《Jackal Among Snakes》Chapter 379: Layered Problems
Advertisement
Argrave, Anneliese, and Orion followed behind the Supreme Myriarch and half a dozen elite soldiers of the elven army—the Kheshig, they were called. They didn’t walk on the ground… rather, they walked hundreds of feet above it, standing on the branches of the redwood trees. Down below, the elven gods and the Veidimen marched on foot, but the canopies of this forest were the home of the elves.
“Maybe it was a foolish thing to try and block the entrances to the centaurs’ retreat,” the Supreme Myriarch confided. “I thought to narrow the points they might attack from… but by bunching them closer together, they decided to unify. When the roots churned the ground, bursting free, the centaurs were the hardest hit. They thrive on the open ground—with the ground obstructed, we are benefitted while they are hindered.” He shook his head. “They’ve unified to cope with that hardship. It’s a disaster.”
Argrave agreed, but he thought the disaster was more so that the centaurs were attacking at all. He hoped they just stayed in that cave, twiddling their thumbs. Eventually, Argrave could would come to rouse Sarikiz, unifying elf and centaur in combatting Kirel Qircassia. But now, between Erlebnis and this…
If the elven gods’ faith in me wavers, it’s over, Argrave realized. I need to put the brakes on these issues, solve them quickly…
“Not much further to home,” the Supreme Myriarch looked back. “I’ll be frank with you, King Argrave, as your presence will mark the first time one of Vasquer has come not as a conqueror but as an ally. We are fewer than Vasquer, but having gone through this forest, you should know that means nothing. We live in a forest with Amaroks and Mishis, with giants and centaurs. And amidst all that, we are dominant. I hope you do not mistake our hospitality for naivete.”
“What is this place called?” Anneliese questioned.
“We do not name our cities,” the Supreme Myriarch answered her. “We change their location too often for them to be named. To us, it is merely home.”
With that, the Supreme Myriarch moved ahead. Argrave followed, and as he did he saw light ahead. The canopy grew thinner and thinner until the open sky greeted them, sunlight beaming down splendidly at this high altitude.
The city of the wood elves was not fixed to one location, but in a way, it always stayed the same. It required something consistent as its foundation—a gathering of four redwood trees, with branches strong enough to support a sizable population. Once they had that, the elves would clear out a great portion of the branches until it became a flat circle. From there, their city was born.
Though an elven warrior could enter the city from any direction, there were four entrances for the non-acclimated, or for those who hauled the creatures hunted on the forest floor—four pulley elevators, crafted of elven wire and wood. Even as Argrave watched, the first of his Veidimen honor guard was pulled up on these platforms. When their platform docked, the snow elves looked out across the cleared canopy in wonder. The floor of this city was held together by a patchwork of rope, wire, and woven branches in an intricate yet sturdy manner that incorporated enchantments at points. Still… one would need to watch their footing.
Advertisement
Everywhere else… the industry of the wood elves was on clear display. The primary food in the Bloodwoods was meat, and that showed. Towering wolves—Amaroks—and giant cats with tails as long as ten men were laid out in rows, then disassembled by skilled warriors in a systematic order and distributed to cooks. They extracted tendons, then gave those to mages who made the exceedingly potent wires they used for transportation and trapping. Everyone worked, even the children, the elderly, the pregnant, or the sick. Everyone had to pull their weight, lest the Bloodwoods leave them for dead.
Traditional houses were nowhere to be found, but Argrave saw people dip below where branches sloped downwards. All of the residences were just beneath this top layer, woven and carved from the branches. It was an exceedingly compact place. There might be five or six of these cities at a time, each working to support the local Tumen as it defended and hunted for them. When it came under fire, or more simply when the Tumen thought it necessary, the elves would abandon the city and migrate to build another. In time, the redwoods would regrow. Like this, the wood elves moved through the canopies, struggling for dominance in this vast and magical forest.
But with Kirel’s intervention, his wanton destruction of the forest, this method of city-building would fail fast. If the trees died, this way of life died. And the elves would surely not be ignorant of the forest’s condition.
“My men will escort you to a building, and treat you with hospitality,” the Supreme Myriarch informed Argrave. “Your men will receive much the same treatment. I must confer with my counsel, and with… with the gods,” he said in wonder. “In time, I will join you. I ask for your patience, King Argrave.”
