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PREVIOUSLY-

Leon closed the book, his eyes eting Threxil’s.

"Don’t think of it,"

Threxil muttered.

Leon, already on his way, whispered to air.

"Let’s try this."

----x----

Leon’s steps slowed, then ceased altogether.

Before him lood a structure—ancient, vast, and quietly nacing. It rose from the earth like the ribcage of so long-dead beast, curved in great arcs of pale, weathered marble. Vines crawled across its flanks, creeping tendrils clinging to the stone like desperate fingers. They had slithered their way through every crack and seam, wrapping columns, curling around broken statues, draping like wilted banners from the archways above.

The colosseum did not roar. It brooded.

Its silence wasn’t the silence of abandonnt—it was the silence of mory, of blood-soaked sands and nas shouted into the heavens only to be forgotten monts later. The kind of silence that thickens the air, makes the lungs labour, makes the ground feel hollow beneath your feet.

At the front stood a gate of solid steel, its bars thick, blackened with rust. No decoration, no emblems—only the cold, brutal geotry of iron made to keep things in. It didn’t creak. It didn’t groan. It simply was, immovable and watching.

Leon tilted his head. A faint breeze stirred his hair, carried the scent of moss, dried blood, and old stone.

He could see through the gate—just barely.

Beyond it lay shadow-drenched corridors and sunlit tiers, concentric rows of broken benches rising like the teeth of a gaping mouth. Wind moved in strange spirals through the bones of the place, whispering sothing just out of reach.

He stepped closer. The vines shifted slightly, as if disturbed by his presence, or perhaps welcoming it.

He touched the steel. It was cool, not cold—like the skin of a corpse.

His fingers curled around the bars. His knuckles whitened.

DING!

{Gladiator’s Labyrinth}

[DIFFICULTY: HARD]

The corners of Leon’s lips tugged into a grin—slow, wolfish.

"Finally," he exhaled, voice low, near reverent.

"Sothing good."

The gate groaned as it rose, chains clinking behind the walls, the sound deep and grating like the throat-clearing of so ancient giant. Dust trickled down from overhead as the tal ascended, dislodging years of silence and webs from the stonework above.

Leon didn’t wait for it to fully lift.

He ducked under the halfway-raised gate, one hand brushing against the steel bar as he passed, and stepped into the corridor beyond.

The world changed.

The light outside—pale and natural—was devoured the mont he entered. The corridor swallowed it, offering only a faint glow from wall sconces that hadn’t been lit in years but still held the mory of fla. Shadows clung to the walls like wet ink, wavering faintly with each step he took.

The floor beneath his boots was uneven, worn from countless footfalls, grooved with ti and the weight of ritual violence. The stone slled of sweat and iron, of old torches and dried blood long scrubbed but never truly erased.

His breath echoed softly. Each step was swallowed by the hush of stone and emptiness. Ahead, the corridor stretched into a quiet bend, curving deeper into the belly of the colosseum like a throat guiding him to sothing waiting—sothing alive.

Leon didn’t hesitate.

His grin remained. If anything, it widened.

As he reached the end of the corridor, a blade of sunlight cut through the shadows and struck his face. It was sudden—sharp enough to make him squint, forcing his pupils to contract.

The air changed too. Cooler inside the tunnel, now dry and warm, touched by wind and dust.

Leon stepped out from the mouth of the corridor and into open light.

The arena unfolded before him—broad, circular, and bruised with ti. Tiered stone seats rose around him in massive rings, stacked high like the walls of a sunken amphitheatre. So rows stood strong, proud in their old bones.

Others sagged or crumbled, their edges cracked and gnawed by age, with vines spilling between the joints like veins across a scarred body.

The centre of the arena was bare—no markings, no sand, only pale, hard earth. Stains lingered there, like mories baked into the floor. Faint, rust-colored sars that no wind or rain had dared to wash away.

Above, clouds drifted lazily across a blue sky, casting brief shadows that swept across the seating like ghosts returning to their graves.

Leon’s boots crunched on gravel as he stepped further in. The sound echoed—not loud, but right. It belonged here. So did he.

DING!

The system window flickered into view with a sterile glow.

[STARTING STAGE (1/5)]

A chanical chi followed, sharp and clinical, before vanishing into silence. Then ca the sound—low, guttural, like a landslide of breath snarling through a tunnel.

From the other end of the arena, the gate shuddered.

A heavy tallic groan echoed through the chamber as the steel doors peeled open at a glacial pace, scraping against stone with the screech of age and rust. Darkness festered beyond the gate, thick as oil. Then movent stirred within it—a silhouette, hulking and slow.

