Monster Evolution System: I became a Rat-Chapter 83: Hermit Soul

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Chapter 83: Chapter 83: Hermit Soul

The giant monster continued to munch on the flesh within its mouth as it dragged the warriorโ€™s lifeless body through the mountain pass. ๐•—๐š›๐šŽ๐šŽ๐ฐ๐—ฒ๐—ฏ๐—ป๐š˜๐šŸ๐šŽ๐—น.๐•”๐จ๐•ž

Several times, its intuition flared. It halted, turning its massive head to search the surroundings, senses straining for a threat. Each time, finding nothing, it resumed its march.

Within the depths of Oblivion, Rosacer watched closely.

"Thick skin," he muttered. "Resistant to both flame and blunt force. Ice may slow it, but the beast possesses overwhelming strength. Direct confrontation is impossible."

He continued speaking under his breath as his muscles darkened from exhaustion. Necrosis had already begun to creep through his flesh.

Before they could completely fail, he finally invoked Ananta.

The monsterโ€™s image burned itself into his mind, and the world shifted.

The beast sensed something unusual once more. It stiffened, muscles coiling, its guard rising.

Too late.

An obsidian dagger plunged into the back of its neck, and pale yellow flames erupted, engulfing its massive frame.

Rosacer emerged into the physical world and swiftly produced a doll, its tendrils lashing outward with unnatural life. He hurled it toward the burning monster, then vanished again into Oblivion.

This time, he reappeared atop a distant ridge, gazing down at the chaos below. Activating the Grafted Sigil, he conjured additional eyes, scanning the surroundings for any threat that might emerge.

The beast screamed, its bellows echoing through the mountains as poison seeped deeper into its body from the embedded dagger. The flames clung stubbornly to its form, refusing to fade. Though its thick hide resisted the fire, the question was never if it would fall, only when.

Rosacer had time.

Wracked by frenzied pain, the monster could barely think, let alone locate him.

It was a waiting game.

Its cries echoed across Mount Hermit. The entire mountain bore witness to the cacophony, a vicious scream that tore through the beastโ€™s agony and reverberated through stone and sky alike.

Rosacer frowned. "Something is not right."

He carefully searched the surroundings, expanding his awareness, straining every conjured eye for the slightest disturbance. Yet there was nothing. No movement or distortion. No presence he could clearly identify.

Still, his intuition continued to flare.

It was not warning him of the wounded monster below.

It was warning him of something else.

Something far more menacing.

A faint chill crawled up his spine as the realization settled. He was not alone.

"Come on," he whispered under his breath, his voice barely stirring the air. "Show yourself."

With exhaustion piling deep within his muscles, Rosacer allowed the eyes grafted by the sigil to fade one by one. His body slouched forward, shoulders sagging, his eyelids fluttering as they nearly closed.

Even so, his gaze remained fixed on the beast below. He watched as it suffered, its thick hide slowly melting from within, while the clinging flames continued to burn across its massive form.

Then, without warning, the creature went still.

Rosacerโ€™s eyes snapped open, terror surging through him. The blight flames had been extinguished. The screaming had ceased.

"Something is wrong," he muttered, already preparing to escape through Oblivion.

But Oblivion required the doll.

Though he retained ownership over it, he could not activate it from a great distance. It had to be in his hand or physically bound to him. Only then could it serve as a channel for death aura, even if it remained stored within his inventory.

There were limits to this method. He had learned that during his encounter with Josan.

That time, he had invoked the dollโ€™s ability, dismissed it almost instantly, and forced the death aura through Oblivion itself. The timing had been impossibly tight. It had been coincidence as much as skill that allowed him to succeed.

Had anything gone wrong, Josan would have stopped him long before he could escape.

Rosacer continued to monitor the creature from a distance. Nothing moved.

After several tense moments passed in silence, he began to descend the ridge, advancing toward the doll. The monster remained motionless.

Each step was deliberate, his movements measured to produce as little sound as possible.

"A few meters more," he murmured to himself, lowering into a crouch as he advanced.

His plan was simple. De summon the doll, then immediately use it to access Oblivion and escape. He had already abandoned any thought of defeating the monster. If the opportunity presented itself, he would also retrieve the Daken knife, but his priority was leaving.

Removing either could awaken the creature the instant the connection was severed.

And if that happened, he would not have time to run.

