Levi's Perspective:
I dashed forward, the ground cracking beneath my feet as God-Speed surged through me. Everything around slowed down to a crawl—the wind, the faint rustle of leaves, the shifting of the Executioner's cloak. My blade gleamed, aimed to cut him down in a single, precise strike.
This ends now.
But then, eyes around him opened.
Red, glowing like embers in the dark, they pierced through me. It wasn't just a look. It was something deeper. My chest tensed; my muscles froze for half a second. The confidence I carried? Shaken.
Is he reading me?
I faltered, only slightly, but it was enough to make me hesitate. I scanned him, waiting for a reaction, any hint of a counterattack. Nothing. Just the cold, unflinching stare of a predator, as if it knew its prey's every move.
"Levi! MOVE!" Ronan's voice thundered from behind me.
A massive wave of fire roared past, crashing into the Executioner like a tidal wave of molten fury. The flames twisted and surged, engulfing him in an inferno so bright it illuminated the forest around us. The air shimmered with heat, and the trees groaned under the strain of it.
When the fire cleared, he was still there.
The Silent Executioner didn't even flinch.
"Seriously, Ronan?" I smirked, taking a half-step back to regroup. "Maybe next time try aiming for his heart."
Ronan chuckled darkly, the glow of his flames lighting up his twisted grin. "And maybe you should quit shaking in your boots, Levi. Don't tell me those big eyes scared you."
Before I could snap back, the forest around us came alive.
The fire cleared, and he stood there, untouched. His armor glinted faintly as if mocking Ronan's attempt. The air grew colder.
I narrowed my eyes, my grip tightening on my sword. "He's not just standing there for fun."
"Yeah, no kidding," Ronan growled, his flames still flowing at the air around him.
Then we heard it. A sound that froze the blood in my veins—a low, rumbling growl that echoed through the trees.
The forest around us erupted with movement. Branches snapped, the ground trembled, and the skittering sound of claws on stone filled the night.
From the shadows, they emerged—Noctis Graspers. At first, a handful. Then a dozen. Then more.
"Alright," I said, gripping my sword tighter. "This just got interesting."
"Interesting?" Ronan barked a laugh, flames igniting in his hands. "Try surviving."
Massive, four-legged beasts covered in thick black armor that gleamed like obsidian under the dim light. Their claws were as long as swords, their glowing red eyes locked onto us with hunger. These were the Noctis Graspers.
One of these things is bad enough to take down a team of adventurers.
There were at least forty.
"Levi," Ronan said, his voice lower now, more serious. "This is bad."
I smirked, raising my blade. "I've handled worse."
"Really?" he asked, his flames flaring brighter.
"No," I admitted. "But let's see who takes down more of them."
"You're on." Ronan said.
The first Grasper lunged at me, its claws tearing through the air with a screech. I sidestepped, my body moving faster than the creature could track. God-Speed carried me behind it, my blade slicing through the joint in its hind leg. Sparks flew as it collapsed, screeching in pain.
I didn't stop. With a sharp pivot, I drove my blade into its exposed underbelly, ending it in one clean strike.
One down.
But the second was already on me. Its claw came down hard, and I barely managed to roll out of the way, the force of its strike cracking the ground where I'd just been.
Two at once? That's going to be a problem.
Across the battlefield, Ronan roared as he unleashed a wave of flames. The heat was intense, the ground beneath him glowing red-hot as the flames surged forward, engulfing a group of Graspers.
The creatures screeched, their armor glowing white-hot, but they kept coming. One leapt at Ronan, its claws slicing through the fire as if it were nothing.
Ronan ducked under the attack, his fists igniting as he punched the creature square in the jaw, the impact sending it flying into a burning tree.
"That's one!" he shouted, his voice filled with defiance.
Meanwhile, two Graspers had me pinned. One slashed at me from the left, the other from the right. I darted between them, my speed leaving faint afterimages as I moved.
I can't keep this up forever.
