Chapter 92: The Poisoned Sap
Chapter 92: Chapter 92: The Poisoned Sap
Morning in Elarwyn did not arrive with the usual melodic greeting of the forest birds or the gentle, pearlescent glow of the Light-Blooms. Instead, the dawn felt heavy, draped in a stifling, grey pallor that seemed to suck the color out of the world. A bitter, metallic aroma—sharp and unsettling—seeped through the narrow gaps of the guesthouse windows, clinging to the back of the throat like a bad premonition.
Dayat woke up with a strange, jarring sense of alertness. The lingering peace from the previous night on the Zenith Branch was gone, evaporated like mist in a furnace. The moment his eyes snapped open, the sight before him obliterated the last remnants of comfort.
Kancil was no longer in his bed. The boy from the gutters of Bakasa was hunched over a wooden chair near the table, staring vacantly at the grain of the wall. His eyes were bloodshot and hollowed out by dark circles, proof that sleep had been a stranger to him after his secret, midnight patrol. His usually vibrant, wiry frame looked shrunken, as if the collective weight of the entire Brassvale Kingdom had been placed squarely on his small shoulders.
“Cil? You’re up early. You look like you’ve been through a meat grinder,” Dayat said, sitting up on the edge of the bed.
Kancil didn’t respond immediately. His head turned with an agonizing slowness, his lips trembling for a few seconds before he could find his voice. “Big Bro… something was wrong last night. I’m an idiot, aren’t I? I spent half the night running through the canopy because I was scared of a shadow that probably wasn’t even there.”
Dayat’s brow furrowed. He stood up, crossing the room to place a steadying hand on Kancil’s shoulder. The boy was shivering. “Talk to me. If you felt something was off, you should have dragged me out of bed. In my world, and definitely in a place like Bakasa, instinct is the only thing that keeps you breathing. Why do you feel like you were wrong?”
“Because when I checked the pipes… everything was clean, Bang. No leaks, no cuts. I thought I was just losing my mind because of those Dwarf ghost stories. But my gut… it’s still screaming. It hasn’t stopped,” Kancil whispered, his voice raspy with a guilt he couldn’t name.
Just as Dayat was about to offer a word of comfort, a sharp, staccato pulse of electric-blue light flared in the corner of the room. Dola had awakened from her deep hibernation. However, she didn’t greet him with the usual weather report or schedule synchronization. Her sensors, which were remotely linked to the irrigation network in the Hanging Fields, were flooding her processors with emergency pings.
“Master, Emergency Protocol Initialization in the Hanging Fields,” Dola stated. Her voice was flat, but there was an underlying urgency in the speed of her delivery. “Detecting rapid molecular degradation of the World Tree’s vitality. There is a critical viscosity anomaly in the sap-flow at the primary nutrient distribution hub.”
Dayat froze, his hand tightening on Kancil’s shoulder. “Viscosity anomaly? What does that mean in plain English, Dola? Is my system leaking?”
“Negative. The polymer irrigation network is operating within 98% of its optimal parameters. Pressure is stable at 1.5 bar. However, the organic host—the tree itself—is exhibiting a violent rejection response to its own internal circulation. An alien element has infiltrated the primary vascular bundles.”
Kancil’s sallow face turned a ghostly, translucent white. He lunged from his chair, his hand flying to the grip of the Glock 17 at his hip with a desperate, panicked motion. “Big Bro… the shadow. The shadow from last night. I wasn’t hallucinating! It was real!”
“Move, Cil! To the fields, now!” Dayat barked. He grabbed his moss-green jacket and checked the Silver Thorn on his back. The legendary blade remained silent, offering no protective glow, which for Dayat was the most ominous sign of all—it meant the threat was not a simple magical attack that could be parried, but something far more insidious.
By the time they reached the Hanging Fields, Elarwyn was in the throes of a biological convulsion. A subtle, high-frequency tremor was vibrating through the gargantuan boughs. It wasn’t a tectonic earthquake; it was an internal shuddering of the wood, like the heart palpitations of a dying giant. From the depths of the trunk, a sound began to echo—a long, agonizing creak of wood under immense stress, a sound that resembled a muffled scream.
