Chapter 33 Flower

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Chapter Thirty-Three: The Flower of Death

Richard's Perspective

The stone beneath my boots felt like ice—rough, worn by centuries, and full of ghosts. Each footfall echoed in the crumbling passage like a reluctant heartbeat. The air inside these ruins wasn't just stale—it was ancient, thick with the weight of everything that had died here and never quite left. It whispered against the walls like a dying breath, and with every step deeper into the heart of this forgotten tomb, it felt like something was watching, remembering.

Lucas and I finally came to a halt before the entrance to the final chamber—a massive arch of cracked, moss-clung stone that towered over us like the open jaws of something long dead. There were no iron bars or heavy chains keeping intruders out. No lock, no visible trap.

Instead, there was something far more effective.

A seal.

It wasn't visible to the naked eye, at least not mine. But I could feel it—an invisible wall of pressure pressing inward, not against my body, but against my very soul. A sensation like gravity being turned sideways. Not magic in the way people think of it—not wands and incantations and glowing runes—but something older, primal. It had the feel of something etched in blood, sealed in sacrifice, bound with the last breath of desperate people who'd known what true monsters were. It hummed beneath my skin like a storm rolling in just over the horizon—low, deep, and hungry.

Next to me, Lucas tilted his head slightly, his golden eyes flaring to life like twin suns. His werewolf senses kicked in, revealing things I couldn't begin to perceive. Ancient sigils—layers upon layers of them—painted across the threshold like a spiderweb of warnings. Symbols that didn't just stop the bad things. They stopped the things the bad things feared.

He let out a long whistle, his breath fogging in the cold air.

"This seal is really something," he muttered, awe in his voice. "You weren't exaggerating. It doesn't even register us as threats… but it sure as hell isn't letting those vampire wannabes out."

I gave a curt nod. "Obviously. The Hunters who were here before us didn't pull this off on their own. They had help. No one wanted those things getting loose."

Lucas stepped closer, narrowing his glowing eyes at the flickering sigils pulsing within the stone like veins of faint light. "Nice to know if we screw this up, the seal will still do its job. Small comfort, I guess."

I slid my pack from my shoulders and lowered it to the ground with deliberate care. The straps creaked slightly, and the sound echoed far too loudly in the stillness. Unzipping the main pouch, I began laying out the gear I'd prepared for this exact moment. Every piece had a purpose. No extras. No luxuries.

"Each one of those cultists," I said as I worked, "was as powerful as a monstrous corrupted creature. Strong. Fast. Unnatural. There are at least twelve of them down here."

Lucas gave a low whistle, this one less impressed and more grim.

Obviously the Hunters back then couldn't take them down. Not all of them. They had to do the next best thing—seal the whole nest shut like a nuclear waste site and hope time did the rest.

But it didn't.

Lucas didn't flinch. Didn't look scared. If anything, the little bastard looked excited. His eyes were alive with the kind of reckless joy you only see in someone about to throw themselves into something suicidal and call it sport. That glint of wild anticipation, like he wasn't about to face soul-drinking ancient horrors but step into a ring and fight for a trophy.

Even in the face of this… I couldn't help but smile. God, I'd miss this.

I reached down into the hidden compartment of my pack and pulled out a small glass case, no bigger than a jewelry box. It was lined with protective velvet and inscribed with faintly glowing runes—precautions for the lethal thing inside.

I popped the lid open.

Inside, resting like a piece of frozen smoke, was a single flower. Delicate, pale blue, and impossibly soft-looking. It seemed to shimmer faintly in the dim light, like mist caught in moonlight. It was beautiful in a way that didn't feel natural. The kind of beauty that made your skin crawl, like seeing a perfect smile on something that shouldn't have a mouth.

Lucas's expression shifted. Eyes wide. Breath caught.

"Is that—?"

"Yeah," I said quietly. "The flower of death. The most potent venom known to man. Even the scent smells like a funeral."

He leaned in slightly, cautious but clearly fascinated. "How the hell do you even have one? They're practically myths."

"I got it a long time ago," I said, carefully lifting the flower with gloved fingers. "Been saving it. Figured I'd need it for something… big."

With a practiced motion, I crushed the flower in my palm. The petals turned soft, then liquefied, becoming a single thick drop of glowing blue venom that clung to my glove like living mercury. I took ten of my silver arrowheads—each one painstakingly carved with binding runes, each one tempered in blessed water—and dipped their tips into the venom. As the blue liquid touched the metal, the sigils ignited briefly, pulsing with pale fire, then vanished into the steel as the venom was absorbed.

Now, each arrow carried death in its purest form.

Only ten. That was all I could make. All I'd ever have.

Lucas watched in silence, his usual snark momentarily forgotten.

Then, finally: "So… what about me?"

I looked up from my work and shrugged. "Only had the one flower. And besides—you've got lightning. You don't need this."

Lucas frowned. "Still. Doesn't mean it's going to be easy. I can't just zap them like I'm Thor. I've got limits."

I smirked. "You trying to guilt one of these out of me?"

He raised an eyebrow. "Depends. Is it working?"

I chuckled and held up an arrow, nocking it to my bow. It glowed faintly, humming with that quiet promise of absolute silence. "Seniority has its perks, kid."

He snorted. "Old men and their hoarding habits."

I didn't answer. I just smiled.

We stood in silence for a long moment, both of us facing the arch and the seal that guarded it. Beyond that barrier, horrors older than kingdoms waited. Creatures that had drunk from the soul and danced in nightmares. This wasn't just another hunt. It wasn't a mission.

This was the end of something.

For me, maybe everything.

And I was ready.