Chapter 23-Power and Madness
Ivan walked closer to Scorpion with deliberate, unhurried steps, his skeletal form casting a long, eerie shadow across the blood-stained floor. The hollow darkness in Ivan's eye sockets held no interest or pity, only the cold detachment of a predator toying with its prey. As he approached, the fear in Scorpion's eyes deepened, morphing into sheer terror. The surrounding air seemed to thicken, suffocating any hope William Katz, the man behind the Scorpion mask, might have had left.
Ivan finally stopped, mere inches from Scorpion's trembling form. He tilted his head slightly, as if in thought, his gaze fixed on the broken man before him. “You seem familiar now that I think about it,” Ivan mused, his voice as cold and distant as the grave. “That pathetic scream of yours… it reminds me of a student I once taught. What was your name again? It seems to have slipped my mind.”
“My name is… William,” Scorpion stammered, his voice shaky, laced with desperation. “William Katz. It's true, I was one of your students.”
“Ah, yes, William Katz,” Ivan echoed, the name rolling off his non-existent tongue with a faint trace of disdain. “You were easily one of my worst students, weak, lacking in discipline. Tell me, how did you manage to remove the bomb from your head? I've been wondering about that.”
“Nikolai… Nikolai deactivated them all,” William spat out, his anger momentarily overcoming his fear. “He helped us escape after you bastards turned us into monsters!”
Ivan's expression remained blank, unfeeling, as if William's words were nothing more than the buzzing of an annoying fly. Without warning, Ivan plunged the artifact's blade into William's leg, causing him to cry out in agony. “I believe I told you there would be no more profanity,” Ivan said coldly. “You trash.”
William crumpled to the ground, his remaining arm clutching his leg in pain. Blood oozed from the fresh wound, as he tried to crawl away, inching slowly toward the briefcase he had dropped earlier. Every movement was a struggle, his body was weakened by the relentless blood loss, but desperation fueled his determination. He reached the briefcase, his fingers trembling as he fumbled to open it. Inside, a small bottle of pills lay nestled among other supplies, each pill a vibrant, unnatural color.
With trembling hands, William broke open the bottle, the glass shattering and spilling across the floor. Ignoring the shards that cut into his flesh, he scooped up the pills, along with fragments of glass, and shoved them all into his mouth. The sharp edges tore at his throat as he swallowed, but he didn't care. He was beyond reason, beyond pain, driven only by the primal urge to survive, to escape the nightmare that Ivan had become.
William’s body convulsed violently, his screams echoing through the gymnasium as the grotesque transformation began. His skin, once human, turned a sickly gray and began to bubble as though boiling from within. The sight was horrifying, flesh rotting and reforming in twisted, unnatural ways. His previous injuries regenerated and healed. His eyes liquefied, melting away as his eye sockets fused shut, leaving his face a smooth, featureless mask where his eyes once were. His mouth, however, warped and stretched grotesquely, its size growing until it dominated his face. From within the gaping maw, a single, grotesque eyeball emerged, bloodshot and filled with malevolent fury.
As the transformation continued, his body swelled, muscles bulging and expanding with terrifying force. His once-human frame became a hulking, monstrous form, each muscle fiber straining against his increasingly tight, ripped clothing. Massive black wings burst from his back with a sickening crunch, the feathers sharp and crystalline, glittering ominously like obsidian blades. They flexed and unfurled, casting a dark shadow over the gym, their edges gleaming with lethal potential.
William's scorpion tail, now even more menacing, grew longer and more flexible, its stinger elongating into a razor-sharp point that dripped with venom. The tail swayed menacingly, ready to strike with deadly precision. His right arm morphed into a hideous, segmented whip, bristling with jagged blades that resembled the legs of a monstrous centipede. The whip-like appendage snapped and curled, eager to tear through anything in its path. Meanwhile, his left arm thinned grotesquely, the skin stretching tight over elongated bones, ending in claw-like fingers with nails as sharp as daggers.
His entire body was now a grotesque patchwork of unnatural growths and twisted mutations, with thick veins pulsating just beneath the surface, coursing with a sickly greenish-black fluid. His legs, transformed into powerful, cheetah-like limbs, were built for speed, and he crouched low, ready to pounce with ferocious velocity. The transformation complete, William stood as a nightmarish abomination, a twisted mockery of both man and beast.
