Chapter 650
Chapter 650
Ludger didn’t linger.
He grabbed what he could, what made sense, and shoved it into whatever space he had left: the intact silver swords, still cold from the ice but stubbornly unbroken, and any other small pieces that didn’t scream trap. His hands moved fast, almost angry, not because he wanted to hoard, but because standing still inside a collapsing hive was how you got buried and forgotten.
The egg chamber behind him creaked again. A long, tearing groan ran through the resin ribs overhead. Dust rained down in lazy sheets, and somewhere deeper in the castle, something structural gave up with a muffled crack like a snapped spine.
That was all the encouragement he needed. He turned and ran. Or tried to. His legs disagreed.
Two steps into the corridor, his foot slipped on slick resin and shattered debris. His balance went. His body didn’t even have the dignity to fight for it, he just pitched forward and kissed the floor face-first.
Cold resin. Grit. The taste of blood.
Ludger lay there for half a heartbeat, blinked once, then shoved himself up with a quiet snarl of effort.
“...Tch.”
He clicked his tongue, wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, and kept moving.
He made it another twenty meters before his knee buckled unexpectedly. Not from a hit. Just… empty muscles finally remembering they were empty. He stumbled, caught himself on the wall, then his shoulder slid, and he went down again, hard enough that his teeth rattled.
A second time.
Another kiss.
He spat, more annoyed than hurt, and forced himself upright while the corridor above him trembled with another distant collapse.
“Not now,” he muttered, voice raw.
He pushed on anyway, half-running, half-staggering, Seismic Sense flaring every time the floor shifted under him. The castle’s vibrations were changing, less organized, more chaotic, like the whole structure had become a dying animal thrashing in its last minutes.
He’d assumed…
He’d honestly assumed that after all these years of grinding levels, stacking skills, building walls and shelters and murdering things that should’ve murdered him, he’d reached that point where nothing could take this much out of him.
Where “cost” meant pain and bruises, not… collapse.
But the way his arms shook when he tried to steady himself, the way his chest still rose too fast, the way his vision tunneled every time he stood up too quickly…
It told him he’d guessed wrong. Turns out there were still moves in his arsenal that didn’t just hurt the enemy. They taxed him.
They demanded payment in full.
And right now, payment was due while he was limping through a monster castle that wanted to fall on his head. Ludger clicked his tongue again, more bitter this time, and forced his legs to keep moving. Because collapsing could come later.
Outside, Harold and the others were still buying time with their lives.
And Ludger didn’t plan to show up late.
When Ludger finally staggered out of the ant castle’s mouth, the world hit him like a slap.
Noise. Light. Smoke. Blood.
And a sea of ants.
They were everywhere, climbing over rubble, spilling through streets, crawling over bodies, drowning the courtyard in chitin and clicking legs. Some were dead, cracked open and leaking dark ichor onto the ground. Some were alive and twitching, limbs jerking as they tried to decide what to do next.
But the cohesion was gone. The swarm no longer moved like a single organism.
It hesitated.
Clusters surged forward and then stopped for no reason. Patrol lines broke apart. Ranged variants on ruined balconies fired at empty lanes, then turned and shot into crowds of their own kind as if the “rules” that had guided them were suddenly missing.
It wasn’t strategy anymore. It was muscle spasms after the brain went dark.
Ludger’s Seismic Sense confirmed it instantly, streams that had been clean rivers of movement were now messy puddles, conflicting directions, ants bumping into each other, turning in circles, wasting steps.
He didn’t have time to feel satisfied. Because his people were still in it.
Harold was the first thing he saw through the chaos, standing in a pocket of half-cleared ground, shoulders sagging just a fraction, armor smeared with blood and dark insect gore. He looked like he’d been hit by a carriage and decided it was rude to fall. His blade rose and fell slower now, but it still rose.
Cor was a few steps to the right, staff planted, breathing controlled but heavy. His shaping was smaller, short ridges, quick spikes, sudden slabs, less “dominance” and more survival, conserving the last of his reserves while still denying flanks.
Aleia was behind them, bow arm trembling faintly from repetition, her arrows not wasted but fewer now, shots chosen with grim economy. Her hair was stuck to her forehead with sweat, and there was blood on her sleeve that wasn’t all hers.
Selene, Selene was still fighting like a lunatic, but even she looked spent. Her fists were red to the wrist, knuckles split open, coat torn, grin gone into something tighter and meaner. She was still smiling, technically, just in the way a person smiles when they’re too tired to do anything else.
They were holding by stubbornness and hate.
And the ants pressing them… weren’t pressing cleanly anymore.
They surged in uneven waves, then broke, then surged again. Some charged and stopped mid-run, antennae flicking like they were listening for orders that never came. A few turned and snapped at other ants. Others wandered aimlessly through corpses, stepping on dead shells without even noticing.
In the distance, the city gates finally gave way.
Not the ant castle, Rokram’s battered outer entrances where the four containment forces had been grinding all morning.
