Chapter 206: Nagas VS Phantom Voice, Taking Advantage Of Chaos
Chapter 206: Nagas VS Phantom Voice, Taking Advantage Of Chaos
Some were uncertain, others angry.
A few warriors glanced toward Orun, as if trying to confirm they’d heard him right.
He didn’t repeat himself.
Instead, he turned to the side as a few veteran warriors stepped forward to receive more direct instructions.
“We’ll strike the stronghold from four directions,” he said. “The first group will attack from the west side. Once the humans move to defend it, the other three will strike from the north, east, and south. You don’t need to push deep. Just cause chaos, and buy time. Your main objective is the farm at the eastern edge. That’s where the farmer will be.”
“Should we kill him?” asked one of the younger warriors, her snake-like hair hissed as she tried to suppress the tremors in her voice.
Being suppressed by the human governor wanted her to kill the farmer that the humans treasured.
“No,” Orun said. “Hurt him if you must. But do not kill him.”
Several warriors glanced at each other.
Orun’s daughter stepped forward before he could finish.
“I will go too.”
He turned to face her.
She was barely past her teen years in naga terms.
Her face still held traces of youth. But her eyes had aged too quickly. Orun knew the reason for the cause, and that was why he couldn’t allow her to leave with warriors.
“You will stay here,” he said simply.
“I’m not weak. I can fight.”
“I know you can. But you won’t be fighting this time.”
She clenched her fists.
But she didn’t argue again.
He looked to the rest of the gathered warriors.
“You are not to kill civilians. Target the stronghold’s defenders and the farm. Strike, cause fear, and return. That’s it.”
The warriors grew furious at his command.
Not kill the civilians?
“Why….”
A naga warrior spoke up,
“Why should we not kill them when we finally have a chance!? They’ve been tormenting us! My brother was killed by that human awakener Vale just because they wanted to instill fear in us!”
Orun looked at the warrior, H’Gael.
“H’Gael, if we kill the civilians do you really think we will be able to live in this city when that human governor will overtake it? Public opinion will in favor of killing us all if we harm civilians too.”
“So what? We’ve already harmed their awakeners! Now, no matter…”
H’Gael suddenly closed his mouth.
He looked around and noticed the civilian nagas.
They were still clinging on hope that they could survive.
H’Gael couldn’t say it in front of them that the human governor was just using them and would kill them later.
Grinding his teeth hard, H’Gael turned around to leave.
The others naga warriors followed behind H’Gael, who was the next in command after Orun.
Since Orun would stay back at the base, H’Gael would lead today’s assault.
In total, twelve champion-ranked warriors moved through the tunnels, armored and ready.
Though they had not fully recovered from their previous injuries, each of them still held power far beyond that of ordinary awakened humans.
The moment they emerged onto the surface outside the city’s central sector, they scattered and moved towards the Sanctum of Masters Stronghold.
It stood proud even in the half-ruined cityscape, shielded by a transparent golden dome of light.
H’Gael stood to the west of it, hidden behind the remains of a shattered building.
“Is this really worth it?” one of his men asked quietly beside him. “What if humans have more monsters like that Vale?”
“He is an anomaly. It’s clear he isn’t human. Normal human Champion rank awakeners are no match for us, who are mid-rank species. Moreover, according to the spies, only seven human Champion rank awakeners are in that stronghold. Our assault will proceed without issues,” H’Gael replied.
Even five human Champion rank awakeners would have difficulty winning against a Champion rank awakener of a mid-rank species.
But with Nagas ability to summon contracted beasts, a single naga Champion rank awakener could defeat ten human Champion rank awakeners.
Twelve naga Champions had come to attack.
They had nothing to fear.
As if in agreement, a faint hum echoed as several of the naga warriors called forth their contracted beasts.
Shadowy shapes moved in the ruined streets.
Some were hulking brutes.
Others resembled serpents with wings or wolves made of mist.
They waited for the signal.
Then, just as H’Gael was about to raise his hand—
“Leader,” a voice buzzed through the communicator.
H’Gael frowned. “What is it?”
“Look to the south, towards the wall.”
H’Gael twisted in place and peered out from behind a crumbling chunk of reinforced concrete.
There, faint at first, was a light fog rolling over the streets. It glided across the cracked pavement in eerie silence, weaving through broken lampposts and rusted vehicles like a living thing.
