Chapter 67 67: Killing all
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- Chapter 67 67: Killing all
The moment Vonjo felt the tingle on his skin—the kind of primal sensation that whispered ambush—he stepped sideways without hesitation.
A crashing noise followed, then the screech of metal bending and drywall shattering.
He didn’t flinch, didn’t blink.
The world slowed around him as the corner of the apartment erupted in debris and dust, a grotesque hand-like shape made of concrete and bone scraping past where his throat had been a second ago.
They were already here.
Vonjo landed lightly on the floor, knees bent, hand already reaching back—not for a blade, not for his gauntlet. But for the old longbow strapped diagonally across his back.
The weapon clicked into his palm like it was born there. He grinned.
“So you guys are that desperate to get a kill?” he muttered, flicking his fingers and drawing an arrow.
Another reanimation burst through the door, followed by three more—mismatched limbs, faces sewn together from the recently deceased, glowing eyes, brittle and twitching. There was no ceremony. They charged.
But Vonjo didn’t absorb their attacks.
Where was the fun in that?
Where was the challenge?
He could feel his innate ability humming beneath his skin, eager to activate, to neutralize. But no. He wanted to see how far he could go with archery alone.
Just a bow, and the thrill of hitting moving death with pinpoint precision.
He ducked behind a pillar, kicked off it, and sprinted to the window.
The frame shattered as he dove through it, rolled mid-air, and landed on a lower balcony with his bow already nocked and drawn. Distance. He needed more of it. He needed the room to breathe, to turn the battlefield into a playground.
And then—he fired.
One arrow sliced through the head of a reanimation peering through the hole he’d just made. The creature fell, its body toppling like a marionette with its strings cut.
Then another.
Then another.
The arrows came in a rhythm that quickly abandoned anything human.
Vonjo moved and shot like a living storm—leaping from balcony to balcony, spinning, twisting mid-air, drawing arrows that shimmered in the moonlight.
Each shot bore a purpose. Some pierced skulls. Others ricocheted off surfaces, bouncing in perfect geometry to hit necks, chests, eyes.
He tried something insane—fired an arrow into a fan unit, let the recoil shoot it into the reanimated creature’s jaw. It worked. He laughed.
He kicked a chair into the air, fired an arrow that hit the leg of the chair, redirecting the bolt into a zombie’s temple. It worked again.
“Okay, okay, that was sick,” Vonjo whispered to himself, eyes wide.
He launched another—this time wrapping the arrow in the end of a ripped curtain to create drag, slowing its flight enough to time it with his movement.
When he jumped, the arrow met him midair and redirected, slicing downward into the chest of another corpse.
Below, pieces of the apartment collapsed from the absurdity of it all—chunks of rebar and drywall tumbling down like dominoes. Each shot echoed with velocity and ingenuity. He wasn’t just shooting. He was playing with physics, experimenting with mayhem.
Behind the line of collapsing undead, a voice finally roared out—hoarse, angry, ancient.
“HALT!”
The sand man had arrived.
A tall, draped figure emerged from the rising dust cloud, dragging with him a trail of scorched sand and brittle bones. His body wasn’t solid—always shifting, face half-formed, parts of his torso filled with flowing particles instead of organs. He looked like a man made from the afterlife itself.
His hand lifted—and the dead obeyed.
“Spread,” he rasped.
The reanimations stopped charging. Then moved like a formation of ants, crawling onto the walls, climbing across the ceiling, surrounding the building.
“Strike from angles four and six. Pressure him to the west balcony. He favors forward momentum. Cut it off.”
The sand man’s voice was thunderous but methodical. As if he were reciting instructions to old comrades from a war long past.
“Unit six, distract with feints. If he reloads, take a limb. Don’t aim to kill—aim to scatter his precision. Wear him down.”
Vonjo stopped, crouching on a rooftop pipe, bowstring tight. His eyes narrowed.
“…He’s commanding them?” he muttered, eyebrows lifting. “You’re not just a necro-freak. You’re a tactician.”
The next volley of corpses moved with more intelligence. One acted as bait. Another ducked. A third threw debris to block his vision. Vonjo barely dodged a spinning chair aimed straight for his head.
He fired three shots in retaliation. Only one hit.
He laughed in delight.
“Oh, this is getting fun.”