Elven citizens were already gathering at the perimeter, their faces masks of unadulterated terror. They looked at the Manaferum Sativa crops that had only just begun to recover. Now, the plants looked like something out of a nightmare. Small, oily black spots were blooming across the leaves, spreading like spilled ink on wet parchment. The rot moved with a predatory speed, turning healthy green tissue into shriveled, necrotic waste in seconds.
“Look at that, Bang… it’s exactly like the stain I saw under the valve last night!” Kancil pointed a shaking finger at the primary irrigation hub.
Dayat sprinted toward the junction, sliding to his knees in the grey dust. He ignored the gasps of the onlookers and focused on his polymer pipes. The lines were intact; the pale-yellow sulfur-mana solution was flowing clearly through the translucent tubes. But on the surface of the World Tree’s bark, exactly where the main distribution valve was anchored, the black stain had formed a sprawling, web-like pattern. The sacred wood appeared to be liquefying from the inside.
“Damn it… it’s an internal breach,” Dayat hissed. He closed his eyes, centering his will. “Dola, I need medical-grade precision. Manifesting: Ultra-Thin Precision Scalpel and Digital Micro-Fiber Probe.”
The sapphire light flared, and the clinical, silver tools appeared in his gloved hands. Dayat leaned in, his eyes narrowing as he made a surgical incision into the blackened bark. A thick, viscous black fluid, smelling of scorched metal and rot, began to ooze from the wound. Dayat stared at it, his stomach churning. “Cil, this isn’t just a poison. It’s a coagulant. It’s blocking the sap-veins.”
“WHAT HAVE YOU DONE TO OUR MOTHER?!”
The voice arrived like a thunderclap. Governor Caelmir emerged from the Kenanga groves, flanked by three Senior Druids whose wooden staves were glowing with a fierce, accusatory light. Caelmir’s face, once softened by respect, was now a mask of raw fury and mounting despair. He saw the scalpel in Dayat’s hand as the smoking gun of a traitor.
“Caelmir, back off! I just found—”
“SILENCE, OUTLANDER!” the Druid beside Caelmir screamed, his voice cracking with emotion. “We allowed you to pierce the sacred skin with your dead pipes, and now the World Tree wails in agony! You have injected a void-venom into our Nura-flow! Listen to the shrieking of the wood—that is the guardian’s cry of betrayal!”
Dayat stood up slowly, holding the scalpel that was now coated in the oily black sludge. He didn’t flinch as the Paladin guards leveled their wooden spears at his throat. “Listen to me very carefully, Druid! If I wanted to poison this tree, why would I spend three days building a precision irrigation system to save it? This rot didn’t come from my tanks! Someone infiltrated this site last night!”
Dayat locked eyes with Caelmir, projecting an aura of engineering authority. “Governor, think of this tree as a body. My irrigation system is the food I put in its mouth. But this black stain… this is different. Someone made a surgical puncture beneath my valve and injected a concentrated toxin directly into the bloodstream. This toxin is a clotting agent—it’s causing a ’Sap-Thrombosis.’ It’s stopping the tree’s blood from reaching the branches.”
Dayat pointed to the ink-like stain that was sinking deeper into the wood. “This is a ’Forced Wound.’ Someone injected a darkness-concentrate specifically under my equipment so that I would take the fall. This thing is eating the tree’s life-force from the inside out, bypassing the soil entirely.”
Caelmir hesitated, his gaze drifting to the blackened wound. But the Senior Druid stepped forward, his face twisted in a sneer. “How do we know this is not merely a side-effect of your ’cleansing’ chemicals? You brought these alien substances, and this plague followed in your wake!”
Suddenly, a massive, bone-jarring creak echoed through the platform. The very bough they stood on swayed violently, as if the World Tree were trying to shake off a painful parasite. Leaves falling from the canopy turned into black ash before they even touched the ground.
