God Of Immortals

Chapter 246: Interlude II

"Not from the beginning. I meandered a little, busied my hands at various positions before I wound up in WaterWay. Yet, the Cradle." Chang shook her head. "They'd never seen a bantam lady pretty as me who could contend energetically as the young men they bet their coin on." 

Chang grinned at Chang's satisfied articulation. "Nobody at any point attempted to cause you to grow a facial hair growth?" 

"Furthermore, they know not to contact my hair," Chang said. 

Somewhere far off, Chang could see the behemoth framework of Ferryman's Haven. Apparitions circumnavigated in an unending dance in the water, sometimes twirling up to twist their bodies crookedly around the messed up poles of the rearranged transport. 

The leviathan's bones twined consistently with the spoiling greatship. There was no tissue left to propose what the animal may have resembled in its unique structure, yet its prospect driving the huge boat straight into the air was boggling. The leviathan's remaining parts held the Ferryman back from diving into the profound by sheer power of an old will, a need past death to remain secured fight. 

Chang looked neutral by the sight. "How you considering moving beyond them?" she asked, gesturing at the phantoms. 

Chang shut her eyes. She murmured the natural melody to prepare herself against the enchantment. The lost kid, attempting to discover his direction home. She didn't take a gander at Ju Feng to see his response to the melody. She was unable to leave herself alone diverted. 

"Discover a way into the destruction," Chang trained them. She ventured into her pocket for foci, cautious this opportunity to ensure they were the right items. "At the point when the apparitions dissipate, make for it with all conceivable speed." 

Chang grunted. "They're not simply going to allow us to float in—" 

"Calm," Ju Feng said. "Let her work." 

Help me, Nelzun, Chang thought. The pontoon floated nearer. Individually, the apparitions eased back their anxious circumnavigating. They detected an adjustment of the turbulent frequency of their space and directed their concentration toward the little pontoon and its three particularly human tenants. 

Chang completed the spell and tossed her arms into the air. She delivered a modest bunch of coin-sized stones, three in each hand. They took off high and burst into orange fire. She imagined them to her, the wild, taking off circles, beating with obscure energy. 

To the phantoms, obscure energy delivered from a body saturated with spellplague resembled a bone cast in the way of starving canines. Their bodies sparkled working together with the blazes. They streaked get-togethers spheres in groups of three and four, leaving a make way between the lone three living spirits on the water and an enormous opening snugged between the destroyed Ferryman and the leviathan's bones. 

The pontoon floated up to a cut of sail hung across the upper portion of the opening. Ju Feng shoved it to the side with his paddle. He moved the pontoon among structure and rib and they coasted on, into the Haven. 

Cerest paid attention to Tau's report in interest. "You're sure it's just them three?" he said. Trik looked awkward. Cerest limited his eyes. "I'm upset for the deficiency of Borion, however in case you're lying, it will not go severely for just me. We've lost Guani and Dangong." 

Tau's eyes messed with out and he half-influenced on his feet. "How?" 

"Saragui's watchmen," Cerest said. "They got them soon after we split up. I thought little of their faithfulness. Be that as it may, relax, Feston is protected. He's gone to get three a greater amount of your colleagues to help us." 

"Six of us," Trik mumbled. "Six of us against three of them." 

"More than tolerable chances, if Chang will coordinate." 

Tau shook his head. He took a gander at Cerest such that made the mythical being's skin prickle with outrage—disdain swimming in feel sorry for. However, Tau wasn't taking a gander at the mythical person's scars. 

"You go get her all alone," he said. "Take the others assuming you need. Hells, they'll all battle until they're dead, in case there's coin in it." 

He dismissed, the torchlight consuming his profile orange. 

"Don't you need vengeance?" Cerest asked him. "They killed your companion." 

"What's more, I killed hers, or close to enough," Tau said. "I'm out of it." 

Cerest watched the man leave. It didn't influence him the manner in which it had when the Locks had left him. He didn't feel anything now, not considering what Trik had enlightened him regarding Chang. 

He'd at last worn her out. She was coming to him, and she was coming irate. He would need to battle to handle her, however he wasn't stressed over that. He would have the high ground, since he had reality Chang needed. 

