Chapter 446: Hollow Vein X
The bone-mask Overseer's body shook as the prayer ripped through him. His arms stretched too long, bones snapping and reshaping with wet cracks. The second mouth inside his throat widened until it split his chest, jagged teeth gnashing together as black drool poured down. His eyes rolled back white, and his voice came out as a guttural growl layered with a hundred whispers.
"The Maw… hungers…"
From his warped body, tendrils of shadow burst forth—long, twisted cords lined with teeth and claws. They whipped through the cavern, lashing at stone, tearing grooves into the floor. Each one pulsed like a living vein, dragging rot in its wake.
Asher didn't slow. He planted his foot and swung. His scythe cleaved the first tendril apart, spraying black ichor that hissed when it touched the ground. A second tendril shot for his leg, but he spun with it, letting the chain-sickle arc sever it clean. Two more came from above, jagged and snapping like jaws, but his cloak flared with bloodlight and they glanced off as though striking armor.
He pushed forward through the storm.
The Overseer moved like a puppet now, every limb bending wrong, every motion driven by the Maw that pressed from behind him. His new mouth shrieked, a sound that cracked the torches in their brackets, flame spilling out. From that cry, more shadow poured, crawling across the floor like a tide of worms, dragging bone fragments with them.
Asher lifted his free hand. His blood dripped faster, drawn out by will. It coiled into a sphere in his palm, burning like a crimson heart. With a flick, he slammed it down into the crawling tide. The blood-heart burst, a red wave ripping outward in all directions. Shadows screamed, melting into ash, bones crumbling into dust.
"Pathetic," he said flatly, stepping through the haze.
The Overseer hurled himself forward, his body a frenzy of teeth and tendrils. The second mouth snapped, dripping corruption, aiming to swallow him whole.
Asher didn't back away. He ducked low, cloak sweeping wide, and drove his scythe upward in a brutal arc. The blade carved from hip to shoulder, tearing through warped ribs. The Overseer's body convulsed, but instead of falling, the wound stretched wider—like a door being forced open. Behind the ruined flesh, a massive set of jaws pushed outward, the Maw itself trying to claw free.
For a heartbeat, the cavern froze. The seed pulsed with joy, as if welcoming its master's breath.
Asher's eyes narrowed. He adjusted his grip on the scythe, the edge glowing hotter with black-red light.
"You're not crawling out tonight."
And with a surge of speed, he swung again, aiming to cut the creature down before the Maw could finish its entry.
The Overseer's body tore apart like wet parchment, the chest splitting down the middle as the second mouth yawned wider. From within spilled not just blood, but chunks of bone and shadow, all dragged into shape by something greater pressing to get through. Ribs twisted into fangs, spine bent backward, and what had once been a man became a living doorway to the Maw.
The cavern howled with its arrival. The torches dimmed, their flames snuffed one by one until only the pulsing red light of the seed lit the room. The air turned thick, hard to breathe, heavy with the stink of rot and iron.
A massive jaw shoved its way out of the Overseer's ruined body, black gums lined with jagged teeth that dripped filth like tar. Tendrils coiled around the stone floor, dragging the half-born Maw forward. Its voice was no longer human, but a chorus of whispers and screams layered over each other.
"Devour… devour… devour…"
Asher tightened his grip on the scythe, his stance lowering, cloak flickering in the red glow. His face didn't twist in fear—his eyes sharpened. He had seen worse, killed worse, and if the Maw thought it could step through in half a body, it was about to learn what waited on this side.
The beast struck first. A tendril whipped down, heavy as a chain, cracking the stone where Asher had stood a heartbeat before. He slid sideways, cloak snapping like a banner, and the scythe cut up in a sharp line. The tendril split, black ichor spraying across the cavern floor, sizzling where it landed.
Another tendril lashed at his back. Without turning, Asher spun the weapon in a vicious backhand sweep. The scythe's edge carved it clean, the severed half writhing like a snake until it withered to ash.
The Maw lunged its giant jaw forward, snapping down to swallow him whole. The bite crushed a stone pillar into dust, but Asher wasn't there. He had already moved, sliding along the edge of the collapsing rubble, cloak brushing stone. His scythe flashed, dragging sparks across the ground as he whipped it in an upward arc, slamming it into the jaw. The blade bit deep, splitting teeth, ripping black saliva across the floor in a flood.
The creature howled, voice shaking the cavern walls. Shadows poured thicker from the wound, trying to swarm him, faces screaming inside the black mass.
Asher didn't hesitate. He shoved his hand into the air and willed his blood to answer. It streamed from his palm, glowing crimson, coiling into a crescent around the scythe's edge. When he swung, the weapon dragged that bloodlight with it, turning the slash into a wide arc of red force. The swarm of shadows split apart instantly, scattered into ash, their screams dying mid-cry.
The half-born Maw pulled back, its huge jaw snapping in frustration. The Overseer's ruined body dangled beneath it like a broken puppet, ribs jutting outward as support. More tendrils shot out in wild fury, aiming to pin Asher to the ground.
He leapt straight into them. His body blurred, every strike of the scythe breaking chains of flesh and darkness in brutal, efficient cuts. Tendrils fell in heaps around him, twitching like dying snakes before rotting away. The scythe gleamed brighter with each kill, drinking in the death it dealt.
Then the Maw tried to crush him. The jaw snapped down again, wider, heavier, fangs glowing faint red as if the seed itself was feeding its strength. The cavern floor cracked under its weight, stone screaming as it came down.
Asher planted both hands on the scythe and met it head-on. The blade braced between those enormous teeth, sparks flying as fangs ground against black steel. His boots slid across the stone, cloak whipping in the storm of force. For a heartbeat, the cavern itself seemed to hold its breath—man and monster locked, power straining against power.
Then Asher roared. Bloodlight burst across his body, muscles tightening like iron, veins glowing. He shoved upward with a surge that split the air like thunder. The jaw tore open wider than it should, cracking bone, black ichor spraying in a flood.
The Maw recoiled, screaming in fury.
Asher straightened, scythe dripping with both blood and shadow. His voice carried, sharp and merciless, cutting through the cavern like a blade.
"You should've stayed buried."
And with that, he advanced again—no hesitation, no retreat—ready to carve the half-born god into nothing but ruin.