“Do you hear that groan?” Dayat shouted over the sound of the shuddering wood. “This tree isn’t crying because of my pipes. It’s crying because its heart is being choked by this rot! If we don’t perform a ’biopsy’ right now to localize and neutralize this toxin, this entire district—and every Elf in it—will be dead within twelve hours!”
Kancil stepped forward, his voice high and sharp with desperation. “I saw the shadow! I swear by the gods of Bakasa, I saw a tall, black distortion right here at midnight! I thought I was just a scared kid, but that thing was real! It’s the one that did this!”
Caelmir looked at the trembling boy, then back at Dayat. The dilemma was written in the lines of his face. On one hand, the evidence of destruction was undeniable. On the other, he saw the burning sincerity in Dayat’s eyes—the fierce, protective pride of a creator who would never allow his work to be sabotaged.
“Fine, Manusia,” Caelmir said, his voice dropping to a heavy, ominous bass. “Prove your words. If you can show me that this venom did not originate from your sulfur-mix, I will grant you the authority to proceed. But hear me: if the tree’s heart stops because of your ’biopsy’… your head will be the first to fall.”
Dayat nodded, a grim determination hardening his features. He turned back to the irrigation hub, his hands steady despite the literal earthquake beneath his feet. “Dola, prepare for a cellular-level forensic scan. I need the exact chemical and mana-signature of this toxin. Kancil, stop the guilt-trip. Last night wasn’t your fault—it was a lesson for all of us. Our enemy is more sophisticated than we imagined.”
Kancil wiped the tears from his eyes and nodded, his hand tightening on his staff. “Understood, Big Bro. I won’t let that shadow slip away again if it dares to come back.”
Under a sun that now felt cold and indifferent, Dayat began the agonizing task of dissecting the sacred wood of Elarwyn. Before him, the black stain continued to pulse with a malevolent rhythm, as if laughing at the human’s desperate attempt to save a god. The agricultural battle had evolved into a war of shadows, and the clock was ticking against the heartbeat of the world.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 186: Encounter At The Border
- Chapter 185: Preparation
- Chapter 184: The True Awakening
- Chapter 183: Sacrifice
- Chapter 182 182: The Heart Of The Plague
- Chapter 181 181: The First Sign
- Chapter 180 180: The Calm Before The Storm
- Chapter 179 179: A Peaceful Life Interrupted
- Chapter 178: Voices From The Darkness
- Chapter 177: Shadows In The South
- Chapter 176: The Promise On The Terrace
- Chapter 175: The Architect’s Design
- Chapter 174: Echoes Of Ignis-sol
- Chapter 173: Residual Wounds And Schemes
- Chapter 172: The Hand That Clutches
- Chapter 171 171: Dreams And Thrones
- Chapter 170 170: Silence And The Report
- Chapter 169 169: Violet Blade vs. Crimson Blade
- Chapter 168: The Awakening of the Architect
- Chapter 167: The Maiden’s Final Transfer
- Chapter 166: The Crimson Blade of the Brassvale Hero
- Chapter 165 165: The Red Dot
- Chapter 164 164: The Envoy of Brassvale
- Chapter 163: Morbis’s Offer
- Chapter 162: A New Home for Loy and Riri
- Chapter 161: Aura of the Wailing Forest
- Chapter 160: The Opened Door
- Chapter 159 159: What Remains
- Chapter 158 158: Memories Behind the Scars
- Chapter 157 157: After the Storm
- Chapter 156 156: DEW and Gravity Magic
- Chapter 155 155: Battle in the Narrow Alley
- Chapter 154: The Plan Behind the Darkness
- Chapter 153: Night at Alaric’s Mansion
- Chapter 152: The Adventurer’s Guild and Dalgor’s News
- Chapter 151: Rustgard and the Return to Bakasa
- Chapter 150: The Return Journey and the Beginning of Brassvale(2)
- Chapter 149: The Return Journey and the Beginning of Brassvale(1)
- Chapter 148: Audience with the Dwarf King
- Chapter 147: The Train to Karak-Zorn (2)
- Chapter 146: The Train to Karak-Zorn (1)
- Chapter 145: Toward Karak-Zorn (2)
