if the very mountain drank in the offering, accepting the sacrifice with a hunger older than time.
The earth beneath them seemed to pulse, as if coming alive, as if breathing the dark magic into its depths.
And then, at last, Lyerin's chanting softened, his voice dropping to a whisper, the final syllables falling from his lips like stones cast into a deep well.
The silence that followed was deafening, an eerie calm that settled over them, thick and suffocating.
The soldiers held their breath, eyes wide, hearts pounding in the silence that had swallowed the world.
Lyerin let his hands fall to his sides, a slow, satisfied smile spreading across his face as he looked down at the blood-stained earth, his work completed.
The pig orcs sagged, one could see that their strength were all spent, eyes dull and listless as they stood in the pools of their own blood, breathing in shallow gasps.
The soldiers watched him, eyes filled with questions they dared not voice.
In the depths of their hearts, a new fear took root-a fear not of the mountain or of the orcs, but of the man or the Warchief who had brought them here.