[Chapter 98. Report Part 2]
The three hooded figures seated at the head of the long obsidian table shifted in a sudden, synchronized motion at the ntion of the title, their previously composed and serene expressions tightening into masks of sharp, imdiate concern. A palpable, heavy tension filled the cathedral's high-ceilinged antechamber, pressing down on the air like a physical weight. The High Priest’s gaze, which had been calm and fatherly monts before, swept toward the two Golden Sentinels standing guard at the massive, reinforced doors.
"You two, leave the room imdiately," he commanded. "No one is to enter this chamber until I personally command otherwise. Ensure the periter is secured against all eavesdropping, magical or otherwise."
His voice, once lodic and serene, now carried a jagged undercurrent of genuine unease. The gentle, diplomatic tone he had maintained since their arrival vanished like morning mist under a harsh desert sun. The two Sentinels offered a crisp, tallic salute, their heavy boots thundering against the marble floor as they exited. The heavy, gold-leafed doors of the antechamber sealed shut with a resonant, final thud, their internal chanisms clicking into place. The shimring golden light that usually bathed the entrance faded, leaving the chamber in a heavy, shadowed silence.
The High Priest’s gaze, now as sharp and cold as shards of broken glass, settled back upon Narina. "Continue your report," he commanded, his voice now a low, dangerous thread of sound that sohow managed to carry the full weight of his divine authority.
Narina's beak clicked once—a sharp, brittle sound that echoed in the quiet room. She looked at her teammates before looking back at the hooded figure. "It was not simply the fact that he possessed a title," she began, her voice dropping to a low, conspiratorial whisper that seed to vibrate in the silence. "It was the specific nature of the title that put us all on edge. The System identified him as Genocidal."
The word hung in the air like a physical shroud, thick and suffocating. It was a title of legend, usually reserved for entities that had wiped entire civilizations from the map, not a Level 21 Dhampir in a backwater dungeon. The two flanking priests stiffened visibly, their composure finally fracturing into pieces. Their faces, previously serene masks of bureaucratic authority, bleached to a sickly ashen hue beneath the shadows of their deep hoods.
Astera took over the narrative of the report, her pearlescent hands resting perfectly flat against the cold surface of the obsidian table. "As we initially approached the survivor," she continued, her tone regaining its detached and clinical edge, "his constructs moved with a terrifying degree of independence. Whether this was truly autonomous magitech action or a series of incredibly fast direct commands from the user remains unclear to our observation."
She paused for a mont, her luminous eyes shifting toward Garu, who remained a silent, towering presence. "A minor miscommunication resulted in one of his summoned constructs attacking our Companion. By his role as a Guardian, Garu moved to intercept the strike with his bare hand, assuming his passive defenses would negate the low-level threat."
Astera's gaze lingered on the Grak'thul's scarred skin. "By Garu’s own testimony, the attack bypassed his active defensive skills entirely, leaving a substantial, cauterized wound that resisted initial biological knitting." Her voice dropped slightly in volu, adding a layer of gravity to her words. "By his professional assessnt… it was an attack of such concentrated power that it could only have originated from a summoner operating in the upper sixties, at an absolute minimum."
The High Priest's fingers, adorned with the pulsing rings of golden light, rose slowly from the obsidian table. "Child of Light," he spoke, his voice calm but vibrating with that sa undercurrent of authority, "your companion claid his level was but a re fraction of what your report suggests. You are surely aware that to deceive a high-tier skill such as Narina’s Clairvoyance is no small feat. It requires a manipulation of a magnitude that is incredibly rare even in our circles."
"Indeed, Your Holiness," Astera replied, her pearlescent face remaining unreadable as she t the High Priest's unwavering gaze. "However, that is not the extent of the anomalies we recorded."
"There is even more?" one of the flanking priests asked, his voice tight and high-pitched with barely concealed disbelief.
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"Throughout the clear," Astera continued, pointedly ignoring the priest’s interruption, "Narina maintained a constant, hidden observation of him. But the unsettling reality is that he maintained a similar observation of us—as if he were studying our tactics for future exploitation."