The mist thickened with each passing second. It wasn’t like the polluted dust or natural vapors that sometimes rolled through the city.
No. This was something else.
He stared at it, unblinking.
“Why…. Why is that thing here?” he muttered.
His eyes wouldn’t leave the Phantom Voice that was approaching the Master of Sanctum stronghold.
“Did it follow us here to kill those who survived?”
H’Gael’s breath became heavy.
He gulped.
Every day, he would have nightmares of the destruction of that city.
Countless monsters were coming towards them.
His neighbors and fellow warriors were screaming.
The nightmarish wave of monsters continued to kill and eat their victims.
And in those memories, a single monster stood out to H’Gael.
Phantom Voice.
The murderer of his family.
A mix of intense fear and fear made H’Gael tremble.
The mist was moving faster now as though it had caught a scent. Or like it knew exactly where it needed to go.
Several warriors shifted uneasily, gripping their weapons tighter.
“What do we do, leader?” someone asked.
H’Gael didn’t answer immediately.
He exhaled sharply, trying to calm himself.
He wanted to do nothing but attack that Phantom Voice, but he didn’t let his anger cloud his judgement.
“We will hold our location,” he said at last. “Stay hidden. First, we need to know why Phantom Voice is here. If it’s going to attack the stronghold, we will take advantage of the commotion it will create.”
“But if it reaches the stronghold, the farmer might—”
“It’s not our problem to handle. If the farmer dies to the monster, that’s better for us,” H’Gael snapped, sharper than he meant to.
Then he looked around at their faces.
The younger ones in particular looked unsure, torn between their orders and this unexpected variable.
“We wait,” he repeated, calmer this time.
The warriors with him nodded.
“Send someone to scout the stronghold,” he added. “We need to know if the farmer is still there.”
One of the warriors gave a quick nod and slipped into the darkness without a sound.
The rest of the team stayed in their positions, scanning the area carefully.
H’Gael’s eyes stayed locked on the pale mist rolling slowly toward the stronghold.
In his mind, he couldn’t help but wonder if this city would meet the disaster next, and be wiped out by it just like the nagas.
If that was the case, they needed to escape as fast as possible.
’But Orun and others wouldn’t escape.’
’They trust in the god too much.’
H’Gael couldn’t help but clench his fist.
That snake was still sleeping.
He couldn’t understand why others believed it to be their god.
Why was he not helping them? Because it was just a monster.
Unfortunately, the none of the nagas listened to him when it came to their god.
Suddenly, something shifted.
The air felt heavier.
The younger warriors didn’t notice anything.
Some kept chatting softly through comms, some simply stared ahead.
But H’Gael’s instincts screamed.
He frowned and moved closer to the wall beside him.
Without a word, he lightly tapped the wall with his knuckle.
It shattered like glass.
This….
’Mirror Dimension.’
Someone had pulled them into mirror dimension while they were not paying attention.
Their ambush had been caught.
“Get ready to fight!” he barked. “Summon your contracted beasts, now!”
There was no hesitation in his command.
The naga warriors immediately sprang into action, their summoning tattoos lighting up their skin in swirling patterns.
Dozens of beasts—ranging from scaled hounds to winged reptiles and misty serpents—emerged from glowing portals around them.
They waited for the attack to come.
Nothing happened.
No enemy charged at them.
Just when they thought the enemy was hiding and buying time, H’Gael turned to look outside the building.
He saw the same mist, drifting slowly toward them.
Phantom Voice.
That monster had been pulled into the Mirror Dimension as well.
And now, it had no stronghold to aim for.
So, instead it was attacking the nagas.
“Shit,” H’Gael muttered under his breath. “Someone set us up.”
He glanced toward his warriors, some already bracing for impact. The beasts growled and hissed as the mist thickened.
“Form defensive lines! Don’t let it scatter us!”
…
Meanwhile, far from the east side, the southern team sat in silence, huddled near a broken tall hospital building that overlooked the stronghold’s rear defense lines.
The leader of south-side team, a tall naga with red-tinted snake hairs, watched the golden dome through a scope.
He lowered it and tapped his comms device again.
“Team East, respond. H’Gael, do you copy?”
Static came back.
He tried once more. The result was the same.
“Still nothing?” one of the younger warriors asked. His voice wasn’t panicked, but there was concern beneath it.
“No,” the leader said. “That’s the fifth try.”