Chapter 363 Even more
As the sun dipped below the horizon, casting long shadows over the camp, a faint commotion stirred the remaining soldiers.
Those left behind turned their heads toward the edge of the forest, their faces a mixture of hope and dread.
The group that had ventured into the woods earlier stumbled back into view.
Their armor was battered and dented, their clothes torn and soaked in blood—both theirs and that of some unidentifiable creatures. Each step they took was heavy, their exhaustion evident, their faces pale and grim.
The camp fell silent as they approached, collapsing near the fire pit. The medic rushed over, his hands trembling as he began to tend to the worst of their wounds.
"How did it go?" one of the soldiers who stayed behind dared to ask, his voice hesitant.
The group's leader, a grizzled veteran named Caron, looked up, his face lined with pain and weariness. "It was…" He paused, his voice breaking as if the words were too heavy to speak. "It was worse than we could have imagined."
Another soldier from the group, a younger man with a deep claw mark across his chest, gritted his teeth as the medic stitched his wound. "That thing… it's a demon. No, worse than a demon. It's like the forest itself birthed it to punish us for daring to enter its domain."
"What happened?" someone pressed, their voice tinged with fear.
Caron sighed, shaking his head. "We thought we were prepared. We had numbers, a plan… but it didn't matter. We found it near the riverbank. It was waiting for us, like it knew we were coming. The moment we stepped into its territory, it attacked."
His words hung heavy in the air, and another soldier from the group, a woman named Tessa, spoke up, her voice trembling.
"It moved so fast. One moment it was in front of us, and then it was behind us. I—I didn't even see it strike, but suddenly, two of us were down."
She clenched her fists, her knuckles white. "We tried to fight back, but nothing worked. Arrows just bounced off its hide like twigs. Our blades barely left a scratch."
"It's like it was toying with us," another soldier added bitterly, his face pale. "Every time we thought we had it cornered, it would disappear into the shadows and reappear somewhere else. And those eyes… those damn glowing eyes. I can still see them every time I close mine."
The group fell silent, their faces haunted by the memory of the beast. The soldiers who had stayed behind exchanged uneasy glances, the gravity of the situation sinking in.
"It's stronger than anything we've ever faced," Caron admitted, his voice heavy with defeat. "We thought we could outnumber it, overwhelm it, but it's smarter than that. It knows how to fight. It knows how to win."
For a moment, no one spoke, the weight of their words pressing down on the camp like a suffocating fog. Then, one of the younger soldiers, barely more than a boy, whispered, "So what do we do now? We can't just give up. We need those cores, or we'll never leave this place."
Caron's eyes flickered with a mix of determination and despair. "We'll go back," he said finally, his voice steady despite the tremor in his hands. "But we need a new strategy. This thing isn't just a beast—it's a predator, and it sees us as prey. We need to think smarter, not just hit harder."
The group huddled closer, their conversation shifting from recounting the terror of the beast to analyzing their failure.
"We were too scattered," Tessa said, her voice firm despite the fear in her eyes. "It picked us off one by one because we weren't watching each other's backs. We need to stay closer, cover each other's blind spots."
"And we can't rely on brute force," Caron added. "That thing's hide is too thick for our weapons to pierce. We need to find its weak points. There has to be a way to hurt it—maybe the eyes, or the joints. Something."
"We also need bait," another soldier said reluctantly. "Something to draw it out, to keep its attention focused while the rest of us strike."
The group exchanged uneasy glances at the suggestion, the implications clear. No one wanted to volunteer for such a dangerous role, but they knew it might be their only chance. Experience tales with empire
"What about traps?" someone else suggested. "If we can't beat it in a straight fight, maybe we can outsmart it. Set up snares, pitfall traps… anything to slow it down or immobilize it."
Caron nodded slowly, a spark of hope flickering in his tired eyes. "It's risky, but it might work. We'll need to be careful, though. This thing is cunning. If it suspects anything, it'll turn the tables on us."
The conversation continued late into the night, the soldiers pooling their knowledge and ideas in a desperate bid to find a way to defeat the beast. The fire crackled softly as they planned, their fear gradually giving way to a grim determination.
By the time the first light of dawn crept over the horizon, they had a plan—or at least, the beginnings of one. Their bodies ached, their wounds still fresh, but their resolve was stronger than ever.
As the morning broke, they gathered their weapons and supplies, their faces set with a mix of fear and determination. One by one, they stepped into the forest, their hearts heavy but their minds focused.
This time, they would not run. This time, they would face the beast together.
As the sun set once more, casting the forest in hues of deep red and orange, the group stumbled back into the camp, their faces etched with the same despair and exhaustion as the day before.
They were battered, their armor even more dented and broken, their bodies covered in dirt, blood, and sweat. Each step they took seemed heavier than the last, their defeat weighing them down like stones tied to their feet.
The soldiers who had stayed behind rushed to meet them, their anxious faces searching for any sign of success. But as the group crossed into the clearing, it was clear—there was none.Nôv(el)B\\jnn
Caron collapsed onto a nearby log, his head bowed, his sword falling from his grip. Others simply dropped to the ground where they stood, too tired to even remove their helmets.
"What happened this time?" one of the soldiers asked hesitantly, his voice barely above a whisper.
Caron lifted his head slowly, his eyes hollow. "It...it didn't work," he said, his voice trembling with frustration and hopelessness. "The traps...the snares...everything. It saw through it all."
Tessa, sitting nearby with her arm cradled against her chest where a deep gash bled through makeshift bandages, shook her head. "We thought we had it," she said bitterly. "We set the bait, lured it to the clearing, and had everything ready. But it knew. Somehow, it knew. It avoided the traps like it had seen them a hundred times before."
"Not just avoided," another soldier chimed in, his voice trembling with both fear and awe. "It dismantled them. It tore apart the snares, triggered the pitfall on its own terms, and then turned on us like it was mocking us for even trying."