The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 11: Toad Lord(3)
The lake swallowed them.
One moment, the swamp was a nightmare of noise and violence — the shrieking of three serpentine heads, the guttural bellowing of the Toad Lord, the crack and crash of ironwood trees snapping like dry twigs — and then the black water rose and closed over the writhing mass of scales and flesh like a grave filling in.
Silence.
Not the comfortable silence of the swamp at dawn. This was the silence of a held breath. The silence before the second impact.
Krug stood at the edge of the boundary stones, knee-deep in the floodwater that had surged over the camp perimeter. His scales were slick with mud and the foul-smelling muck that the Toad Lord’s charge had sprayed across everything. The Shepherd’s Stick trembled in his grip, the red gem pulsing erratically, as if the artifact itself didn’t know whether to signal hope or alarm.
Behind him, the tribe pressed against the root-walls of the Hollow. Faces peered from the gaps — wide-eyed, pale-scaled, breathing through their mouths because the air was too thick with swamp gas and blood-stink to breathe through their nostrils. The hatchlings had stopped crying. They clung to their mothers in a silence more frightening than wailing.
"Where—" Vark started.
The lake detonated.
A geyser of black water erupted fifty feet into the air, dragging with it chunks of vegetation, mud, and the shattered remains of the boundary stones that had once marked the safe line. The blast wave hit Krug chest-first, staggering him back three steps. Vark went down hard, his crab-shell chest plate cracking against a root.
Two shapes breached the surface.
The Toad Lord came up first, propelled by the sheer power of its hind legs. It left the water like a living avalanche, its massive bulk crashing down on the mudflats with an impact that shook the earth hard enough to crack the remaining wall segments of the camp. Its golden eyes were wild now — not with hunger, but with fury. Black blood sheeted down its warty flanks from a dozen deep puncture wounds. The throat sac that had been so imposing, so full of dominance, was hanging in shredded ribbons, leaking a sickly yellow fluid that hissed and smoked where it hit the water.
It was hurt. For the first time in its long, unchallenged rule, the Toad Lord of the Green Basin was hurt.
The Hydra followed. It erupted from the lake like a black geyser given form, three necks uncoiling in the air, each head twisting to track the wounded toad. The oil-slick scales streamed water. The venom-dripping first head was caked in a black ichor that was not its own. The screaming second head had a jagged wound across its jaw — a row of scales torn clean away, exposing raw, pink muscle beneath.
But the third head — the silent one — was untouched. Its crimson eyes burned steady and bright, locked onto the Toad Lord with an attention that was less animal and more *mechanical*.
It was reading the fight. Adjusting.
"Down!" Krug roared, and the tribe flattened behind the roots as the two monsters collided again on the mudflats.
The Toad Lord’s tongue whipped out — that terrible, blurred muscle that had swallowed Rot in a single wet heartbeat. It struck the Hydra’s middle neck, wrapping around the screaming head and yanking it forward with enough force to dislocate the neck joint.
The second head shrieked — a sound that cut through the screaming wind like a blade on bone. It twisted, fangs scraping against the leathery tongue, tearing, but it couldn’t break free. The Toad Lord began to pull, its massive body leaning backward, using its weight as an anchor.
It was trying to rip the head off.
The Hydra’s body convulsed. The first head lunged instinctively, slamming into the Toad Lord’s face. Needle-thin fangs punctured the skin beside its left eye, and the green venom pumped into the wound in visible pulses — a sickening, rhythmic injection.
The Toad Lord’s left eye clouded. The pupil dilated. A haze of green crept across the gold like ink in water.
Poison, Krug realized. The serpent bleeds venom.
But the tongue held. The second head was being dragged forward, its neck stretching to a grotesque length. The wet sound of tendons tearing was audible even over the roaring.
And then the third head moved.
It didn’t lunge. It didn’t bite. It lowered itself beneath the Toad Lord’s jaw — into the gap where the shredded throat sac hung in bloody strips — and it shoved.
The needle-fangs didn’t pierce. They probed. They found the soft, unprotected tissue beneath the jaw where the major blood vessels ran. Where the tongue was rooted.
It bit. Deep. And twisted.
The Toad Lord’s tongue went slack.
The second head ripped free, trailing saliva and blood, its metallic scream turning into a hoarse, rattling cough. But the damage was done. The Toad Lord’s primary weapon — that whip-crack tongue that had made it untouchable — was severed at the root.
Black blood didn’t pour. It erupted. A pressurized gout of dark fluid sprayed across the mud, painting the camp ruins in a pattern that looked like something out of a butcher’s nightmare.