“Then you have it,” Argrave answered.
#####
Argrave, Anneliese, and Orion sat on a wooden floor before a table woven of branches. Orion and Anneliese both looked around in wonder, but Argrave had seen much of this place before. Some wood elves walked into the room, placing down cups filled with a reddish liquid. They were hospitable, but not servile.
“This is a tea made of the fruits of the redwoods—firefruits, we call them,” an old female elf explained. “Though bitter and tasteless ordinarily, when roasted, ground, and dissolved in water, they become firemilk. Please, sate yourself with this. We shall prepare a large meal of meat while you wait,” she gestured, then walked away.
Argrave and Anneliese both picked up their cups at once, but Orion sat there unmoving. Argrave took a drink of fruit from a redwood, something that shouldn’t truly exist. He found it was quite a wondrous thing—it resembled cinnamon in taste, though had a natural sweetness to it and a certain resemblance to milk that gave it both a pleasant mouthfeel and an airy pleasantness.
“Way better than I expected,” Argrave said in surprise, then quickly took another drink.
Anneliese set her cup down, her focus on more urgent matters. Argrave’s praise got to Orion, and the prince was tempted to pick his cup up.
His queen conjured a ward over them. “Let us discuss strategy,” Anneliese said decisively.
“Yes, let’s,” Argrave agreed, leaning back comfortably. “We need to examine each and every member of our party for any ties to Erlebnis. Agreed?”
Advertisement
“I was just going to say that,” Anneliese nodded. “We cannot ignore this before it springs on us. Whether among the elves, or among our own, the elven gods cannot think we have ties to Erlebnis.”
“Chiteng is the only one that truly knows about my Blessing of Supersession,” Argrave pointed out.
“But he might’ve told them. He is their family. And regardless, that message Dimocles delivered was ominous,” Anneliese continued.
“But what can we do?” Argrave took another drink, finishing it. He looked down at the cup in disappointment, but no more liquid remained. “We’re in this, ride or die.”
“We can make sure that we find any problems before they arise,” Anneliese insisted. “And perhaps… I believe we should avoid the gods before the time comes.”
Argrave nodded. “They’ll be busy, anyhow. Though they’ve manifested… existence on the mortal realm is a process,” he explained. “With their physical form present, the realm that I visited will slowly converge with this one. Their divinity will spread throughout the land, making it theirs. I don’t suspect they’ll make any grand changes to the layout of the Bloodwoods, but once they exert ownership it should prevent any other breaches from another realm—more accurately, breaches from another god.” He set the cup down firmly. “They’ll get stronger as time passes. But before they can claim the whole of the Bloodwoods… Kirel’s gotta go.”
“And a breach—is it different from what the elven gods do?” Orion asked.
“Great question,” Argrave praised. “Yes, it is. The god breaching has no earthly connection to this place. The elven gods ended the last cycle of judgment here, and their worshippers still abound here, even if greatly diminished. They have a direct claim to this land, and so can appear fully. Sarikiz could, too. I don’t think any others would qualify. Kirel Qircassia, on the other hand, is forcing his way through. You can picture it… like he’s stuck his arm through a hole, and now works to widen it large enough to fit his whole body through.” He looked at Orion. “One small mercy is that Kirel Qircassia is morbidly obese, cosmologically speaking. It’ll be some time before his physical form appears.”
“Then why do the elves struggle?” Orion pressed.
“Well, Kirel has mortal servants,” Argrave shrugged. “As he becomes more present, he can field more of them. They’re what’s pushing the elves back, not the god himself. I don’t think it’s worrying. Kirel could kill all of us with ease, but I can’t imagine he has any servants has that are strong enough to resist the elven gods.” He looked back at Anneliese. “As you point out… we just need to make sure the elves and their gods stay on our side. Perhaps that’s what Erlebnis meant about starting the fire, but not sticking around to watch it burn. He might intend to sabotage, or… something.”
Anneliese nodded. “Indeed. We must do a thorough review of all our party members.”
Argrave saw movement, and turned his head to see the Supreme Myriarch walk into the room, descending down a sloped branch. “There’s another matter, isn’t there? The centaurs.”
Anneliese turned her head, too, and when she saw that the Supreme Myriarch had come, dispelled her ward.
“I can give you more time,” the commander offered graciously, hesitating at the end of the branch.
