The Useless Extra Knows It All....But Does He? - Chapter 257
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- Chapter 257 - Chapter 257: Chapter 257 - The Abandoned Children of World Tree (2)
Chapter 257: Chapter 257 – The Abandoned Children of World Tree (2)
The world shook.
A soundless light erupted, then—
BOOOOOOOMMMMMM!
The explosion tore through the clearing before the World Tree, devouring the air itself. The shockwave hurled bodies like leaves in a storm, shattering armor, bones, and the silence that had once blanketed the forest.
Sylthara’s vision blurred white. Her ears rang, the world distant and muffled.
Instinct alone moved her body—she flung her arms wide, a barrier of mana shimmering around her as she tried to shield those closest to her.
But she was too late.
When the haze cleared, the gentle emerald of the forest was gone—replaced by a sea of crimson.
Hundreds of her kin lay strewn across the roots of the sacred tree. Silver armor shattered. Limbs twisted. Eyes wide open, staring blankly at the branches that no longer glowed. The scent of blood and burnt wood mixed with the air’s mana, thick enough to choke on.
The ground itself pulsed faintly—alive. The blood spilling from her people seeped into the glowing ritual circle, lines once dull now flaring an angry, blistering red. The aura it released was not divine. It was devilish—cursed, hungry, whispering with glee.
“N-No… no… this can’t be…”
One of the surviving elves collapsed beside her, his voice trembling, face streaked with soot and tears.
“They betrayed us… Princess… they… they betrayed us…”
Another elf clutched the stump where his arm once was, eyes burning with grief and rage.
“They betrayed us! Those damned cultists! Those filth—”
He never finished. His body went limp, eyes glassy as life left him.
Sylthara barely heard them.
She was kneeling in the center of the devastation, her silver circlet cracked, blood streaking her cheek, her hands shaking uncontrollably.
Her gaze locked on the circle — the pulsing light that fed on her people’s blood.
Her people.
“Stop…” Her lips trembled. “Stop this…”
No one answered. The cultists were gone—vanished in the chaos they’d created.
All that remained was the faint echo of their laughter, carried on the dying wind, and just the bloody ritual circle and dust.
Sylthara’s body shook. She wanted to scream, to command, to tear the world apart for what had just happened. But all that escaped her lips was a hoarse whisper.
“You fools… all of you… I just wanted to save the forest…”
Her knees gave way completely, her palms pressing into the soaked ground. The blood of her kin clung to her fingers, warm and thick. Her reflection trembled in that scarlet pool—an elf princess painted in her people’s blood.
Above her, the World Tree groaned, its once-luminous leaves dimming to a ghostly gray. The red aura from the ritual circle climbed its roots like veins of corruption, twisting upward, feeding on life itself.
The air grew colder, heavier—like the forest itself was holding its breath.
Around her, the remaining elves—those few still alive—stood in stunned silence. No words left them now. Only the sound of dripping blood, the low hum of the dying ritual, and the faint rustle of the cursed wind.
Sylthara raised her head, eyes wide and glassy.
Her heart pounded against her ribs like a trapped beast.
Her people lay dead. Her forest was tainted. The very thing she wanted to save was now drowning in red.
And somewhere deep within her—beneath the guilt, beneath the grief—something cold began to stir.
The red light pulsed.
The forest seemed to breathe in pain.
Sylthara knelt motionless, blood soaking through her gloves. Her mind had gone silent — numb — until a trembling hand touched her shoulder.
“Princess…”
The voice was frail but steady.
The elder dark elf — her hair silvered by age, her armor cracked and bloodied — knelt beside her. Her eyes, still gentle despite the horror around them, met Sylthara’s.
“Breathe, child,” the elder whispered, her tone soft but commanding. “You must not fall apart. Not now. Your people… your kin are watching.”
Sylthara’s breath hitched.
Her fingers twitched, stained red, her thoughts scattered. Around them, the surviving dark elves looked to her — eyes hollow, desperate, pleading for strength.
“Elder…” Sylthara’s voice trembled, barely audible. “I… I led them here. I told them this was the right path. And now—”
“Enough.”
The elder’s hand pressed against her cheek, wiping a smear of blood away. “You carry the burden of a leader, not the weight of guilt. The forest still breathes, child. As long as you do, there is hope.”
The warmth in her voice — that single flicker of comfort — began to pierce through the fog in Sylthara’s mind. Slowly, painfully, focus returned to her eyes. Her trembling eased. She clenched her fists, breathing through the ache in her chest.
“Yes…” she whispered, forcing strength into her tone. “I must… stand. For them. For all of us.”
The elder smiled faintly. “That’s it. Remember who you are, Princess Sylthara—
And then….
Ssssshhhhhhhhkkkkkkkk!
A wet, slicing sound cut through the air.
The elder froze — her smile still half-formed — as a blade erupted from her chest.
Sylthara’s eyes widened. The world slowed.
A spray of crimson splattered across her face — hot, sticky, the elder’s blood dripping down her cheek.