The Toad Lord staggered. Its golden right eye blinked, confused. Its left eye was clouded, blinded by the venom. The massive legs, which had shaken the earth with every step, buckled at the knees.
GROAAAA—
The roar started, but it never finished. It devolved into a wet, gurgling cough as the blood filled the throat cavity.
The Hydra struck together. All three heads. The first drove into the shoulder, severing muscle. The second clamped onto a foreleg, its metallic screech vibrating through the bone like a tuning fork until something inside *cracked*. The third head — the silent architect of the kill — pushed deeper into the throat, tearing the wound wider, wider, until the cough became a drowning.
The Toad Lord fell.
It went down slowly, like a mountain collapsing. Its hind legs gave first, folding beneath the enormous weight. Then the forelegs, bloody and broken, splayed outward. The massive body hit the mud with a wet, final *thoom* that sent a tremor through the camp ruins.
The golden right eye rolled. It found the camp. Found the small, cowering shapes of the tribe behind their pathetic roots.
For one terrible second, Krug felt the dying monster look at him. Not with hate. Not with hunger.
With confusion.
Why?
It had been king. It had been the natural order. Bugs bred, fish spawned, and the Toad Lord fed. The cycle was eternal. Unchallengeable.
Until something from outside the cycle broke the rules.
The eye dimmed.
The Toad Lord of the Green Basin exhaled its last breath — a low, bubbly rattle that collapsed the remains of its throat sac — and was still.
The Hydra released its grip. The three heads rose, coated in black blood, and screamed in unison. Not the metallic shriek of battle. Not the hissing of aggression.
Victory.
The sound echoed across the silent swamp, bouncing off the treeline and rolling over the black water. Birds that had gone mute burst from the canopy in a panicked cloud. Things in the reeds fled in every direction.
The king was dead.
A new predator had claimed the throne.
***
Zephyr didn’t breathe for six seconds.
The health bars had been close. Terrifyingly close. The Toad Lord had taken the Hydra to 22% HP before the venom stacks finally reached critical. If the fight had lasted thirty more seconds — if the tongue had held — the Hydra would have lost its second head permanently, and with it, the pressure advantage that let the third head find the kill shot.
[Entity: Giant Swamp Toad (Lord) — DEFEATED]
[Reward: Territory Claim (Green Basin — Contested → Owned)]
[Reward: Biomass Deposit — Apex-Grade Remains Available for Harvest]
[Entity: Chimera Protocol — Hydraboat Variant]
[HP: 22%]
[Status: Victory State — Feeding Initiated]
[Aggression: DECLINING (Satiation Protocol)]
The aggression counter was dropping. The fight had burned through the Hydra’s combat stimulants — the artificial hormones the Chimera Protocol injected to make unlocked creations maximize lethality. Now, the chemical cocktail was winding down, replaced by a different set of imperatives.
Hunger. Rest. Territory.
The Hydra coiled around the Toad Lord’s carcass, its three heads already tearing into the soft belly where the hide was thinnest. It wasn’t neat. Strips of grey-green flesh were ripped free and swallowed whole, the Hydra’s necks bulging as the massive chunks slid down.
Zephyr watched it feed. His hand was shaking on the mouse. He made a fist, squeezed, released.
You’re fine. It’s dead. Boss down. Move to phase two.
He forced himself to look at the numbers.
[Faith Points: 700]
[Breakdown: 500 (Reserve) + 200 (Witnessed Miracle Surge)]
[Faith Generation Rate: 24 FP/day → PENDING RECALCULATION]
[Tribe Morale: CRITICAL]
He pulled up the faith analytics. The green pie chart that had been mostly "Casual Believers" was bleeding red. The witnessed miracle — the Hydra appearing from the earth like divine wrath — had given a brief spike, but the sustained terror of the fight, the destruction of the camp, and the death of Rot had done more damage than the spectacle had bought.
Fear of the god was not the same as faith in the god.
Not yet.
He tagged the Toad Lord’s carcass on the map. The system was already rendering it as a resource node.
[Apex-Grade Biomass: Giant Swamp Toad (Lord)]
[Available Yield:]
[— Toad-Hide (Superior): Natural armor plating. Spear-resistant.]
[— Toad-Bone (Dense): Construction-grade skeletal material.]
[— Throat Sac Fluid (Alchemical): Bio-preservative. Antiseptic properties.]
[— Tongue Tendon (Elastic): High-tension cord. Siege-weapon grade.]
Zephyr’s mind, momentarily drowning in post-battle adrenaline, caught on the last line.
Tongue Tendon. Siege-weapon grade.
