Deus Necros - Chapter 516: Oldest Wisdom

Chapter 516: Oldest Wisdom
The cadence of the Lich’s words was resigned, as one reading out the terms of a contract that could not be rescinded.
Ludwig frowned, dragging the mace behind him, letting it carve a furrow in the dirt. “I don’t tire.”
The furrow ran straight for several paces, a black seam unspooling in the dim.
“Do you think only the dead are tireless?” the Lich asked. “There are gods who never rest. Demons who never breathe. You, boy, are something between. Neither living nor dead. And that’s why this place reacts to you.”
The last sentence quieted as it ended, as if the forest might overhear the definition and disagree.
Ludwig’s expression darkened as understanding crept in. “It’s the damn heart.”
He did not curse the heart with heat. He said it as one observes rain sliding through a crack, certain it will widen the gap with time.
He touched his chest. The faint thrum beneath his fingers felt heavier here, almost as if it was listening.
It answered his touch not with pain but with attention. In this place, the beat seemed not entirely his.
“So this is what it means to mimic life,” he said quietly. “To be alive, but not living.”
The words tasted like iron filings. He did not spit them out.
The forest gave no answer, only that endless suffocating stillness.
A leaf fell somewhere beyond sight. It did not make a sound when it struck the ground.
Then Ludwig’s eyes narrowed. “Wait… that tree.” He had not meant to speak, but surprise cut the thought short of his teeth.
Thomas leaned forward. “What about it?” He scanned where Ludwig’s gaze rested: a trunk with a twist in its grain like a rope half-unwound.
“I passed that one before,” Ludwig said. “The twist in the bark, there. I remember it.”
Memory threaded the grooves. He could trace the path of his first glance along them with his finger.
He turned, scanning the line of trees behind him. They looked identical, too identical. He dragged the mace again, leaving a deep groove in the soil. “Let’s see something.”
The mace’s head plowed a dark channel, damp earth shivering up to either side. He watched it as one watches a fuse burn.
He broke into a sprint, weaving through the roots, counting steps under his breath. A few minutes later, he stopped, and stared.
Under his boots, the same groove waited for him, carved clean through the earth. The same gnarled tree stood ahead.
The mark gleamed wet in the half-light, as if some patient hand had laid it down just this instant to humor him. Realization hit like a bad dream that you woke up from only to find yourself still dreaming. A loop.
“Looks like we’re trapped,” he said flatly and in a matter-of-factly, a simple deduction to the cumbersome issue they were in right now.
Thomas floated silently, then murmured, “An illusion?”
“Maybe,” Ludwig said, scanning for magical residue. “But I don’t sense any flux. Nothing tangible. It’s like space itself’s looping.” He tasted the air as a mage tastes it, expecting the bitter tang of a cast spell. There was none. The forest did not cast. It was.
This was as if a law was placed onto this forest and he was forced to obey it. Unable to escape it.
He looked down at the lantern. “Yo, Lich.” The metal clicked faintly against his glove. The ghostly flame inside the lantern narrowed to a slit. It them flickered faintly. But the lich didn’t answer.
“You said I’m not undead,” Ludwig said aloud, more to himself. “Undead aren’t supposed to fall to mental tricks. The same as I didn’t fall for the commander’s guise. So, what’s this then? How can I be trapped in something I can’t even detect?”
He watched the groove, as if the earth might admit its trick and close it.
The Lich’s voice came, slower now, almost reluctant. “You weren’t immune to the commander’s spell because of undeath, boy. It was the acorn.”
The word dropped like a pebble into still water. The ripples did not reach far.
Ludwig blinked. “Ulesse trinket?”
His fingers twitched at the memory of the golden acorn against palm.
“That golden acorn you carry, it belongs to the elves. It reveals the truth of forms. It’s a key to their kingdom. That’s why you saw through her illusion. Nothing to do with what you are.”
There was no praise in the explanation, only the careful stripping of a wrong assumption from its nail.
Thomas folded his arms, ghostly eyes narrowing. “Then what about this forest? Isn’t it also a part of their kingdom? So he should technically not fall to its illusions, undead or not…” His gaze raked the undergrowth as if a seam might show if watched sternly enough.
“This is different,” the Lich said. “You’re standing in a maze woven by will alone. A prison made from the trees themselves. If you were truly undead, you’d see the exit plain as daylight. But you’re not. You’re in between. The maze accepts you as prey.”
The last word carried no drama. It did not need any.
Ludwig’s hand tightened around Nightbreaker. “And what happens if an undead does enter?”
His grip shifted higher on the haft of Nightbreaker, more out of habit than threat. A slow readiness, like drawing a breath before a plunge.
“They die,” the Lich whispered. “The one who imposed this will aren’t the elves. But the entity guarding this place. An Entity that abhors the dead and hunts them. If you were still as you were… it would have sensed you long ago and crushed you to dust.”
“You seem to know a bit about this place?” Ludwig asked.
“It’s where I got my staff from after all, though I had to pay a far too great of a price for it. A dragon isn’t something that one can simply… face.” The whisper held a trace of respect not for dragons but for the certainty of their work.
“A dragon?” Ludwig muttered.
He then immediately felt the air shift, heavier, hotter.
It came first against the cheek, a warmth that did not belong to sunlight. The hair at his nape prickled.
He hadn’t heard wings. There was no tremor, no warning. But suddenly, as if the forest exhaled, something enormous was there.
Presence replaced distance. The canopy seemed to lean, and every leaf on a dozen branches turned its underside to face him.
The shadows peeled apart, and a shape took form before him, a creature vast enough to block the world. Moss dripped from its scales like a second skin. Branches jutted from its horns, curling like the antlers of an ancient stag. Its eyes glowed faintly gold, not with malice but with an alien intellect.
Every line of it said old. The kind of old that did not count winters. The kind that watched mountains change their minds.
The dragon lowered its head until its snout was a breath away from Ludwig’s face. He could feel its exhale, hot and damp like a forge.
The smell was clean earth after rain, sap split open under knife, the faint char of lightning that had struck a tree and left it living.
Then, without its mouth moving, a voice resonated directly inside his skull.
It arrived fully formed, a bell struck once in a great hall with no walls.
“How did you know?”
The question settled between them like a stone placed carefully on a scale. The leaves did not stir. The maze waited to see what the weight would do.