"His gaze just felt... wrong!" Narina snapped, cutting across Astera's asured words with a sudden burst of agitation. She imdiately shrank back into herself, her feathers smoothing down as the weight of her insubordination and the silence of the chamber settled over her.
"His gaze was rely one outward aspect of the overall anomaly," Astera continued, reclaiming the narrative with practiced ease. "The entirety of his deanor—his relaxed posture in the face of death, the calculated, rhythmic nature of his speech, and most unsettlingly, his profound knowledge of the System's inner workings—radiated a sense of profound wrongness. He did not act like a man of this world, or any world we are familiar with."
She turned her luminous eyes toward Narina again. "You may speak on the origins now."
The Avian took a deep, steadying breath, her sharp talons flexing against the polished marble floor. After a mont's hesitation, she t the High Priest's gaze directly, her crest feathers taking on a pale gold shimr in the cathedral's ambient light.
"Through a combination of direct observation and forced conversation," Narina began, her voice sharp but tightly controlled, "I determined that he originates from a newly integrated world. In his own words, he is from a Stage One World."
As the High Priest shifted in his seat, his hand rising as if to interject with a correction, Narina's beak clicked once—a sharp, preemptive warning in the heavy silence. "Please, Your Holiness, allow to complete the full scope of my report before you render judgnt."
When no further words ca from the High Priest, she continued. "Throughout the progression of the dungeon, his actions were consistently and frustratingly inconsistent. It beca apparent very early on that he was deliberately and thodically limiting his visible capabilities, likely to gauge our own reactions. He played the part of the wounded novice with just enough flaws to be believable."
She drew a sharp, audible breath, her yellow eyes narrowing into slits. "It was in the boss chamber," Narina continued, her voice dropping back to that low, conspiratorial whisper, "that the true, terrifying magnitude of his deception beca undeniable to everyone present."
She took another breath, her talons flexing against the floor once more before she pushed forward. "The corrupted beast we encountered—the Depths Devourer—posed a significant and lethal challenge to our formation. Our combined attacks, despite their precision, elental variety, and perfect coordination, managed to achieve little more than superficial, costic damage to its multi-layered armored plating. We were in a stalemate of attrition."
A flicker of vivid mory crossed her features, a look of genuine fear passing over the scout's face. "Victor—this Searanox—eventually unleashed a single attack that bypassed all of our collective efforts. With but a single, overcharged volley from his constructs and his primary rifle, he bored a clean, molten hole entirely through the creature's reinforced armor. He created an opening that our most powerful strikes, including Valdor’s lightning and Aruru’s blades, had failed to even crack."
The High Priest leaned forward slowly, his rings of golden light gleaming brightly against the polished obsidian as he folded his arms on the table. The serene, detached mask of his composure finally fractured completely, replaced by an expression of cold, intense calculation.
"I want full, written reports," he commanded, his voice low but carrying a frantic undercurrent of urgency. "I want them from each of you, individually. Leave no detail out, however insignificant or small it may seem at this mont. Record your observations, your tactical assessnts, and even your personal suspicions."
His luminous gaze swept over the entire assembled team, lingering for a second on Garu’s hand and Aruru’s notched blade. "If your testimony holds true... if this Dhampir's power indeed scales in the manner you have described..." He paused, the gravity of his next words chilling the room. "We may be witnessing the ergence of a sixth Primarch."
A heavy, suffocating silence fell over the chamber, that single word hanging in the air like a burial shroud. The High Priest's mind raced, centuries of theological study and political calculation intertwining in a complex web of implications that stretched far beyond the cathedral's white marble walls.
`The sheer magnitude of this impossibility defies every established parater of the System.` The High Priest thought, his fingers trembling slightly beneath the table. `For a lone individual to attain Level 21 on a world that has been integrated for a re week... even for a Progenitor or a True Blood, such rapid progression strains credulity to its absolute breaking point. It is a statistical impossibility.`
His thoughts darkened as he considered the location of the event. `And for the Void to corrupt a dungeon on the extre outer rim, precisely within his grasp, at the exact mont he arrived... this was no coincidence of geography.`
A cold, absolute certainty settled in the depths of his mind, a fear he hadn't felt in centuries. `Great and terrible forces beyond my understanding are in motion. The balance of the Core Worlds may shift.`
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