He glanced at the Blueprints tab. At the greyed-out entry for the God-Killer Ballista. Under requirements: *"Tension Mechanism: Dragon Sinew or Hydra Muscle."*
The Toad’s tongue wasn’t dragon sinew. But it was apex-grade elastic tissue capable of the same whip-crack acceleration. It might work.
He filed it. Later. Right now, his people were huddled in a hole, their camp was a mudflat, and the thing he’d summoned to save them was eating a corpse fifty meters from where the hatchlings slept.
One disaster at a time.
He checked the Hydra’s loyalty parameter one more time.
[Loyalty: NONE]
Still wild. Still not his.
But alive. That was more than he had a right to hope for.
He opened the `[Creation]` tab. Scrolled to the bottom. The sub-menu he had spotted earlier was still there, grey but visible.
[Divine Binding Protocol]
[Requirements: Active Chimera + Willing Mortal Vessel + 500 FP]
[Status: Locked — Prerequisite: Chimera must reach Saturation State]
"Thirty days," Zephyr whispered to the empty room. *"Thirty days to turn a weapon into a pet."*
He minimized the tab. The tribe didn’t need to know about this yet. They needed to survive tonight.
He leaned back, rubbing his eyes. The monitor’s glow carved deep shadows across his face.
*"Tutorial boss down,"* he murmured. *"Now the real game starts."*
***
The tribe came out of the Hollow like ghosts walking into a graveyard.
Krug was first. He planted the Shepherd’s Stick in the mud and looked at what his god’s intervention had bought them.
The camp was unrecognizable.
The north wall was gone — scattered into logs and torn vines by the Toad Lord’s initial charge. The trench it had carved when it bulldozed through the perimeter was a muddy canyon five paces wide and deep enough to swallow a crouching lizardman. The cistern — their lifeline, the carefully stone-lined pit that held clean rainwater — was cracked down the middle, the precious water draining into the polluted floodwater that covered the camp floor.
The Processing Pit was a flooded hole. The drying racks were kindling. The smoke that still rose from the drowned hearth was thin and grey, the fire’s death rattle.
The central hearth. The heart of the camp. The thing Krug had rebuilt three times during the first week, nursing the flame like a sick child. Cold.
Grak came up beside him. The former leader’s jaw was tight, his claws curled into his palms. He said nothing. There was nothing to say.
Vark led the enforcers through the ruin, checking for injured. The damage done by the Toad Lord was impersonal — a force of nature that had simply walked through their lives without noticing. The damage done by the Hydra was worse. The serpent’s thrashing tail had demolished the ironwood shelter where the crafting tools were stored. Bone needles, woven baskets, half-finished shields — all crushed into the mud.
A female crouched in the wreckage of the kiln. The potter’s kiln. The first true brick-firing oven they had built. The clay walls had collapsed inward, burying the first batch of proper bricks under rubble.
She dug through the debris with her hands, pulling out fragments. Broken. Every one. She held a piece up to the grey light. It was smooth. Well-fired. It would have been the first brick that didn’t crack.
She put the piece down carefully, as if it were a body.
Krug watched her. He watched them all. The tribe moved through the ruins with the numb, careful steps of people looking at an accident they couldn’t undo.
The hatchlings were alive. Twenty-four pairs of yellow eyes peered from the Nesting Rise, which the Elder Tree’s roots had shielded from the worst of the destruction. They were trembling. Mud-splattered. But intact.
Krug knelt by the Rise. A hatchling — the same one that had stacked stones in Chapter 8’s quiet evening — reached out and grabbed his finger. It held on with a grip that was far stronger than its size should allow.
"Safe," Krug whispered. "You are safe."
The hatchling chirped. Quiet. Uncertain.
Krug stood. He looked east.
The Toad Lord’s carcass was a grey mountain on the mudflats. Already, the toxic yellow fluid from the ruptured throat sac was leaching into the surrounding pools, killing the insect larvae and turning the water a sickly amber.
And beyond the carcass, in the deeper water where the lake turned black, the Hydra coiled. Three heads resting on the surface, jaws dripping with the Toad Lord’s flesh. The crimson eyes were half-lidded, but not closed. Watching the shore. Watching the small, warm-blooded things that smelled like food.
It didn’t approach. The Toad’s body was a meal that would last weeks. But the message was clear in the lazy sweep of those red eyes.
I am here. This is mine now.
Vark came to stand beside Krug. The enforcer’s arm was bruised from the fall, and the crab-shell plate had a new crack running through the center. He looked at the Hydra.
"That is... our god’s... weapon?" Vark asked. The words came slowly, as if his mouth wasn’t sure they were real.
