The Beginning After The End
Ch-291: Chapter 289
Chapter 289: Familiar Faces
Despite the fast-approaching ghouls both behind and below us, we  stared dumbly at the large chasm that Kalon had made, collectively  unable to understand why it was in front of us.
“We—we were running in a circle the entire time?” Ada said, her voice quavering.
“That’s impossible!” Ezra panted after felling another ghoul with his  spear. “We were running in—a straight line. I’m—sure of it!” I could  hear the strain in his voice; he was starting to grow tired.
“Ezra’s right. There’s no curve in the bridge.” Kalon spun his weapon  and swept the heads off two ghouls that were trying to reach me. He, at  least, seemed to have retained his strength so far.
The idea of a straight path looping in circles seemed impossible, yet  was completely plausible if one took into account the edicts of aether.  I couldn’t help but wonder if the Relictombs had brought us to this  zone because of me.
I looked down to see that Riah had lost consciousness in my arms.  Perhaps it was for the better; Ada had coated her wounds with a thick  paste that had stopped the bleeding, but her strained expression said it  did nothing for her pain.
“What do we”—Haedrig unleashed a flurry of slashes at a trio of ghouls that had managed to reach the path—“do now?”
‘Still think they’re in control?’ Regis chimed in snidely.
Fine. Come out, but remember not to talk.
Regis’s large wolven form leapt out of my back, startling our team and drawing their attention away from the ghouls around us.
Kalon instinctively tried attacking Regis, and while I was curious what would happen if he struck my companion, I intervened.
“Stop! It’s my spell,” I snapped, immediately halting Kalon’s spear  before turning to Regis. “Go scout ahead and see if you can spot  anything.”
‘Roger,’ my companion sent back before leaping across the chasm. He was nearly out of sight before a realization dawned on me.
Since when have you been able to communicate telepathically when you’re not inside me?
There was a momentary pause, then I heard Regis’s voice in my head  again. ‘Not sure. My guess is, I’m either getting stronger, or the  ambient aether density in this zone is allowing us to. Or we might just  be getting more…connected.’
I groaned. Can you not say it in such a gross tone?
Turning my attention back to the battle, I realized that Ezra, Ada,  and Kalon were looking at me with shocked expressions. Haedrig was the  only one who didn’t seem fazed; if he was surprised by Regis’s sudden  appearance, he hid it extremely well.
Fortunately, the group’s attention was forced back onto the growing  horde of ghouls surrounding us. We abandoned our line formation,  tightening into a close knot around Riah and Ada and inching closer to  the chasm.
“What’s the plan?” Kalon shouted, glancing at me.
“We wait,” I said as my foot connected with a ghoul’s sternum,  sending it flying back down into the abyss. “I want to make sure that  this place really is looping.”
We held our position, restricting our mana consumption as best we  could out of fear that our war against the nightmarish ghouls would last  for hours more. Considering that I was surrounded by people I felt  responsible to protect, and that I couldn’t even reveal my own strength  as I did so, there was little else I could do.
‘Good news! Well, I guess it’s bad news, but I see you all ahead of me now,’ Regis thought to me.
I cursed under my breath.
So that confirms it.
‘Did you want me to help fight? I took down about a dozen or so of these bastards already.’
No. I don’t think we’re going to get out of here by just killing more  of these beasts, I sent back. I want you to go around and carefully  scan the walls.
I could feel a wave of curiosity coming from Regis. ‘You mean the gross faces?’
Yeah. Something about them has been bothering me. Just let me know if you find something out of the ordinary.
‘Out of the ordinary from gross stone faces…got it,’ Regis responded, turning to race away from us once more.
A stifled groan pulled my attention behind me.
“Ezra!” Kalon roared. His form flashed, appearing next to his brother  and decapitating the ghoul that had wedged its claws through a slit  below Ezra’s pauldron.
With Ezra unable to freely move his left arm due to his injury, he  became a crack in our defence. It wasn’t long before a ghoul was able to  slip past his weak side, forcing me to throw myself into its path to  save Riah. The creature’s putrid claws carved a series of deep gashes  into my hip and thigh.
