Chapter 639
Chapter 639
Ludger nodded once. Just acceptance. Because he knew the truth as well as Harold did. This plan was risky.
A straight push through a city with over a hundred thousand ants, relying on four people to hold the lanes while one kid conserved strength for the only fight that mattered.
It was the kind of plan that only existed because the alternative wasn’t “safer.” The alternative was “impossible.” Ludger glanced toward the broken window again, listening to the endless crawling outside. Then he turned back, expression flat, voice quiet.
“Understood,” he said.
Harold’s hand tightened into a fist once, then opened.
“Move,” he ordered.
And the Lionsguard spear tip slid out of the abandoned building and into Rokram’s living nightmare, advancing nonstop, because stopping would mean the swarm finally had time to notice them.
Rokram looked like it had been chewed.
Not smashed cleanly like a siege, not burned out like a riot, chewed, as if something with too many teeth had taken bites out of streets and buildings and then decided it didn’t need to finish the meal.
The first block outside the abandoned building was a cemetery without headstones.
A wagon lay on its side in the middle of the road, wheels still spinning lazily from whatever had thrown it. One axle was snapped, and dried blood had painted an arc across the cobbles like someone had tried to crawl and changed their mind halfway through. A dog, or what was left of one, was wedged under the wagon’s frame, ribs splayed, fur matted dark.
Ludger didn’t let his eyes linger.
Seismic Sense did it for him, whispering the shapes of bones beneath rubble, the hollow echo of empty cellars, the places where bodies had been dragged through alleys and never returned.
The signs were everywhere if you knew how to read them.
Doors blown inward, splintered from the inside like people had barricaded and then panicked when something started scratching. Windows broken outward, glass glittering across floorboards as if someone had tried to leap and been caught mid-flight. A storefront with a sign half hanging, Baker, the rest torn away. Inside, flour was smeared across the ground like snow, and the smear marks ended in a dark patch where something had fed.
The air carried that distinct smell of death that didn’t belong to one corpse. It belonged to a lot of corpses. Old blood, rot, damp stone, and the sour-acid tang of insects, sharp enough that it sat at the back of the throat.
Harold led them into the street in a tight wedge, shield arm slightly forward, body angled to block for Ludger without boxing him in. Selene mirrored him on the left, loose and ready, hands open like she was waiting for something to be stupid enough to step close. Cor held right, staff low but present, a quiet promise of walls and spikes and sudden weight. Aleia brought up the rear, footsteps silent, eyes flicking from rooftops to alley mouths to the dark gaps between collapsed buildings.
They moved like a single creature. And the city watched them with too many eyes. Ants were everywhere.
Clinging to walls. Crawling over rubble. Pouring through cracks in the road. Nesting in what used to be doorways. Some were just workers, thin, fast, always carrying something: a chunk of wood, a scrap of cloth, a bone. Others were heavier, soldier variants with thicker plating and mandibles like hatchets.
Ranged ones too. Ludger spotted them on high perches: ant-archers with rigid thoraxes and jointed limbs that held bows like tools, not weapons. Their arrow shafts were stacked in neat bundles beside them like someone had assigned them a quota.
They should have been swarmed immediately. They weren’t. That was the strangest part. A hundred thousand ants in the city and only a handful actually noticed them.
One patrol skittered across the street ahead, then froze as if catching a scent. Two ants pivoted, heads tilting, antennae flicking. The rest of the patrol didn’t even slow. They flowed around the moment of hesitation like water around a rock.
The two that noticed started to move toward them. Selene’s hand snapped out, fast, cruel. She didn’t punch them. She destroyed them.
A short burst of force, pugilist skill condensed into something ugly, caved the first ant’s headplate in like rotten fruit. The second got a fist through the thorax so cleanly it barely had time to twitch before Selene yanked her arm out and wiped her knuckles against her cloak.
No scream. No alarm. The ants around them didn’t care. They kept hauling debris. Kept climbing. Kept moving with the same dead-purpose rhythm. Ludger’s eyes narrowed.
“They’re… busy,” Aleia whispered behind them.
“Directed,” Cor corrected softly.
Harold didn’t look back. “Good. Means the brain’s occupied.”
Ludger felt it too, the city’s vibrations weren’t random. They weren’t just a chaotic nest expanding.
They were streams. Paths. Traffic patterns. Like the whole swarm was being routed by an intelligence that didn’t waste effort. And as they advanced toward the center, the city got worse.
The destruction became intentional. There were bones in the gutters. Human bones, cleaned too well. A ribcage arranged wrong. A skull cracked and empty, face turned toward the street like it had died watching something approach.
Every now and then, they passed something that hurt to see because it was so normal. A child’s toy cart, overturned, one wheel still attached.
A scarf caught on a nail, fluttering weakly in the breeze. A handprint in dried mud on a wall, small, smeared, panicked. They didn’t speak. They didn’t need to. The city said enough. Then the streets opened. Not into a square. Into a void.
The heart of Rokram had been scraped clean of its old identity and rebuilt into something else, something that didn’t belong in a human city. An ant castle. Ludger stopped without meaning to, the formation tightening around him as if they all sensed the same thing at once.
It rose from the ruined center like a tumor made of architecture. Not stone in the way humans cut it. Not brick. Not mortar.