Krug didn’t answer. He looked at the place where Rot had been standing when the tongue struck. There was nothing there. Not a scale. Not a tooth. Just a patch of mud indistinguishable from any other.
Rot was gone. Not dead like an elder who passed in the night. Not killed like a warrior on a battlefield. *Erased*. Swallowed so fast there hadn’t even been time for a scream.
Krug walked to the spot. He knelt. He pressed his palm flat against the cold, wet earth.
He didn’t pray. He didn’t speak.
Behind him, the tribe watched. They didn’t know whose spot it was. But they saw the Priest on his knees in the mud, and they understood.
One of theirs was missing.
Vark stepped forward. He had served with Rot. Patrolled with him. Eaten beside him at the hearth. He drew his broken spear — the shaft cracked, the stone head still bound with sinew — and drove it into the mud beside Krug’s hand.
A marker. Not a grave. Rot had no grave. The Toad Lord’s belly was his tomb.
"Rot of the Ridge," Vark said. His voice was thick. "He stood the line."
"He stood the line," Krug echoed.
A moment of silence.
Then Krug stood, pulled the spear from the mud, and handed it to Vark. "Keep it. The dead don’t need markers. The living need reminders."
Vark took the broken weapon and tucked it into his belt. He didn’t cry. Lizardmen didn’t cry. But his frill lay flat against his skull, trembling in a way that had nothing to do with the cold.
Grak’s voice cut through the mourning. "We should leave."
Krug turned.
The former leader stood among the ruins, arms crossed. His face was hard, but his tail was vibrating — the involuntary tell of a lizardman stretched to his limit.
"We should never have stayed," Grak continued. "The monster is dead. Good. But now a worse monster sits in the lake. *Your* god’s monster." He pointed at the Hydra. "It watches us, Priest. How long before the dead one’s meat is gone? How long before it looks at us?"
The tribe stirred. Grak was voicing the thought that every one of them carried like a stone in their gut.
Krug looked at the Hydra. At his people. At the ruins.
"Where?" Krug asked. One word.
Grak faltered. "The plains. The—"
"The desert killed us. The grey waste starved us. We came to the swamp because the Architect said *here*." Krug’s voice didn’t rise, but it hardened. Iron shaping in a forge. "The monster in the lake is not our enemy. The Toad Lord was our enemy. The beast killed it."
"And who kills the beast?" Grak shot back.
"No one," Krug said. "Because the beast isn’t hunting us. It has its meal. When it finishes—" He paused. He didn’t know what happened when it finished. The Voice hadn’t told him. "We will be ready."
"Ready for *what*?" Grak pressed. "Ready to be eaten in a stronger cage?"
Krug looked at the Elder Tree. At the Hollow beneath it, where twenty-four hatchlings were chirping for food they didn’t have.
"Ready to be iron," Krug said. "We rebuild. Now. Today. While the beast sleeps and the dead one feeds it."
He turned to the tribe. Thirty faces, caked in mud and fear, staring at him.
"I know what you lost," Krug said. "I lost it too. The walls. The kiln. The hearth. Forty-five days of sweat and clay." He gripped the Shepherd’s Stick. "But we are not the walls. We are not the bricks. We are the hands that built them. And hands can build again."
He pointed at the Toad Lord’s carcass.
"That mountain of flesh has hide thicker than any wall we ever raised. It has bones harder than stone. It has enough meat to feed us for a moon." His voice sharpened. "The monster that tried to eat us is going to become our fortress. That is the Architect’s way. Nothing is wasted. Nothing is lost. Even death serves the Forge."
The words hung in the heavy air.
The potter — the female who had been cradling a broken brick — stood up. She wiped her hands on her thighs. She looked at the carcass.
"How do we cut it?" she asked. The question was practical. Devoid of sentiment. The voice of a woman who had already mourned and was now thinking about tomorrow.
"The Architect will show us," Krug said.
He didn’t know this. The Voice had been silent since the battle. But faith was not the same as knowledge. Faith was the bridge you walked before the road was built.
One by one, the tribe moved. Not with the energy of believers marching toward a miracle. With the stiff, heavy steps of survivors who had no other direction to walk.
But they moved.
Grak watched them go. He didn’t follow immediately. He stood among the ruins, tail still vibrating, looking at the Hydra in the lake.
"Iron," he muttered. "Iron breaks, Priest."
No one heard him.
***
Zephyr watched the faith counter.
[Faith Generation: 24 FP/day → 11 FP/day]
[Reason: Believer Morale — LOW]
[Casual Believers: 18 → 9]
[Devout Believers: 4 → 2 (Krug, Runt)]
[Provisional Believers: 24 → 12]
Half. He’d lost half his faith generation in one night.