“E–Elder…?” she whispered, disbelief twisting her voice.
The old elf’s body trembled. Her mouth opened soundlessly — eyes wide with shock, confusion, pain — before the sword was torn out of her back with a sickening sound.
She crumpled forward, falling against Sylthara’s chest.
Her blood pooled rapidly, soaking the princess’s armor.
And then, like a nightmare tearing through reality—
“Jiejeiejeiejejejieeehhhahahahahahahahaha—”
The twisted laugh slithered through the clearing, sharp and distorted, echoing between the silent trees.
Sylthara froze as her gaze lifted past the elder’s falling body—
Behind her stood one of the cultists.
His face was pale, stretched into an unnatural grin. His blackened fingers gripped the blood-slick blade that had just claimed the elder’s life. His eyes—red as coals—burned with ecstatic madness.
He leaned close, voice bubbling with glee.
“Didn’t we tell you, Princess? Sacrifices always make the roots grow deeper—jiejeiejeiejiejeiehhhehehh—”
Sylthara’s breath broke into a gasp, her world crashing in waves of horror and rage. The elder’s body slid from her arms to the ground with a dull thud.
The remaining elves shouted in fury and shock, weapons drawn, grief blazing in their eyes. But Sylthara…
She could no longer hear them.
Only the echo of that laughter.
And the sound of her heartbeat — pounding, breaking, consuming her.
Sylthara’s pupils quivered — from grief, from fury, from something deeper.
The laughter still echoed in her ears, but before it could twist her thoughts further—
Swishhhhhh!
Her body blurred. Like a phantom born of wrath, she vanished from sight.
The cultist’s grin froze mid–laugh. He barely registered the rush of wind before a hand plunged through his chest.
His eyes bulged. A guttural gasp left his throat as Sylthara’s arm, drenched in his blood, tore free a pulsing, blackened heart.
For a moment, the world stood still.
Her breath came ragged. Her hands trembled. Then —
Squelch.
She crushed the heart in her palm.
Dark blood hissed and burned the ground as the cultist’s body collapsed, the light fading from his twisted eyes.
But before she could even draw breath —
The air shuddered.
A ripple spread through the clearing, like reality itself had cracked.
The blood that soaked the earth began to boil — rising, twisting into shapes — and one by one, figures began to emerge.
Pale. Grinning. Warped.
Hundreds of them.
Their forms flickered like shadows in a storm, their limbs contorted, faces stretched into grotesque smiles. The laughter returned — not one voice, but a chorus — echoing, overlapping, growing until it became a wave of insanity.
“Jiejeijejeiejjejjejejjieehehhh—”
“The roots thirst for blood—”
“The world tree… will feed—!”
The stench of corruption thickened, black mana swirling in the air like smoke. The once-sacred ground was no longer green; it pulsed red and black, veins of darkness crawling across the soil toward the roots of the World Tree.
Sylthara and the surviving elves stood frozen for a heartbeat — disbelief etched on every face. The world itself seemed to twist before them.
Then Sylthara’s voice cut through the madness.
“Protect the Mother Tree!!”
Her shout carried like thunder through the forest.
“Don’t let that filth touch our Mother!”
The remaining dark elves snapped out of their stupor, rallying to her call. Dozens — the last remnants of her people — formed a defensive ring around the roots of the World Tree. Their armor dented, their eyes bloodshot, their mana flaring despite exhaustion.
The cultists advanced, their feet dragging across the blood-soaked ground, their laughter never ceasing. The air trembled with raw, corrupted energy.
Sylthara turned toward the great tree, her chest heaving. She could feel it now — the sacred pulse of the World Tree fading, being devoured. The pure emerald glow that had once blessed the forest now flickered with veins of shadow.
Her knees hit the ground.
Her palms pressed against the ancient roots, her voice breaking.
“Those bastards…” she whispered, teeth clenched in rage and despair. “They used us… our blood… as a summoning circle—to weaken the forest’s barrier… to break and summon more of them….and corrupt you, Mother…”
Her tears fell freely now, streaking down her dirt-stained face.
“I’m sorry… I’m so sorry, Mother…”
The roots beneath her pulsed weakly, as if answering her sorrow.
And then—her mana flared.
A wave of pure black energy burst from her body, dark yet serene, spiraling up her arms and into the soil. The corruption crawling toward the tree slowed, its spread restrained by the raw force of Sylthara’s will.
The ground trembled under the clash of powers — corruption and darkness, holiness and blight.
Around her, the last of the dark elves stood shoulder to shoulder, forming an unbroken ring of defiance around the sacred trunk. Blood dripped from their weapons. Their breaths came ragged. Yet none stepped back.
They knew there was no escape.
Only this stand.
The corrupted horde advanced, laughter rising like a funeral song.
And before it all — beneath the dying light of the World Tree — Sylthara knelt, her hands glowing black and her tears falling onto the roots she swore to protect.
“We were born in the shadows,” she whispered. “So let the shadows be our shield.”
And the battle began — the last stand of the dark elves, against a thousand monsters born from their own blood.