Supreme Hunter of Beautiful Souls-Chapter 393: Problems
The silence following Seraphyne's fall was almost religious.
The white snow that remained of her corrupted body evaporated slowly, rising in thin clouds. The core of the hall, for the first time in hours, remained still. Neither pulsing, nor shining, nor screaming. Just… still. An impossible stillness, too heavy to be natural.
Kael breathed slowly.
Each breath was a cut from within.
Each movement, a stab.
Blood trickled down his side in a steady stream, tinted by the pale glow of the shadows that tried to hold his flesh together. His eyes remained fixed on the void where Seraphyne had crumbled—not out of vigilance, but because there was something there.
Something he felt even before it happened.
Behind him, far behind, Sylphie, Amelia, and Irelia approached cautiously, calling his name in frail voices.
"Kael!"
"Your wound—!"
"We need to get him out of here!"
But Kael raised a hand without even turning around.
"Stay… where you are."
His voice was lower than usual, but absolutely firm.
Sylphie froze.
Amelia bit her lip.
Irelia raised her sword, but hesitated.
Kael inhaled… and, as if confirming something only he could feel, murmured:
"She didn't accept."
The girls exchanged glances.
But before any questions could be asked, the hall trembled.
Not like before.
Not like the roar of Chaos corrupting reality.
This tremor was more physical. More brutal. Like ice expanding violently under pressure.
The white smoke—the evaporated snow—stopped in mid-air.
And then…
It froze.
Literally froze.
In mid-air.
The white particles crackled, locked together, and solidified like tiny suspended crystals—as if time had been caught off guard.
And at the center of it all…
The ground cracked.
Slowly at first.
Then too fast for any mortal vision to follow.
Kael narrowed his eyes.
"Shit."
The crack opened like a mouth, and something emerged. First a column of pure ice. Then another. Then a third.
But it wasn't ordinary ice.
It was white ice.
Living ice.
Ice that pulsed.
The three columns twisted and merged, creating a grotesque, thorny trunk, with veins that glowed like frozen magma. From these veins, the same white light of Chaos escaped, snaking like thin serpents.
And then… the head emerged.
Or what would be a head.
An icy shell, symmetrical yet fractal, with multiple white eyes that opened and closed chaotically, as if an entire swarm were trying to look at every angle at once.
From inside the monster…
A voice—the same voice, but distorted, fragmented, colder than before—echoed:
"K̷̘̬͐̚a̴̠̤̚ḙ̵̅͘ḻ̷̢̢̈́̿… S̴̖̔͛c̸̖̐͒ä̷͖̲̠́̉r̷̤̒̈l̶̟̄͝ͅé̵̹̑t̸̗͋̿…"
Amelia stifled a scream.
Sylphie covered her mouth.
Irelia took a single step back, incredulous.
Seraphyne—or something born of her—was reborn.
Not as liquid chaos.
But as absolute ice.
Ice that wouldn't melt.
Ice that didn't obey the laws of matter.
Kael took a step forward, despite the excruciating pain.
"So that's it."
His hand gripped the blade's hilt.
"You've become an aberration."
The monster moved—and everything around it froze instantly.
The ground.
The air.
The light.
And all that stillness exploded toward Kael.
The blow came as a blur.
A single spiraling arm, made of razor-sharp ice plates, hurled itself at Kael with enough force to crush a mountain.
Kael raised the blade at the last instant.
The impact was monstrous.
The ground beneath his feet sank, cracking in concentric circles. The shadows beneath him writhed in pain, as if they too could feel the impact. Kael was thrown backward as if he'd been run over by a living storm.
He crashed through two pillars—which shattered into dust—and tumbled dozens of meters.
The girls screamed.
But Kael immediately stood up.
He coughed up blood.
But he remained standing.
"I'm fine."
It was a lie.
But it was also true enough.
The monster advanced without giving time.
It didn't walk.
It glided, like a fragment of a comet stuck to the ground. The trail it left was a layer of white ice that devoured the stone floor like an infestation.
Kael ran in the opposite direction.
The shadows pulled his legs forward, accelerating him to the point where his body could barely keep up with the speed.
The monster opened a vertical mouth in its chest—a gleaming fissure—and fired a blast of white ice.
Kael narrowly dodged.
The blast struck a column five meters away.
The column disappeared.
It didn't explode.
It didn't freeze.
It simply ceased to exist, erased as if it had never been part of the world.
Kael snorted.
"Great."
He ran along the monster's flank.
He jumped.
He swung the blade.
