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With a thunderous crash that echoed through the woods, the cultist belonging to the Cult of Annihilation was hurled a staggering ten ters through the air. As he soared, blood gushed from his mouth like a macabre fountain. His airborne journey ended abruptly when he smashed into the trunk of a towering, ancient oak tree. After the collision, he slid down the trees massive trunk, collapsing onto the ground as if he were nothing more than a sack of potatoes casually discarded.

His face was etched in an expression of profound disbelief and bewildernt. He had encountered formidable enemies and deadly traps throughout his life, but never in his wildest imaginings had he thought he would be propelled through the air by soone who wielded a dark hound as a blunt weapon.

Shirley, her hand tightly clutching the chain leash connected to her otherworldly friend nad Dog, approached the incapacitated cultist with asured steps. She stopped a few yards away, ensuring she remained at a safe distance.

The cultist was still clinging to life. However, it should be clarified that this dream world had its own set of rules. Under normal circumstances, in the waking world, the injuries he sustained would have been fatal. Here, despite having a head that seed to be sinking into his neck and joints contorted in grueso, unnatural angles, he was still breathing. His eyes locked onto Shirley, filled with a cocktail of loathing and just a hint of fear.

Shirley disregarded his hostile gaze. Lifting the chain slightly, she signaled for Dog to step closer. The skeletal hound obediently moved forward until its face was inches away from the wounded cultist.

Who who are you? rasped the cultist, his voice strained and filled with pain. As he saw Dogs fearso visage draw closer, uncontrollable terror finally erupted in his eyes. Not far from this unsettling scene, his mystical companion, the Death Crow, squird as if intending to intervene, but it seed to lose its resolve due to its masters debilitating weakness. This only made the cultists voice sound more frail. What are you planning to do?

Shirley smiled slowly, her eyes twinkling with a mysterious light. You see, this place is a dream. In the real world, capturing you might prove challenging, she explained. She lifted her armthe one holding the chain leashand softly rubbed the cold, dark tal links against her cheek. Her expression remained disarmingly calm. So, I need to leave a lasting impression, a mark if you will.

A mark?

The cultist lay there, montarily paralyzed by confusion. But before he could contemplate the aning of her words, he saw Dog open its cavernous maw to reveal an array of skeletal fangs. With rciless precision, Dog bit down on the cultists arm, tearing through flesh and bone. The cultist had just enough ti to emit a blood-curdling scream before the unbearable agony almost shattered his mind. His arm was instantly reduced to chunks of flesh, now held in Dogs mouth.

Dog then lifted his head, its eyes glowing a malevolent red, and stared intently at the cultist, who was now wailing uncontrollably. I have committed your scent to mory. Well find you in the waking world, Dog spoke, its voice emanating from the skeletal frawork that comprised its chest. The voice was low and growling, dripping with nace. Well capture you alive; He will reward us handsoly for your capture.

The cultists wails of agony abruptly halted, and his eyes expanded in sheer terror. He gazed at Dog with his mouth hanging wide open. It was difficult to discern whether his astonishnt stemd from the realization that this demonic canine was capable of human speech or from the unsettling implication of Dogs words that there was a He who would reward them for the cultists capture. Who could this mysterious girl and her equally mysterious demon dog be in league with? And who was this ominously-referenced He?

Almost as quickly as these questions surfaced in his mind, the cultists form started to blur and distort. In the space of a re one or two breaths, he vanished entirely from Shirley and Dogs sight.

He got away, it seems, Dog remarked, his head swiveling back and forth as it scanned the area, a hint of disappointnt coloring its gravelly voice. His associates in the physical world must have sensed sothing amiss and forcibly extracted him. We have no ans to counteract such a spiritual transfer.

Its not an issue; youve logged his scent, correct? Shirley responded nonchalantly before fixing her gaze intently on Dog. You can track him in the real world, cant you?

As long as hes within a reasonable distance within the radius of my sensory abilities, Ill be able to locate him, Dog assured, his voice tinged with grim determination. Im a dark hound, a demon breed specialized in tracking prey. He wont be able to remove the taphysical mark Ive placed on him.

Excellent, Shirley exhaled a sigh of relief. Capturing him alive would be the best outco. Even a couple of magical scrolls as a reward would be quite helpful.

Dog didnt react to Shirleys muttering about potential rewards. Instead, he lifted his head, sensing the turbulent winds and the cacophony of natural sounds emanating from the surrounding forest. He noted that the distant trees were becoming increasingly translucent, their forms fading into a kind of ethereal haze. The signs that the dream realm was dissolving beca ever more conspicuous.

Sothing was having a powerful impact on this dream dinsion the end of this artificial reality was clearly approaching.

.

Deep within the shadows, there were auditory disturbances akin to chaotic winds that seed to howl through the forest, snapping branches off towering trees as they surged past. However, upon closer inspection, these sounds felt more like illusions than actual phenona.

Duncan had no bandwidth to focus on these vague auditory disturbances; he was wholly engrossed by the inexplicable vision before him.

This was the Vanished an elusive ghost ship. As he projected his consciousness deeper into the tendrils of vines at the very heart of this enshrouded realm, he found himself staring at this eerily familiar apparition.

