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The Guardian gods-Chapter 457
Chapter 457: 457
The Humanity Kingdom had always prided itself on being one of the least affected by the presence of cursed spirits. Unlike other lands where resentment, tragedy, and chaos often birthed these malevolent entities, Erik’s people had maintained relative peace. That was, until now.
His kingdom’s embrace of a promiscuous culture, meant to rapidly grow their population, had inadvertently attracted something far worse—a surge in the presence of cursed spirits of lust. These entities fed on the unchecked desires and indulgences of humans, slithering into the dark corners of society where their influence grew unchecked.
Measures were taken. Laws were enforced, purges were carried out, and the clergy sought to drive out these spirits through sacred rites. Yet, despite their best efforts, the people had already tasted the sweetness of excess. Even if on the surface all seemed well, shadows whispered of hidden indulgences, of secret gatherings where the spirits’ influence continued to spread.
But for now, Erik’s mind was drawn to the new spectacle that had appeared at the boundary of their land—a lake of deep, dark waters that seemed almost alive.
Where others saw danger, Erik saw something else. Curiosity. Possibility.
He had long admired the Harpies, beings of unparalleled grace and beauty, and to his surprise, he had received a message from their leader. A woman of angelic form, one whose ethereal elegance he secretly revered. Yet, the message was cryptic, laced with an uncharacteristic tone of urgency. The harpies, beings who rarely expressed fear, were now wary—cautious. But why?
Despite his inquiries, no answers were given.
Yet, the lake stood before him, an enigma waiting to be unraveled. If there was a lead to the harpies’ concerns, this was it. Without hesitation, Erik ordered his mages to deploy and construct a research base near the lake’s edge.
However, it appeared he was not the only one with such intentions.
The Sun Kingdom, his neighbor to the south, had also taken interest in the phenomenon. Unlike the two kingdoms in the eastern continent that constantly are at ecah other’s neck, Erik’s kingdom and the Sun Kingdom maintained an uneasy yet respectful peace. They each went about their business, selecting their own territory for research, neither interfering with the other.
For now, at least.
Erik stood at the edge of his growing encampment, watching as the shimmering dark waters lapped against the shore. Something was calling from within. Something ancient. Something patient.
And he intended to uncover it.
It was such a sight that welcomed the two world spirits and the treants before them. Seemingly learning their lesson, the two world spirits made no attempt to communicate with the humans or take away the spectacle, instead focusing on healing the destroyed land.
Already, his people worked tirelessly around the site. A network of wooden pathways had been built to extend over the shallows, allowing scholars and mages to take samples without touching the cursed liquid directly. Runestones were placed in a protective circle, humming softly with containment spells. Erik’s alchemists tested the water, their vials glowing faintly with unstable energy. Soldiers stood guard, watching not just the lake but the Sun Kingdom’s own encampment on the opposite shore. Their presence was a reminder that this peace could fracture at any moment.
It was this tense and unnatural scene that welcomed the arrival of the two world spirits.
Aqua and Brix emerged from the portal with an air of quiet authority, their presence casting an immediate hush over the land. Unlike their previous encounters with humans, they made no attempt to speak, no demand for answers or explanations. They had learned.
The world spirits did not come to claim or to interfere.
They came to heal.
Behind them, the treants followed in silent procession, their ancient forms moving with slow, deliberate purpose.
Brix knelt first, pressing his massive hand to the ruined soil. The earth trembled in response, whispering of its pain, of the destruction that had led to this unnatural formation. He closed his eyes, listening. Then, with careful precision, he began his work. His touch sent pulses of power through the land, stabilizing the shattered ley lines that had once fed this place with life. The ground shifted, cracks sealed, and what had been barren wasteland slowly regained its fertility.
Aqua turned his attention skyward, summoning clouds thick with mana-rich rain. Droplets fell, shimmering as they touched the earth, restoring balance to the disrupted elements. The air, once heavy with corruption, grew lighter, carrying the scent of renewal. At the edge of the lake, the shadows recoiled, as if resisting the touch of purity.