I spotted a boulder nearby and made a break for it, luring the creatures toward me. At the last second, I ran up the side of the rock, flipping over their heads. They crashed into each other, momentarily stunned.
That was all I needed. I drove my blade into the neck of the first, then spun around and severed the leg of the second.
"Three down," I muttered, breathing hard.
But I couldn't celebrate. The Executioner's gaze fell on me again, and suddenly, the Graspers began moving differently—faster, more coordinated. They weren't attacking blindly anymore. They were hunting.
On the other side of the battlefield, Ronan was struggling too. His flames engulfed another Grasper, but its armor refused to yield.
"Why won't you burn?!" he growled, his frustration boiling over.
He shifted tactics, focusing his fire on the joints and weak points. A beam of concentrated fire shot from his hands, melting through the armor of one Grasper and bringing it down.
But then, like with me, the Executioner's presence turned the tide. The remaining Graspers began anticipating Ronan's attacks, dodging his flames and closing the distance.
"Damn it!" Ronan cursed, forced to retreat as the creatures pressed him harder.
I tried to move, to find an opening, but every time I did, the Executioner's red eyes were there, dissecting my every thought before I could act. The Graspers surrounded me, their claws slicing through the air as I dodged and weaved.
"Out of ideas already?" I said, my tone laced with mockery despite the situation. I sidestepped a claw that came dangerously close to my side, the wind from its strike cutting through my overcoat.
"Watch your mouth, God-Speed," Ronan snapped, his voice sharp, menacing. "You're not exactly winning this fight either, are you?"
Another Grasper leapt at me; its claws aimed for my chest. I darted to the side, barely escaping its reach, and countered with a slash to its exposed underbelly. Sparks flew as my blade barely pierced the creature's armor, leaving only a shallow wound.
"They're adapting," I muttered, glancing at the Executioner, who remained motionless. The red eyes locked onto me, unblinking, cold, and calculating.
"No kidding," Ronan growled, igniting a burst of flames to drive back a pair of Graspers lunging at him.
"He's toying with us. Waiting for us to bleed out, isn't he?"
I didn't respond. My grip on the hilt of my sword tightened as I tried to shake off the crushing weight of the Executioner's presence. Every move I made, every thought I tried to form, felt like it was being dissected, predicted, and countered before I could act.
"Come on, Levi," Ronan's voice dripped with venom, his flames flaring brighter for a moment as he slammed a burning fist into a Grasper's head, sending it sprawling back. "You're supposed to be the big-shot tactician, right? Figure something out."
"Maybe I would, if your oversized bonfire wasn't such a waste of energy," I shot back, driving my blade into the leg of a Grasper that got too close. It shrieked but didn't fall, its claws swiping wildly at me.
"Oh, you think you're funny, huh?" Ronan snarled, dodging another attack and countering with a wave of fire that incinerated a patch of trees but barely singed the beasts. "This isn't a damn joke, Levi!"
I darted past another Grasper, using God-Speed to flank it, but its movements were sharper now. It twisted mid-lunge, forcing me to block its claw with the flat of my blade. The impact sent a jarring pain up my arm.
"Enough!" Ronan roared, his flames surging with renewed intensity. He hurled a massive fireball at the Executioner, who still hadn't moved. The fire roared through the battlefield, engulfing several Graspers in its path.
But when the flames cleared, the Executioner stood there, untouched. His armor glinted mockingly in the dim light, his red eyes locking onto Ronan.
"You done yet?" I sneered, though my voice lacked the usual bite. "Throwing tantrums isn't going to win this."
Ronan's glare could have burned a hole through me. "Says the guy who hasn't done anything useful except dodge and look pretty."
Before I could retort, the Executioner raised a hand. A simple, deliberate motion, but it sent a chill through the air. The Graspers stopped their relentless assault for a moment, their glowing eyes snapping toward him like obedient hounds awaiting a command.
Then they moved.
Faster, more coordinated. They weren't attacking blindly anymore—they were hunting. The pack closed in on us, their claws slashing with precision, their movements synchronized.
"Levi!" Ronan's voice broke through the chaos, strained and desperate. "We're done if you don't do something!"