- Chapter 144: Toward Karak-Zorn (1)
- Chapter 143: The Gates of Terragard
- Chapter 142 142: Journey Through the Forest of Lamentation
- Chapter 141 141: A Jealous Morning
- Chapter 140 140: Strategy and Room Warmth
- Chapter 139: The Architect’s Blueprint
- Chapter 138: Throne of the Architect
- Chapter 137: Dinner of the Damned
- Chapter 136: Echoes in the Binary Corridors
- Chapter 135: Awakening Upon the Steel Throne
- Chapter 134: The Bastion of Indigo Light
- Chapter 133 133: The Goddess’s Authority
- Chapter 132: The Goddess’s Priorities
- Chapter 131 131: The Goddess’s Agony
- Chapter 130 130: Metallic Carnage
- Chapter 129: Awakening of the Harbinger
- Chapter 128: Echoes of the Maiden: Tragedy Behind Logic
- Chapter 127 127: Binary Echoes Behind the Memory
- Chapter 126 126: The Architect's Nadir
- Chapter 125: Silver Rain on Lamping Hill
- Chapter 124: The Line Upon the Hill
- Chapter 123: Lament Upon the Scorched Wheat
- Chapter 122: Dawn’s Echo on the Brink of Purification
- Chapter 121: The Queen’s Mobilization
- Chapter 120: The Calm Before the Storm
- Chapter 119: Echoes Behind the Shadows
- Chapter 118: The Price of a Betrayal
- Chapter 117: Resonance Behind the Straw
- Chapter 116: Service in the Land of the Mixed
- Chapter 115: Fugitives at Rest in the Northern Grasslands
- Chapter 114: Runners on Wheels
- Chapter 113: The Crumbling of the Sacred Walls
- Chapter 112: Path of Blood
- Chapter 111: Resonance of the Primal Light
- Chapter 110: The Fall of the Architect
- Chapter 109: Days of Rust and Roots
- Chapter 108: Memory of Rust and Blood
- Chapter 107: Echoes of Screams Within the Roots
- Chapter 106: The Oppressive Depths of the Roots
- Chapter 105: A Thorny Banquet
- Chapter 104: The Signature of Doom
- Chapter 103: The Banquet of the Ancestors
- Chapter 102: The Mover of Winds
- Chapter 101: Echoes of Tranquility
- Chapter 100: The Awakening Omen
- Chapter 99: A New Mission
- Chapter 98: The Queen’s Gratitude
- Chapter 97: Battle in the Canopies
- Chapter 96: The Confrontation
- Chapter 95: The Trap is Set
- Chapter 94: The Inquisitor’s Ghost
- Chapter 93: Investigation: Forensic Data
- Chapter 92: The Poisoned Sap
- Chapter 91: The Shadow in the Garden
- Chapter 90: A Moment of Peace
- Chapter 89: The Skeptical Council
- Chapter 88: Manifestation: Drip Irrigation
- Chapter 87: Dola’s Soil Analysis
- Chapter 86: Verdia’s Agriculture Crisis
- Chapter 85 - 83: The Asylum Agreement
- Chapter 84: The Sisters’ Face-Off
- Chapter 83: Dayat’s New Look
- Chapter 82: The Living Wonders of the Ancients
- Chapter 81: Entry to the World Tree
- Chapter 80: The Paladin’s Ambush
- Chapter 79: The Emerald Threshold
- Chapter 78: The Sight of Daylight
- Chapter 77: Supplies Running Low
- Chapter 76: The Hall of Memories
- Chapter 75: A Breath in the Void
- Chapter 74: The Silent Stalker
- Chapter 73: Echoes of the Maiden
- Chapter 72: Farewell to the Forge
- Chapter 71: The Deep Road Map
- Chapter 70: The Price of Victory
- Chapter 69: The Breach Closure
- Chapter 68: Manifestation: Anti-Tank Javelin
- Chapter 67: Dola’s Tactical Overload
- Chapter 66: The Demon General Appears
- Chapter 65: The Fortress Hold
- Chapter 64: Kancil’s Training Ground
- Chapter 63: The Science of Exorcism
- Chapter 62: The Shadow Swarm
- Chapter 61: Under the Last Light
- Chapter 60: The Emergency Council
- Chapter 59: The Foundry of Progress
- Chapter 58: The Scout’s Report
- Chapter 57: The First Tremor
- Chapter 56: Dola’s Origin Inquiry
- Chapter 55: Manifestation: Industrial Lathe
- Chapter 54: The Meritocracy Challenge
- Chapter 53: The Great Workshop
- Chapter 52: The Customs of Iron
- Chapter 51: The Stone Breath
- Chapter 50: The Steel Threshold
- Chapter 49: Dayat’s Emotional Acceptance
- Chapter 48: Logical Conclusion (Wife Status)
- Chapter 47: Dola’s Reboot — Logic Within Tears
- Chapter 46: Recovery & Discovery
- Chapter 45: Manifestation of Wrath
- Chapter 44: Broken Dola (The Climax)The heavens had finally broken.
