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The campfire crackled weakly, its light barely piercing the oppressive darkness of the Scorching Badlands. The jagged volcanic ridge lood over the group like a row of teeth, and the air carried the acrid scent of sulfur and molten rock. Despite the heat, an uneasy chill settled among the champions as they prepared for the night.

Kael sat cross-legged near the fire, gnawing on a strip of dried at. His amber eyes glinted in the flickering light as he tossed an extra piece to Jas. "You’re awfully quiet, tinkerer. Scared of what’s out there?"

Jas caught the strip awkwardly, his mind elsewhere. "Not scared," he muttered. "Just… thinking."

"Thinking doesn’t keep you alive out here," Kael retorted, his sharp teeth flashing in a grin. "Strength does."

"Strength without a brain to use it is just as useless," Thrain grumbled as he inspected his hamr. "Not all problems can be solved by tearing them apart."

Kael snorted but said nothing more. Sylvia sat apart from the group, her wings dimd as she held her Communication Runestone tightly. The faint glow of the stone pulsed weakly, a stark contrast to its usual radiance.

"It’s not working," she said finally, her voice strained. She shook the stone gently, as if that might fix it. "I’ve been trying for hours, but there’s no response from E the Radiant."

"We need to think this through," Sylvia said, her voice steady but firm. "Sothing’s wrong—more than just the heat. Runestones don’t just fail. Not all of them. Not at the sa ti."

Thrain grunted, his thick fingers tightening around his own stone as if willing it to work. "You think the heat’s ssing with ’em? These things are supposed to be enchanted to work anywhere, no matter the conditions."

"It’s not the heat," Jas murmured, his gaze fixed on the ground as his thoughts raced. "Runestones are warded against interference. If they’re not working… it ans sothing is actively blocking them."

Kael tilted his head, his ears twitching as he leaned back with a low growl. "Blocking us? Who? And why? No one outside of the Avatars and the King even knew we were coming here."

"Except Elyndor," Sylvia said sharply, her words cutting through the tension like a blade. She fixed her luminous gaze on Kael. "He betrayed us for a reason. Maybe this is connected."

Kael’s claws scraped against the stone floor, his eyes narrowing as his tail lashed behind him. "You’re saying knife-ears set us up for this? That he’s working with… what? Soone back ho?"

"It’s possible," Sylvia admitted, though her tone betrayed her reluctance to say it aloud. "He’s been suspicious from the start, and his attack proves he has no loyalty to this group. But…" She hesitated, her brow furrowing. "It doesn’t add up."

"How doesn’t it?" Thrain rumbled, his voice like grinding rock. "He tries to kill us, traps us in this hellhole, and now our connection to the Avatars is cut? Seems pretty damned clear to ."

Jas shifted uncomfortably, his hands fidgeting with a small gadget from his pack. "It’s too… ssy," he said hesitantly. "Elyndor’s smart, careful. If he had a plan, it wouldn’t be this chaotic. Why try to kill us here and now, when the Badlands would do the job for him eventually? And cutting the communication doesn’t just hurt us—it cuts him off too. That doesn’t make sense."

Sylvia nodded slowly, her eyes thoughtful. "Jas is right. Elyndor might be trying to finish us off, but he wouldn’t sabotage himself in the process. This isn’t just about him. Sothing bigger is happening."

Kael let out a sharp laugh, his claws tapping rhythmically against the ground. "Bigger? Like what? You think soone sent us here to die on purpose? Or maybe the Badlands themselves have it out for us?"

"I don’t know," Sylvia admitted. "But I do know this: we can’t trust Elyndor, and we can’t count on anyone coming to save us."

The words hung heavy in the air, their weight sinking into the group like stones. For a mont, no one spoke, the distant rumble of molten rock the only sound.

"So what’s the plan?" Thrain finally said, his voice gruff but asured. "Do we use the Return Runestones and call it a loss? Go back, lick our wounds, and report what we’ve seen?"

Jas looked up sharply, his expression conflicted. "And what exactly would we report? That there’s sothing out here evolving faster than anything we’ve ever seen? That we don’t even know what it is, let alone how to stop it? The mission was to investigate and return with answers. If we leave now, we fail."

"And failing isn’t an option," Sylvia added, her tone resolute. "The Avatars chose us for a reason. We have to see this through."

Kael rolled his shoulders, the faint glow of the firelight casting his sharp features in shadow. "That’s all fine and noble, but let’s not forget we’ve got Elyndor skulking around, licking his wounds and waiting to gut us. Not to ntion whatever caused that beam of destruction earlier. You really think we stand a chance against any of that?"

Jas hesitated, his mind flashing back to the claw mark they’d found earlier. He felt a chill despite the heat, the mory of its size and precision sending shivers down his spine. "We might not stand a chance," he admitted quietly. "But we’ll definitely die if we stay like this—scattered, arguing, and second-guessing each other. If we’re going to survive, we need to trust each other."