"Shut up and fight!" I barked back, barely managing to deflect another attack. My breaths came ragged, my vision blurred from the strain of dodging and countering.
This isn't a fight anymore.
It was a massacre in slow motion.
The Executioner still hadn't moved. He didn't need to. His eyes followed every one of my desperate attempts to find an opening, his presence like a shadow looming over my every thought.
The Graspers pressed harder, their claws raking the ground around us, their growls filling the air with a primal dread. My body screamed for rest, but I couldn't stop. Not now.
"I'll burn them all to ash!" Ronan roared, his flames surging one last time as he unleashed a wave of fire that lit up the battlefield. The heat was intense, almost suffocating, but the Graspers kept coming, their armored hides glowing faintly under the onslaught.
"Ronan, it's not enough!" I shouted, slashing desperately at another Grasper that lunged at me.
"Then we die fighting!" he snarled, his voice filled with defiance even as the beasts closed in.
I wanted to laugh, to mock his bravery, but the Executioner's eyes crushed the thought before it could form. This wasn't just a battle anymore. It was a death sentence, signed and sealed by the silent figure who watched us with unflinching cruelty.
Celia's Perspective:
I don't understand... How are those monsters working together so perfectly? How are they managing to guess where Ronan and Levi may attack from so quickly..... It doesn't make sense that should be impossible.
But my eyes never left them—Levi and Ronan.
They were enemies, their hatred for each other sharper than any blade, yet here they were, standing against the Executioner as if the world depended on it. Maybe it did.
Levi, with his almost inhuman speed, darted around the Graspers like a shadow. His sword struck fast, carving precise arcs, yet no matter how skilled his attacks were, it wasn't enough. Not against those...things.
Ronan, a living inferno, stood his ground with raw power. Flames surged around him, his fists blazing as he unleashed blast after blast. But even his fury couldn't penetrate the Executioner's calm.
And then, for the first time, the Executioner moved.
A subtle shift—a tilt of his head, a flick of his wrist. It shouldn't have been terrifying, but it was.
"He's about to do something," I whispered, gripping the edge of the jagged rock I was hiding behind. My heart raced, a drumbeat against my ribs. I wanted to help. I should help. But what could I do?
"Focus, Ronan!" Levi's voice cut through the chaos, sharp and commanding.
"You don't need to tell me twice!" Ronan barked back, his flames roaring brighter.
I didn't think it was possible, but they were actually working together. Barely.
Levi closed the distance in a flash, his sword slicing through the air with deadly precision. At the same time, Ronan launched a massive hell fire, its heat searing even from where I stood.
The Executioner didn't flinch.
Their attacks were in perfect sync, a combination of speed and power that seemed unstoppable.
Levi darted forward, his speed breaking the sound barrier, leaving minor trails of flame in his wake. Each step was a blur, each movement timed to perfection, as he slashed and weaved around the Executioner with blinding agility.
Meanwhile, Ronan unleashed devastating firestorms, his magic roaring to life with every chant, turning the ground beneath them into molten slag. Together, they were a cyclone of fire and fury, their combined strength erasing the distinction between magic and physical combat.
For a moment, the Executioner faltered, the relentless assault forcing him to his knees. His red eyes flared, brighter than ever, as if daring them to continue. Levi and Ronan didn't hesitate.
With synchronized chants, they unleashed their ultimate attack: A spiraling inferno of unimaginable heat and destructive force, aimed directly at the Executioner.
And then the ground trembled.
A deep, guttural roar erupted beneath us, shaking the battlefield. My breath hitched as the earth cracked, splitting open with violent force.
"What the—?!" Ronan stumbled, barely catching his balance as the ground erupted.
A shadow loomed over us, impossibly large and monstrous. Scales, dark as midnight and shimmering faintly with an unnatural glow, emerged from the gaping fissure.
The Leviathan.
Its massive body coiled, armored plates glinting under the fading light. Its eyes, glowing like molten gold, locked onto Levi and Ronan with a terrifying intelligence.
