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Chapter 120: Chapter 119: The Ones Who Watch

The forest did not return to normal after the battle.

Even after the last of the Ruin Lurkers had fallen and their fading bodies dissolved into the surrounding earth, sothing in the atmosphere remained unsettled. It was not the kind of tension that ca from danger alone, nor the lingering echo of violence. It was sothing quieter—more deliberate. The air itself seed to hesitate, as though an unseen presence had claid dominion over the space and was unwilling to release it.

Aether stood exactly where the battle had ended, his posture relaxed but his awareness fully extended. His eyes did not linger on the scattered remains of the beasts. Those were no longer relevant. Their purpose had already been fulfilled.

Instead, his focus had shifted.

From prey—

To predator.

"...They’re still here," the Fallen Succubus said softly, her voice no longer carrying its usual teasing edge. There was a subtle change in her tone now, sothing sharper and more attentive, as though even she recognized the shift in circumstances.

Aether did not respond imdiately. His gaze moved slowly across the tree line, scanning the forest with quiet precision. He wasn’t searching blindly; he was asuring—tracking the faint disturbances in the environnt, the unnatural stillness, the absence of instinctive life.

After a mont, he spoke.

"...Not beasts."

The distinction mattered.

The presence he felt lacked the chaotic unpredictability of wild creatures. It was controlled. Intentional. Focused. Whatever was watching him was not driven by hunger or instinct—it was observing with purpose.

And that made it far more dangerous.

Instead of retreating, Aether took a step forward.

Then another.

He moved deeper into the forest without hesitation.

The Fallen Succubus seed to pause for a brief mont before speaking again. "You’re choosing to approach them?"

"Yes," Aether replied calmly. "If they’re watching, then there’s no reason to pretend otherwise."

There was no fear in his voice. Only clarity.

"If they want to observe ," he continued, "then I’ll force them to act."

The terrain began to change as he advanced. The dense trees thinned slightly, allowing faint streams of light to filter through the canopy above. The ground sloped downward into a shallow basin, where remnants of ancient ruins erged once more—cracked stone pathways, broken pillars, and fragnts of collapsed walls scattered across the area.

It was a place that had once held structure and aning.

Now, it existed only as a silent witness to ti.

"...Stop," the Fallen Succubus said suddenly.

Aether halted instantly.

Just in ti.

A faint shimr passed through the air directly in front of him. It was nearly invisible, like a ripple across the surface of still water, but it carried a distinct presence.

Aether’s eyes narrowed slightly.

"...A formation."

He extended his senses outward and imdiately recognized the pattern.

"...Not just a barrier," he corrected quietly. "A periter."

The realization ca quickly.

They had not walked into danger.

They had been guided into it.

"...We’re already inside," Aether murmured.

For a brief mont, the forest seed to hold its breath.

Then—

Movent.

A shadow shifted ahead.

Another to his right.

Another behind him.

And finally, one more from the left.

Four figures stepped out from different directions, erging from concealnt with a level of precision that spoke of experience rather than coincidence. They were cloaked, their faces hidden beneath deep hoods, their presence muted yet unmistakable.

Each of them was accompanied by a beast.

Not wild.

Not uncontrolled.

But trained.

Disciplined.

Aether’s gaze moved from one to another, analyzing them in an instant.

The first beast resembled a wolf, but its form was unnaturally sharp. tallic ridges ran along its spine like blades, each movent producing a faint scraping sound that hinted at its lethality.

The second was a hulking creature, its massive body composed of dense stone-like muscle. Every step it took caused the ground beneath it to tremble slightly.

The third was a serpent, coiled low to the ground, its eyes unblinking as it tracked Aether’s every movent.

The fourth was smaller than the others, but its presence was the most unstable. Its body flickered faintly, as though it struggled to maintain a consistent form, and waves of chaotic energy radiated from it in irregular pulses.

"...Rogue tars," Aether said quietly.

"...Not ordinary ones," the Fallen Succubus added.

The air grew heavier.

Not overwhelming.

But deliberate.

One of the cloaked figures stepped forward slightly, his movents controlled and asured.

"You adapt quickly," a voice said from beneath the hood.

Aether’s expression did not change. "So you’re not here to kill

imdiately."

"Not yet," the figure replied.