- Chapter 43: Scorched Remnants and the Whispers of Doom
- Chapter 42: Mage vs. Logic
- Chapter 41: The Weight on My Shoulders and the Irrational Heartbeat
- Chapter 40: Blood Ultimatum at the East Gate
- Chapter 39: Scorched Trails and the Shadow of the Hunter
- Chapter 38: Collapsed Logic and the Anomalous Heartbeat
- Chapter 37: Death Resonance and the Traitor’s End
- Chapter 36: Thunder in the Narrow Alleys and the Mist of Death
- Chapter 35: Festival Symphony and the Traitor’s Frequency
- Chapter 34: Heavy Gravity and Magnetic Rails
- Chapter 33: Three Threads of Fate and the Escape Map
- Chapter 32: Logic in the Dead End and The Painful Truth
- Chapter 31: The Serpent’s Banquet and The Living Main Course
- Chapter 30: Dinner Etiquette and The Golden Serpent
- Chapter 29: Warm Soup for Broken Souls
- Chapter 28: Shock in the Dark and The Eight-Legged Queen
- Chapter 27: Ghosts of the Past and Bloodless Tactics
- Chapter 26: Bloody Bonus and The Screaming Book
- Chapter 25: A Deadly Picnic and The Stone-Piercing Bolt
- Chapter 24: Blueprints, Royalties, and Peeping Eyes
- Chapter 23: Salty Bureaucracy and Gear Eyes
- Chapter 22: The Price of an Explosion and Melting Steel
- Chapter 21: Touch of Used Rubber and The Ghost Bow
- Chapter 20: Purple Anomaly and Corrupted Code
- Chapter 19: Printer Ink and Hacking Spells
- Chapter 18: The Dust Library and the Little Spy
- Chapter 17: Chromium Shine and The Hunger Transaction
- Chapter 16: The City of Scrap and The Economy of Rust
- Chapter 15: The Rusty Iron City and Those Who Hate Machines
- Chapter 14: The Mask of Kindness and Filthy Touches
- Chapter 13: Night School Language Class and Bridge Thugs
- Chapter 12: Incognito Mode and The Outskirts Humans
- Chapter 11: Cracked Asphalt and the Glitched Toll Keeper
- Chapter 10: Pendulum Physics and anAerial Embrace
- Chapter 9: The Humor Algorithm and the Definition of Catching Feelings
- Chapter 8: Right Angles Amidst Natural Chaos
- Chapter 7: Sleep Anomaly and The Breathing Battery
- Chapter 6: Puppet Dance and Data Threads
- Chapter 5: A New Name and the ForestThat Never Sleeps
- Chapter 4: The Hunger Download
- Chapter 3: Imagination Colliding with Logic
- Chapter 2: Interface in Flesh and Blood
- Chapter 1: The Last Message on a Saturday Night