Chapter 32: Ch32 A Ride Of Chaos
The spiked beast twitched beneath him like a stubborn mule that had suddenly grown steel quills. Its gray hide glistened with sweat and mud, while its jagged horns looked more like a torture device than anything that should be used as reins.
"Easy now, you walking porcupine," Luther muttered, patting its armored back. His grin widened as the beast bucked hard enough to shake an oak tree. "What’s the matter? Not used to someone with style riding you?"
The creature roared and tried to shake him off, but Luther clamped down with his legs, laughing like a madman in a tavern brawl. His crystal dangled against his chest, glowing faintly in rhythm with his heartbeat. He reached up and hooked it to his belt loop, patting it like a pocketed coin.
"Stay there, shiny. If I drop you, Mariana will kill me before anything else does."
The beast snapped its jaws, twisted, then slammed itself into a tree. The impact rattled Luther’s bones, but he only laughed louder.
"Ha! Is that all? I once arm-wrestled a troll with a hangover stronger than you." He leaned forward, whispering like a conspirator. "Here’s a tip: stop wasting energy. I always win."
The beast didn’t seem convinced. It reared up on its hind legs, claws thrashing wildly, trying to crush the man clinging to its back. Luther just leaned casually, dodging blows by hairbreadth margins. His voice carried like he was having the time of his life.
"Oh, you’ll make a fine steed. We’ll be unstoppable—you, me, and maybe a saddle if you behave."
For a second, he imagined himself parading into the nearest village on the spiked beast. The horrified expressions, the screaming children, the fainting merchants—it was beautiful. He’d finally get the recognition he deserved.
But the daydream shattered when the beast suddenly froze. Its body stiffened, its nostrils flared, and an uneasy growl built in its throat.
"What now?" Luther muttered, scanning the trees.
The forest had gone quiet. Too quiet. Even the birds had abandoned the branches. The only sound was the sticky, wet slither echoing from the underbrush.
Then it came crawling out.
A slug—if a slug had grown to the size of a carriage, sprouted dozens of half-formed limbs, and oozed black liquid that hissed when it touched the ground. Its skin pulsed as though something inside was trying to claw its way out. Veins of darkness crawled across its slimy body, and where its eyes should’ve been were two pits of glowing red.
Luther blinked. Then grinned. "...That’s the ugliest thing I’ve ever seen. And I once looked at myself in a pond first thing in the morning."
The spiked beast snarled, stomping backward in panic. Luther held on tight, chuckling.
"What’s wrong, porcupine? Don’t tell me you’re scared of some slug. It’s just... ew." He tilted his head, watching the black ooze drip and burn a smoking hole into the grass. "...Okay, ew with acid. That’s new."
The corrupted slug’s body lurched forward with a guttural hiss, and suddenly the air stank of rot and iron. The spiked beast bolted without warning, leaping through the trees as if the devil himself had crawled up behind it. Luther threw his head back and howled with laughter.
"YEEE-HAW! NOW THIS IS A RIDE!"
Branches snapped, trees cracked, and animals fled in terror as the beast tore through the forest, Luther clinging to its back like a deranged knight. The slug followed, its body splitting and stretching unnaturally, moving far too fast for its grotesque size.
Every time it slammed into the earth, shockwaves rippled through the soil, making the forest groan like it was alive. The black ooze it left behind spread outward, eating the grass, the roots, even the bark of trees.
For once, Luther’s grin faltered. He leaned forward, eyes narrowing. "That... doesn’t look natural."
But the beast beneath him didn’t give him time to think. It leapt over a fallen log, stumbled, and nearly pitched him into the dirt. Luther grunted, yanking on one of its horns like a rein.
"Steady! Don’t kill me before I kill the slimeball!"
The slug slammed into a tree just behind them, splitting the trunk in half. Splinters whizzed past Luther’s head, one grazing his cheek.
"Alright, alright, enough running!" Luther barked, yanking hard. The beast screeched but skidded to a halt in a clearing. Luther slid off, landing with a heavy thud.
He cracked his neck, eyes locking onto the slug as it oozed into the clearing. "You’re disgusting, you’re loud, and you’ve officially ruined my ride."
The slug hissed, its maw opening unnaturally wide, rows of jagged teeth forming from its slime.
"Oh, so we’re doing this." Luther rolled his shoulders, grinning again. "Fine. Let’s dance."
The slug lunged, its body slamming down like a collapsing tower. Luther dodged, grabbing a branch thicker than his arm and swinging it like a bat. It smacked against the monster with a splat, spraying black slime everywhere.
Luther grimaced. "Ugh, gross! Why is it always slime?"
The ooze burned through the branch in seconds, and the smell of rot choked the clearing.
For a fleeting moment, Luther’s gaze flicked to the crystal on his belt. It pulsed faintly, reacting to the creature’s corruption.
"...Huh. You know something I don’t, shiny?"
The slug’s body twitched again, and for a second he swore he heard whispers coming from inside it. His grin faded completely this time.
"This isn’t just a monster."
The slug lunged again, but Luther didn’t dodge this time. Instead, he grabbed his unwilling spiked beast by the horn and shoved it forward.
"Go get ’em, porcupine!"
The beast roared in outrage but collided with the slug, driving its quills deep into the slimy body. The slug screeched, black fluid spraying like rain. The air sizzled where it landed.
Luther charged in, fists swinging with reckless abandon. He pounded the corrupted flesh until it shuddered and writhed, then with a final roar, the slug collapsed into itself, melting into a pool of foul-smelling tar that slowly seeped into the earth.
Silence.
The spiked beast collapsed on its stomach, panting heavily. Luther wiped slime from his face, smearing it worse. Then he burst out laughing, patting the beast’s head.
"Good job, partner! Knew you had it in you. Don’t give me that look—you and I are destined!"
The beast glared, too tired to argue.
Luther stretched, grabbed two boar corpses from earlier, and slung them over his shoulders. Then he took the beast by the horn and started dragging it along with him.
"Come on. Mariana’s waiting with supper, and I’m starving. You’ll fit right in—she loves big dumb animals."
The crystal pulsed again, brighter this time. Luther paused, glancing at it. For the briefest second, he thought he saw a shadow curl behind the light, like a hand pressing against glass.
His grin wavered. "...Well, that’s not ominous at all."
The forest wind shifted, carrying the faint echo of whispers—distant, chilling, and growing louder.
Luther tilted his head, smirking despite the chill crawling down his spine. "Guess the fun’s just getting started."