Why, though? Why would the Vanished manifest here?

As he drew closer, he noticed that the ship appeared to be floating on an inky, pitch-black body of water. The darkness beneath was so impenetrable it seed to consu the lower half of the ship. The deck above was unsettlingly silent, devoid of even the faintest sound.

After a monts hesitation, Duncan projected himself onto the deck of the Vanished.

Within this shrouded domain, he functioned solely as a form of conscious viewpoint, granting him a certain ease in navigation but leaving him disconcerted by the ships unexplained presence.

The deck was utterly desolate, devoid of any sign of life or movent. As Duncans eyes road across its expanse, the sights that t him were both weather-beaten and eerily recognizable. He felt as though he were walking through a ti-worn, yet hauntingly accurate, diorama of a place he once knew intimately.

Carefully navigating the ships deck, he took ti to examine the fixtures and adjoining cabins that lined the area. Each detail was impeccably replicated, down to the finest minutiae. It was a surreal experience; everything was exactly as he rembered it from the real Vanished.

Yet, Duncan felt a discord. This wasnt the actual Vanished, nor was it so ethereal projection. The usual affinity he felt with the ship, the feedback loop of energy that emanated from its spiritual flas, was conspicuously absent here. This facsimile of the Vanished had been manifested by so unknown external force.

Just then, the nebulous sounds he had previously notedakin to wind and distant murmursechoed again, this ti with a sharper, more pronounced clarity. For a brief mont, Duncans attention shifted towards the source of these disconcerting sounds.

Shaking off the distraction, he moved towards the rear of the deck until he reached the captains cabin. His eyes lifted to the lintel of the door, and his gaze abruptly froze. Inscribed into the wood were words that read, May He Linger in the Dreams.

Why not Door of the Lost?

This puzzled Duncan. He vividly rembered that the inscription over the captains cabin on the real Vanished read Door of the Lost. This room served as his private sanctuary aboard the ship. Why was this vessel, appearing deep in the foggy abyss, an almost perfect replica except for the words etched above this particular door?

He redirected his focus to the door itself, and at that instant, as if beckoning him to enter, it swung open without a sound.

The captains cabin materialized before him, bathed in a dim yellow light. All the furnishings were exactly as he rembered them, right down to the curious goat head positioned at the corner of the navigation table.

Wait, a goat head?

An epiphany flashed through Duncans consciousness. He recalled that when he had initially found himself in subspace, neither the Ruined Vanished nor the Model Vanished in his private space had featured a goat head. This seed to be a subtle but crucial divergence, a distinct variable that separated the various iterations of the Vanished.

Engulfed by a surge of conjecture and mories, Duncan crossed the threshold into the captains cabin. With cautious steps, he approached the navigation table, casting his gaze upon the black, carved goat head at its corner.

The sculpture sat inanimate, as inert as a re piece of wood, offering no response to the approach of its so-called captain. Duncan reasoned that this might be due to his non-material existence in this realm; he was rely a form of conscious perception here, not a corporeal entity.

Choosing not to disturb the mysterious goat head, Duncan remained vigilant, his eyes darting around the room as he continued his cautious exploration.

Soon, Duncan ca across another detail that set him further on edge.

Normally, the nautical chart spread across the table would docunt the various paths that the Vanished had navigated. It should have depicted well-known city-states, significant landmarks, and sea routes that crisscrossed the expansive ocean. Yet, what Duncan found himself staring at was anything but familiara map unlike any hed ever seen!

This perplexing projection displayed a topographical view of a sprawling forest interspersed with towering mountain ranges and vast expanses of flora. Strikingly, various anomalies peppered the terrain, looking like bizarre architectural formations or perhaps sacred sites. Hovering above this dense labyrinth of greenery was a semi-transparent icon representing the Vanished, which moved at a glacial pace through the simulated forest.

Duncan gaped at the alien chart before him, completely bewildered.

Though he could glean no actionable information from this enigmatic display, it did stir up mories of another peculiar nautical chart hed observed on the Ruined Vanished in subspace. That version of the ship had also featured an inexplicable map of a disorienting, chaotic, unknown sea filled with odd navigation markers.

And now, here he was, confronted by another confounding map, this one on a Vanished that seed to have manifested from the midst of an eerie, fog-shrouded gloom. A map that bizarrely suggested the ship was navigatingof all thingsa forest!

A strange and almost ludicrous thought unbiddenly arose in his mind:

Just how many alternate Vanisheds could be sailing through divergent dinsions at this very mont, each docunting its own unique, bewildering journey?

While he was grappling with this uncanny notion, a faint squeaking and creaking sound abruptly broke into his train of thought.

His attention imdiately darted toward the source of the sound.

To his astonishnt, the black goat head, perched at the edge of the navigation table, was slowly rotating its neck, its eyes swiveling to et his gaze.

And in those eyes, chiseled from jet-black obsidian, a glint of what seed like erging consciousness began to materialize.

In the following instant, a low, raspy voice vibrated through the room, reaching Duncans ears and chilling him to the bone.

Who is there it inquired, turning an already perplexing situation into one that bordered on the surreal.

You are reading Deep Sea Embers Chapter 573: Sailing Through Darkness and Fog on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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