The Anomaly's Path-Chapter 87: Blood and Echoes

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 87: Blood and Echoes

The jungle was silent, but it wasn’t a peaceful quiet. It was the suffocating, heavy stillness that happens right before a predator snaps its jaws. The birds had stopped their chatter, and the wind had died down to a stagnant heat.

A shadow moved between the trees.

It was fast, barely more than a blur of dark clothing and darker steel. The figure did not run blindly or crash through the undergrowth like some wild animal. Each step was calculated, each breath controlled.

The mana in his body flowed like a river, circulating through his core, his limbs, his fingertips, never stopping, never wasting. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞

He was hunting.

...And the jungle knew it.

_

I moved through the undergrowth not as a trespasser, but as a ghost. Every step was a calculated placement of weight, my boots barely disturbing the rotting leaves.

Tempest was in my right hand, the blade held low and the edge angled toward the ground. The black scabbard was strapped to my back, but I would not need it yet. Not until the killing was done.

Inside me, the Flowing Vessel Art was no longer a humming engine; it was a silent, rushing river. I could feel the mana circulating—Adept Mid—pulsing through my core and out to my fingertips, ready to ignite at a moment’s notice.

I caught the scent before I saw them: the musk of rot and wet wood.

Ahead of me, maybe thirty feet away, a pack of Thorn-Hides were feeding on a carcass.

There were six of them.

Their bodies were covered in thick, bark-like armor that could deflect most blades. The armor was not smooth like metal. It was rough and jagged, with deep grooves that looked like tree bark. Their claws were long and curved, designed for tearing through flesh and bone.

Their mouths were filled with rows of needle-thin teeth that glistened with drool.

It were Grade 2 monsters. Low to Mid rank.

A month and a half ago, I would have looked at this pack and turned around. I would have told myself it was too dangerous, that I was not ready, that I would come back when I was stronger.

I had trained every single day since the Grave-Steel Behemoth fight.

From dawn until dusk, Roran had pushed me harder than I thought possible. He had beaten me bloody, thrown me into the dirt, forced me to fight until my mana ran dry, and then pushed me to fight some more.

There were days I hated him. Days I cursed his name and wished I had never met him. I lay in the mud, staring up at the sky, wondering why I was doing this to myself.

But I did not quit.

Because every time I wanted to stop, I thought about my purpose.

What I wanted to do?

Both Roran and my Uncle Theorn told me one thing. Found your purpose of holding the sword. It will take time to found it but when you found it. Hold it and never let it go.

That reason will become your path. Your purpose and goal. It will make a path for you to creating a personal sword art.

...And I think I am getting close to it.

I am creating my own path. So I kept going to get more stronger and it had worked.

I had also broken through to Adept Mid three weeks ago. I could feel the next wall—Adept High—waiting for me just around the corner. My mana control was sharper than ever. My reflexes were faster.

My body had hardened into something lean and dangerous.

My affinities had grown too.

Lightning came to me like a second heartbeat now. I could call it without thinking, let it flow through Tempest like water through a river. The black arcs still hurt, still drained my mana faster than anything else, but they did not feel like a wild animal anymore.

Space was harder.

Every fold still came with a headache and a nosebleed. But I was getting better. I could fold small distances now—a few feet at a time. Enough to blink behind an enemy. or to redirect a strike and survive.

Roran said my progress was astonishing. He said he had never seen anyone climb the ranks so fast. He said I had talent, and that the life-and-death experiences I kept throwing myself into were accelerating my growth.

But I knew it was not just that.

It was Martha’s healing, stitching my body back together after every brutal session. It was Mia’s cooking, keeping me fed when I forgot to eat. It was Roran’s training, pushing me past my limits every single day.

I was not doing this alone.

I tightened my grip on Tempest. The black hilt felt like an extension of my own palm.

I didn’t feel fear.

I felt... hungry.

_

The Thorn-Hides had not noticed me yet.

They were too busy eating, their snouts buried in the carcass of a deer. Their tails twitched back and forth, the spines along their backs rattling softly with every movement.

