Chapter 47: Fangs in the Fog
[System Message]
[New Quest: Kill the Snake and Save the Nobles]
Reward: ???
Noel stood beneath the warped shadow of an ancient tree, hand on the hilt of Revenant Fang, jaw clenched.
The battlefield was a fucking disaster.
Screams echoed through the clearing. One noble flew through the air, slammed against a rock and didn’t get back up. The others flailed, casting spells that barely scratched the thing, scrambling like mice with broken legs. No surveillance orbs in the sky. No safety barriers kicking in. No magical artifacts lighting up like they were supposed to.
Just chaos.
’What the fuck system, what the actual fuck,’ Noel thought.
He stepped forward, boots pounding against the dirt. One of the nobles nearly crashed into him while fleeing—Noel shoved him aside without looking.
"Fall back!" he barked.
No one moved.
Of course they didn’t. They were nobles. They didn’t take orders from the trash of the Thorne family. Not unless it came with a title or a fucking invitation.
"I said MOVE!" he snarled, grabbing one of them by the collar and pushing him toward the trees. "Go find the Patriarchs and Matriarchs. Tell them the failsafes are dead and the orbs are gone. Tell them someone screwed with the system. And if you stop running, I swear I’ll gut you myself and leave the rest for the beast."
That got them moving.
Feet pounded against soil. Broken pride. Noel didn’t care. He turned toward the center of the clearing, where Elena still stood.
Her sword hung low. Blood ran down her arm. She looked like she wanted to stay.
Noel walked up to her with that same dead calm he always wore when he was seconds from losing it.
"You’re done," he said, voice flat. "Catch your breath. I’ve got this."
Elena frowned. "You don’t need to—"
"I’m not in the mood for speeches. Go."
A beat of hesitation. Then, reluctantly, she turned and limped away.
Noel waited until she disappeared into the trees, then exhaled.
’Right. Just me, a cursed snake, no plan, and no clue what I’m doing. Again. Just how I fucking like it.’
The forest swallowed them fast.
Five nobles—three bruised, one limping, one crying without realizing it—raced along the overgrown path, mana flickering weakly around their boots to keep them upright. None of them had trained for this. Not really.
They weren’t warriors. They were heirs. Heirs with names, and houses, and reputations. Useless things when you’re being hunted by death scaled in black.
"Is he insane?" one of them gasped between ragged breaths. "He stayed behind alone?"
Another spat to the side. "That was Noel Thorne. Figures. Freak never knew his place."
"He’s the failure son, right? The one no one talks about."
"Yeah. Guess he finally snapped."
Silence followed. Just the slap of boots against dirt and the ragged thud of panic-filled hearts.
They broke through the treeline into the outer perimeter, where shimmering barriers protected the observation camp—a dome of golden light surrounded by highborn tents and floating surveillance screens.
A dozen guards stiffened as the group stumbled in, breathless and wild-eyed.
"Emergency!" one of them shouted, voice cracking. "One of the main zones is compromised! Orbs are down—protective gear’s not activating—there’s a Adept Core beast loose!"
That got attention.
Lord Albrecht Thorne stood from his seat near the central table, his cold grey eyes narrowing. The man didn’t move often. When he did, the air noticed.
"Where?" he asked, his voice quiet and final like a death sentence.
"In the central lake quadrant—
There was a group, they were ambushed—Lady Elena von Lestaria was there—"
"And who sent the warning?" interrupted a voice, sharp and suspicious.
The noble swallowed. "Noel Thorne. He... he told us to run and inform you."
The name landed like a stone dropped into still water.
Lady Mirelle, seated beside Albrecht, didn’t even bother hiding her smirk. "So the ghost of the family speaks."
Albrecht said nothing. Just turned toward the dome’s shimmering edge, where the forest trembled under unnatural silence.
"...Mobilize a response team," he said at last.
"But the rules of the Hunt—"
"Now."
The clearing was quiet now.
Noel stood at the center, wind brushing past his face like the breath of something watching. Elena was gone. The others were gone. All that remained was him, the trees... and the damn thing slithering just beyond the mist.
He exhaled slowly.
’Alone again. Of course.’
His eyes scanned the field—fallen weapons, broken branches, churned earth. All signs of panic. Of failure.
Noel crouched, pressing two fingers to the dirt. Still warm. Vibrating faintly.
’It’s circling me now.’
His grip tightened around the hilt of Revenant Fang.
’Good. Let the fucker come.’
His heart thudded. Not fast or slow, but steady.
He wasn’t calm.
He was wired.
His thoughts ran like wildfire.
’No backup. No terrain advantage. That thing’s got speed and weight on me. Durable as hell. Limited range of vision. Heat-seeker behavior. Probably corrupted. Probably not even acting on instinct anymore.’
He looked up at the canopy. Still no orbs.
’Still alone... and still completely fucked, alright lets do this...’
And yet he stayed.
Because running would’ve meant dragging more corpses out of this place later. Faces that would haunt him. Names he never bothered to learn. That was the deal. He knew the story now. He was in it. For real.
No more side character shit.
"Alright, bastard," he muttered, lifting his sword. "Let’s see how much mana it takes to cut through a nightmare."
A tremor rolled through the soil beneath him.
The snake was coming back.
The ground pulsed again.
Then silence.
Then—
A blur of black surged from the treeline, scales glinting with unnatural sheen, the air behind it splitting with a thunderous snap. Noel didn’t hesitate.