It was a layered mass of compacted earth, resin-like secretion, and scavenged material fused into a single structure that looked half-grown and half-constructed. Dark, glossy bands ran through it, hardened insect resin that caught the thin dawn light and reflected it like wet oil. The surface wasn’t smooth. It was segmented, ridged in overlapping plates that mimicked chitin.
The whole thing looked alive.
Ramparts weren’t built, they were formed, bulging outward in rounded crenellations like the spines of a gigantic beetle. Spires rose in uneven clusters, some thin as spears, others thick as towers, each one punctured with oval holes that pulsed with movement as ants flowed in and out.
There were entrances, but not gates. Gates were for negotiation. These were mouths.
Wide, sloping tunnels lined with hardened resin and reinforced with stolen beams and cracked stone blocks taken from Rokram’s own buildings. Above each mouth, the walls were stained darker, layered with old ichor and grime like the structure had… breathed.
The castle’s base sprawled outward into a web of trenches and ridged pathways, ant roads, engineered for speed. Everywhere those roads touched, ants moved in dense rivers, bodies brushing past each other without hesitation, without recognition.
Above it all, perched in high alcoves and slitted windows, were ranged variants. Dozens. Hundreds. Bows held ready. Arrow bundles stacked like ammunition. They weren’t firing at the distant walls anymore.
They were facing inward and outward, covering every approach like they’d been expecting this moment since the first human screamed.
And then Ludger felt it. Not just the movement. The pressure.
A dense, centralized weight under the structure, like an organ buried beneath a ribcage. The vibrations down there were deeper, slower, more intentional, different from the frantic crawl of the swarm outside.
Harold’s voice came out rough, almost unwilling. “That’s not a nest.”
“No,” Cor murmured. His eyes were fixed on the structure like he was seeing a new kind of sin. “That’s a castle.”
Selene’s grin flickered back, thin, excited, a little insane. “So that’s where the queen sits.”
Aleia swallowed once, bow steady. “Destination confirmed.”
Ludger didn’t blink. He stared at the ant castle, at the living rivers of chitin flowing around it, at the resin-black walls that looked like armor.
And he knew, deep in his bones, that everything they’d done so far had been the easy part. He lowered his voice until it was barely more than breath.
“That’s it,” he said. “That’s the brain.”
The four-sided assault thundered in the distance like a storm battering city walls.
Here, at the center, the storm didn’t matter. Because the heart of the swarm was sitting right in front of them, waiting. They didn’t need another word.
Harold’s earlier assignments snapped into place like a weapon being assembled, no ceremony, no hesitation. One glance was enough.
Ludger felt it happen more than he saw it.
Harold shifted half a step forward and left, putting his body between Ludger and the widest lanes. Selene peeled to the left flank with a predator’s patience, shoulders loose, hands ready. Cor drifted right, staff angled, eyes scanning for angles and choke points. Aleia slid behind them like a shadow that refused to be surprised.
Positions assumed. Then they moved. Not walking. Not creeping. Running. No orders. No countdown. No dramatic signal. They sprinted straight toward the ant castle.
The streets blurred past, broken cobbles, shattered carts, strips of cloth snagged on rubble. The air thickened with the smell of resin and death, and the vibrations under Ludger’s feet grew denser, more organized, like the city was starting to notice an error in the pattern.
The first ants reacted on instinct.
A loose cluster in the road, workers and a couple of thicker soldiers, turned as one, antennae snapping toward the motion. They surged forward, mandibles opening, bodies low and fast, trying to clog the path like living barricades.
Harold hit them like a battering ram. He didn’t slash. He didn’t duel. He cleared.
His weapon snapped down in brutal arcs, each strike meant to remove a body from the world. Chitin cracked. Legs severed. A soldier ant tried to latch onto his shield, Harold twisted and drove the shield edge into its headplate with a wet crunch, then stepped over it without losing speed.
Selene didn’t even slow. She flowed along the left edge of the formation, punching through anything that got within arm’s reach. Her fists didn’t just break shells, they broke structure. One ant came in from an alley; she met it with a short, compact blow to the joint line and tore the leg clean off. Another lunged for her hip; she grabbed it mid-air and slammed it into the ground hard enough that the cobbles popped, then used the stunned body as a stepping stone.
Cor’s control was quieter, and somehow more frightening. Where ants tried to flank, the ground betrayed them. It wasn’t geomancy, but it was probably something simple he learned from Gaius.
A ridge rose at the right angle, just enough to trip. A sudden slab of stone pushed up like a knee under a sprinting body, flipping ants onto their backs. When a thicker soldier variant tried to barrel through anyway, Cor’s staff tapped once and a narrow spike of compacted earth punched up under its thorax, pinning it for a heartbeat, long enough for Harold’s follow-through to remove its head.
Aleia didn’t waste arrows on what the front could handle. She was watching the angles. The rooftops. The holes in the walls. When a ranged variant spotted them and lifted its bow from a half-collapsed second floor, Aleia’s arrow was already in the air.
It took the ant through the headplate and nailed it to the wood behind it. The body twitched, bow arm spasming uselessly, and then it went still.
Another archer raised a shot from farther back, Aleia fired again without looking like she’d aimed. The arrow punched through chitin and into the wall with a thunk that sounded like a door being shut.
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