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I Copy the Authorities of the Four Calamities-Chapter 188: The Alpha Hunt
The sun did not rise over Mourn-Hold. The sky simply transitioned from a suffocating black to a flat, bruised purple that offered no warmth and very little light. The snow had stopped falling sometime during the night, but the wind had picked up, driving the drifts into hard, frozen waves against the stone foundations of the village. It howled through the eaves of the Inn like a dying animal, rattling the shutters and stripping the heat from the walls.
Vane was already awake when the first grey light touched the windowpane. He didn’t need to wake Isole. She was sitting on the edge of the bed, her boots already laced, her emerald dark green hair tied back loosely with a strip of rough leather she had cut from her spare cloak. She didn’t look like a Saintess preparing for a ceremony. She looked like a soldier waiting for the whistle. Her face was pale, but her hands were steady as she checked the seals on her mana-harness.
"The salt," Vane said. His voice was a low rasp in the quiet room.
Isole touched the heavy pouch at her belt. "Check. Three kilos, divided."
"The filters."
"Check. Rated for necrotic particulates."
They left the Inn without waking Alden. The common room was cold, the fire in the hearth reduced to a pile of grey ash. They stepped out into the street and the silence hit them like a physical weight. The village was a tomb. Even the stray dogs that usually barked at the wind were huddled somewhere out of sight, sensing the pressure in the air.
They moved through the heavy oak gates and turned North. The path to the Old Crypts was not a road. It was a goat track that wound its way up the spine of the ridge, cutting through the dense, frozen treeline that separated the living valley from the ancient burial grounds of the district.
Vane took point. He moved with a steady, rhythmic pace that ate up the distance without burning unnecessary stamina. He didn’t look back. He didn’t need to. He could hear the soft thud of Isole’s staff against the frozen mud and the rhythm of her breathing. She was matching his stride perfectly, stepping in his footprints to conserve energy.
An hour into the climb, the world began to change.
The hardy pines of the lower slopes gave way to the twisted, black oaks of the high ridge. These trees were not just dormant for the winter. They were dead. Their bark had peeled away in long, grey strips, revealing wood that looked like bleached bone. The branches clawed at the sky like skeletal fingers. There was no undergrowth here. The ground was bare, covered only by a thin layer of ash-grey dust that swirled around their boots in the wind.
Vane stopped. He held up a hand.
"The air," Isole whispered. She sniffed, then immediately wrinkled her nose.
It was metallic. It tasted like copper and old blood, mixed with the sharp, distinct tang of ozone. It was the smell of a thunderstorm that had rotted from the inside out.
"Necrotic saturation," Vane noted. He watched a snowflake land on his glove. It didn’t melt. It turned grey and crumbled into dust. "The ambient mana is dead. Put the mask on."
He pulled the heavy leather rebreather from his pack. It was a piece of industrial gear, ugly and functional, with brass fittings and thick glass lenses. He strapped it over his face, tightening the seals until the air turned stale and filtered. The world narrowed to the view through the lenses. The sound of his own breathing became loud and raspy, a mechanical rhythm in his ears.
Isole did the same. The mask hid her face, making her look insectoid and alien, but her mismatched eyes remained clear behind the glass. She gripped her staff, the crystal pulsing with a faint, agitated light that seemed to struggle against the heavy atmosphere.
"Check comms," Vane said, his voice muffled by the leather.
Isole tapped the side of her mask. "Clear. I can hear you."
"Let’s move."
They continued the ascent. The "Echo" in the ground was stronger here. It wasn’t just a vibration anymore. It was a physical pressure that pushed against the soles of their boots with every step. It felt like walking on the skin of a drum that was being beaten from the inside. It wasn’t the chaotic, skittering vibration of a hive. It was steady. It was deep. It felt heavy. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝔀𝓮𝒃𝙣𝓸𝒗𝒆𝒍.𝙘𝒐𝒎
They reached the plateau at noon.
The Old Crypts stood against the cliff face like the teeth of a rotting skull. They were massive stone structures, mausoleums built centuries ago by the first settlers of the district. The architecture was brutal and blocky, designed to withstand the harsh winters and the weight of the mountain. Most of the entrances were sealed with heavy iron slabs, rusted shut by time and neglect.
Except for the main gate.
The central tomb, a mausoleum the size of a small cathedral, stood open. The massive stone doors, each weighing five tons, had not been pushed open. They had been torn off their hinges. They lay in the snow twenty feet away, shattered into jagged fragments of granite and iron.
Vane signaled for a halt. He crouched behind a boulder fifty yards from the entrance, his spear tip resting in the snow.
"No guards," Vane said.
"The hive creates a perimeter," Isole replied, her voice tinny through the mask. "There should be Soldiers. There should be drones watching the approach. A Rank 5 Alpha wouldn’t leave its door open."
"There is nothing," Vane said.
He scanned the snow around the entrance. It was undisturbed. There were no tracks leading in or out. Just the shattered doors and the dark, gaping maw of the crypt. The silence was absolute. There was no clicking of mandibles, no hissing of steam vents.
"The Alpha is inside," Vane reasoned, though the logic felt thin even to him. "It pulled everything back to protect the core. This is a siege mentality. It knows we are coming."
He checked his spear. The star-steel tip gleamed dully in the flat grey light. He checked the [Silver Fang] reserves in his core. They were full. He checked the salt pouches at his belt.
"We go in hard," Vane instructed. "Standard breach formation. You hold the light. I take the aggro. If you see eggs, you burn them. If you see the Queen, you blind her. Do not engage in melee. Do not try to be a hero."
"Understood," Isole said.
She stood up. She didn’t hesitate. She didn’t look for his approval. She walked up to stand beside him, the wind whipping her loose hair around the leather straps of her mask. She slammed the butt of her staff into the ground.
’Lumina.’
A sphere of pure, white light erupted from the crystal. It wasn’t the filtered, golden "purity" she had forced in the cave yesterday. It was a harsh, functional combat light. It cut through the gloom of the plateau and illuminated the darkness of the tunnel ahead. It was ugly, bright, and efficient.
Vane looked at her. He saw the resolve in her posture. He saw the way she held the staff, not like a religious artifact, but like a weapon.
"Move," Vane said.
They stepped past the shattered doors.
The transition was instant. The biting wind of the ridge vanished, replaced by a stillness so profound it felt like the air itself had been frozen in time. The temperature inside the crypt dropped ten degrees. The stone floor was slick with a thin layer of black ice that crunched softly under their boots.
The walls were lined with alcoves, each holding the skeletal remains of the district’s ancestors. Some of the bones had been disturbed, rattled loose by the vibrations, and lay scattered on the floor in piles of yellowed calcium.
But Vane didn’t look at the dead. He looked at the floor.
There was a trail. It was a wide, slick path of sludge that led deeper into the dark. It looked like a slug trail, but it was ten feet wide and smelled of ammonia and rot.



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