Deus Necros - Chapter 514: Green Omen

Chapter 514: Green Omen
The air was thick with silence.It gathered low to the ground and higher among the boughs, a hush that seemed to soak into bark and leaf and skin alike. It wasn’t the natural hush that followed dusk, nor the gentle quiet of a forest at peace, it was the kind of silence that pressed down on the skin, that made every heartbeat sound like a drumbeat in the skull. Even breath felt like an intrusion here, a pale mist that ought not be seen.
“You feel that?” Thomas’s voice came low, a whisper that almost dared to break the stillness.The sound slipped out of him like a blade drawn an inch from its sheath, wary of echo. He hovered close, as if the air itself might swat him down for speaking too loud.
The Knight King replied, tone grave, “I’m impressed even you sensed it.”He did not move much when he spoke, a still figure above Ludwig’s shoulder, helm tilted, gilded faintly by light that wasn’t truly there. Approval and warning threaded the same measured breath.
Ludwig gripped tighter at the horns jutting from the salamander’s neck, his knuckles whitening. “What are you two on about now?”
He did not look back at them. His eyes were forward, into that smear of gray and green where the world held its breath. The salamander’s hide quivered under him, not from fear but from the echo of tension that ran along Ludwig’s spine into the beast’s frame.
“The absence,” Thomas murmured. “Of sound. No croak, no flutter, not even a mosquito’s whine. The mire’s gone hollow.”He said it as one names a bad omen. The word hollow lingered, like a mouth held open and waiting.
“Ah, that.” Ludwig’s voice came clipped, as though he’d already thought it through. “Side effect.”He let the words fall and did not elaborate. The air pressed closer, curious.
Thomas’s ghostly brow furrowed. “Side effect? You can’t just throw that out like it’s a footnote. Explain.”
He drifted a fraction nearer, hands folding behind his back.
“Nightbreaker,” Ludwig said simply, glancing down at the weapon holstered to his side. “And the death of that marsh Alpha. No living creature here’s foolish enough to announce itself now. Even the insects can feel it. Instinct, fear, whatever you want to call it. They’ll stay buried till the air stops smelling like that weapon’s wrath.”He did not lift the weapon; he did not need to. The notion of it was enough. The swamp carried memory the way wood carries sap, slow, clinging, impossible to wash out.
A ripple of amusement passed through the Knight King’s tone. “So you’ve turned the whole swamp into a graveyard just by existing. Charming.”He did not quite smile. The sound was closer to a leather glove creasing at the knuckles, dry humor in a place that did not allow laughter.
Ludwig ignored him and pointed forward. “Look. The end of the mire.”He leaned, chin angling past the salamander’s horn. A thin shiver of wind slid across the water, and the surface did not answer. Ahead, the land lifted.
Ahead, the swamp thinned into patches of cracked soil. Pools of dark water grew fewer until only damp veins of mud stretched between mounds of grass. The silhouettes of trees rose beyond the haze, dense, tall, and shadowed in unnatural green.The line of them was not a wall so much as a row of backs turned together, heads bowed. Between trunk and trunk, the shade pooled like a lake, darker than it had any right to be at this hour.
“Stop,” Ludwig said, tugging on the salamander’s horn.The command ran down his arm and into the reanimated thing beneath him, and it obeyed in a single, halting stride.
The creature’s massive limbs sank slightly as it obeyed. Its needless breath came out in short gusts that stirred clouds of damp air. Ludwig jumped down, boots sinking into the soft ground, and raised a hand. “You’ve done enough,” he murmured.Mud gripped at his soles with a sucking sound. He shook one heel free and stepped again, finding the firmer grit where the marsh’s hold loosened.
With a quiet motion, he flipped open the Malvolume Codex. A violet shimmer spread beneath the creature’s feet. The salamander’s body broke apart into a mist of dark smoke, curling and twisting before being drawn into the pages like ink vanishing under water.Bone unstitched from bone without clatter; sinew dissolved to shadow. The last of it funneled inward with a faint hiss, as if the book took a breath and then closed its mouth.
“Back inside for now,” Ludwig said, dusting his hands.The gesture left streaks of silt on black leather. He brushed again, slower, as if to steady his own pulse rather than clean fabric.
Thomas tilted his head. “I thought you were planning to ride that monstrosity all the way to the sands.”He said monstrosity without malice. Practicality wore the word clean.
“That was the plan,” Ludwig admitted, closing the codex. “But look ahead. This isn’t ordinary forest.”The book’s cover thumped against his palm. He did not sheathe it; he let it hang loosely, the weight of it an anchor at his side.
He gestured toward the treeline. The closer one looked, the more the forest seemed alive in a way that wasn’t natural. The trunks were gnarled and twisted, each knothole shaped vaguely like an open mouth or staring eye. Bark curled like scar tissue. The air shimmered faintly with an unseen haze.
A drift of scent met him, resin and wet leaves, yes, yet under it something older, like stone that had remembered blood. Even the light bent as it reached the first line of branches, thinning into a diluted green that did not warm anything it touched.
“Does that look friendly to you?” Ludwig muttered.He narrowed his eyes, as if the trees might relent under scrutiny.
Thomas followed his gaze, and even his spectral form seemed to stiffen. “No. That place isn’t meant for casuals. There’s… something inside. Something’s messed up.”
The Knight King added softly, “It feels old. Older than the elves themselves.”The word older did not mean mere years. It meant a manner of being that rooted under bedrock and did not move when kingdoms fell.
“I can sense it too,” Ludwig said. “Whatever lives in there doesn’t want the undead walking its soil. I can feel it pushing back at me, like a hand on the chest. If I ride into that forest on a reanimated beast, I’ll wake up everything that’s sleeping under those roots.”He laid his palm against his sternum, as if measuring the pressure. The push did not bruise, but it refused him the comfort of forgetting it was there.
He started walking, boots squelching softly as the last traces of swamp gave way to firmer ground. Every step closer made his senses sharpen, he could almost hear the forest breathing.A slow, leaf-deep inhalation. A slower exhale. The rhythm did not match his own. It asked nothing and denied nothing. It simply was.
Then, as the first tree’s shadow fell across his face, a cold blue prompt blinked before his eyes.It flickered in the air itself, thin as frost drawn along a windowpane.
[You are being watched.]