"No...this can't be happening," I whispered, my hands trembling.
"Stay on your feet!" Levi shouted, his voice sharp with urgency.
"I don't need your advice!" Ronan snapped, flames surging around him again.
But even he hesitated as the Leviathan's massive maw opened, revealing rows of jagged teeth. Its roar shattered the air, a sound so deafening it made my knees break.
And then it struck.
Levi and Ronan moved in sync; their attacks perfectly timed despite their animosity. Levi dashed forward, his sword aimed for the Leviathan's exposed scales, while Ronan unleashed a torrent of fire straight at its head.
For a moment, it looked like they had a chance.
But the Leviathan's scales shimmered, glowing faintly as it twisted its body. The sword strike, so fast it seemed invisible, glanced off its armor, leaving not even a scratch. Ronan's flames washed over it harmlessly, dissipating into the air like smoke.
"What the hell?!" Ronan's voice was raw with disbelief.
Levi didn't waste time. He darted to the side, his movements precise, his blade aiming for a weak point near the Leviathan's neck. But it was no use. The creature was too fast, its body whipping around to intercept him.
The impact sent Levi flying, his body slamming into the ground with a sickening thud.
"Levi!" I screamed before I could stop myself.
Ronan charged, his flames flaring brighter than ever. "You overgrown entipede! Burn!"
The Leviathan didn't even flinch. Its massive claw swiped through the flames, scattering them like embers, before slamming into Ronan. He tried to block it with a wall of fire, but the force was too much. He was thrown back, his body hitting the ground hard.
"No...no, no, no," I whispered, my chest paining.
Both of them, lying motionless. The Leviathan towered over them, its eyes glowing brighter, its maw opening again as if preparing to finish them off.
I clenched my fists, my nails digging into my palms. My body screamed to move, to do something. But what could I do?
The Executioner stood motionless in the distance, watching the scene unfold with cold detachment. The Leviathan's roar echoed again, shaking the ground as its massive body coiled tighter.
Was this it? Was this how it ended?
The Executioner stepped forward, leaving behind a trail of ash. His eyes locked onto Levi and Ronan, and even though I wasn't his target, a chill ran down my spine as if Death itself had glanced in my direction.
"Pathetic," he said, his voice colder than the void. "You are insects—crawling in the shadow of greatness. Did you think you could challenge us? Compared to our Lord, you're less than nothing."
Levi, coughing, forced himself to lift his head. "W-Who... who is your Lord?" he managed, his voice trembling with pain.
The Executioner tilted his head, his glowing eyes narrowing as though the question amused him.
"You do not deserve to speak his name. But know this: when Nemesis rises, the world will kneel. It will belong to us, in the palm of our Lord's hand."
Ronan shuddered, the color draining from his face. "You're insane... Nemesis is a myth! You're playing with things you can't control!" he snapped, but his voice cracked, betraying his fear.
"How are you even controlling monsters like that?!"
The Executioner chuckled, a low, grating sound that made my skin crawl. "Control? You think I need tricks for such things? You are a fool." He loomed over them, his crimson eyes casting a sinister glow on their battered forms. Levi and Ronan were utterly powerless, reduced to mere corpses from what they were moments ago.
Then the Executioner crouched slightly, his dark aura expanding like a shroud. "You've lost," he whispered, his voice so low it felt like a death sentence. "Your bodies, your will, your pathetic existence—all of it belongs to me now."
His blade pulsed with dark energy, and suddenly Levi and Ronan convulsed. Their eyes widened in terror as they struggled to resist whatever dark force he had unleashed.
The red glow intensified behind him, a crowd of shadowy, monstrous eyes watching in silence, their intent as clear as the Executioner's words.
"You are nothing but tools for our Lord's ascension. Accept your fate... and despair."
As he spoke, Levi and Ronan's struggles ceased. Their bodies went limp, their eyes dimmed, and they were no longer themselves. The Executioner straightened, turning his attention briefly to me and Kiel. I froze, unable to breathe, as his eyes pierced through me.
