662. Traces of Tasty Electric Shocks
Nexus Awakened (An Isekai LitRPG Gender Bender Story)
662. Traces of Tasty Electric Shocks
A week had passed since they arrived in Grandis. Jury was present too, but she was stationed in Central Grandis alongside Galia and a sizeable force of Atelier personnel.
Trailing at least by one day behind Frost and Cer were the Exalted and the Tear Retrievers. As for the Iron Stars and the Black Moons; Moses returned to the Ark just south of Paradise. The chains that anchored it into Grandis remained. There were mountains smaller than an individual link.
Twisted shadows of these chains consumed most of southern Grandis as if to lock it up. Frost did not gain much insight into what the Ark was aside from being a mobile prison. The Iron Stars and the Black Moons were so dangerous that they were locked away in a world that desperately lacked Stars of the Nexus.
The reason for this was one of their powers:
âThe ability to send entire cities into Subderma Layer. It was their method of removing impurities from the face of the world. From what we know, it has contributed heavily to the massive population that exists beneath the Epiderma Layer.â
Nav answered.
âIt is different from Spatial Distortions. Remember, the Subderma can physically be accessed without the need to warp space. Think of it as a deep-sea trench. Those who sleep at the bottom will inevitably burst as they rise. Those who fall will cave in as they descend. It is nearly impossible to escape without, as Lailah claims, indomitable P-Factor Augmentation. Incandescent Ranked Souls wouldn't have much trouble.â
Another piece of the Nexusâs damned past. Make Sure Umbra does not use them for this purpose. We will need to keep a leash on them. Luckily, they seemed willing to cooperate. Eager, more like⦠They appeared suddenly like they smelt blood in the water.
The Iron Stars and the Black Moons was a major topic Cer, Nav and Frost had been focusing on for the past few days. Aside from their existence, Cer had zero knowledge of them. But it did not surprise them that they were instrumental in the past wars and the dark ages of Elysiaâs history.
Not for the good reasons, however. Iron Stars were what happened if an Eclipse were tasked with assassinating a civilization rather than an individual. It would be no exaggeration to say that they were currently the strongest assets of the Nexus outside of the Beholders and the Archetypes.
But with that power came unpredictability. Their powers would come to be known soon enough, as with the Black Moons who were no more than Moons that embrace the Chained Theocracyâs defeatist and fatalistic philosophies.
âBlack Moons have gotta be one of the rarest Moons. Right up there next to Blue Moons. You know how weâre named after different phases of the moon? A black moon is a moon that doesnât exist.â Cer brought up.
âMakes sense considering they were also locked away.â
âWho has the better stats?â
âI havenât seen one yet. But if theyâre anything like the Iron Stars, then theyâll be stronger for sure. Probably not as much as Ber and Res. Theyâre on an entirely different level. Rest assured, Cer. It wonât change anything thatâs already established. The Stars might belong to the Nexusâ on the virtue of them being Stars, but the Black Moons are loyal to Umbra.â Frost informed. âUnless we can integrate them.â
âI donât know how to feel about Moons that are secretly stronger than us. What would even be their use case? Send them on suicide missions like the Vermillion Moons?â
âDepends on what theyâre trained to do. Lailah and Nav donât have an answer yet, other than theyâre paired with an Iron Star. Besides, theyâre the least of my worries right now. Weâll have a few of them fighting with us when the time comes.â
âYeah, and letâs see how strong they actually are.â Cer pouted.
* * *
They eventually reached a place far from Paradise where the landscape began to flatten out. Large hills coalesced behind a pale fortress in the great distance. The structures here were not ruined like those before.
An impenetrable wall of emerald trees lined the bases of the mountain range. Birds that were like miniature dragons soared above those clouded peaks, diving in and out like fish in a brine pool.
Iscaâs Fort was one of three major fortresses that defended Infernis. Towering walls with battlements ran from the foot of the mountains to the distant ruins of Paradise. It was untouched to their surprise. Ashes fell from the skies. They originated from various piles of forever smoldering fire crystals.
They were no doubt used to burn corpses. It was a rather unspectacular location. Nothing within the castle-like fort was anything of particular interest. Information was not usually stored in strategic locations.
Weapons on the other hand were plentiful. Racks of halberds, swords, spears, and shields lined every dark room. The quality was quite good from what Frost could tell as she plucked the head of a halberd, then, with a resounding shatter â crushed it in her bare hands.
Behind the fort were mountains of charred metal armor. With no traces of bone and with the Interrogating Clock showing nothing of significant value, it was unclear what exactly had transpired in this place.
A field of haybales sat beside it, which were used to feed the horses of an enormous stable. Not a single horse was to be found, aside from frayed leads and bone fragments.
Damaged Bone Fragment
Frost could not help but ponder on what had occurred here. A fight was always the likely answer. But with whom? Or better yet, what? Scattered further across the dying fields were more charred armor.
Normal flames cannot burn iron to such a degree.
Frost estimated that roughly a few thousand soldiers must have been stationed here.
âYouâre off by a long shot. A hundred at best. Take a look at how this place was built. How big its halls are for humans. Not enough beds in the barracks either. Puritas made things bigger than they needed to be. Itâs how they tricked people into thinking they had more numbers.â
Cer corrected, dragging a claw along the weapon racks that lined the outer walls of the fortress, cutting them effortlessly as though they were the heads of her enemies.