The surrounding air seemed to crackle with dark energy, the very essence of his being now radiating a palpable aura of malevolence. He was no longer William Katz, the former student, he was something far worse, a monster born of desperation and fueled by rage. And yet, through it all, Ivan remained unfazed, his hollow gaze fixed on the abomination before him, as if daring William to make his next move.
“How tragic,” Ivan murmured, his tone a mix of pity and disdain. “You were so consumed by hatred for what we did to you, yet you’ve become something far more monstrous just to try and defeat me. I wonder what those pills were…” His voice trailed off, but his hollow eyes never left the abomination that was once William.
The monster charged at Ivan, its speed shocking for something so massive. Its clawed fingers, now grotesquely elongated, slashed through the air with deadly precision. Ivan moved like a wraith, effortlessly dodging the vicious swipes. The creature’s nails carved deep gouges into the floor, but Ivan remained untouched, gliding out of reach with a fluidity that seemed almost supernatural.
In a swift counterattack, Ivan summoned a pillar of bones from the ground, the sharp, ivory structure erupting with brutal force. It impaled the creature straight through its abdomen. But where a fatal wound should have left the monster writhing in pain, it merely grunted, its grotesque face twisting into a grin as the wound sealed itself almost immediately, the flesh knitting together with unnatural speed.
Ivan’s expression remained unchanged, though a hint of annoyance crept into his voice. “Regeneration that potent… how troublesome. It seems I’ll have to completely erase you. The boss won’t be pleased that there will be no body left for an autopsy.”
The monster lunged at him again, its bloodshot eye glowing with unrestrained fury, but Ivan remained calm, his bony fingers twitching slightly in anticipation. His voice cut through the chaos with eerie composure. “Children, take note of this moment,” he called out, never taking his eyes off the creature. “The line between overwhelming power and overwhelming madness is perilously thin. Cross it, and you’ll find yourself lost to the abyss, just as he has.”
Ivan, unfazed by the monstrous transformation before him, calmly assessed the situation. His skeletal frame seemed almost delicate compared to the towering behemoth that was once William Katz. But Ivan had faced countless abominations in his time, and this one would be no different.
With a flick of his wrist, Ivan conjured a series of bone spikes from the ground, each as sharp as a razor’s edge. The spikes erupted from beneath William, aiming to impale him in multiple places. William, despite his monstrous form, moved with surprising agility, dodging most of the spikes while allowing a few to graze his thick hide. His wounds began to heal almost immediately, the flesh knitting itself back together with alarming speed.
Undeterred, Ivan pressed the attack. He extended his arm, and the bone spikes shattered, transforming into a swarm of bone shards that whirled around him like a deadly vortex. The shards shot toward William, slicing through the air with lethal precision. William roared, his scorpion-like tail whipping around to deflect the shards, but some found their mark, embedding themselves in his skin.
As William charged, Ivan summoned the souls of the damned. Ethereal figures appeared around him, their faces twisted in eternal agony. With a motion of his hand, Ivan directed the souls to converge on William. The souls screamed as they closed in, their wails piercing through the air with a frequency so high it shattered the glass in the room. William staggered, his one eye squinting in pain as the screams assaulted his senses. His ears, though altered, were not immune to the soul-shattering power of Ivan’s necromancy. Blood began to trickle from his ears as the souls continued their barrage.
Taking advantage of the momentary weakness, Ivan activated 0-1 Blood of the Dead God. The blood took the form of a whip, a weapon of pure destruction that pulsed with malevolent energy. Ivan lashed out with the whip, the blood slicing through the air like a blade. William barely managed to dodge the first strike, the whip’s edge grazing his crystalline wings and disintegrating a portion of them on contact. The wings cracked and splintered, fragments of crystal falling to the ground.
Ivan’s strikes were relentless. Each crack of the whip sent William reeling, the blood tearing through his flesh with every blow. William fought back fiercely, his mutated arms and tail lashing out in a desperate attempt to land a hit on Ivan. But the lich was always one step ahead, his movements precise and calculated, weaving through William's attacks with an ease that belied his skeletal form.
Despite the damage William sustained, his regeneration was relentless. No matter how many wounds Ivan inflicted, they closed almost as quickly as they were made. Ivan’s attacks, though devastating, seemed to be doing little more than stalling the inevitable. The fight dragged on, a brutal dance of bone, blood, and fury, with neither side willing to give an inch.