Kaiser was motionless, his body crumpled behind me in the shadow. Ronan and Levi's eyes were lifeless, their bodies nothing more than a puppet under the Executioner's control. And now, standing before us, the Silent Executioner loomed—a figure of pure malice, his crimson eyes glowing like dying embers in a void. Behind him, the writhing mass of Noctis Graspers—a grotesque army of shadowy beasts—awaited their master's command.
"You..." My voice trembled with anger, despair, and something deeper—a helpless fury that burned my chest. "You did this! What kind of monster does this to people? What kind of—what are you even after?!"
The Executioner's cold gaze locked onto me. His voice was devoid of life, each word cutting like ice. "You must be the vessel of the Cursed Queen my lord has spoken of. The one I was sent to kill."
His words froze my blood. Vessel? Cursed Queen? What was he talking about?! I stumbled back, the weight of his accusation sinking in. My anger flared, breaking through my fear.
"If you think you can spout nonsense and terrify me, you're wrong! Who are you? What do you want? Answer me!"
He took a slow step forward, his massive blade dragging across the ground, leaving scorched marks in its wake. "Answers?" He tilted his head slightly, his crimson eyes narrowing. "You scream for knowledge you cannot comprehend. Why should the prey understand the slaughter?"
"Levi, Ronan..." My voice cracked, and I clenched my fists. "You destroyed them for what? Some ridiculous cult?! You think I'll let you—"
Kiel's voice cut through my rage like a blade. "Stop wasting your breath, Celia." His tone was sharp, filled with venom and frustration.
"This bastard doesn't deserve your pity or your questions." He stepped forward, calling upon the voidrend sword using magic, fury etched into every feature.
"Listen to me, Executioner, or whatever the hell you are. In a world like this, a cult like Nemesis will never exist! You're nothing but a stray dog, and I'll put you down like one."
The Executioner stopped, his gaze shifting to Kiel. For a moment, there was silence, then—he chuckled. It was a low, guttural sound that grew into a chilling laugh, echoing across the battlefield.
"Ahahah...AHAHHAHAHAA!"
"You threaten me? A fool grasping at broken swords, standing amidst the corpses of his allies? How amusing."
"You won't think it's funny when I—" Kiel began, but the Executioner raised a hand, silencing him with an unspoken authority.
"You want to know how I control the beasts? How I predict your every move?" His voice was soft yet piercing, every word laced with menace.
"You wouldn't understand. But I will tell you this—our Lord sees all. The past, the present, the future. Your fate, your failures, even your pathetic little threats. Tonight, I know exactly how this ends."
"That's impossible," I whispered, shaking my head. "You're insane."
Kiel growled, gripping his sword tighter. "You're lying. No one can see the future—"
The Executioner interrupted, his tone cutting through Kiel's defiance like a knife. "It is not for you to decide what is possible. My Lord's will is absolute, and fate is but a thread in his hands. I know the outcome of tonight, and let me assure you—there is no future where you win. Fate cannot be rewritten."
I staggered back, my breath caught in my throat. Was he serious? Could this cult—could he—really know the future? The very idea was maddening, impossible, yet the certainty in his voice clawed at my mind like a shadow creeping into the light.
"You're insane," I spat, my voice trembling. "You don't know anything. Whatever lies you're feeding yourself, they're—"
He turned his eyes to me, and the air seemed to freeze. His crimson eyes bore into mine, and for a moment, I felt as though the weight of an entire world pressed down on my shoulders.
"You disappoint me," he said, his voice colder than the void. "To think the Queen of Curses would fail so miserably. Weak. Unworthy. A shadow of what she was meant to be."
My chest pained, the words cutting deeper than any blade. I opened my mouth to respond, but no words came out. Behind him, the Noctis Graspers stirred, their glowing red eyes locked on me, waiting for his command.
"You were meant to bring ruin, yet here you are, trembling in the face of inevitability," he continued, his voice sharp and unrelenting.
"This is your legacy. Failure."
