Font Size
15px

The fog cleared, and what unfolded before William was a scene of pure desolation. A crimson moon hung motionless in the sky, bleeding red light over a field littered with rusted crosses. At its center, a single black pillar jutted into the heavens like it was accusing the gods themselves.

A shiver crawled down William's spine.

"No... this place..."

He knew these ruins. These broken hos. His heart pounded as mories surged. This was the village where he'd first arrived in this world. The ho of the original William's family.

"What the hell is going on...?"

He started walking through the village, opening doors, peeking into abandoned buildings. Everything was frozen in ti. The red moon warped the colors, making the wood, the sky, even his skin look alien.

"No one's here... nothing's out of place... except that damn moon..."

Frustration simred. He thought of Caerlin. Maybe if he retraced his steps—through the forest—

The mont he turned toward it, his body scread. A wave of dread slamd into him like a wall. His chest tightened. His instincts roared:

Death. Turn back.

He didn't hesitate. He spun and ran the other way, heart racing.

Redvale was the closest place now. The na alone made his blood boil. The ones who had murdered the original William's family... He didn't want to go there. But he had no other choice.

He ran.

Using his enhanced stats, he tore across the land, a blur through a blood-tinted world. After nearly a hundred kiloters, he paused atop a rocky hill to catch his breath. In the distance, he spotted a small farmhouse.

"Please... let there be soone."

He pressed forward—but then he heard it.

A sound. Wet. Crawling. Chittering. Like sothing slithering and clicking at once.

He turned.

His face went pale.

"Oh no..."

A wave of black insects was pouring down the road. Twisted, chitinous things with far too many legs and mandibles designed for tearing flesh.

"SHIT!"

He bolted, full sprint. He didn't look back again.

They were fast—but he was faster. Still, they never stopped.

The farmhouse grew closer. A large mansion, a stable, and a water well. No fences, no weapons, no people.

He reached the front door and yanked it hard.

Locked.

He kicked it. Once. Twice. Three tis.

"OPEN, DAMN YOU!"

Nothing.

He looked back. They were almost on him.

His mind scread, RUN! FIGHT! HIDE! But there was nowhere to go.

Then—

"GET DOWN!"

A voice exploded in the air, followed by a blast of fire. The front line of insects exploded in a splash of goo.

From the smoke, a hooded figure appeared and grabbed his arm.

"Co on! Move!"

They ran together—no ti to talk. They sprinted for hours, dodging shadows and twisted trees, until finally reaching a pile of leaves and tangled vines.

The figure swept them aside, revealing a hidden door. With a small key, they unlocked a rusted padlock and pulled William inside.

"Down here. Quick."

They descended into darkness.

William gasped for air, soaked in sweat and fear. He could barely see a thing.

"Where... where are we?"

"A hideout," the voice said. "Hold on, I'll light it up."

There was sothing odd in the voice. Slightly muffled, like it was filtered through an oxygen mask. Lamps flickered to life, revealing a small bunker—just a bed, a table, and a few dusty cans of food.

"Thanks..." William muttered, still breathless. "You saved my life out there. I was about to be bug food."

The figure turned to him. Slowly, they pulled back the hood—and then the mask.

Psssshhh...

It was a girl. Twelve, maybe thirteen. Pale gray eyes, ghost-white hair, and cheeks slightly sunken from hunger.

"It's nothing," she said softly.

William blinked. Her voice was small, but calm. Too calm.

"You say that like it's normal," he said. "You just blew up a swarm of nightmares."

She lowered her gaze.

"I've gotten used to seeing people die."

His chest tightened.

"What's your na?" he asked, gentler this ti.

"I don't rember."

"You... don't rember your na?"

"My dad called 'Little Star.' But I don't think that's my real na."

William felt sothing crack in his heart.

"Where is your dad now?"

She shook her head.

"I don't know. He left a long ti ago. Said he'd be back. Said it wouldn't take long."

"Did he tell you where he was going?"

"No... just that the world was broken. That sothing was terribly wrong, and he had to fix it. He left food, a blanket... this mask. Told not to go out if the moon turned red."

William stared at her. The silence weighed heavy.

"And... you went out anyway?"

"I was hungry..." Her voice cracked a little. "I couldn't take it anymore. I thought maybe... maybe he'd be out there waiting."

William swallowed hard.

"I'm sorry. You shouldn't have to go through this alone."

She looked up, locking eyes with him for the first ti. Her gray eyes shimred with a sadness no child should carry.

"Are you scared too?"

He didn't hesitate.

"Yes. I am. But I'm not leaving you here alone. Not a chance."

She didn't answer. Just curled up on the bed, like she'd done it a hundred tis before.

William sat down with his back to the wall, watching her in the dim light. Outside, the blood moon stared down at the world without rcy—its silence louder than screams.

You are reading The Nightmare Wizard Chapter 47: The Nightmare Realm 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

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