The orc stepped into the light.

Towering at over seven feet, it was a slab of living muscle. Veins coiled beneath green skin like braided rope. Its bare torso glistened faintly with sweat or perhaps sothing older, dried and crusted. The only garnt it wore was a crude strip of animal hide slung around its waist, frayed and stained with old blood.

Its jaw jutted forward with an underbite sharpened by two pale tusks. Eyes small and yellow, set deep beneath a heavy brow ridge, scanned the arena with predatory calm.

In its massive hand, it dragged a wooden club—less a weapon and more a chunk of tree carved into brutal simplicity. Splinters still bristled from the grain. The club was dark with moisture, as though it had been soaked in sothing more sinister than water.

The arena fell still.

Dust hung in the air like ash, and the scent of tal and sweat clung to the back of the throat. The orc paused just past the threshold of the gate, chest rising in a slow, deep rhythm. Then it raised its head and exhaled—a low, animalistic snort that stead faintly in the cold, recycled air.

And then, without ceremony, it advanced.

"Hello!"

Leon raised a hand, his grin crooked with casual bravado. But before he could finish the wave—

WHAM.

The club crashed into his face like a battering ram, and the world tilted.

Leon flew backward, limbs flailing, before slamming into the stone arena wall with a bone-rattling crack. Dust rained from the ceiling. A deep thud echoed as his body crumpled to the ground in a heap.

"Urgh... cough..."

He winced, slowly pulling his hand away from his face. His palm was swollen, bruised purple where he’d managed—barely—to shield himself from the full force of the blow.

"You orcs... are really rude,"

He muttered, voice scratchy but defiant.

Across the arena, the orc stood frozen mid-step, club resting against one shoulder. It blinked once. Then again. Slowly, it scratched the side of its bald green scalp, thick fingers dragging through a scar that split one eyebrow.

It looked almost puzzled.

"How dare you attack soone during a greeting?"

Leon barked, half-rising, brushing grit off his coat with exaggerated offense.

The orc’s yellow eyes lit with recognition. Sothing clicked.

"Chik,"

It grunted—an orcish syllable that may have ant oops.

It knelt, spine creaking, head lowered as if in solemn apology... then rose again, this ti with a slow roll of its shoulders.

Leon sighed. "Finally."

His hand reached for the chipped hilt strapped to his back. Fingers wrapped around it with practiced ease. In one smooth motion, he drew the claymore free—steel scraping against the worn leather scabbard.

The blade was battered, nicked along the edge, but it still carried weight. Still had purpose.

He swung it once—a clean, vertical arc through the air that kicked up dust at his feet. His stance dropped into sothing tighter now, more coiled. His heels dug into the arena floor.

The orc snarled, nostrils flaring.

WHAM.

They charged.

The orc moved first, a lunging boulder of muscle and montum, club arcing down like a falling star.

Leon t it with a shout—his claymore sweeping upward in a brutal intercept.

CLANG!

Steel t wood. The force of the clash sent a shockwave through his shoulders. His blade bit deep into the grain of the orc’s club, splintering a jagged gash near the haft. The club juddered in the orc’s grip, cracked but still intact.

Leon’s boots slid back half a step, skidding against the stone. He gritted his teeth.

Not bad for the first swing.

"Chik!"

The orc shrieked—a piercing, primal sound that rattled through the ribcage like war drums cracked open.

It twisted, movent wild but honed from instinct. The club, battered yet still deadly, whipped around with terrifying speed—an arc of splintered wood aid straight for Leon’s skull.

"Not again!"

Leon barely had ti to raise his blade. He angled the flat of the claymore up like a shield.

CRACK.

The impact hit like a battering ram. His arms numbed instantly, shoulders flaring with pain. He slid backward, boots carving two trenches into the gravel, only stopping when his heel struck a jagged piece of arena stone.

A fresh fracture split along the length of his sword where the club had struck. A spiderweb crack—hairline, but dangerous.

The orc didn’t pause. Neither did Leon.

He thrust the claymore forward in a straight line, the tip a blur as it lunged toward the orc’s exposed side—right where the liver would be. A clean kill if it landed.

But the orc was faster than it looked.

THWACK.

The club swung down, intercepting the blade just in ti. The wood splintered further, but it held.

"Predictable!"

Leon barked, grinning through gritted teeth.

And that’s when the real strike ca.

The tip of the claymore slamd into the gravel, anchoring him. Using the montum, Leon pushed down hard and kicked upward—his entire body rising in a coiled spring of motion.

His right foot blurred through the air.

THUD.