Kiel stepped between us, his sword trembling in his grip. "Stay away from her!" he roared, his voice desperate but defiant.
The Executioner tilted his head, a faint, cruel smile tugging at his lips. "You think you can protect her? From me? From her fate? How amusing."
Then, with a gesture, the Noctis Graspers began to advance, their twisted forms moving as one. The Executioner's final words echoed in the air, a sentence drenched in cold, inevitable doom.
"Your fight is over. You belong to us now."
How did it come to this?
I stood there, frozen, as his words echoed in my mind—a relentless tide of accusation, contempt, and truth I couldn't ignore.
Weak. Unworthy. A shadow of what she was meant to be. The Silent Executioner's words pierced not just my heart but my very soul. And the worst part?
He wasn't wrong.
My hands trembled at my sides. Kaiser lay broken, Levi was lost to whatever curse the Executioner had placed on him, and now Kiel...
Kiel's energy was rising again, preparing to fight. I could feel it burning through the air like a wildfire, desperate and unrelenting. He was going to fight. For me.
Why?
Why did it always come to this? I was supposed to be strong—someone who could protect those around me, not drag them into my failures. Yet here I was, standing in the shadow of monsters, relying on everyone else to save me. My chest pained as shame clawed at my heart.
Kiel, stop. I wanted to scream, to beg him to stand down, but the words wouldn't come. Because deep down, I knew I had no right to ask.
What could I even say? That I'd try harder next time? That I'd make it right? How could I, when every time I stood up, I just fell harder? When all I did was make things worse?
The Executioner's voice whispered in my mind again. Failure. This is your legacy.
I bit my lip, hard enough to draw blood. He was right. I was weak. I was a burden. And the weight of it crushed me. Kaiser had to carry me. Levi had to fight for me. Now Kiel—despite everything he's endured—was preparing to put himself on the line.
Why was he helping me? From the moment we met, he made it clear he wanted nothing to do with me. He wanted me gone, cast aside, like I was some kind of threat or nuisance. Yet now, here he was, standing between me and certain death, willing to fight a battle that wasn't even his to begin with.
Why does he care now?
And for what? A girl who couldn't even protect herself? A vessel for some cursed legacy she didn't even understand?
My breath hitched, anger bubbling beneath the surface. Not at the Executioner. Not even at Kiel. At myself. I hated this.
Hated me.
But then... something shifted.
At first, it was just a whisper—an unfamiliar sensation curling around my senses. I could feel the cursed energy radiating from Kiel, raw and unrestrained. It was fierce, burning with desperation and determination. But there was something else. Something darker.
I turned my gaze toward the Executioner, my chest tensing as I felt the oppressive weight of his aura. His cursed energy was a storm—a suffocating void that threatened to devour everything in its path. And yet, amidst that chaos, I felt... something else.
A presence.
It wasn't like the cursed energy or the hatred swirling around us. It wasn't even human. It was... disgusting. Wrong. A vile, dying sensation that clung to the air, as if the world itself recoiled from its existence.
My stomach churned, and I instinctively stepped back. The disgust pressed against me, almost unbearable, but then—
I felt something else.
I turned sharply, my eyes landing on Kaiser's crumpled form. He hadn't moved. Not yet. But in that moment, I could have sworn... his eyes fluttered. Just for an instant.
"Kaiser?" I whispered, my voice barely audible.
Something stirred deep within me, a spark of hope buried beneath layers of fear and self-loathing. It was faint, fragile, but it was there. And as I stood there, caught between despair and determination, I realized one thing.
Even if I was weak. Even if I was a failure. Even if the Executioner's words were true.
I couldn't give up. Not now. Not ever.
Because if I stopped fighting, if I let them all suffer for me without trying, then he really would be right. And I refused to let that happen.
Not again.
I clenched my fists, my gaze hardening as I took a step forward. The disgust, the fear, the shame—it didn't matter anymore. The Executioner might have known the future, but he didn't know me. Not truly.
And as long as I had breath left in my body, I wouldn't let him win.
Not tonight.