Font Size
15px

Leon moved the mont the screams reached that point, the point where it was already obvious that in a few seconds it would only get louder, and then all that would remain would be the sa thing left behind by hundreds of others on campus: blood, abandoned belongings, and a silence that didn't an safety, only the absence of prey.

There was no decision in it. No heroism. It was closer to an automatic response. No thought like I have to save them crossed his mind, only a cold, clinical assessnt of the situation: fifteen zombies packed into a tight space, people trapped from both sides, screaming that was already drawing in more shapes, and the simple fact that if he did nothing now, in a minute he'd be forced to watch them die.

He accelerated.

Not to his absolute limit. Only to a pace his body could sustain without his coordination falling apart. Valeria had been right, speed without control was just as dangerous as having no speed at all. Even so, that "controlled" pace was still sothing none of the people there could follow with their eyes.

To the students standing in the middle of the square, Leon simply vanished from sight. In the next instant, he was among the zombies, sliding sideways, half-stepping, moving in short, inefficient motions that didn't look like swordsmanship so much as heavy, dirty work done up close. The blade slipped into necks again and again, sotis eting resistance, sotis gliding through smoothly, depending on how badly the bodies had already warped.

There was no finesse.

Leon didn't cut "cleanly." He didn't pick angles with a master's precision. He swung the sword in a way that simply worked with his current stats. Agility over forty ant his hands moved faster than the zombies could react, and strength nearing thirty ant that even an ordinary, normal-grade sword was enough to slice through flesh and vertebrae without needing follow-up strikes.

Heads fell one after another, not in spectacular arcs, but heavily. So bounced off the asphalt. Others lodged between collapsing bodies. Blood sprayed outward, splattering shoes, pants, and the building walls, forming a chaotic, sticky ring around the group of students that stead faintly in the cool air.

The whole thing lasted maybe three seconds.

Maybe a little more, if you counted the mont the last body slumped to the ground and Leon's blade finished its motion, dropping down, heavy with blood.

Michael Kopiec stood frozen, his hands clenched around the straps of his backpack, staring at what remained of the zombies that had been seconds away from tearing him apart. Only after a few monts did he manage to move his lips.

"Did you… did you see that?" he rasped, not really directing the question at anyone in particular.

The student beside him looked first at the corpses, then at Leon, and finally at the group of people who had gathered behind them over the last few minutes. Only then did it hit him that the guy in the long coat hadn't saved just the five of them, but a dozen people, maybe more.

"He… he used to be a student here, right?" he asked quietly, more to himself than to anyone else, as if trying to force the image of pre-apocalypse normalcy to line up with what he had just witnessed.

Leon didn't listen.

He didn't look at them. He didn't count bodies. He didn't analyze reactions.

His gaze fixed instead on the dry, system text that appeared before him exactly as it always did, emotionless, indifferent to how many people were still breathing because of what he'd done.

[Essence Record - Kill Confird]

[Target: 15x Normal Zombie (LVL 5)]

Only after a mont did he lift his head, not to look at the people he'd saved, but to check whether the screams had drawn sothing bigger. In this world, there was no ti to stand still, not even after sothing that looked like a miracle to others.

Leon remained among the bodies for a mont longer, feeling his heart still pounding fast, not chaotically, but in that familiar post-exertion rhythm, when the body hasn't yet returned to normal and instinct is already warning that this isn't over, that he'll need to move again soon.

Then he noticed sothing, almost absentmindedly.

No new system window.

No familiar surge that accompanied level-ups. No sense of the body "jumping," the feeling that had always been there before whenever his level increased.

Despite killing fifteen level-five zombies while he himself was only level six, it hadn't been enough to gain another level or receive any additional stats.

A cold, unpleasant realization settled in.

From this point on, not every fight, even a large-scale one, would an rapid progress. The higher he climbed, the more work, risk, and effort it would take to advance even a single step. In practice, that ant running at the edge of his limits, killing at maximum speed, and relying on stats to "handle the rest" would eventually lead to exhaustion.

And exhaustion, in this world, was one of the simplest ways to die, just as Valeria had warned him.

He could already feel it.

Not as sudden weakness. Not as lack of breath. But as growing tension in his legs, a slight heaviness in his arms, and that uncomfortable pressure in his chest, the feeling that ca when the body was working faster than it should for too long, even if the mind still wanted more.

That was why, almost instinctively, he stopped moving the way he had before.

Instead of using the full speed he'd relied on against the dog or the giant wasp at the start of the campus fights, rather than "closing" distance in a single flash and betting everything on ending it in a fraction of a second, he began to match his pace to his opponent. He shortened his movents, conserved steps, allowed himself an extra half-second if it ant using less energy. Even with agility above forty, he still had only thirty stamina, which ant he burned out far faster when pushing his absolute speed.

Only then did he turn toward the five students who were slowly getting up from the ground, still shaking, sared with blood and dust, their faces filled with relief that was only now fully sinking in as their minds caught up with the simple fact that they were alive.

One of them opened his mouth, clearly about to say sothing, maybe to thank him, maybe to ask who he even was, but Leon didn't look at him.

His gaze stopped on the boy standing slightly off to the side, the sa one a zombie had caught near the corner of the building earlier.

A torn hoodie. Several long scratches across his arm, shoulder, and neck. Bloodstains that looked freshly made.

Leon stepped closer, stopping right in front of him. When he finally spoke, his voice was cold, calm, and stripped of emotion, as if he were stating sothing obvious, not delivering a sentence.

"You're not coming with us."

The boy froze.

"What?" he croaked after a mont, staring at Leon in complete confusion, as if he hadn't heard properly, or had misunderstood the words entirely. "What are you even talking about…?"

Leon didn't answer right away.

Instead, he took a half-step to the side, leaned in, and without asking or warning, pulled aside the torn fabric of the hoodie, exposing red, uneven claw marks running from the shoulder downward. Then more, shallower scratches on the neck, already starting to dry but still clearly visible in the daylight.

"Here," Leon said calmly, pointing to the first spot. "And here. And here."

The boy instinctively recoiled a few centiters, as if only now realizing that soone was actually looking at his wounds up close, truly examining them, not just glancing in passing.

"It's nothing," he said quickly, voice tight. "Seriously, they're just scratches. It didn't even hurt, I… "

"One is enough," Leon cut him off, his tone unchanged, voice never rising. "One scratch. One contact with their claws or teeth, and it's over."

Leon slowly straightened.

"I've already seen soone like you," he added. "One scratch. After a few hours, the woman had a massive infection. She started losing control of her movents, growling, losing awareness of her surroundings. And then…"

He didn't finish the sentence as he looked at the boy.

"This isn't about not wanting to save you," Leon said after a mont. "You're already infected. Now it's just a matter of ti before you turn into one of them."

The words landed heavily, like a stone dropped into water.

The other four students sat in absolute silence. No one moved. No one argued. No one even tried to speak. Every one of them was staring at the boy's wounds, then at his face, as if they were truly understanding for the first ti what the word infected ant, and that there was no room for negotiation.

Michael Kopiec, who was sitting closest, slowly got to his feet, his legs moving as if made of lead. He looked at his friend with an expression that couldn't be mistaken for anything else, grief mixed with pure, paralyzing fear.

"Is there really no way to save him…?" he asked quietly, swallowing hard. "Maybe… maybe you're wrong. We don't know for sure. There has to be so way. So way to cure him."

After Michael's words, silence fell again, heavy and deep, as all eyes turned to Leon.

You are reading Void Reaper: The Essence Apocalypse Chapter 23 23: One contact with their claws or teeth, and it 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.