CH809 · Rewrite
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Chapter 809: The Moment of Crisis

By the time the soldiers understood what was happening, adjusting the machine guns for aim was already too slow. They pulled the revolving rifles from their backs and fired without bracing — a volley swept over Edith’s prone form, close enough that she heard the air split as the bullets passed.

She rolled onto her back in time to watch the distortions in the air solidify around something solid and visible. The creature took shape as it died: a taupe shell covering a body nearly two meters tall, a pair of sickle-like forelimbs and seven or eight pairs of supportive legs erupting from the abdomen, its head narrow and elongated like a locust’s. The bullets had cracked it open across the skull. It twitched once and folded to the ground, its blood spreading dark around it.

“Get out of my way!”

The voice came from behind her, followed immediately by a heavy sword cutting the air with a sound like a struck bell. The blow struck the space before the first machine gun squad — a strike of enormous force that flattened the rippling air, flung two invisible shapes into visibility, and knocked them both off their feet before they could recover.

The God’s Punishment Witches came through behind Ashes’ blow, moving fast and coordinated, cutting the sickle monsters before they had risen. In moments, the bodies were in pieces on the ground.

Edith let out her breath.

The enemies’ advantage had rested on invisibility and the element of surprise. Outnumbered and stripped of camouflage, they had lasted seconds.

She noted, watching the last few attempts, that as the sickle monsters drew closer to the God’s Punishment Witches, their concealment degraded — half-visible, shimmering between states, as though the proximity of something in the witches was suppressing their ability to hide.

“Are you hurt?” Margie pulled Edith upright. “We spotted them on the cliff and moved as quickly as we could, but we were still late.”

“You used the Magic Stone to see through them?”

“Yes.” A tall God’s Punishment Witch stepped forward. “Ordinary weapons don’t work well against these creatures. You should inform the people above to send more God’s Punishment Witches down.”

Edith recognized her as Betty. “You can destroy their camouflage?”

“It functions on the same principle as the God’s Stone of Retaliation.” Betty shrugged. “So far, I can only suppress it briefly.”

“But those soldiers were wearing God’s Stones as well.” Brian’s voice was tight. He was staring at the three soldiers on the ground. “Why couldn’t they see the enemy?”

“Distance, light, and attention all affect what the eye can find,” Betty said, her composure undisturbed. “A God’s Stone only functions within one or two paces. The enemy was exposed for less than a second in this dim space. Even with the stones on them, most people would not have had the reaction time to register what they were seeing. Ordinary soldiers don’t stand a chance against these creatures in conditions like these.”

Edith exhaled slowly. Betty was right. She herself had not seen the full shape of the creatures until they were already dead. The long forelimbs and the invisibility together made their attacks nearly impossible to defend against at the human reaction speed. Burying God’s Stones throughout the sentry post in advance, creating a wider detection zone — that was the only way to give ordinary soldiers a fighting chance.

“Damn it.” Brian drove his fist against his thigh. “I should have laid the wire netting first.”

“We should consider withdrawing,” Betty said. “Something unpleasant is still coming. The shriek earlier nearly shook the entire snow mountain.”

Edith looked up. “You heard it too?”

“Losing most physical sensation has sharpened our remaining senses considerably.” Betty studied her for a moment. “I didn’t expect a common person to have heard it at all.”

So it had been real — not her imagination. Edith removed her God’s Stone and set it beside the nearest machine gun. She and the others gathered around Margie as she summoned the Magic Ark, and they descended to the lower level, then ascended again along the steep cave wall. Brian, the Gun Battalion commander, had a visible reluctance about ceding the front line to the Taquila witches, but the reality left him no other choice — once the God’s Punishment Witches were engaged, firing around them became impossible.

The soldiers stationed at the Blackstone Pagoda level had no clear picture of what was happening below and had continued sending equipment down: tents, God’s Stones, ammunition, supplies. Brian ordered them to stop. They transferred to the steam-powered elevator and ascended.

As the Magic Ark approached the worm tunnel passage, the entire cave above them erupted with the sound of sustained gunfire — the specific, continuous crash of three machine gun squads firing at once without leaving themselves a gap.

Edith’s expression changed. Margie poured everything into the Ark.

They broke out of the passage opening and Edith widened her eyes.

Pieces of something were falling from the upper cave in a shower. Three machine gun squads had arranged themselves in one continuous line and were firing at the cave ceiling, sustained fire, under Sylvie’s direction. The revolvers and precision shooting units covered the blind angles, sending shots into the cave walls without taking aim.

Brian caught the nearest soldier. “What are you fighting?”

“Demonic beasts, my lord!” The man slammed a fresh cartridge in without stopping. “A pack charged down from the mountain!”

“Why now, of all the—” He bit it off.

The thought struck Edith before Brian had finished reacting.

“Could the muffled sound have been a summons?”

She had read something of this in His Majesty’s books — sounds that existed below the range of human hearing, or at the upper edge of it, used by some creatures to communicate across distances. If the monster she had heard was capable of producing such a signal, and if that signal traveled through the rock to the demonic beasts gathering outside the mountain—

But crisis did not wait for analysis. A soldier ran to Brian with a second report: Lady Maggie, flying reconnaissance in the east, had spotted an abnormal pattern of demonic beast movement near Misty Forest. They were moving toward the mountain and toward Neverwinter on a convergent heading.

“This…” Brian stood very still. “How can this be—”

“Ahem.” Edith cut into his silence before it could become a visible panic. A leader who showed bewilderment openly destroyed his soldiers’ ability to function. She had no authority here and no rank. She did not waste a breath on either point. “The situation is simpler than it appears. First — withdraw the First Army deployed outside the snow mountain and concentrate them at the cave entrance. A smaller battlefront requires fewer machine guns to hold. The demonic beasts cannot simply flood inside; you control the chokepoint.”

Brian turned to her. Something steadied in his face. “Yes. Exactly.”

“Second — have Lady Maggie contact His Majesty and request reinforcements as a precaution. Our ammunition and food come through Redwater River. If we lose the supply passage, we cannot sustain the fight regardless of how well we hold the cave entrance.” Edith kept her voice level. “The beasts cannot swim. Keep the concrete ships on the water and post a few men to hold the river approach and guide whatever reinforcements arrive.”

She continued without pause. “Lady Sylvie handles the demonic beasts inside the cave ceiling — she already has a clear picture of the space. Gather everyone’s God’s Stones and bury them at the sentry post for detection coverage. And send the Taquila witches down to reinforce Betty immediately. She needs more people to push south along the riverway toward Agatha and the others.” Edith paused. “We must reach Betty quickly. If my guess about the sound is correct, the source of it will be the key to ending this.”

Brian drew a long breath. “I understand. We’ll proceed as you’ve said.”

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