A pained grunt escaped from my throat as I drove my open hand  straight through the ghoul’s throat. It spit out a mouthful of blood and  collapsed before Ezra could turn to drive his spear into its back.
The boy’s face was pale and wet with sweat, but after that he redoubled his efforts, refusing to let another ghoul through.
Have you found anything? I asked Regis.
‘Just a lot more hideous faces. There aren’t any patterns I can see either.’
Keep looking, I sent, pulling a ghoul off of Ezra and shoving it to the ground so he could finish it.
“What are we still doing here? We have to get moving!” Kalon shouted, his relaxed demeanor completely gone.
“And go where?” I asked. “I’ve already confirmed that this zone is  looping back on itself, taking us in circles. I sent my summon to check  for any anomalies on the walls.”
“Can you share senses with your summon?” Haedrig asked, redirecting a  ghoul’s tackle and causing it to fall back down into the dark.
“Kind of?” I hesitated. “It has a limited amount of sentience.”
‘Hey!’
Ignoring my companion, I turned to Ada, who had been helping out  where she could, standing over Riah at the center of our circle. To  conserve mana, she had resorted to firing small bolts of fire and  lightning at the ghouls climbing up from the sides, but even that had  been a huge help in keeping them at bay. I could tell she was at the end  of her power, however. “Focus on replenishing your mana reserves.”
“But there’s too many of them!” Ada stammered, wiping away the beads of sweat rolling down her face. “I-I should be helping…”
I sat her down with a slight push and gave her the closest thing to a smile I could muster. “I’ll keep you safe.”
After a moment of hesitation, Ada nodded in determination before closing her eyes.
“Haedrig. Do you have an extra sword?” I asked, turning toward the green-haired ascender.
Without a word, Haedrig withdrew a thin shortsword from his dimension ring and tossed it to me.
Grasping the handle and pulling the sword out of its sheath, I was  suddenly overcome with a sense of calmness. It was a silly thing what a  weapon could do, but after fighting so long with Dawn’s Ballad in my  hand, I realized how much I had missed the sensation of wielding a  sword.
I let out a sharp breath as I imbued aether into the sword; a fine  crack appeared in the blade, leaking a subtle purple light that only I  could see, and I knew it wouldn’t hold up long. Still, though the sword  was simple and obviously just a spare weapon, it was perfectly balanced  with a good weight on my hand.
It would do.
The world around me seemed to slow and the sounds distracting me  became indistinct. My first strike seemed to confuse even the ghoul, who  didn’t know what happened until it slumped and fell off the bridge.
The next series of slashes killed any and every ghoul within my  reach. The sword in my hand travelled in a flurry of narrow arcs that  shimmered, catching the reflection of Kalon’s fire-clad spear.
My eyes constantly scanned our surroundings, making sure none of the  ghouls managed to slip by. I hoped to see some sign that the onslaught  was beginning to slow, but it seemed that, if anything, the ghouls  became even more desperate the more of them we killed.
Kalon and Ezra’s side had it the worst, since the chasm in the bridge  allowed the ghouls to climb up more easily. With Ezra injured, Kalon  had to keep the ghouls from getting past him and protect Ezra.
Haedrig’s movements, on the other hand, hadn’t slowed down at all,  even as pools of both sweat and blood had formed beneath his feet.
I was confident that we could hold on for a while longer, but it would all be meaningless unless we found a way out of here.
A blinding flash lit up the hall, followed by a torrent of voltaic  streams that obliterated the horde of ghouls that had managed to climb  up from the chasm.
I was gazing around to admire the pure destructiveness of Kalon’s spell when Regis contacted me again.
‘Uh… Arthur?’ he said, his confusion clear in my mind. ‘You should come see this.’
“Let’s move!” I yelled out immediately. “Ezra, can you hold Riah?”
The younger spearman’s brows furrowed in annoyance. “What? I should help guard—”
“Ezra!” Kalon snarled, cutting his brother off. “Carry Riah.”
Following Kalon’s order without hesitation, Ezra put away his spear and picked up our unconscious teammate.
Leading the way, I cleared the path of ghouls while Kalon remained in the back of the line as our rear guard.