All he needed to do was make her quit any pretense of everything to get it. 

Ju Feng's lamp gleamed and went out. Chang began to project a light spell when she felt Ju Feng's hand on her arm. 

She realized it was him by the cool dash of calfskin. 

"Save your solidarity," he said. "I'll get the lamp moving. Ruo, continue to push." 

The diminutive person snorted affirmation. Ju Feng moved away in the haziness. Chang could just expect he was feeling his direction. 

She attempted to get a feeling of the inside of the Haven by the twilight separating through the holes in the gear, however the sheer heft of the vessel and bones kept a lot of detail from being perceptible. The constructions had massed together fit, overshadowing every one of the individual parts. 

The pontoon knock against something strong about a similar time Ju Feng got the lamp lit. Chang thought it was flotsam and jetsam skimming in the water. It took her a breath to understand that it was a boot, set against the front of the pontoon. The boot's proprietor glided six crawls over the water. 

Chang turned upward into the most alarming montage of a human face she had at any point seen. Bare over the midsection, the man's middle and shoulders were lopsidedly wide. Veins and bone lumps stood apart from his fair skin. 

Meager patches of hair developed like scour grass all around his head. His base lip collapsed over on itself in one corner, giving him an unending scoff and permitting a surge of slobber to escape from his mouth in a needle-meager cascade. This sort of deformation, the godscurse, Chang had seen previously. Be that as it may, the divine beings weren't finished with their joke at this helpless soul's cost. 

From the man's neck grew a group of four of bulbous dark arms. He had them hung across his shoulders like a mane that finished at his belt. The limbs were moving, apparently autonomous of any cognizant mental heading on their proprietor's part. 

With his boot on the pontoon, the man presented a long polearm, its tip arriving at well over his head. He swung the point down level with her chest. His arm muscles strained. Chang thought he planned to drive the weapon through her bosom, yet all things considered, he let out a keening whistle that took steps to break her eardrums. 

Chang collapsed into herself, grasping her head against the piercing whistle. At the point when it was finished, she saw Chang and Ju Feng had embraced comparable defensive positions. 

"We intend no damage here," Chang said shakily. "We came here for shelter—" 

A wailing cry repeated from some place somewhere down in the modified Ferryman, removing Chang's words. It rose in power, with the goal that it imitated the man's whistle consummately. The sound rang out once more, closer, and with it came snaps and fast beating on wood. 

"Get the paddles up!" Ju Feng yelled. Chang was at that point pulling hers out of the water. 

Ju Feng ran past Chang and swung his paddle. He batted the man's polearm away from her chest and turned around the swing for a swipe at the man's legs. 

The disfigured man eased off, hindering Ju Feng's swing with his polearm, yet he took no further action to retaliate. He grinned, and the articulation was horrible, his lips twisting like worms around lopsided lines of teeth. 

Ju Feng dove the paddle into the water, attempting to drive them away from the Ferryman. 

"Be careful!" Chang cried, highlighting the boat. Pinpoints of light were apparent from a hole in the structure. There came another wail, and a breath later, two tremendous bodies jumped through the opening. In size and development they took after stags, however their appearances were a hybrid of canine and badger. They dispatched into the air utilizing enormous rump, one and afterward the other arriving on the little pontoon. 

The smell of spoiling tissue and gamey hide expanded in Chang's noses. Their specialty was not large enough to contain the monsters. Chang tumbled to her knees to try not to be hammered off the pontoon by the heaviness of the fuzzy bodies. 

The monster farthest from her whipped its head around, getting Chang by the leg. She fell on her posterior. The monster shook her like a recess doll, and interestingly Chang heard the bantam lady shout. Fear enlarged her eyes, yet she retaliated, and collapsed her body up to get at the monster's head. 

It lifted her by her leg and swung her, throwing its head and growling. On the second backswing Chang snatched her belt knife and planted it underneath the monster's eyes. She missed its consuming sphere significantly an inch. 

The monster keened and snapped its head down. The blade emerged from its tissue. It nibbled the sharp edge into equal parts, almost cutting off Chang's fingers as well. The bantam lady dropped the demolished weapon. Her skull smacked the pontoon, and she went silly.

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