Destroying a world carries imnse karmic consequences.
Though one could dress up every god-tier war under the veneer of the Dark Forest theory, the truth is that the aftermath is always ssy.
Leaving the Slavic pantheon to handle the cunningly treacherous Mayan pantheon was Thalos's contingency plan.
And once the Mayan world was drained of its atmosphere (wind elent), it was the Aztec world's turn.
Cruelty, yes—it was certainly cruel. But not nearly as cruel as what the three soarican worlds had once inflicted upon the Slavic realm and several African worlds.
At the very least, Thalos had relocated most of the mortals and capturable animals from those three worlds to the Ginnungagap's newly-ford South Arican Continent at the world's lower layers. He hadn't truly wiped them all out.
One carrot, one hole—pull out the old carrot so the new one can take root.
After Perun and the Slavic gods annihilated the fauna of two worlds, things seed to settle... but what was bound to co still ca.
One silent night, moonlight spilled over the new South Arican continent.
Here, the divine servitors of the Slavic pantheon were busy disciplining the forr "slave masters."
Having gone from slaves to slave masters, the Slavic servitors and mortals were now exacting a harsh vengeance—rciless, though not lethal.
The Aztecs had once lived on corn. The famous tortilla was their favorite.
Now, ten million enslaved people from the three destroyed worlds had been relocated so quickly that food supplies hadn't kept pace.
Fortunately, after Ragnarok, every mortal kingdom in the Ginnungagap world had developed a habit of stockpiling grain.
Large stores of aging food were distributed—black rye that hadn't even been baked into bread, just ground into slop and dumped into bowls. Even the "bread" given out was often mixed with roots, sawdust, and other foul ingredients. If it didn't kill you imdiately, you were being treated well.
Still, with a hard limit of no more than 20% loss tolerated, Perun didn't dare to let his n push the slaves to death.
But even without fatal abuse, life was bleak.
Thankfully, the new South Arican continent—like the older mini-worlds of Sur, Midgard, and others—didn't have extre climates.
Most of the year, the weather was temperate, which made housing simpler.
This was a slave camp. On the roof of a straw hut, two eerie lights flickered in the moonlight.
The high-intensity labor during the day had sent the slaves into deep sleep early. Only the whisper of a breeze disturbed the calm.
Suddenly, a small creature appeared beneath the eaves. It looked like an ordinary sparrow—but carried with it a sinister, unknown power. Its beady black eyes shimred with eerie light.
This creature, sparrow in na but demon in truth, stared down at the dozens of mortals sleeping side by side on the communal mat. Its gaze resembled that of a pork vendor inspecting live pigs at the market—full of picky calculation.
To anyone watching, this would have been pure cruelty, laced with devious malice.
The demon fluttered upward, its body glowing with a hypnotic shimr.
Gracefully, it slipped through the hut's thatched window and entered the room where the slaves slept.
In the quiet of the night, this demonic sparrow began a horrific, secretive reproduction.
Its wings fluttered silently, lding into the darkness, transforming into a ghostly wind. Like a surgical airstrike, it passed over the sleeping forms, laying countless tiny eggs as it went.
These eggs were minuscule—dust-like in scale.
Yet they seeped in through the pores of the slaves, burrowing into their flesh and blood.
One victim twitched slightly. He scratched an itch. To him, it felt no worse than a mosquito bite.
The next day, the man rose, worked, ate his subhuman rations, and slept again as usual.
The sa went for the second day.
Then, on the third day—without warning—he collapsed in agony, clutching his stomach in searing pain.
"Report! Anochi's sick!"
His companions looked on coldly and reported him to the overseers.
No dicine. No rcy. He was tossed into a relatively isolated sick house in the slave camp—a building over a hundred square ters, already full of similar cases.
If you could survive, you might live. If not, you died.
No one knew what was actually happening inside him.
Inside his veins and organs, eggs the size of quail eggs had begun to form. Then, one after another, sparrow-sized demons burst from within, tearing him apart with razor-sharp beaks and claws.
His screams echoed throughout the sick house. No one ca to help.
It was a place ant for the dying. Even if soone survived, they'd just be thrown back into labor.
The victim writhed nonstop. The tornt was like being flayed alive, and death soon followed.
He would never awaken again. But the nightmare wasn't over.
As the other sick slaves cried out in terror, bloody sparrow-demons erupted from the man's chest and abdon, leaping onto the next victims.
By sunrise, the guards slled blood and ca cursing to inspect the scene—only to find that the demons' offspring had already completed a new cycle of egg-laying.
The newborn Blood Sparrows screeched with hunger, craving fresh at.
They flew out through the windows, ready to hunt again.
Human organs beca their feast, slaking their unending thirst for flesh and blood.
And so the blood-colored sparrows vanished into the sky, leaving only carnage and malice in their wake.
The damage they caused was imnse.
Several Slavic priests were killed.
And these blood sparrows were just one type of monster. Across the new South Arican continent, a host of bizarre demons began to appear. Even Midgard and the Celtic Isles felt their influence.
Reports climbed the chain of command, eventually landing on Perun's desk.
Crushed by pressure, Perun dared not conceal the truth. Steeling himself, he reported directly to Thalos.
In truth, Thalos had already known about it via Heimdall. He was rely waiting to see when Perun would confess.
And now, he saw that the timing was... acceptable.
"Reporting to Your Majesty—this servant failed in his duties. Unnad monsters have slipped into the Ginnungagap world," Perun bowed low, trembling. He was truly terrified.
After all, as an outsider who had managed a coback under Thalos's rule, he considered his fortune miraculous. And now, to have let strange creatures wreak havoc on Ginnungagap's lands—he couldn't afford to shoulder this disgrace.
Thalos didn't respond imdiately. Instead, he stood, descended the steps, and with great interest, gazed at the bizarre creatures currently bound by divine restraints.
They were clearly not Western-style monsters.
Then, as his gaze fell upon the sparrow-like one, Thalos finally spoke a na:
"The Inner Sparrow!"
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Fairy Tail: Igneel's Eldest Son (Chapter 256)
I Am Thalos, Odin's Older Brother (Chapter 336)
Reborn in Arica's Anti-Terror Unit (Chapter 542)
Solomon in Marvel (Chapter 924)
Becoming the Wealthiest Tycoon on the Planet (Chapter 1284)
Surgical Fruit in the Arican Comics Universe (Chapter 1289)
Arican Detective: From TV Rookie to Seasoned Cop (Chapter 1316)
Arican TV Writer (Chapter 1402)
I Am Hades, The Supre GOD of the Underworld! (Chapter 570)
Reborn as Humanity's Emperor Across the Multiverse (Chapter 660)
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