What did you find? I asked Regis.
‘Something even more disturbing than the deformed stone faces,’ he answered cryptically.
“Did your summon find something?” Haedrig asked from behind me.
“Yes, though I’m not sure what yet. Keep moving!”
With me clearing the way, Kalon defending the rear, and Haedrig  darting from side to side casting down any monstrous serpents that  climbed up the sides of the bridge, we ran as fast as Ezra could move.  He was wounded and carrying Riah, so it wasn’t as fast as I would have  liked, but within minutes Regis’s shadowy form materialized ahead of us.
Several ghoulish corpses littered the path around him, with more climbing over the edges every moment.
“What is it?” I asked, letting my battle instincts run my body,  cutting down the ghouls attempting to swarm Regis while I focused on  scanning the distant faces around us.
Pointing with his muzzle, Regis directed my gaze to one statue in  particular. From this distance, it took my eyes a moment to focus  through the gloom and the dancing shadows, but when I realized what it  was, I froze solid, forgetting for a moment that we were fighting for  our lives.
Razor sharp claws raked across my shoulder and back, tearing into my  flesh and scraping bone. Flipping the short sword in my hand, I thrust  backwards and up, stabbing my attacker through its chest. I turned and  kicked it, pushing aether into my leg. The blow sent the ghoul flying  into three others, all of which tumbled off the bridge.
Haedrig gasped, his eyes wide as he stared at the gaping wound on my back. “Grey!”
“It’s fine.” I gritted through the pain, telling myself it would heal quickly, and turned instead back to the statue.
My own face looked back at me from the wall.
The statue had been carved as if in the midst of a fierce battle cry:  the mouth was open wide, teeth bared, and even the tongue visibly  carved as if in motion; the brows were turned down, angry and  aggressive; the eyes were alive with fury, glaring out at the rest of  the zone as if this giant Arthur was about to smash the place to dust.
That had to be it. Why would my face be carved into the wall otherwise?
Looking at the battered sword in my hand, crumbling from the burden  of aether flowing through it, I tossed it out into the empty space  between the wall and the bridge. It tumbled down into the dark and  disappeared.
“Hey!” Haedrig grunted from a few feet away, where he was holding off  four ghouls that were clinging relentlessly to the edge of the path.
“I was hoping for some sort of invisible bridge,” I admitted, shrugging apologetically.
‘You think that’s the exit?’ Regis asked mentally, his jaws busy tearing at the throat of a ghoul.
I think it might be, yeah. I think we’re here because of me, because  the Relictombs knows I can use aether and is trying to test me somehow.  That’s why this zone has been so hard for the others. I need to use  aether somehow so we can escape, I’m sure of it. I just need to think…
‘Well think fast, or there will be a few less of us to leave once you do figure it out.’
Ezra grunted as one of the fallen serpent-ghouls, which was missing  much of its lower half, grabbed at his heel and tripped him. Riah fell  next to him and jolted awake with a scream of pain. The monster clawed  toward her, pulling its slithering torso across the ground with its long  arms.
From his back, Ezra spun his spear around and tried to drive it into  the ghoul’s neck, but he didn’t have the angle or momentum, and he  merely nicked its arm instead. Strong claws wrapped around the shaft and  ripped the spear from his hand.
Riah tried to scramble backwards away from it, but in doing so  slammed the stump of her leg against the stone path. Her entire body  went rigid as she screamed again, and it looked as if her strength had  left her.
Kalon was nearly overwhelmed at the rear, unable to disengage.
Haedrig had his back turned to the pair, and though he must have  heard the screams, he couldn’t see the half-dead monster crawling toward  Riah.
Ada was backpedaling away from two other ghouls, flashes of  electricity jumping from her hands to their snakelike bodies, but she no  longer had the strength to generate spells strong enough to kill.
Regis whimpered behind me as three ghouls fell atop him, their claws ripping and tearing at his neck, ears, and belly.
They’re all going to die, I realized with grim certainty. They aren’t strong enough to be here, and even with God Step I can’t—
It was like a jolt of electricity went through my mind. God Step! I  couldn’t walk through thin air with Burst Step, but God Step would take  me directly into the statue’s gaping maw.