A section of wall collapsed under siege pressure and spellfire, stone breaking into a cascading ruin. Through the gap, the western army poured in, shields up, spears forward, mages behind them hurling clean, brutal volleys into disorganized clusters.
On another horizon line, far across the shattered rooftops, Ludger saw the same thing happen again, a second breach, then a third. Four jaws closing became four jaws biting through.
And now the empire wasn’t ramming into a coordinated swarm.
It was mowing down a body that had forgotten how to move.
The plan had worked.
He could see it in the way the ants died now, messy, panicked, stupid. They still had numbers, still had claws and mandibles, but they didn’t have purpose.
The “king” had been the purpose.
Somehow, through whatever unnatural intelligence or link bound the hive together—the ant king had been controlling them.
And now it wasn’t.
Ludger swallowed, chest still heaving, and pushed his legs forward even though they screamed.
He raised a hand just enough for Harold to see.
Harold’s eyes snapped to him.
For a heartbeat, the veteran just stared, taking in Ludger’s shredded clothes, the blood, the exhaustion, the fact that he was standing at all.
Then Harold’s expression changed. Not relief. Not celebration. Something harder. Confirmation.
He bared his teeth in something that might’ve been a grin and shouted over the chaos, voice ragged but fierce:
“You did it.”
And all around them, the swarm started to break, not from fear, but from the simple, brutal truth that without the mind guiding it…
It was finally just insects.
And insects could be slaughtered.
Ludger didn’t stop to breathe properly.
He didn’t stop to rest.
He just stepped into the mess like his body hadn’t already tried to collapse three times on the way out.
The moment he hit the edge of Harold’s pocket of space, he drew steel.
Two of the silver swords, smooth, balanced, annoyingly perfect, slid into his hands like they belonged there. They felt wrong in a way that made his skin itch. Not because they were heavy. Because they were clean. Noble weapons in a slaughterhouse.
He didn’t care.
He needed efficiency.
He moved.
The first ant that lunged at Harold’s flank didn’t even get close. Ludger’s left blade flicked once, short, precise, and took the spear arm at the joint. The limb dropped with a wet snap. The right sword followed through a heartbeat later, cutting across the thorax seam and opening the body like it had been stitched together badly.
The ant fell in two pieces.
Ludger didn’t look at it.
He flowed forward, blades low, stance still heavy from exhaustion but driven by pure refusal. He cut like he fought with fists close, practical, no wasted motion. The swords made it easier.
Where his bracers had crushed and shattered, the silver edges simply ended things.
A soldier ant charged with a shield, Ludger slipped inside the angle and drew one blade across the shield rim, carving it open, then stepped past the collapse and stabbed the second sword through the headplate with a clean, final push.
Another ant tried to bite at his side, he twisted and lopped off the mandibles with a quick cross, then kicked the body away without looking.
The pocket of space widened.
Not because the ants were suddenly afraid.
Because the swarm didn’t know how to coordinate anymore, and Ludger was turning every clumsy approach into a pile of parts.
Harold saw the swords and huffed out something that might’ve been a laugh. “So you went shopping.”
“Loot later,” Ludger muttered, and cut down another guard before it could step into range.
Selene slid closer on his left, still swinging her fists but now letting the swords do the heavy clearing. She flashed him a look, half curiosity, half disbelief.
“What happened inside?”
Ludger’s eyes stayed forward.
Two blades rose and fell, silver flashing through steam and dust, cutting down a pair of ants that had wandered into their lane like idiots who’d forgotten they were in a war.
“I’ll explain later,” he said.
Then he added, flat and sharp:
“Let’s finish this before anything.”
Selene opened her mouth like she wanted to argue—then shut it.
Because the message wasn’t in his words.
It was in the way his arms trembled between strikes.
In the shredded cloth hanging off his shoulders.
In the blood streaked across his ribs and cheek.
In the way his breathing was still too fast, too rough, like he’d run out of something important and was operating on stubbornness alone.
Harold’s gaze flicked over Ludger’s condition once more, and the veteran’s expression tightened. Cor’s eyes narrowed, understanding the unspoken cost. Aleia’s jaw set, her posture shifting subtly as she covered Ludger’s blind side without being asked.
None of them pressed him.
Because it was hard to imagine what kind of enemy could do that to Ludger.
And if Ludger, pragmatic, sarcastic, usually in control, was saying “later,” it meant later was only possible if they survived the next few minutes.
So they fought.
Together.
With the swarm breaking around them, with the empire flooding in through fallen gates in the distance, with chitin cracking under steel and fists and stone.
And Ludger kept cutting, two borrowed swords flashing like cold lightning, until the city stopped looking like a living hive and started looking like a battlefield the humans could finally win.
Thank you for reading!
Don't forget to follow, favorite, and rate. If you want to read 400 chapters ahead, you can check my patreon: /Comedian0
nashuaworldcup