Thrain huffed, his fingers tightening around his hamr. "Trust? You’re asking a lot, boy. Trust gets you killed."

"It also gets you through," Jas countered, his voice steady. "Look, I’m not saying we all have to hold hands and sing songs, but if we keep fighting each other, we’re doing Elyndor’s work for him. We don’t have to like each other, but we do need each other."

Kael snorted but didn’t argue, his claws tapping out a restless rhythm against the stone. Thrain muttered sothing under his breath but gave a reluctant nod.

Sylvia looked at Jas, her expression softening slightly. "You’re right," she said finally. "We have to focus. Elyndor’s still out there, and whatever’s ahead of us is even worse. We survive this together, or not at all."

The group fell into an uneasy silence, the tension easing slightly but not fully gone. Jas leaned back against a rock, his mind racing with possibilities. Sothing about the Badlands felt wrong, like they were walking into a trap far bigger than Elyndor’s sches. And then there was the dream—the molten eyes, the shadow, the overwhelming sense of insignificance.

He shook his head, trying to push the mory aside. One thing at a ti.

"We move at first light," Sylvia said, her voice breaking through his thoughts. "Stay alert. No one wanders off alone."

Kael rolled his eyes but gave a sharp nod. Thrain grunted his agreent, and Jas let out a quiet sigh of relief. For now, they were united—if only just.

The group fell into silence, the weight of the situation pressing down on them. Jas tried not to dwell on the implications, but his mind churned with possibilities. What if they failed? What if they couldn’t return?

Or worse—what if sothing out here made sure they didn’t?

As the night deepened, the fire died down to glowing embers. The champions took turns standing watch, their figures silhouetted against the faint glow of the volcanic landscape. When Jas’s turn ca, he sat on a boulder, his goggles resting on his forehead as he stared into the distance. The heat pressed against his skin like a smothering blanket, but his thoughts kept him alert.

Eventually, exhaustion overtook him. He leaned back against the rock, his eyes growing heavy.

The dream began abruptly.

Jas stood in a vast expanse of nothingness, the ground beneath his feet cracked and glowing faintly with molten veins. The air was thick, oppressive, and filled with the faint hum of sothing ancient and alive.

He looked up—and froze.

A colossal shadow lood before him, its form obscured but undeniably monstrous. Its molten eyes glowed like twin suns, piercing through the darkness and locking onto him. The sheer size of the creature was incomprehensible; its massive body stretched beyond the horizon, blotting out what little light there was.

Jas tried to move, but his body wouldn’t obey. The shadow shifted, a low rumble vibrating through the air as if it were laughing. The sound wasn’t cruel—it was indifferent, a force of nature acknowledging its own supremacy.

"A little mouse," a voice echoed, deep and resonant. It wasn’t a voice ant for mortal ears, and Jas’s head throbbed with the weight of it. "Searching for ."

The molten eyes began to focus, and Jas realized they weren’t fully open. The lids shifted, peeling back slowly to reveal an infinite void within. As the eye opened fully, a searing light burst forth, consuming everything in its path.

"Sleep."

Jas scread.

He jolted awake, his heart racing and his body drenched in sweat. His breath ca in shallow gasps as he clutched his chest, his mind struggling to process what he’d just seen.

"You all right there, tinkerer?" Kael’s voice broke the silence. The beastman leaned against a nearby rock, his claws idly scratching at the stone. "You were screaming like a pup caught in a bear trap."

Jas wiped his forehead, his hands trembling. "Just a dream," he muttered. "Nothing to worry about."

Kael raised an eyebrow, his grin widening. "Didn’t sound like nothing."

"Leave him alone, Kael," Sylvia said, her voice soft but firm. She sat cross-legged by the fire, her luminous eyes fixed on Jas. "Dreams can be more than they seem, especially here."

Jas hesitated, his mind replaying the image of the colossal shadow. "It was just... a nightmare," he said finally, though his voice lacked conviction. He didn’t want to admit how real it had felt—or how much it terrified him.

Sylvia studied him for a mont before nodding. "Rest if you can. We’ll need our strength tomorrow."

Jas nodded but didn’t lie back down. Sleep felt like a risk he wasn’t willing to take.

Unseen by the group, Elyndor crouched atop a nearby ledge, his breathing labored and his staff glowing faintly. He clutched his injured arm, the wound from Kael’s claws pulsing with pain.

"They’re still alive," he muttered, his voice dripping with venom. "But not for long."

With a flick of his staff, he activated another trap. The molten ground around him shimred, and a low rumble echoed through the night. Tiny embers rose from the cracks, coalescing into fiery shapes. The elentals hissed and snarled as they ford, their molten bodies glowing in the darkness.

Elyndor smirked despite his pain. "Let’s see how long they last against this."

He watched as the fire elentals began to descend toward the camp, their hissing voices blending into the night. The champions wouldn’t know what hit them.

Not until it was too late.

You are reading God, Help Us All [Monster Evolution/Progression/LitRPG] Chapter 68: Dreams Of The Colossus on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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