The clearing became chaos given form.
When Youko herself back into the fray, the impact of her fury driven swipes drove into already-damaged flesh, forcing the creature to give ground, if only a step or two, its posture shifting as it was pressed from the front.
KaMara’s voice cut across the battlefield as she closed the distance, her warning sharp and timely. The creature’s evasive movements were no longer subtle. It bent, twisted, and slipped around direct lines of attack with unnatural precision, its body moving in ways no living thing should.
But the space around it was shrinking.
Yumi came flying towards the commander. Driven forward with sudden force, her form cut through the air in a spinning arc of steel. Her scythe carved a wide, whirling path that the commander could not fully escape this time. Even as it twisted to avoid the worst of it, the edge bit close, forcing it to recoil and abandon its footing.
Only to be slammed by the unrelenting momentum of the angered Moose woman. The blow forced the commander further off balance, its stance breaking as it was driven sideways across the scorched ground.
When Yukan approached with his steely gaze, and feinted; the commander reacted to it, shifting its weight to avoid a strike that never came. Leaving it exposed to the one that did.
The yari drove forward with devastating force, a wide wall of fire and will that tore through the space the creature had just moved into. The impact landed clean, piercing through with a burst of sacred flame that erupted outward in a controlled ring.
The blaze surged across the clearing, sweeping over the scattered remains of the fallen wights. Every corpse that littered the ground; whether already smoldering and burning or not was caught in it. Burned down to ash before it could rise again. The fire curved harmlessly around allies, its path deliberate, its purpose absolute.
The commander staggered.
Its blade rose again, but slower now. Its body twisted, attempting to recover that unnatural flow, but it no longer had the space. No longer had the numbers. No longer had control.
Youko’s pressure held it forward.
Yumi’s presence denied it escape.
Moo’s relentless force kept it off balance.
Yukan’s strike had broken something vital.
And as KaMara closed in, ready to intercept whatever desperate retaliation it might attempt
there was nowhere left for it to go.
The final moments came quickly.
A series of strikes, too many to track individually, landed in rapid succession. Each one forced the creature further into collapse, its form failing to recover between impacts. The hollow blue light in its eyes flickered violently, dimming with each passing second.
Until finally, the body fell.
Silence followed, heavy. Earned. And then it was as if the clearing exhaled.
From the edge of the battlefield, Rextelian stepped forward, his blade lowering at last as his gaze swept across the fallen commander.
“…That’s it,” he said, voice steady, though quieter now. “It’s over.”
Aya moved beside him, her posture easing as she scanned the area one final time. Nothing stirred. Nothing remained.
“…Finally,” she muttered, a breath leaving her as tension slipped from her shoulders.
Behind them, the soldiers of Nan Gau began to gather, the weight of the battle lifting in visible waves. Some leaned on weapons. Others simply stood, staring at the place where the commander had fallen.
Then came the sound. Low at first, but slowly growing.
Relief turning into quiet cheers.
Hiruq let out a howl, before his form shifted in a brief flare of light as he returned to himself. He rolled his shoulders once, breath steadying, before stepping forward.
His hand came down firmly against Moo’s shoulder.
“Good fight,” he said, voice rough with exertion but carrying clear approval.
There was the faintest hint of a grin before he moved on.
He approached Yukan next, extending a hand without hesitation.
“Well struck,” he said. “That ended it.”
Nearby, where the commander had fallen, something remained.
Amidst the ash and broken remnants, a dagger lay half-buried.
Its blade burned with a faint blue flame that did not spread, did not consume. It flickered quietly, unnaturally, as though it belonged to something deeper than fire itself.
Along its surface was etched a symbol.
A seven-pointed star.
Encircled.
Bound.
By thorns.
Rextelian turned back to the gathered group, his expression firm, but no longer strained.
“You fought well,” he said, voice carrying across the clearing. “All of you.”
His gaze lingered, acknowledging each of them in turn.
“You held the line. You ended this.” He paused a moment, before looking to each of them and continuing.
“…You have my thanks.”
Aya gave a small nod beside him, a faint smirk tugging at her lips.
“Yeah,” she added. “Not bad.”
The fires burned low and snow fell softly through drifting ash.
And for the first time in a long time Nan-Li was free of the undead.
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Fin
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