The heel of his boot crashed into the orc’s temple with the weight of a blacksmith’s hamr. The orc’s head snapped sideways, spit flying from its mouth. For a heartbeat, its legs stuttered. The monster stumbled, balance faltering as its club wavered in its grip.

Leon flipped off the pivot point midair, twisting with a grunt before landing hard on both feet.

He didn’t stop to admire the hit. His eyes locked onto the orc, watching to see if it would recover—or fall.

The crack on his blade glinted under the light. The orc blinked furiously, dazed but still upright.

"Stubborn bastard,"

Leon muttered, spitting dust from his mouth.

The claymore shot forward again, this ti with blood behind the intent. Leon’s muscles scread as he drove the blade in a direct line for the orc’s exposed throat.

SHLK!

Steel t flesh—but not where he aid.

The orc twisted at the last second, and the blade sank deep into its left forearm instead. Blood sprayed—dark, thick, almost tar-like. The sll was iron and rot and sothing fouler, like at that had soured in the sun.

"CHHIIIK!" the orc howled, voice shredding the air like torn cloth.

Its foot lashed out in retaliation, faster than its size should allow.

THUD.

Leon caught the full brunt of the kick in the torso. Air fled his lungs in a sharp grunt as his body was flung backward like a broken doll. He crashed into the arena wall for the second ti, stone splintering behind his spine. Dust exploded outward from the impact.

His vision swam.

The world tilted, doubled, then snapped back into one sared image of pain. He slumped to one knee, gasping, hand pressed to his ribs—sothing felt wrong under there. Bone or breath. Maybe both.

Across the arena, the orc snarled and wrenched its arm to the side.

The claymore, still lodged in its flesh, refused to co free. Blood stread down its forearm, soaking into the fur-wrapped grip of the club.

Leon pushed himself up with a wheeze. His side throbbed. His vision blurred. But the orc was vulnerable now—bleeding, weapon heavy, and balance faltering.

He sprinted.

No sword. Just fists and grit.

The orc turned too late. Leon closed the distance in three pounding strides and drove his shoulder into the creature’s wounded side.

It roared in pain and staggered.

Then he twisted behind it, eyes fixed on the embedded claymore.

His hand grabbed the hilt.

"Mine."

With a raw shout, he yanked it free—blood sprayed across his face, warm and thick. The orc howled, spinning wildly with its club, but Leon was already in motion again.

He ducked the wild swing and slashed.

CLANG!

The blade bit into the orc’s thigh. Another wound. Another roar.

But this ti, the orc didn’t falter.

Its body tensed. Sothing in its blood boiled. Its muscles bulged with sudden, unnatural growth. The veins along its neck pulsed with a dark hue—inky black under green skin.

Leon stepped back, chest heaving.

The orc’s eyes glowed with a sudden, eerie luminescence. Not just anger now—rage, primal and drugged with instinct.

Its voice dropped to a growl, guttural and ancient.

"Gror’makh..."

Leon didn’t know what it ant—but it didn’t sound good.

Then the orc slamd its bleeding fist against its own chest.

The earth rumbled beneath Leon’s boots.

The orc raised its clawed hand, casting a monstrous shadow over Leon’s crumpled form. Its breath stead through bared tusks, eyes wild with bloodlust, lost to everything but the kill.

Leon’s fingers twitched.

The orc slamd its bleeding fist against its chest again—once, twice—each strike louder than the last, like a war drum pounding from within.

THUMP. THUMP. THUMP.

Sothing changed.

Its breath grew louder, almost animalistic, rasping in and out through flared nostrils. The veins bulging along its neck and arms began to throb unnaturally, as if trying to burst free. Skin flushed a deeper, sickly green, mottled with black lines spidering beneath the surface.

Its spine arched back—and it roared.

Not a battle cry.

A transformation.

The sound shattered through the arena, guttural and raw, so loud that dust rained from the arches high above. Blood frothed at its lips. The club clattered to the floor—abandoned—as its fingers curled into claws.

Muscles tore at their own limits, swelling grotesquely. Its shoulders bulged, jaw widening with a sickening crack as tusks lengthened, now too large for its own mouth.

Its wounds? Still bleeding—but the pain no longer registered in its eyes.

Only the hunt did.

Leon staggered back, claymore raised instinctively, his boots skidding over stone.

"Shit," he breathed, the word barely audible. "You’ve gotta be kidding..."

The orc—no, the beast now—dropped to all fours for a breathless second.

Then it charged.

Not like before. Not lumbering. This ti it ca like a landslide—raw speed, rawer rage. Each footfall cracked stone beneath it, sending gravel in all directions.