He cut.
The black steel pierced the ice as if it were flesh.
A gigantic shard broke off—an "ice wing"—and crashed to the ground with a thud.
But before it hit the ground, the shard dissolved into white vapor.
Immediate regeneration.
And worse:
From the point where Kael cut, three new arms emerged, all sharp as blades.
They attacked simultaneously.
Kael dodged the first.
He blocked the second.
The third pierced his shoulder.
It didn't pierce flesh.
It pierced shadow.
Kael roared as he felt something being ripped from inside him, something that shouldn't bleed, but did.
He grabbed the monster's arm with his free hand and squeezed until the ice shattered into spirals.
The creature roared.
Kael stepped back.
White ice exploded from the ground, forming spikes that tried to impale him from below.
Kael threw himself to the side.
He rolled.
He jumped.
He slid over the spikes like an acrobat.
But the monster didn't stop.
It had no rhythm, no pattern, no logic.
It was a pure storm.
Brutal.
Mindless.
Limitless.
And Kael was slowing down.
His blood dripped onto the ice.
Each movement pulled at the wounds.
But he continued.
Because if he stopped, it would all be over.
The monster split.
Yes.
It split.
Its torso opened like a cocoon breaking, releasing three smaller bodies—each with four arms and a translucent ice head.
They all advanced at the same time.
Kael clenched his teeth.
"Damn it."
The three attacked together.
The first tried to pierce his stomach.
Kael kicked the monster's leg, deflecting the angle of the blow, and the arm grazed his skin.
The second came from behind, trying to crush his spine between two blades.
Kael ducked, rolled, and used the momentum to cut the monster's arm in half.
The third leaped over him like a predator.
Kael raised his sword to defend himself—but the monster crushed the blade with its entire body, throwing Kael to the ground.
The impact was so strong that the stone shattered dozens of meters.
Kael coughed up blood.
The monster smashed into the ground.
Kael rolled.
The ice exploded in the form of a gigantic pillar.
The second monster advanced, its arms like circular saws.
Kael slid between them.
He cut off a leg.
He cut off an arm.
He spun.
And he cut off a head.
But it regenerated before it even touched the ground.
"Infinite regeneration… great."
The third monster roared and fired a blast of white ice.
Kael threw himself to the side.
The blast erased half a pillar behind him.
Literally erased it—like an eraser on paper.
The three monsters merged again.
And became one once more.
A colossus of white ice, now even larger, even more grotesque, with multiple arms, multiple mouths, and multiple eyes.
Kael spun his blade.
The monster did the same.
The forces collided.
There was no elegant magic.
There were no refined strikes.
It was brutal.
It was instinctive.
It was one animal fighting another.
Kael's blade cut through ice and chaos.
The monster's claws tore through shadow and flesh.
Kael pierced the monster's chest.
The monster pierced Kael's thigh.
Kael ripped off an entire arm.
The monster ripped chunks of shadow from inside his body.
Each blow created explosions.
Each impact shattered the ground.
The entire room trembled.
And yet, Kael continued.
Because retreating was not an option.
Because losing wasn't an option.
And because, deep down, Kael knew:
If Seraphyne was reborn once, she could be reborn again.
He needed to kill every last fragment of her.
The monster roared.
Kael roared back.
Two creatures.
Two predators.
Two anomalies.
They collided.
And then…
Kael saw.
In the center of the monster's chest…
A glint.
A point.
A crack.
"There."
He ran.
The monster noticed.
Tentacles emerged from the ground.
Kael dodged.
Blades emerged from the ceiling.
Kael rolled.
Spikes emerged from the walls.
Kael slid between them.
He jumped.
The shadow propelled him.
And the blade descended.
Right into the crack.
The monster screamed—not with one voice, but with hundreds.
The ice split open.
Kael buried his hand inside the monster, ignoring the cold that burned his skin, ignoring the shards that pierced his flesh.
He grabbed something.
Something that pulsed.
Something alive.
And he pulled.
The monster exploded in light.
Kael was thrown back like a bullet fired off the scene.
He fell to the ground, sliding meters, dragged by the force of the impact. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
And the object in his hand…
It was a heart.
A white heart.
Still pulsing.
Still alive.
Still trying to regenerate.
Kael crushed it.
And the monster froze.
Cracked.
And crumbled into an endless cascade of ice.
Kael fell to his knees.
Breathing. Bleeding.
Almost fainting.
But alive.
The battle was over.
Or at least…
That's what he hoped.