âOne hundred humans wouldâve cut it a long time ago. Puritas had some powerful people by their side. Now? One hundred normal humans post Paradise Lost wouldâve been a free feast for whatever monsters live in those mountains. Iscario probably wanted to save face somehow. Bring people in from all over. Then boom.â
An electric maw tore a hole into the side of the pale walls. The brickwork surrendered to her overwhelming might. Residual sparks caused material to fling around, causing further destruction.
Wooden beams and log pillars collapsed as they exposed themselves from the wreckage. Along their smoldering surface was a Lichtenberg figure â the shape of a branching electrical tree. It was no doubt caused by Cerâs immense electric discharge.
âThey just disappear all at once. Got anything on that clock of yours?â
âNope. Nothing big happened here. Itâs just another angle on what happened to Infernis. Events take precedence, huh.â
âItâs a good thing. If it was limited to peopleâs perspectives, then itâd be hell to tell apart their biases and whatever the hell goes on in their minds.â
âThatâs exactly why we have two different clocks. Cer. Got any ideas what might have caused this?â
âSpeaking from a professional wolf-hunter like meâs standpoint ââ She folded her arms, grinning to herself impishly now that Frost was relying on her. ââ It looks like they died. Horribly too. Armor remains but their bodies are missing sounds to me like something ate themâ¦â
Cer became unsure all of sudden. She leaned over the blackened plate body of one, her eyes uncaring of the death surrounding her. She kicked the pieces around, fiddled with them, and tossed them aside, treating them like uninteresting trash.
She treated the field like it was the aftermath of her own doing.
âTake a look at this. Itâs bloated.â
Frost joined her to investigate further. Indeed, the armor was strangely wider than it should have been, with signs of stress in various parts of the metal. The very rims of the armor flared and curled inwards with sharp splinters, like how one would picture the barrel of an exploded gun in a cartoon.
âNah. Bloated?â Cer scoffed. âIt looks like they exploded.â
âIt canât be the doing of the Memento Mori then. I imagine they prefer intact cadavers over chunks. Know any monsters like that?â
âThat causes people to explode? No clue. Iâve never seen a monster that kills this quickly.â Cerâs words carried a strange wisdom as she turned her head to the mountains. âNot once. Not ever. Not here. The monsters of Southwestern Grandis like to play with their food. They let them marinate in their suffering.â
The air around her shifted unexpectedly. A solemn expression befell her before she shook her head and deeply sighed.
âDid you know, Frost, that some flowers can grow on infertile soil? Grandis is home to a lot of monsters that can make anyone want to throw their hands up in the air in surrender. Not me though. Wellâ¦â
She trailed off again, scratching her head as she searched for words to speak. Her mouth opened, but her voice betrayed her.
âDo you want to take another path?â Frost patted her head. Cer threw her body against Frost, leaning beside her as she sighed again.
âNo. Itâll be good for at least you to see what happened there. Itâs on our way too. I also have a feeling that âitâ will be there as well.â
âThe Salivating Spark, huh.â
âWhatever they want to call it. To think a Corrupted ended up forming because of my rampage. Annoying, but itâs got my blood charged in a good way. Maybe I can grab myself a unique ability while Iâm at it. Youâll be there too, so itâs not like Iâm at any risk.â
Cer shrugged as Frost picked up an armor piece, bringing it close to her face.
âDo you always go into missions recklessly like that?â
âDuh. What do I look like a coward?â
âI canât believe youâre one of the oldest Moons.â
âWell, what can I say?â
â⦠Haaah.â
Maybe bringing the single braincelled wolf along was a bad idea.
Frostâs attention moved back to the metal. She brushed off the excess soot with [Cleanse], revealing severe warping and discoloration. Another strange thing was that the âsootâ contained powdered metal too.
Just as she was about to put it aside, her eyes caught something peculiar.
âCer. Did you notice this?â
âNotice what? You got the better eyes, so you gotta point it out to me.â
Frostâs fingers revealed a Lichtenburg figure in the metal.
âDid you shock them when you touched them?â
âNo. I only lashed out at the fort. Oh⦠Oh shit. This is kind of troubling now.â
They exchanged stares before looking back down at the Lichtenberg figure. Quickly, the two sifted through various scattered armor pieces.
They all revealed the exact same markings.
âThe culprit didnât just use normal fire.â Cerâs bared her teeth eagerly all of a sudden. âThey electrocuted them. The bodies wouldâve burned immediately. No, skip that. They wouldâve vaporized on the spot.â
Cer demonstrated by taking a metal sheet and, in the next instant, a bright flash of blue light disintegrated it. A cloud of black and grey vapor was all that was left behind. Nothing, not even a shaving of metal, remained in her hands.
The scent of chlorine returned as it usually did during extreme electrical discharges, as ozone was formed as a result.
What Frost witnessed was an arc flash, the ultimate nightmare of electrical mishaps. The fact that the triplets could withstand it, never mind control it, never properly registered in her mind until now.
âFucking hell. Cer. That Corrupted of yours is on a rampage of its own.â
âSeems like it. This isnât that much different from the scenes Iâve caused, so I had a feeling this had to be my fault. Somehow. In some way. Anyway, itâs going to be a Monsoon Corrupted since it couldnât erase their armor. At worst itâll be an Eternal Night.â
Cer nudged Frostâs shoulder.
âLetâs go hunt the old me!â