“No, you’re fine,” Argrave beckoned. “I just wished for some quiet time alone with my wife and brother. Please, sit.”
The Supreme Myriarch nodded, then came to sit opposite Argrave. “I’m curious to hear how you intend to help with the centaurs. Those under my command wish to meet you, but I thought to engage with you first.”
I’m curious too, Argrave thought. How would one put an end to a rampaging mass of centaurs? Ideally, Argrave would make use of them, as the original plan entailed.
“What are they doing, specifically?” Argrave asked. “You must have scouts.”
“It’s as I said. They have merged into a horde of unmatched size, and roam in a party that razes all it comes across. They hunt everything—elves, the wildlife, but of even greater alarm, they topple redwoods and burn them.” He shook his head. “Our wire traps have been working, but they come without relenting. Ordinarily we would simply take this opportunity to punish their foolhardiness… but with this strange breach from the invaders in the central north, our Tumens are hard-pressed.”
Argrave listened and thought. Though his mind drifted, wondering if there might be something else driving them into a frenzy, he tried to focus on simply solving the problem. After a while of silent thinking, during which the meal was served, Argrave narrowed his eyes and looked up.
“How densely packed are they?” he questioned, eating the meat. To say the least, it was not as pleasant as the firemilk.
“From my reports, they spread out somewhat, then converge on any resistance they encounter until it is entirely wiped out,” the elven commander summarized.
“You know the terrain of the forest well, right? You have maps.” Argrave leaned in.
“Very well,” the Supreme Myriarch said with some pride. “It matters less now that the roots have disturbed all, but topography will still apply.”
Argrave placed his elbows on the table and entwined his hands. “But how well do you know the underground? Caves, caverns, and the like.”
“That’s… more difficult,” the Supreme Myriarch admitted.
Argrave chewed over his idea more, then said, “It may be time to improve your cartography, Supreme Myriarch. I think I want to meet the rest of the elven commanders.”
“Certainly.” The Supreme Myriarch stood, and Argrave rose with him.
As they made to walk out, Anneliese stopped him. “What is your idea?” she asked in curiosity.
“Do you know what roots help prevent? Landslides. Sinkholes. Other such natural disasters,” Argrave explained. “They help fix the ground in place. And all the roots, Anneliese, are out of whack. If we want to stop, but not to kill?” Argrave looked ahead. “I think there’s a way. But for now… let’s get involved in elven high society.”
Advertisement
- In Serial195 Chapters
Dungeon's Path
The only places I have posted the story and allow it to exist are on RoyalRoad, Scribblehub, and my Patreon. So the world ended. Whoopsie? We didn’t even see it coming. Quite literally as it came at us faster than the speed of light. Don’t worry though, it got better. Also, I am not joking about the world ending. Most people say that and mean humans are inconvenienced for some reason. Nope, all matter disintegrated at the atomic scale there for a few moments. Apparently the local universe wasn’t actually stable? Don’t ask me to go into too much detail. It would require both of us to have a few more college degrees than sense, and I at least lack them (both the degrees and the sense). Anyway, the energy/matter/wibbly wobbly strings were at a local minimum and not the universal minimum. Basically, what we took for sea level was actually a nice little mountain lake and when the dam busted so did, well, everything. Now here is where things go a bit off track with what normal meant before. You see magic is real, qi is real, gods are real. Not on old Earth mind you but souls pay little attention to time and space so we dreamed of it. In fact, the closer the shift in reality got to Earth, the closer our dreams got to the new reality. This is basically me tip toeing around the fact that it was a ‘System Apocalypse’. Reality became a video game, I became a dungeon, and this is my story. Doyle Huxley just wanted a normal life but as the above might clue you in on that just isn’t in the cards. He gets to experience a “Path Based System Apocalypse” and some early paths he takes, both literally and figuratively, lead to him becoming a dungeon. The aim is to release chapters once a week on Friday. Cursing will be avoided and no naughty adult action will take place in the story.
8 404 - In Serial60 Chapters
Deep Space Combat School: Nexus
In the deep of space, a fully automated battle school instructs students and prepares them for leadership in the military, politics, and business. But the station holds secrets that none on board suspect, and when things go wrong the students must find answers for themselves.
