FREE USE in Primitive World - Chapter 256: Valley Of Death

Chapter 256: Chapter 256: Valley Of Death
The Great Orrath did not believe in subtle transitions. One moment, the jungle was a suffocating, dense labyrinth of petrified roots and towering violet ferns, the next, it was violently ripped open, exposing the raw, bleeding earth beneath.
As Sol rode atop the massive, fifteen-foot Layer 2 Commander, flanked by thousands of heavily armored soldiers and an escort of colossal Omen-Bloods carrying the Hive Mother, the signs of the apocalyptic conflict became impossible to ignore.
The march North was a journey through absolute devastation. The air grew steadily thicker, losing the fresh scent of morning dew and replacing it with the heavy, metallic tang of spilled blood and the sharp, chemical burn of vaporized acids.
The towering flora of the primordial jungle had been greatly eradicated. Trees with trunks as wide as modern houses were snapped like dry twigs, their jagged, splintered remains littering the churned mud.
Everywhere Sol looked, there were bodies scattered across the landscape like discarded toys. He saw the shattered, crystalline wings of massive Dreadwings half-buried in the dirt, their beautiful, faceted eyes dimmed and hollow. He saw the colossal, silver-backed corpses of Great Badgers, their stone-spiked fur melted away to expose the ruined, rotting meat beneath.
It was a trail of breadcrumbs made of pure carnage, leading directly toward the escalating storm.
From miles away, the noise was already deafening. It wasn’t the chaotic, high-frequency clicking of an insect swarm, it was a deep, continuous, earth-shaking rumble that vibrated right through the thick soles of Sol’s boots.
The unmistakable, concussive booms of highly compressed essence detonating echoed through the canopy, followed by the terrifying, mechanical shrieks of aerial predators and the guttural, chest-rattling roars of massive mammals.
The war of the Lords was still going on.
Sol raised his left hand, his brow furrowed in deep concentration. He tapped his heel against the thick chitin of his mount and sent a sharp, absolute command down the mental tether connecting him to the Queen.
HALT AND CONCEAL.
The response was flawless and instantaneous. The Queen’s massive, tree-trunk antennae twitched, broadcasting the silent, telepathic order across the entire hive-mind. The earth-shaking march of the rusted-red and obsidian tide stopped on a dime.scrambled into the dense underbrush, using their naturally dark and rusted carapaces to blend seamlessly into the shadows of the petrified roots and towering ferns, their legs digging into the mud, entering a state of absolute, terrifying stillness.
Within seconds, the massive army had effectively vanished from sight.
Sol slipped off the back of his Commander mount, his boots hitting the damp earth soundlessly. “Stay put,” he whispered to the giant insect, not entirely sure if it understood the words, but trusting the Queen’s overarching command to keep it docile.
He didn’t want to bring an army of thousands to the edge of a warzone blindly. He needed intelligence. He needed to understand the current board state before he committed his newly acquired pieces.
Sol gripped the heavy shaft of his Void-Oak spear. He suppressed his Golden Liquid aura until it was nothing more than a faint, tightly coiled ember in his solar plexus, completely hiding his spiritual signature. He then slipped through the ruined underbrush, moving with the silent, fluid grace of an apex predator.
He navigated the treacherous terrain of splintered logs and acid pools for another half-mile until the tree line abruptly fell away, revealing a massive, naturally formed valley.
As he crept closer to the source of the noise, the air grew incredibly hot, saturated with the coppery stench of blood and the sharp, chemical burn of raw acid.
Sol climbed the broken, slanted bark of a half-fallen Void-Oak, pulling himself high into the remaining canopy to secure a proper vantage point. He parted the thick, violet leaves and looked down.
His breath hitched in his throat.
The battlefield was a vision of absolute, unadulterated purgatory. The previous crater he had seen was a minor skirmish compared to this. The valley floor was a churning, hyper-violent meat grinder. And the most shocking realization hit him immediately: there were even more lackeys here than before.
Obviously, the reinforcements had arrived.
Thousands of silver-backed Great Badgers and massive, iridescent Dreadwings were locked in a frantic, suicidal melee that spanned the entire valley. The sheer, terrifying volume of primal essence being expended in the area created localized, twisting vortexes of wind and dust.
What chilled Sol the most was the absolute, unadulterated disregard for life. The beasts didn’t care about their fallen kin. A massive Badger would routinely trample over the crushed, bleeding skull of its own packmate just to reach a grounded insect, tearing into it with massive, glowing claws.
The Dreadwings were no better, dropping volatile, hyper-concentrated acid bombs into the thick of the melee, indiscriminately melting friend and foe alike just to secure a kill. It was pure, unthinking biological warfare.
But as chaotic as the lackey brawl was, the true spectacle… the apocalyptic event that was actively dictating the flow of the entire battlefield… was taking place in the dead center of the valley.
The Layer 3 Lords.
Sol activated his Crimson-Sight, wincing and squinting as the blinding, white-hot thermal blooms of the two Sovereigns threatened to overload his vision.
They were both heavily injured, covered in deep, gaping wounds that wept glowing essence, but they were still going unbelievably strong. The sheer vitality of a Layer 3 Lord Bloodline was a terrifying thing to witness.
Unlike the lower bloods, both of these Lord blood beasts, had a majestic beauty to them.
Likewise, the Lord Dreadwing was a creature of terrifying, alien majesty. It was the size was absoultely massive, its elongated, heavily armored thorax a deep, iridescent sapphire that deflected the morning light. Its four massive wings were perfectly formed, translucent crystals that hummed with a frequency so high it physically blurred the air around them. It didn’t just fly, it dictated the airspace, moving with the impossible, physics-defying agility of a dragonfly.
Opposite the colossal insect was the Lord Great Badger. It was a walking, breathing mountain of muscle, silver fur, and sheer, unapologetic rage. It was easily tens of feet long from its scarred, bloody snout to its thick tail. Its fur wasn’t just hair, it was heavily saturated with dense earth-essence, hardening into thick, jagged spikes of solid stone that formed an impenetrable, biological fortress around its body.
They were locked in a violent, perfectly matched stalemate.
The Dreadwing was the absolute master of speed and corrosive attacks. It would dive from the clouds at blinding speeds, moving so fast it created localized sonic booms that shattered the surrounding rocks. Sol had a hard time following, as It practically teleported through the air, spewing torrents of hyper-concentrated, glowing green acid that hissed like a thousand angry snakes.
But the Great Badger was the ultimate, immovable vanguard. Its defense was the perfect, hard-counter to the Dreadwing’s lethal agility.
Sol watched in awe as the massive insect initiated a blistering dive, unleashing a waterfall of acid directly onto the mammal’s back. The Badger didn’t try to dodge. It didn’t have the speed. Instead, it roared… a sound that shook the leaves from the trees a mile away… and flooded its thick, silver fur with dense, yellow earth essence.