I crept closer, my Flash Instinct humming in the back of my mind. The world slowed. I could see the way the lead Thorn-Hide’s muscles coiled under its bark hide. I mapped the space between us—fifteen feet of obstacles.

I moved.

Starlight Steps kicked in, and the ground became a blur. I didn’t just run; I glided. Before the nearest beast could even sniff the air, I was in its guard. Tempest hissed as it left the scabbard. I didn’t aim for the armor. I aimed for the gaps.

Shing!

The blade slid through its throat like a hot wire through fat. Black blood sprayed, and the head hit the dirt before the body knew it was dead.

The pack erupted into snarls. Two lunged from my flanks, their claws whistling through the air. I didn’t retreat. I leaned back, the talons missing my nose by a hair’s breadth, and channeled the Black Lightning.

The obsidian arcs didn’t explode outward in a waste of energy. I kept them tight, coating the steel in a vibrating, humming shroud of electricity. I spun, a low horizontal sweep that caught both attackers across their unarmored bellies. The lightning cooked them from the inside out before they even landed.

Three down.

The largest of the pack, the alpha, let out a gurgling roar and fired a volley of its back-thorns. I could see them—six jagged projectiles aimed at my vitals.

This was the part Roran had nearly killed me to master.

I reached out, grabbing the invisible threads of space. The fold.

Blink.

The world twisted. For a microsecond, I was nowhere. Then, I was behind the alpha. My head throbbed—that familiar, dull pressure behind my eyes—but I didn’t stumble.

I reversed my grip on Tempest and drove the blade downward through the gap in its shoulder plating. The steel met resistance, then gave way with a wet thunk. The beast collapsed, its legs twitching as the lightning fried its nervous system.

The last two realized the hierarchy had changed. They turned to bolt.

"Not today," I muttered.

I didn’t run. I folded the distance again. Blink.

I appeared ten feet ahead of the first runner. Its eyes went wide, reflecting the black steel of my blade. One clean draw-cut separated its life from its body. I didn’t even stop to look; I pushed my mana into a final, desperate fold.

I reappeared directly beside the last one. I didn’t even use a form. I just used the momentum of the Blink, swinging Tempest in a brutal, vertical arc that split the creature from crown to brisket.

Silence returned.

I stood in the center of the carnage, my chest heaving, the black ichor of the monsters steaming on the grass. I sheathed Tempest with a sharp, mechanical click.

"Took you too long on that last one," a gruff voice broke the silence.

Roran was leaning against a tree, looking as bored as ever. He’d been there the whole time, watching.

"I was testing my limits," I said, wiping sweat from my brow.

Roran snorted, walking over to inspect the bodies. "You’re at Adept Mid. You’ve got the talent, I’ll give you that. But don’t get cocky. A Grade 5 won’t wait for you to find your balance after you teleport."

He looked at me, and for a split second, the scowl softened into a real nod of respect. "Good job, kid."

I blinked. "Was that a compliment? From you?"

"Don’t make it weird," he grunted, turning back toward the path. "Clean yourself up. It’s the Festival of Echoes tonight. If we’re late, Martha will have both our heads, and I’d rather face a Behemoth than that woman’s cooking spoon."

He disappeared into the trees.

I walked over to the nearby stream, kneeling down to wash the gore from my face.

The water was crystal clear. I stared at my reflection.

My hair was longer, wilder, and my blue eyes looked... sharper. Harder. There were new scars, but they looked like badges of honor.

I couldn’t help it.

A slow, narcissistic grin spread across my face. "Damn, Leo. You’re actually starting to look like a hero." I turned my head, admiring the jawline. "If the girls back in my old world could see me now, they’d be lining up."

I laughed at myself, but then sighed.

The last forty-five days had been absolute torture. Roran had beat me until I couldn’t stand, then made me cultivate mana while my muscles were literally tearing. I had cursed his name every night, dreaming of the day I could finally land a hit on him.

But looking at my hands, feeling the steady, powerful thrum of the Adept Mid core... I couldn’t hate him.

He’d turned a victim into a predator.

The sun was sinking, painting the jungle in shades of violent orange. I stood up, sheathed my blade, and started the trek home. The village lights were already flickering in the distance.

The festival was starting.

RECENTLY UPDATES