But as the battle wore on, Ivan’s patience began to wane. The constant regeneration was becoming an annoyance, a tedious obstacle in what should have been a swift execution. His hollow eyes narrowed as he watched yet another wound on William's body stitch itself back together.
“Enough of this,” Ivan muttered, the irritation clear in his voice. He gripped the artifact tighter, ready to end this farce of a fight once and for all.
Ivan stood in the center of the gymnasium, his skeletal form surrounded by the ominous crimson aura of the Blood of the Dead God. The artifact pulsed in his hand, its malevolent energy coiling around him like a living entity, eager to unleash its destructive power. With a flick of his wrist, Ivan commanded the blood to surge forth, creating a maelstrom that whipped around the room with terrifying speed.
The bloodstorm spiraled outward, forming a crimson vortex that threatened to consume everything in its path. Yet, with a level of precision that only a master could achieve, Ivan directed the swirling blood away from the children, ensuring they remained unharmed. The beast that was once William, now a twisted amalgamation of fury and monstrous power, had no choice but to take to the air. His massive, crystalline wings flapped furiously as he ascended to the top of the gymnasium, clinging to the rafters like a predator watching its prey.
From above, the beast’s singular, grotesque eye began to glow with an unnatural light. A low, guttural growl emanated from deep within its chest, reverberating through the gymnasium. Suddenly, with a blinding flash, a petrifying blast shot from the eye, its energy so intense that it turned the very ground it touched into solid stone. The wave of energy streaked towards Ivan, intent on turning him into a statue.
But Ivan was not so easily bested. With a swift motion, he extended the blood across the entire gymnasium, creating a barrier of crimson that stretched from wall to wall. The blood formed an impenetrable shield, absorbing the petrifying blast and stopping it in its tracks. The barrier pulsated, the blood within it reacting to the violent energy of the blast, but it held firm, protecting Ivan from the deadly attack.
However, this act came with a price. As the blood barrier solidified, a sound began to echo through the gymnasium. It was not a sound of this world, but a haunting, otherworldly scream, a scream that emanated from the very essence of the artifact itself. The children, who had been watching the battle in stunned silence, began to hear it too. The scream was filled with despair and agony, a cacophony of tortured voices that clawed at their minds.
The children clutched their heads, trying to block out the sound, but it was relentless, piercing through their very souls. The same scream that Ivan had grown accustomed to, the maddening wail of the countless damned souls bound to the artifact, now filled the gymnasium. The air grew thick with dread, the temperature dropping, as if the room itself was responding to the artifact’s malevolent presence.
The blood-soaked artifact's screams filled the gymnasium with a haunting resonance, a chorus of agony that pierced the soul. Among the tortured cries, one voice stood out, a young boy's voice, fragile and trembling, laced with unimaginable pain.
“Brother, why are you doing this? We’re family… It hurts so much!” The boy's voice echoed, a desperate plea that reverberated through the room. His words trembled with fear, each syllable soaked in betrayal.
A sharp cry of pain followed, raw and visceral, as if the very air was being torn apart by his suffering. “Please, stop it! Stop it! Sister, brother, why are you just watching? Stop him, please!” The boy's voice grew more frantic, more desperate, as if he could see his siblings standing by, while he endured the torment.
The screams intensified, each one more harrowing than the last, as if the boy was being stabbed over and over again, his voice rising in pitch with each agonizing strike. “Why? What did I ever do to deserve this? Did you really hate me so much… that you wanted me to die?”
The anguish in his voice was unbearable, a mixture of confusion, pain, and heartbreak that clawed at the minds of all who heard it. His voice cracked, faltering as if the strength to continue was slipping away, yet the suffering endured.
“F-Fate, please st—” The voice cut off abruptly, leaving an eerie, suffocating silence in its wake. The pause was brief, but at that moment, the weight of the boy’s despair hung heavy in the air, a suffocating blanket of sorrow that seemed to pull the room into darkness.
But then, the screams started again, as if on a loop, the boy’s torment replaying from the beginning. “Brother, why are you doing this? We’re family… It hurts so much!” The cycle began anew, each repetition a fresh wound, dragging those who listened deeper into the abyss of the artifact's cursed existence.