8 149 - In Serial8 Chapters
Exchange Cultivator
Ye Hao cultivated with a single goal to achieve immortality, he cultivated diligently day and night, but to his horror, his results were just above average unable to accept the outcome. He left on a quest to find some opportunity, to achieve a breakthrough, unexpectedly he got a huge opportunity- Inheritance of 9 stage Tribulation Transcendent, he was over the moon, as he walked to accept the inheritance, someone killed him. ye hao last breath left the murin world. He knew he had died but really what was going on, he felt the sensation of soft pillow on his head, he quickly opened his eye, he saw a whole new world before him, he was initially happy he had survived, the feeling of dying, fading away was quite horrific but he lived. He had traveled through the Time-Space swapping body with the Below-Average rich boy, after recovering his sense he quickly checked his ding-dong, to his merry, it was there. If it was a woman's body, man it would have been awkward, so embarrassing, he would have committed suicide, rather than live shamefully, really. After calming down, he tried sensing his cultivation, there was no response, no feeling, "my cultivation... is..gone" "just like that.. it is gone" There were now two options, one start all over or to live a normal life, Feeling frustrated to cultivate all over, he gave up on cultivation all over. With a resolute heart, he decides to live a normal life. This world was different, so he thought he could take a different path in this life and live a life full of fun, no closed-door cultivation for decades only to suffer from piles. This world was quite the wonder, with its culture, technology, it was totally different from his previous world where weak and mortal were considered less than trash. He especially liked the Internet thing, god knows how addicted he became to insta reels, surfing for hours, and watching web-show, dramas. otherworldy fairies with no comparison would sing and dance for him free, life was truly awesome here. Among all the things he liked reading web-novel, he jokingly compared his experience with the main character where they send to the magical world, becoming extraordinary powerful, he frowned wasn't he the exact opposite? "..." "So am I like a waste product of this... boy" "he got Isekaied, WTF" he laughed, thinking all this. hadn't he left all this stuff behind, so why waste time thinking this, now he will enjoy his slow life. ------ Unknown to him, how heaven's were playing game with him, it was like feeding the sheep with luxury before butchering him. Would he be able to survive that?
8 137 - In Serial48 Chapters
Hatred: The Journey of the Madman [Old]
This story is cancelled and has been rewritten. The Rewrite is already online, follow this link: https://royalroadl.com/fiction/13819/journey-of-the-madman Sorry for the inconvenience.
8 153 - In Serial29 Chapters
Linked
What links all mankind? Is it the blood the runs through us? Is it the mana that all creatures generate. Or is it the bonds of family and business? At the center of the tale. Drew, the young son of a bandit tribe leader, awakens to find he now leads them. He also possess something that he knows can't possibly belong to him. In fact it likely doesn't even belong to this world, but he will use it to his fullest ability if it can protect the ones closest to him. In volume I, (Linked 'in blood') we will learn of the gruesome story behind what would soon be known as the 'greatest technological and cultural leap forward' this world has ever known. In volume II (Linked 'in gold') we learn the lucrative exploits of the 'Duke of Blood'. This includes the building of the capital city, 'Goldianus'. And the greatest trade network of the three kingdoms. The begining of an era known as 'The Envious Rebellion'.
8 125 - In Serial10 Chapters
I am not your Daddy
"Is she your daughter?" a question asked by many."No she is my wife and mine" i said proudly. My little wify is all mine and i am her everything. Her tiny frame looked so seductive. She looked at me with sleepy eyes. "Go to sleep" i said firmly. She did a little action with her hand. "Let's sleep oman, come" I took a sigh. I went near her. Her new forming boobs were visible through sheer cloth and Her legs were exposed. I laid beside her. Her back was aginst my chest. I slowly slide my palm on her waist. "Umm" she moaned."You like it" i took her moan as yes. I pushed my hand towards her little soft stomach. I slowly grabbed her clothed boob and squeezed harder.Oman married 15 year old tara to save her from evil and dirty eyes of men who wanted to take advantage of her as she had no one to take care of her. Oman took her in his care but later on his sister forced him to marry tara. So that she can be safe. But fatima didn't knew, oman is beast himself. He will not stop himself, when he will start developing feelings for his little wife.But the problem was that when people looked at this couple they thaught they were father and daughter because of their big age gap. (18+)Historical novel!!! mature content !!!Read at your own risk.
8 116