There was a brief pause before he continued.

"We want to see."

The aning was clear.

This was not a hunt.

It was an evaluation.

And Aether—

Was the subject.

Without further warning, the four beasts moved.

All at once.

The assault began with overwhelming coordination. The blade-backed wolf lunged forward first, its body becoming a blur of motion as it targeted Aether directly. At the sa ti, the serpent slithered low across the ground, angling for a strike from below, while the massive stone beast charged head-on with unstoppable force.

The fourth creature remained behind—but its energy surged outward, distorting the surrounding space.

"Defend," Aether commanded.

The Spirit Fairy reacted instantly.

A pulse of golden light expanded outward, forming a translucent barrier around him. But this ti, the shield did not feel as stable as before.

It trembled.

The blade wolf struck first.

Its attack sliced across the surface of the barrier, not breaking it entirely but cutting deep enough to weaken its structure.

"...Stronger than expected," Aether noted.

Before he could adjust, the serpent lunged.

Its movent was unpredictable, its body twisting mid-strike in a way that defied normal patterns.

"Shift," Aether ordered.

The Fla Sovereign Pup surged forward, releasing a burst of fire aid at intercepting the attack.

But the serpent twisted again—dodging with unnatural precision.

"They’re reading the flow," Aether said.

The enemy beasts were not simply attacking—they were reacting, adapting to every movent he made.

Then the stone beast struck.

It crashed directly into the weakened barrier, shattering what remained of it and forcing Aether to step back.

For the first ti, his rhythm broke.

Not completely.

But enough.

"...Now would be a good ti to use

properly," the Fallen Succubus said, her tone sharper now.

Aether’s eyes narrowed.

"...Not yet."

He was still testing.

Still holding back.

"Condense output," he ordered instead.

The Spirit Fairy reduced its energy output, focusing only on essential support. The Fla Pup shifted its attacks, abandoning wide-area bursts in favor of concentrated strikes.

The flow began to return.

But it wasn’t enough.

The rogue tars did not rush. They observed. Adjusted.

Then attacked again.

The unstable beast released a sudden burst of chaotic energy.

It spread outward like a shockwave, distorting the environnt and interfering with Aether’s control.

His commands lagged.

Again.

"...So that’s the real threat," he said quietly.

This was not about overwhelming him with strength.

It was about disrupting him.

Aether exhaled slowly.

"...Enough testing."

Sothing about him changed.

Not explosively.

But undeniably.

"Now."

The Fallen Succubus manifested fully.

The battlefield shifted instantly.

An illusion field spread outward, subtle yet effective. The environnt distorted just enough to interfere with perception, altering distances, timing, and reaction speeds.

The enemy beasts slowed.

Not physically.

But perceptually.

A fraction of a second was created.

And that was all Aether needed.

The Trinity activated.

Fla condensed into a sharp, focused form.

The Spirit Fairy stabilized the energy flow, preventing waste and maintaining balance.

The Fallen Succubus disrupted enemy perception, breaking their coordination.

The flow beca seamless.

Connected.

Aether did not issue multiple commands.

He moved—and the system followed.

The first strike landed.

Clean.

Precise.

The unstable beast fell imdiately, its chaotic energy collapsing in on itself.

The serpent followed, unable to react in ti.

The formation broke.

The remaining two beasts tried to recover, but without coordination, they were already at a disadvantage.

Within monts—

They fell.

Silence returned to the forest.

But this ti, it was heavier.

More deliberate.

The cloaked figures did not attack again.

Instead, they stepped back.

"I think, we should go back now, as it is now already Confird," one of them said.

"That he’s above our expected paraters. Or he even exceeded the recorded paraters from history and jut built his own different path."

As they Observing Aether, he is also inscpecting them. Aether’s gaze sharpened.

"You’re not hunters, then can please explain

who are you or who send you to investigate ." he said.

"No we can’t disclose these info," the voice replied.

There was a brief pause.

"But we can tell you that, We’re observers."

Aether understood imdiately.

This had never been about killing him.

It had always been about testing him.

Without another word, the rogue tars disappeared into the forest, their presence fading as though they had never been there at all.

Aether remained where he stood, the silence of the forest settling around him once more.

But now—

He knew.

This was not over.

It had only just begun.

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