I hesitated. If I’m wrong—
‘What the hell do you have these powers for if you’re not going to  use them?’ Regis growled in my head, his voice thick with frustration  and pain.
Choosing not to look behind me again, hoping against hope that I  wasn’t about to leave Haedrig, Riah, and the Granbehl siblings to a  gruesome death, I tuned out everything. I pushed away the pain wracking  my body from both the injuries that I had sustained and the rapid  healing of those injuries. I bottled my emotions of doubt, anger, guilt,  and frustration, and I concentrated on the way forward.
I let my eyes unfocus, seeing the aether all around me. I found the  immaterial path within the realm of spatium, the vibration to which I  could attune, that would let me stop being where I was and start being  where I needed to go.
Though I couldn’t see it, I felt the God Rune flare with warmth,  glowing through the false-spellforms on my back. The aether reacted, the  vibration intensifying, and I felt the path beckon me.
I followed it. Though my eyes told me I was standing in a different  location and my ears detected the sudden muffling of the sounds of  combat, the movement was otherwise so instantaneous that even my own  senses didn’t feel it as a physical action of my body.
I was standing atop the stone tongue within the giant carving of my  own face. The inside of the mouth was recreated with excruciating detail  except, where the back of the throat should have been, there was a  stone door.
For a single breath, nothing happened. In my mind’s eye, I watched as  Haedrig was pulled from the edge of the bridge and cast down into the  depths; as Riah, paralyzed by pain, was mauled by the crawling ghoul; as  Ada was run down by the pursuing monsters…
Then a grinding noise like an avalanche roared through the zone, so  overwhelmingly loud that it shook all thought from my mind. I felt as  though the entire chamber—every piece of stone, every molecule of  air—was about to be torn apart. Then the stone beneath my feet began to  move.
Turning, I saw that the bridge, where my companions had only an  instant ago been fighting for their very lives, was drawing slowly  nearer. It was with a wave of relief that I realized they were no longer  surrounded by the awful, snakelike ghouls.
Kalon and Haedrig both still had their weapons held at the ready,  their heads turning back and forth as if scanning the bridge for  enemies. Ada was kneeling down next to Riah and Ezra. Regis stood at the  edge of the path, staring down into the abyss.
‘They just vanished!’ Regis practically screamed. ‘One second they  were all creepy faces and nasty claws, then they just turned to shadow  and—poof.’
The others turned to watch as my face approached the footbridge. The  walls slowed, then halted, leaving no gap between the statue’s gaping  mouth and the path.
I stepped over the statue’s teeth and back onto the bridge, now a  narrow path between two high walls of faces. The statues carved on the  wall, I noted, didn’t look grotesque and misshapen from up close. They  were kind, regal faces, and I was reminded immediately of the djinn I  battled before I was given the keystone.
“Is everyone alright?”
“Ezra’s a little beat up,” Kalon said, eyeing me warily, “and Riah  really needs medical attention. But she’ll survive. At least it’s over.”
Ada looked up at me from where she kneeled next to Riah. “What happened?”
I wasn’t sure exactly what to tell her. My hesitation must have shown, because Haedrig stepped in to interrupt my response.
“Any sort of explanations can happen once we’re out of this hellish  zone.” He nodded toward Riah. “Let’s get her up off the cold stone.”  Haedrig caught my eye as he turned to look back into the statue’s mouth.  From this angle, it was no longer recognizable as my own face towering  over us. “Is there a portal in there?”
I nodded. “There is a door, yeah.”
“Lead the way then.”
I gestured to Regis, and the shadow wolf loped up to me and leapt  into my body. The gaping jaw was perfectly placed against the path,  making an easy step down and into the mouth. Kalon and Ezra lifted Riah  and followed behind me.
The stone door opened easily to my touch, revealing an opaque portal.  None of us said a word to each other, but we didn’t have to.  Expressions of relief were written clearly on the faces of Kalon, Ezra,  Ada, and even Haedrig.
‘Well, that could have been worse.’ Even Regis sounded like he just wanted some rest.
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