Leon ducked the first swipe, but the wind of it nearly lifted him off his feet. He rolled to the side, narrowly dodging a wild strike that caved in part of the arena wall where his skull had been a heartbeat ago.

He slashed mid-roll—blade arcing low toward the beast’s side.

SCHK.

The claymore bit flesh, but it didn’t stop the montum. The orc spun, blood trailing like a whip, and backhanded him with the force of a falling boulder.

WHAM.

Leon flew again, this ti skipping across the ground like a stone on water before skidding to a brutal stop. His claymore clanged against the floor several paces away.

His arms wouldn’t move.

Ribs—definitely broken now. At least two. Maybe three.

He coughed. Blood.

Still alive.

The berserk orc lood above him, heaving with each breath, drool and blood stringing from its jaws. It raised a clawed hand, the nails curved like sickles, ready to end it.

Leon looked up at the beast.

His lips peeled back in a grin, bloody and defiant.

"Still ugly... even with the upgrade."

And then he moved.

The orc raised its clawed hand, casting a monstrous shadow over Leon’s crumpled form. Its breath stead through bared tusks, eyes wild with bloodlust, lost to everything but the kill.

Leon’s fingers twitched.

His right foot slid against the floor, barely anchoring.

His hand curled, slow and trembling, around the hilt of his claymore—now streaked red, cracked, and humming faintly with aura residue.

"Ti to test it..." he whispered through blood and broken teeth.

"Hope you like pork."

The orc’s arm descended.

Leon moved.

In an instant, he exploded upward—no stance, no setup, just pure raw motion—his aura igniting around him in jagged streaks of crimson. The ground shattered beneath him as he launched forward like a harpoon shot from a rusted cannon.

The blade whipped behind him like a butcher’s cleaver.

His voice tore from his throat in a savage battle cry:

"PIG SLAUGHTER!"

The orc’s eyes widened.

Too late.

SCHK!

The claymore pierced through the back of the orc’s skull—angled just beneath the cranium, punching through thick bone and into brainstem. Blood erupted from the monster’s eyes and mouth like a broken dam.

It froze.

Twitched once.

Then collapsed forward like a dropped mountain, all noise cut mid-roar.

Dead.

But Leon wasn’t done moving.

He couldn’t stop.

The reckless, unfinished technique hadn’t accounted for recovery or recoil. He had launched himself like a battering ram with no brakes. His body whipped forward, still caught in the montum.

CRASH!

He slamd shoulder-first into the arena wall with enough force to leave a crater. His back arched on impact, air and blood flying from his mouth.

He collapsed in a heap, groaning, limbs twitching as the echo of impact rang through the arena.

Silence followed.

Dust settled.

The orc lay dead. Jaw slack, tongue lolled. A twitch in one leg, then stillness.

Leon, barely conscious, blinked up at the ceiling.

"...Okay, enough kissing the walls."

He croaked, voice hoarse.

"Needs... tweaking..."

He laughed once—then winced and coughed blood.

"Pig Slaughter... more like Self-Slaughter."

DING!

The familiar chi rang out, high and cruel.

A new window shimred into view above Leon’s battered body, its purple light flickering like a taunt.

[SKILL TREE UNLOCKED!]

[SKILL TREE: REDFANG BUTCHERY UNLOCKED!]

[SKILL: PIG SLAUGHTER UNLOCKED!]

[PIG SLAUGHTER: 10% Mastery]

Leon stared at the glowing text through half-lidded eyes.

"Ten percent?" he rasped.

"The system’s too stingy... I nearly broke my spine..."

He let his head fall back to the stone floor, exhaling raggedly. Blood pooled under his shoulder. His vision blurred.

But fate wasn’t finished.

DING.

[STARTING STAGE (2/5)]

"No, no, no—wait—!"

Leon’s hand flailed upward, as if trying to swat the window away.

"Let rest, you freak!"

But the arena was already groaning again. The steel gate dragged open with another grinding screech, part smoke, part shadow.

A figure stepped through.

Another orc—but not bare and feral like the first.

This one wore scrapped leather armour, mismatched and held together by frayed cords and patches of tal. A rusty sword hung from one hand, jagged and too long, the edge corroded but still sharp enough to gut.

It paused at the threshold, yellow eyes narrowing beneath its brow.

Leon didn’t move.

He just stared.

"...You’ve gotta be kidding ."

The gate slamd shut behind the newcor.

You are reading Transcendent Odyssey [Coffeepen] Chapter 51: THE FIRST BELL: PIG SLAUGHTER on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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