The screams were not just heard, they were felt. They resonated deep within the bones, vibrating with a sickening intensity that made the heart race and the skin crawl. The children in the gymnasium trembled, some clutching their ears, others squeezing their eyes shut as if to block out the nightmare unfolding around them. But there was no escape. The artifact’s screams were inescapable, a relentless assault on the senses, a reminder of the unbearable pain and madness that it harbored within.
Ivan sighed, his expression one of mild irritation as he noticed the toll the artifact's screams were taking on his students. The air was thick with the remnants of those tormented voices, and the children's faces were pale, their eyes wide with a mixture of fear and confusion. With a dismissive wave of his skeletal hand, Ivan deactivated the blood shield, the barrier dissolving as if it had never been. He turned his back to the beast above, seemingly indifferent to the danger it posed, exposing himself completely.
William, now nothing more than a twisted monstrosity driven by primal instincts, saw his opportunity. His wings beat furiously as he descended at breakneck speed, his singular eye locked onto Ivan’s unprotected form. His instincts screamed that this was his moment, the perfect chance to obliterate his former teacher once and for all. The surrounding air crackled with anticipation, every fiber of his mutated being poised for the kill.
But Ivan remained calm, his bony fingers interlaced as he addressed the children. “Now, students, I have one very crucial lesson for you all when it comes to combat,” he began, his voice steady, almost soothing in its cold detachment. “Always assume you are weaker than your enemy. Never act overconfident, for that shall spell your demise.”
As he spoke, blood began to seep from the artifact’s handle, coiling around him like a living entity, forming a dense, pulsating barrier. The blood shimmered with otherworldly energy, the screams from before now a low, haunting hum that reverberated through the room.
William, consumed by the thrill of the hunt, was oblivious to the danger. His speed was too great, his trajectory too fixed. By the time he realized the trap he was hurtling into, it was too late. His monstrous form slammed into the barrier with full force, the impact sending a shockwave through the gymnasium. For a fleeting moment, there was a blinding flash of crimson, and then…nothing.
William's body disintegrated on contact, his form unraveling into nothingness as the blood barrier consumed him utterly. There was no trace left, no remnants for his regenerative abilities to latch onto. He was simply gone, erased from existence as if he had never been.
Ivan stood there, unmoved, his gaze still focused on the students as the last wisps of blood faded back into the artifact. “And that, children,” he continued, as if nothing had happened, “is why arrogance in battle leads to ruin. Always be prepared, and never underestimate your opponent. Lesson over”
The lesson was clear, delivered with the brutal finality that only Ivan could impart. The children, still reeling from the spectacle, could only nod in stunned silence, the gravity of his words, and actions, etched into their minds forever.
Ivan walked over as he noticed something on the ground, one of the many pills that William had with him, “Neat it seems he missed consuming one, the boss should be grateful for me obtaining this,” Ivan said joyfully.
“Sir, when that man arrived here it sounded like he was looking for someone, could it have been Maxwell?” Noah questioned.
“That was my suspicion as well, alright kids we need to go looking for him, I can protect you all, but you'll have to stick close to me, I don't want any kind of sneak attacks to endanger you,” Ivan commanded.
As Ivan and the students moved through the dimly lit hallways of the facility, the air was thick with the stench of death and decay. The floor was littered with the bodies of non-awakened agents, their lifeless forms a testament to the carnage that had unfolded. The walls, once pristine, were now stained with dark, smeared blood. Ivan led the way, his skeletal frame cutting a stark contrast to the surrounding gore. He ran into numerous intruders as they wandered the halls.
The first intruder they encountered was a burly man with a crude, oversized axe. He swung it with reckless abandon, but Ivan barely flinched. With a flick of his wrist, a bone spear erupted from the ground, skewering the man mid-swing. His expression shifted from rage to shock as he crumpled to the floor, the weapon piercing his chest. “Too slow,” Ivan remarked coldly, his voice echoing off the walls.
The second opponent was a wiry woman with a penchant for fire. She unleashed a torrent of flames, her hands crackling with dangerous heat. Ivan responded by summoning a wall of blood from his artifact, creating a barrier that absorbed the flames effortlessly. As the woman hesitated, Ivan’s bone weapons emerged, slicing through the air with precision. “You cannot burn what is already dead,” he intoned, the weapons cleaving through her with surgical accuracy.