The miracle had saved their lives. The miracle had also shown them what their god was capable of — not gentle guidance and building plans, but the creation of monsters. The Hydra wasn’t a wall or a kiln blueprint. It was a living bomb that he had dropped into their backyard.
The math was brutal. At 11 FP per day, it would take forty-five days to regenerate the Faith he had spent summoning the Hydra. Forty-five days of grinding, assuming no further crises. The same forty-five days they had already invested in the settlement that was now rubble under his feet.
A full reset.
Zephyr closed his eyes. In the game, he would have rage-quit. Smashed the keyboard. Walked away, eaten something, come back, and loaded a save.
There were no saves here. Rot’s health bar was gone from the interface. Not at zero — *gone*. The slot was empty, tagged with a grey `[DECEASED]` marker. A permanent entry in a permanent ledger.
He ate him whole. The kid didn’t even scream.
Zephyr shook his head. He didn’t know Rot. Rot was a dot on a map. A collection of stats and a green health bar that had been performing patrol duties at acceptable efficiency.
But the green bar was gone. And the slot was grey. And the empty tracker bothered him more than it should.
Move. Plan. Do not stall.
He opened the resource map. The Toad Lord’s carcass was already being scanned by the system, its component materials catalogued in real-time as the Hydra tore into it.
[Apex-Grade Biomass: 78% Remaining]
[Estimated Spoilage Window: 14 Days (Ambient Temperature)]
Fourteen days before the meat rotted. The Hydra would eat most of it, but there was more carcass than one creature could consume. The excess was an opportunity.
He composed a vision. Simple. Clear. No words — Krug responded better to images.
He showed the Toad Lord’s body as a blueprint. The hide, peeled and stretched like leather. The bones, cut and stacked like beams. The throat sac fluid, collected in clay pots. A butcher’s diagram overlaid on a monster’s corpse.
Everything is material. Nothing is wasted.
He sent it.
On the ground, Krug stiffened. The red gem flared. Krug looked at the carcass with new eyes.
Good.
Zephyr checked the Hydra one more time.
[Chimera Protocol: Hydraboat Variant]
[HP: 22% → 24% (Regenerating)]
[Status: Feeding / Territorial]
[Loyalty: NONE]
[Aggression: LOW (Satiation)]
[Estimated Lifespan: 30 Days (Unstable Genome)]
Thirty days. The Hydra was a ticking clock. Either he found a way to stabilize it, or it would die — and with it, any hope of having a defensive asset when the wider world came knocking.
Or worse. If the genome collapsed before the lifespan expired, the Hydra wouldn’t just die. `[Unstable]` meant exactly what it said. The aggression protocols could re-engage at any time, turning the wounded, cornered animal into a berserk engine of destruction aimed at the closest source of warm blood.
His tribe.
Two clocks. Two threats. The Hydra’s lifespan and the unknown timer of whatever else lived in this swamp.
Zephyr scrolled back to the `[Divine Binding Protocol]`.
[Requirements: Active Chimera + Willing Mortal Vessel + 500 FP]
[Status: Locked — Prerequisite: Chimera must reach Saturation State]
[Saturation State: The Chimera must consume biomass equal to 200% of its body weight]
He looked at the Toad Lord’s carcass estimation. Then at the Hydra’s estimated body weight.
The Toad Lord had enough meat. The Hydra just needed time to eat it.
"Thirty days to saturation," Zephyr murmured. "Twenty-something days of lifespan. It’s tight. But it’s possible."
He didn’t tell Krug about the binding. Not yet. The Priest was holding the tribe together with faith and willpower. Adding "you’ll need to walk up to the Hydra and touch it" to his burden would shatter the last thread of trust.
One step at a time. Harvest the Toad. Rebuild the camp. Let the Hydra eat. Let the faith recover.
He checked the timer one more time.
[Hydra Lifespan: 30 Days]
[Saturation Estimate: Day 25 (Given Current Feeding Rate)]
A five-day window. Five days between saturation and death.
In the game, five days was nothing. A coffee break between raids.
Here, it was the margin between salvation and extinction.
Zephyr saved the calculation and closed the tab. He looked at the ruined camp. At the tribe slowly, painfully gathering around the carcass. At Krug, staff raised, organizing the salvage with a voice that carried despite everything.
"You don’t know it, Priest," Zephyr whispered, "but you’re going to have to be the bravest thing alive in about twenty-five days."
He watched the Hydra feed. He watched the tribe begin to harvest the dead.
Two groups of scavengers, separated by fifty meters and a gulf of mutual suspicion.
For now, it was enough.

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