Chapter 34 Sound

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Chapter Thirty-Four: Sound and Silence

Richard's Perspective

"Before we go in," I said, my voice low, stopping just short of the ancient seal etched into the floor, "there's something you need to know."

Lucas paused beside me, still and quiet. The air was tense, as if the world itself was holding its breath.

"The old records didn't pull punches," I continued. "They weren't vague, not about this. These cultists… they aren't just fanatics. They're monsters—literal monsters. Fast beyond belief. Stronger than anything once human should be. And their hearing?" I shook my head. "Sharp enough to pick up the flutter of a moth's wings from across a chamber. Even breathing wrong could give us away."

Lucas didn't flinch. He looked at me with that same calm detachment he always wore, as if I'd just told him the weather might turn cloudy. "So I can't count on you to pick them off from a distance like usual."

I gave him a crooked smile, equal parts grim and reluctant. "Not unless I want every one of them on me in an instant. One arrow's all it'd take to break the silence—and bring hell crashing down on my head."

He cracked his knuckles slowly, methodically. A faint glimmer stirred behind his eyes—blue light, electric and alive. "Then I'll go loud," he said, voice like steel sliding from a sheath. "I'll engage first, draw their attention. You take the shots when their backs are turned."

I didn't like it. Every instinct screamed against using him as bait. But it was the best we had. The only thing that gave us a chance. I gave him a nod, sharp and reluctant. "Watch yourself."

He smirked. "Always."

Then he stepped across the seal without hesitation.

We passed through the barrier—an invisible veil, ancient and cold. It rippled around us like smoke, brushing against skin and bone. And suddenly, we were inside.

The air within was thick—dense with age, decay, and something older still. Something unnatural. A scent like damp stone and dried blood clung to every breath. The chamber yawned open around us, vast and crumbling. Towering stone columns—cracked and worn—rose like the broken ribs of a dead god. Above us, the ceiling was lost to shadows. And nestled in the dark, curled in corners and clustered around the fallen, lay the cultists.

Sixteen in total.

Each one over seven feet tall. They might have once resembled humans in shape, but nothing about them was truly human anymore. Skin pale and taut, as if stretched too tight over their twisted forms. Hairless. Lanky. Muscles coiled and lean beneath skin like old parchment. Their heads were elongated, almost animalistic, and filled with teeth—far too many teeth for any natural mouth. Their ears were long, narrow, and constantly twitching, even in sleep.

Batlike. But darker. More cruel. Wrong, in a way you feel before you see.

They appeared asleep. But the moment we crossed the threshold, their ears twitched in unison. Like they'd heard the faintest shift in air. One by one, they stirred—heads lifting, eyes opening.

And suddenly, every gaze in the room was turned toward us.

Lucas didn't wait.

He took a single step forward—and roared.

It wasn't just a shout. It was a war cry—raw, primal, deafening. A sound that shattered the silence like a hammer through glass. It echoed through the stone like thunder tearing through a mountain.

And then everything exploded.

I moved instantly, instinct carrying me behind a crumbled column for cover. Climbing fast, I reached a broken ledge above the fray. Drew my bow. Nocked an arrow. Waited.

They surged toward Lucas in a blur of pale limbs and claws—far faster than I'd expected, even after all the warnings. One moment they were crouched like statues, and the next they were moving with speed that felt impossible.

My body tensed. Even prepared, even expecting it, I nearly froze. They were faster than anything I'd seen before.

But Lucas?

He moved like he'd been born for it.

The first cultist lunged—its claw aimed to tear out his throat. Lucas dipped low, twisted, and countered in a flash. His clawed hand slashed upward through the cultist's throat, lightning sparking from his fingertips. It wasn't just a strike—it was surgical. Precision wrapped in raw power.

The creature spasmed violently and dropped like a puppet with its strings cut. Dead before it hit the ground.

I exhaled. Loosed two arrows.

They streaked through the chamber like twin bolts of blue fire. Silent but deadly. Both hit their marks. Two cultists dropped without a sound, twitching as the venom did its work. No cries. No flailing. Just convulsions—and then stillness.

Lucas was already deep in the swarm. Thirteen remained, circling him, striking with razor claws and gnashing teeth. But he moved like the eye of a storm—calm, focused, deadly.

He didn't just use lightning. He was lightning.

It crackled through him—coiling along his limbs, almost illuminating the veins beneath his skin. Every motion amplified, refined. He moved faster than thought, reacting before attacks even landed. Electricity heightened everything—reflexes, perception, muscle response. He was in perfect sync with it.

Another cultist lunged. Lucas ducked, spun, and drove his clawed hand through its chest. Lightning exploded outward in a jagged burst of blue-white fire. The creature seized and collapsed.

That made four.

I tracked another cultist with my bow, drew back, and let the string hum.

Five.

Then, all at once, everything stopped.

The remaining eleven cultists froze mid-attack.

Their ears twitched violently. And suddenly—without warning—they turned as one.

Not toward Lucas.

Toward me.

I didn't even have time to curse properly.

"Damn it," I breathed, already moving, already scrambling from my perch. I dropped behind the ledge, feet hitting stone, and ran—putting as much distance between us as I could in seconds. But I knew it wasn't going to be enough. Not against creatures who could hear a heartbeat from across a battlefield. Not when they were this fast.

Behind me, I heard Lucas shout. I couldn't make out the words—but the sound of it carried power, rage, fury.

Because this fight?

It wasn't over.

It had only just begun.