Their next encounter was a man in sleek, high-tech armor, armed with a rapid-fire gun. He opened fire, but Ivan’s bone shields deflected the bullets with ease. Ivan raised a hand, and the air around the man began to vibrate with a low, ominous hum. The screams from the souls of the damned influence pierced through the man’s eardrums, rendering him incapacitated. As he fell to his knees, clutching his head, Ivan’s bone blades came down, ending the threat swiftly. “It seems you couldn't augment your lack of skill,” Ivan said, stepping over the fallen foe.
In the fourth skirmish, a woman wielding an electric whip charged at Ivan. Her whip crackled with energy, but Ivan’s bone creations were already on the move. They lashed out, entangling the whip and pulling her off balance. Ivan approached calmly, his artifact’s blood-forming a scythe-like weapon that cleaved through her defenses. “How shocking, you were a disappointment,” he said sarcastically, as the woman fell, her body convulsing from the severed whip’s final jolt.
The fifth adversary was a hulking brute with incredible strength. He charged at Ivan with a feral roar, fists clenched. Ivan waited until the last possible moment before unleashing a wave of necrotic energy, the souls of the dead screaming as they caused the brute to stagger. With a swift movement, Ivan’s bone claws raked across the brute’s flesh, tearing him apart with ease. “Strength without strategy is such a waste,” Ivan stated, his voice unwavering.
Their sixth encounter was a cunning illusionist who tried to confuse Ivan with shifting mirages. However, Ivan’s cold, calculating gaze saw through the illusions. He summoned a barrage of bone spikes from the floor, each one finding its mark despite the illusory chaos. The illusionist’s true form was revealed, and Ivan's artifact was carved through the remaining deceptions. “These illusions only seemed to hide how truly powerless you were,” Ivan remarked.
As they moved further through the facility, the students stayed close to Ivan, their eyes wide with a mix of fear and awe. The corridors were littered with the remains of their foes, each battle leaving its mark on the grim landscape.
Just as they rounded the corner, Ivan's eyes narrowed with a mix of grim satisfaction and caution. The hallway ahead was a grotesque tableau of carnage. Corpses were strewn about haphazardly, a chaotic mosaic of both A.E.G.I.S and Noir members, their bodies torn apart with brutal efficiency. The air was thick with the metallic tang of blood and the acrid stench of death.
At the center of this macabre scene, a large pile of mangled bodies formed a gruesome throne. Seated atop it was a woman who cut a striking figure amidst the carnage. She wore a nurse’s uniform, green scrubs stained dark with blood, and blue nitrile gloves that were slick with gore. A stethoscope hung around her neck, contrasting sharply with the grim tableau. Her face was obscured by a medical mask smeared with blood, and her short brown hair was tied into a practical bun. Brown eyes peered through circular glasses, their intensity only heightened by the disdainful expression she wore.
Ivan halted, his gaze fixed on the woman with an air of detached curiosity. “So, this is where the pile of corpses led us,” he remarked, his voice carrying an undercurrent of cold amusement.
The woman’s eyes narrowed as she met Ivan’s gaze, her annoyance evident. “What a horrible day this has turned out to be,” she began, her voice laced with frustration. “I infiltrated this facility months ago, planning to gather data and leave quietly. But then everything went to hell. First, I was discovered by A.E.G.I.S. agents who realized I wasn’t one of them. Then Noir's people attacked me because they thought I was a threat. And now, of all the people I could run into, it’s the Lich himself. I knew that was your codename, but who would have guessed you were an actual lich?”
Ivan’s expression hardened as he assessed her, his gaze growing more serious. “This one is dangerous, far more than William ever was,” he said, his voice carrying a commanding edge. “Children, step back. This individual is not to be trifled with.”
The students quickly moved behind Ivan, their eyes wide with apprehension. The woman, seemingly unperturbed by the presence of the children, continued to regard Ivan with a mix of irritation and calculated observation.
“You know,” she said, adjusting her glasses with a bloody gloved hand, “I was hoping to avoid direct confrontation. But given the circumstances, it seems I don’t have a choice.
Ivan's gaze remained steady, his bony fingers flexing as he prepared himself for the inevitable clash. “Very well,” he said, his tone cold and resolute.
The hallway seemed to contract with the tension between them, the echoes of past battles whispering through the walls. The air crackled with anticipation as the confrontation loomed, each combatant bracing for the fight that would determine the next turn in this deadly chess game.