Then, the final act of restoration began.
A portal to the spirit realm opened.
From its depths emerged creatures whose ancestors once roamed these lands—ethereal stags with silver antlers, great winged serpents, and luminous insects that left trails of light in their wake. They stepped onto the reborn earth, their spirits merging with the land that had been lost.
The humans—Erik’s people, the scholars, the soldiers—watched in silence. There was no mistaking what they had witnessed. freёwebnoѵel.com
It was divine.
Yet the world spirits spoke not a word. Their task was done, their purpose fulfilled. Without acknowledgment, without judgment, they turned and left the way they had come, disappearing into the portal once more.
They had no interest in the lake itself.
Whatever lurked beneath its surface... that was for the humans to uncover.
The next continent they headed for was the Northern Continent—a land of endless ice and snow, where winter never loosened its grip. As they emerged from the portal, a biting wind howled around them, carrying flecks of ice that stung against their wodden forms. The landscape stretched in all directions, a vast, silent expanse where the sky and land blurred into one.
The battlefield they sought had already been reclaimed by the elements. Snow had buried the remnants of war, smoothing over the scars left behind by steel and magic. The land should have been at peace.
But something had been left behind.
A phenomenon unnatural and unwelcome.
At the very heart of where the battle had raged, the sky wept—an endless, ceaseless rain of dark-colored water. The ink-like droplets fell upon the white snow, staining it in an ever-growing blot, but curiously, the corruption did not spread. It remained contained, as if bound by an unseen force to this one cursed place.
There were no humans here. No wary eyes watching from the shadows. No curious scholars or cautious soldiers. Only the silent, frozen wasteland and the black rain that continued to fall.
Brix lifted his massive hand, extending his palm to catch the strange precipitation, but before the droplets could land, Aqua’s voice cut through the cold air.
"Do not make contact."
Brix halted, lowering his hand as he turned to Aqua.
"Why?"
"Because this does not belong to our world." Aqua’s tone was calm, but firm. "It is from the other side."
The other side.
That which existed beyond the veil of reality.
That which was not meant to be here.
Brix frowned, his gaze drifting back to the corrupted snowfall. "Then how do we stop this? Or even remove it?"
Aqua did not answer immediately. Instead, he raised his hand to the sky, reaching out with his connection to the elements. He called upon the winds to scatter the storm, upon the cold to freeze the rain, upon the sky itself to banish the unnatural taint.
Nothing answered.
The elements recoiled from his touch.
Aqua’s eyes narrowed.
They were afraid.
This was not simply a matter of imbalance, not a wound they could mend with their power alone. The elements did not wish to interfere, did not dare draw near to whatever force lay at the heart of this phenomenon.
Aqua lowered his hand slowly, exhaling.
"This will not be as simple as the last."
Brix watched the dark rain continue to fall, his jaw tightening. "So we cannot stop it." His voice was laced with frustration, his hands clenching into fists. "Then what? Do we simply leave it be?"
Aqua’s gaze remained fixed on the tainted snowfall. "No." His tone was calm, yet resolute. "Even if we cannot remove it, we must ensure it does not spread."
Brix exhaled through his nose, steam rising in the frigid air. "Containment, then."
Aqua nodded. "At least until we understand what we are dealing with."
Silence stretched between them, broken only by the ceaseless patter of the dark rain upon the snow.
"A barrier?" Brix suggested. "Something that can isolate this place, prevent anything from leaking out."
Aqua folded his arms. "A physical barrier would do nothing. We need something that can repel this corruption itself."
Brix grunted, thinking. "What about the Treants? Their roots purged the taint from the last land we restored. Could they not do the same here?"
Aqua shook his head. "The land there was wounded, but still alive. Here, the earth is frozen, dormant. The Treants would find no soil to take root, no nourishment to sustain them. And even if they could..." His eyes flickered with something close to uncertainty. "...this is different."
Brix frowned. "Different how?"