Font Size
15px

After the eting, King Xerxez was escorted by Matheros, Phalleon, Vethor, and Catana to the Betelgeuse district. There, ministers awaited them, their faces etched with deep concern for Thallerion's future, fearing another dark chapter might unfold.

The whispers of the elders painted a chilling portrait of the Ossibians: their attacks would cloak the land in shadow, and ravens, grim harbingers, would circle above, awaiting the spill of blood before descending like a plague to feast on human flesh. More horrifying still, the dead would rise in monstrous forms once the Entity unleashed its most potent magic.

"I agree with the old saying that ravens bring ill ons," Vethor murmured, his eyes fixated on sothing beyond the window. He recoiled abruptly, drawing curious glances from his companions.

"What's wrong, Vethor?" Matheros asked, following Vethor's startled gaze. "Raven! A black raven!" Vethor gasped, his voice laced with horror.

"That brings misfortune!" Vethor exclaid, his hand instinctively reaching for his dagger. "It needs to be driven away, banished from this place, or killed imdiately!"

"That's exactly what I'm talking about," Xerxez stated, taking a guard's pistol. "Perhaps Sapar sent it to spy on us here in the kingdom." He slowly approached the window, weapon in hand.

"No, Xerxez, I'll kill that raven," Phalleon interjected, snatching his own pistol and carefully pushing the window open.

"At first, I believed that seeing such a thing was a bad on," Matheros explained, his voice strained with urgency. "A danger, but with the Ossibians, I say it carries a vile curse! Don't get too close!" Fear gripped everyone present, paralyzing them. Even the king seed utterly convinced by Matheros's words.

"But if we butcher that raven, they won't hear any news about what we're discussing now," Phalleon said, a chilling, almost unsettling smile playing on his lips.

Caw!

Phalleon then feigned nonchalance, as if he had no intention of harming the bird. "What's wrong with you? It's just a raven!" he chuckled, still smiling. "Why do you believe in things that are often just ant to scare children?" He playfully admonished his companions. "Look, it'll fly away imdiately. Maybe it didn't see us; perhaps it's blind!" He opened the window wider, revealing the raven perched outside.

"Shoo! Shoo!" he shooed, but instead of taking flight, the raven rely stared at him with an eerie, knowing gaze. Its dark feathers glead with an unnatural sheen, and its red eyes, fixed intently on them, held an unearthly intensity. It let out a loud, unsettling caw.

"Caw! Caw!"

"Don't touch it, Phalleon!" Matheros cried, his voice laced with heightened alarm at Phalleon's dangerous recklessness.

"Don't worry, this raven is kind!" Phalleon quipped, but his tone instantly shifted from feigned innocence to pure rage and contempt as he faced the bird. "Hey, you wretched bird, don't you dare scare us!" Phalleon lunged, attempting to strike the raven, but as his hand neared, the bird suddenly pecked him with surprising force, drawing blood. "Ow! You damned raven!" he cursed, firing his pistol. The shot rely grazed the bird, but it swiftly took flight, disappearing into the sky. "May you die!" Phalleon yelled after it, but it was gone.

In a fit of anger, Phalleon slamd the window shut, then turned, clutching his bleeding right hand. A strange, agonizing pain pulsed through him, unlike anything he had ever felt, as if crabs were relentlessly pinching the muscles of his hand.

"W-what happened to your hand?" Catana's eyes widened in horror, fixed on his bleeding hand.

Phalleon's face abruptly paled, and a chill, known only to him, seized his fra. Yet, it wasn't just the cold. Screams, high-pitched and guttural, tore through his mind, not from without, but from deep within, as if malevolent spirits clawed at his sanity. He felt as though a virulent fever was consuming him, and his vision blurred, almost blinded by a light that wasn't there in the dimly lit room. He was convinced, utterly, that his flesh was twisting, elongating, his teeth sharpening into fangs—though outwardly, he remained unchanged. He alone experienced the grotesque transformation within his body. A wave of vertigo washed over him, followed by the stench of decay that dissipated as quickly as it ca. Then, just as suddenly, his well-being returned, the agonizing voices in his head quieting to a sinister hum. He stared at his hand; the blood had ceased its flow, as if desiccated, yet the wound's color shifted, a sickly pallor replacing the crimson that should have been. The change, though subtle, was unsettling. His companions stared, their faces contorted in shock, especially after his sudden turn towards them. A laugh, cold and unnerving, escaped his lips.

"What afflicts you all? Why this shock? Truly, I've rely banished the raven; must your reactions be so dramatic?" he chided, a strange lightness in his voice, oblivious to their terror, convinced they saw the monstrous change he felt within himself.

"What happened to the raven?" Matheros dared to ask, his gaze fixed on Phalleon's hand. "Your—your hand?"

"It flew off, obviously! Annoyed, perhaps, that it dared to peck ! Damned bird!" Phalleon spat, a lingering irritation in his tone. "It's nothing! Just a raven!" He settled down abruptly, yet an overwhelming thirst gnawed at him. It felt like a burning in his throat, a primal hunger for sothing far thicker than water, a viscous, tallic craving for blood. He fought it, focusing on the available water, a desperate act of control. Thankfully, water sat before him. He poured a glass, but it wasn't enough. He poured another, and still, the thirst persisted. Finally, he seized the glass pitcher and drained its contents. Only then did Phalleon breathe a sigh of relief, panting, grateful the oppressive thirst had vanished, the grueso craving montarily suppressed. An unholy silence descended upon them. They could scarcely believe Phalleon's actions, unable to utter a sound, unnerved by his unnatural deanor. After several minutes, Phalleon broke the silence.

"Forgive , I couldn't bear the thirst," he mumbled, a hint of sha in his voice, as all eyes remained fixed upon him. Sothing truly bizarre was unfolding, a mont so peculiar it seed shrouded in macabre mystery. Phalleon's actions gradually normalized, and the terror began to recede from their faces as the unsettling atmosphere subsided.

"Let's forget it," Xerxez urged his companions, his voice strained. "Let us return to our normal discourse."

You are reading The Legend of the Constellar King Chapter 31: RAVEN'S PECK on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Elven Invasion cover
Trending now

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.