Mana flooded his limbs like fire in his veins. His body blurred sideways, barely dodging the impact as the serpent’s head cratered the spot he’d been standing.
’Too slow.’
The tail came next. A horizontal slash. Noel ducked, rolled forward, then sprang toward the beast’s side. Revenant Fang flashed—but the blade bounced off its scales with a metallic clang.
’Figures.’
He landed in a crouch. No damage. Just a scratch on its armor.
The snake turned. Its eyes locked onto him.
He grinned.
"Well? Come on, you oversized belt."
It struck again. Fangs wide, dripping something that sizzled when it hit the ground.
Noel leapt back. A little too late. Acid splattered his coat, eating through the outer fabric before he tore it off and tossed it aside.
His shoulder throbbed. Barely a graze. But the pain lit his nerves like fireworks.
’Perfect.’
He focused, reading the rhythm: one strike, two feints, a tail sweep, then a bite—it moved in a pattern, almost mechanical.
’Whoever corrupted this thing gave it just enough intelligence to be annoying.’
Mana surged again—this time not for speed, but resilience. His skin thickened. Muscles braced. He gritted his teeth, then charged straight at it.
This time, he didn’t dodge.
He met the attack.
The tail snapped toward him like a whip.
Noel slid under it and pivoted, twisting his body at the last second to bring Revenant Fang down hard—
CLANG.
Sparks flew. The edge cut halfway in before catching bone. The serpent hissed, writhing in fury.
"Yeah," Noel growled, breath ragged. "I felt that too, bastard."
The thing lunged, and Noel sprinted to the side, eyes darting, mind racing. The corrupted aura it radiated was thick now, choking the clearing.
He couldn’t beat it head-on.
But maybe... he didn’t have to.
’Come on, think. You’ve read the story, you’ve studied the patterns. You’re not strong enough to kill it clean—but maybe you can outplay it.’
Elena crouched behind a broken tree at the edge of the clearing, one hand pressed tightly against her bleeding arm. She should’ve kept running. She knew that. But something rooted her there.
She had to see.
Noel was alone, and the thing he was fighting wasn’t just a beast—it was a fucking calamity wrapped in scales and rage. Yet there he stood, not flinching, not hesitating. Moving like the chaos was familiar.
She’d seen prideful fighters before—showmen and duelists obsessed with form, flair, and legacy. But this... this wasn’t that.
This was something else.
Raw and ugly.
He weaved between death with barely enough space to breathe. No elegant stance, no wasted motion. Just survival, sharpened to a brutal edge.
The serpent struck again, and Elena flinched instinctively—but Noel didn’t run. He dropped low, planted his feet, and shouted:
"Ironbrand Veins!"
Mana surged around his body, making his silhouette flare with heat and grit. The next blow landed against his shoulder, but he didn’t fall.
He used the impact, twisting with it to carve his blade deeper into the creature’s side. Sparks flew. The beast hissed and recoiled.
’That sword... it’s reacting.’
Elena’s breath caught.
She had dismissed Noel—everyone had. The bastard son of the Thorne line. The useless one. The quiet shadow in the corner no one took seriously.
But the boy out there wasn’t useless. He wasn’t quiet.
He was terrifying.
Not because he was strong—but because he moved like someone who had nothing to lose.
And that made him dangerous.
Noel stumbled for a moment, blood dripping from his lip, his coat half-burned away. But he grinned through his teeth and raised his sword again.
And for the first time, Elena felt something twist in her chest—not fear. Not pity.
Respect.
Noel’s breath burned in his chest. His arms ached. His legs felt like stone. The bastard snake wasn’t slowing down—not really. Every time he thought he’d scored a real hit, the thing twisted, recoiled, adapted.
It was learning.
Across the field, its massive body writhed in anger, its wounded flank steaming, one eye narrowed in vicious focus.
Noel stood still, blade trembling slightly in his grip. Not from fear.
From exhaustion.
He could feel his mana running low. He didn’t have many more spells in him. The hits were adding up, and there wasn’t a single clean opening in sight.
’Shit. This isn’t working. I’m stabbing a damn wall and hoping it cracks.’
The serpent slithered forward, slow now. Testing. Tasting the air.
’It’s enjoying this.’
Noel tightened his grip. Every instinct screamed at him to move, to reposition, to try anything—but his body was beginning to ignore commands.
’Think. You’ve seen this before. You’ve read this before. It’s not invincible.’
His eyes narrowed.
Revenant Fang pulsed faintly. The sword felt warm in his hand. Alive. Like it was... waiting.
’Come on,’ he thought. ’If you’re supposed to be special, now’s the time to show it.’
The snake hissed and lunged.
Noel barely managed to dodge—he rolled, smashed into a half-burnt tree, and coughed blood into the dirt.
’One more hit like that and I’m done.’
He stood again, barely.
Not out of courage.
Out of habit.
His eyes locked on the serpent’s. And for a second—just one—everything felt still.
Like the world was waiting.
Noel wiped the blood from his mouth and laughed. Quiet. Bitter.
"Alright then," he muttered. "Let’s try one more round."
The serpent responded with a deep, rumbling hiss that echoed through the trees.
Somewhere at the edge of the battlefield, Elena watched, one hand pressed to her chest.
And in the fading light of the clearing, Revenant Fang pulsed again—stronger.
As if it had decided something.