Rosacer was now within range. Inwardly, he issued the command to the system to de summon the doll.

The instant the connection severed, the monsterโ€™s eyes flared open.

It roared in brutish rage. The knife lodged in its flesh released its deafening poison, flooding the wound, yet the creature showed no reaction at all. The toxin was consumed, erased, as though it had never existed.

Rosacerโ€™s wrist was already flicking.

This time, he was too late.

A tremor rippled through the mountain. The ground convulsed violently, cracks racing outward toward the forest below and across the mountainโ€™s peak. Massive boulders tore free, tumbling down the slopes as the terrain itself began to collapse.

The crunch of flesh and bone. The deafening cries of an unbound soul. Something unnatural. Something starving bellowing from the beast.

It was a wise hunger poured out of the beast, heavy and suffocating, wrapping around the mountain like a living thing.

Slowly, the creature turned its head toward Rosacer.

He was already moving, already trying to flee.

The beast screamed.

Blood burst from Rosacerโ€™s eyes as the sound tore through him. In the same instant, the monster lunged forward. Everything happened within a single breath.

The impact was catastrophic.

The creature slammed into him, hurling his body dozens of meters across the stone. Ribs shattered. His back broke. His limbs twisted grotesquely as he struck the ground, his body crumpling like discarded flesh.

Pain drowned him.

Yet Rosacer did not lose consciousness.

Through blurred vision and choking blood, he forced his will into motion. He activated the Grafted Sigil.

Bones ground against one another as they realigned. Muscles stitched themselves back together, torn flesh knitting with wet, agonizing precision.

"Not this time," he muttered inwardly.

He forced himself upright, though his legs trembled beneath him. Standing alone felt like defiance.

He had learned his lesson during the fight with Kirata. Pain was irrelevant. The moment he allowed it to slow him, death would follow without hesitation.

"Alright," he whispered to himself. "What now?"

There was no longer any choice between running or fighting. Getting away was out of the question. The beast was too quick, too powerful, and utterly in control.

"In control," he repeated within his thoughts, forcing the chaos down, forcing his breathing to steady.

Rosacer turned inward and addressed the system. "Summon Arcis."

The space between him and the monster shuddered wildly. Reality crumpled inward, twisting like ripped fabric, and out of the distortion stepped a slender girl. Her feet landed without a sound, yet the mountain seemed to tremble faintly, as if it too sensed her presence.

As always, her aura flowed outward, dense and undeniableโ€”commanding, in control.

Rosacer raised a trembling arm and pointed toward the towering beast. "Kill it."

Exhaustion was getting better of him.

Arcis inclined her head in a small, almost indifferent nod.

Dark flames bloomed in her palm. Black, lightless, devouring even the glow of the monsterโ€™s eyes, they writhed as though alive.

Even Rosacer shuddered, when he saw the black flames in action again.

The beast roared and charged.

The ground shattered beneath its steps as it closed the distance in an instant, a mountain of flesh and rage hurtling toward her.

Arcis did not move.

She lifted her hand.

The black flames surged forward like a tide.

They struck the creature head on.

There was no bang, no sudden crash.

Instead, the flames effortlessly consumed the monsterโ€™s charge. Its roar cut off suddenly as its body began to collapse, burning and crumbling apart at the same time.

Muscle slid away like soaked paper, while bone darkened and splintered, shrieking as it was taken by something far colder than fire.

The beast thrashed, striking blindly, tearing apart stone and earth, but each movement only fed the flames further. Its body began to warp, bulging and shrinking in unnatural rhythms.

Then it let out another scream.

Just then, something else tore free from within its chest.

A pale, distorted shape burst outward, howling as it emerged, a soul dragged into the open at last. It writhed in the air, twisted by centuries of binding and hunger, its form barely holding together.

Arcis muttered, her eyes widening, "Hermit Soul."

The black flames recoiled from it.

The creature stopped in its tracks, suddenly realizing that something profound and essential had shifted.

The soul let out a final, echoing cry, then fled, streaking across the mountain like a dying star, vanishing into the depths beyond the peaks.

The monsterโ€™s body collapsed instantly.

What remained hit the ground with a dull, lifeless thud.

Silence followed.

Arcis let the flames fade from her hand and turned slightly toward Rosacer, her expression unreadable.

Rosacer sank to one knee, breath ragged, blood dripping from his chin.