The sand man observed quietly. His form rippled, one hand extended forward like a conductor. Occasionally he paused, analyzing. Watching Vonjo’s firing pattern, his stance, his breathing.
“His draw slackens at the twenty-third second. Exploit that delay.”
Vonjo heard it.
He heard the bastard calling out the flaws in his archery like a chess master with a microphone.
That was it.
He grinned, pulled another arrow, and yelled, “Hey, Mummy-Daddy! If you’re gonna narrate my every move, at least compliment my form!”
He fired.
A double shot—two arrows intertwined mid-flight, one spinning to act as a shield for the other. The first got knocked down by debris. The second pierced the gut of the lead corpse.
Sand man tilted his head. “He adapts. Mid-air redirection. Predictive behavior.”
Vonjo clicked his tongue. “Predict this.”
He aimed upward, not at a corpse—but at a hanging light fixture. The arrow sliced the chain, causing the huge chandelier to swing across the hall like a pendulum. It smashed into five corpses in a row, scattering bones like confetti.
Vonjo flipped into the hall, landed with style, and winked at the sand man.
The general of the dead was not amused.
But his forces were dying, one by one. Not in slow intervals—no. They were collapsing in waves. Falling apart from Vonjo’s unpredictable shots, his use of the environment, the tempo of his counter-offensive.
The sand man lowered his hand. Silence fell. Even the corpses seemed to halt.
Vonjo stood in the flickering hallway light, surrounded by the fallen. He flicked the dust off his sleeves.
“What? Out of puppets?” he said, voice cocky. “Got any more tricks, old relic? Or are you just here to give inspirational speeches?”
The sand man didn’t move for a few long moments.
Then, his voice dropped to a whisper, barely heard over the wind.
“You… boy…”
His eyes glowed.
“You are worthy. Worthy to face the era that sleeps beneath the ash. Let me summon… my comrades.”
Vonjo’s smile froze.
From the shadows behind the sand man, the floor cracked.
Something stepped out.
Armored. Taller than a man. Plated in dark obsidian bones fused with metal. Its jaw cracked open with an echoing creak, as if unused for centuries.
Then another emerged. This one with six arms and a rusted lance. Its chest bore ritual carvings that still bled black fluid.
And another—twice the size, carrying the skulls of beasts Vonjo had never seen before. A banner of war stitched from skin hung behind its back.
One by one, they came.
Each more terrifying than the last. These were not mere reanimations.
They were ancient warriors, entombed relics from long-forgotten wars. Sand-encrusted legends forced back into motion.
Vonjo’s grip on his bow tightened.
His breath quickened.
And then he smiled.
A big, wide, cocky, damn-near delighted grin.
“…Now that’s more like it.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 81 81: Just a stroll
- Chapter 80 80: Roaming
- Chapter 79 79: Right away
- Chapter 78: Let's get it on
- Chapter 77: Academia Tour
- Chapter 76 76: Most capable
- Chapter 75 75: I'll replace him
- Chapter 74 74: All at once
- Chapter 73 73: Imposing Vonjo
- Chapter 72 72: Powerful Entry
- Chapter 71 71: Sorcerer Academia
- Chapter 70 70: Useless
- Chapter 69 69: More arrows
- Chapter 68 68: Range battle
- Chapter 67 67: Killing all
- Chapter 66 66: Arrogance? Earned
- Chapter 65 65: 27 years old
- Chapter 64 64: Evasion
- Chapter 63 63: Disappointment
- Chapter 62 62: Mummies
- Chapter 61 61: Relic of past
- Chapter 60 60: Era of prophecy
- Chapter 59 59: Tables have turned.
- Chapter 58 58: Ambush
- Chapter 57 57: Tax
- Chapter 56 56: Home
- Chapter 55 55: Lockdown
- Chapter 54 54: New transportation
- Chapter 53 53: Spiritual Demonoid
- Chapter 52 52: Vance the mortal
- Chapter 51 51: Vonjo's interest: Pit fighting
- Chapter 50 50: Side Character Interest
- Chapter 49 49: Null Sigil Headband
- Chapter 48 48: Fight Set
- Chapter 47 47: Gone
- Chapter 46 46: Have a taste of it?
- Chapter 45 45: Devouring
- Chapter 44 44: Strongest ability: Endless Doom
- Chapter 43 43: Strongest? You underling?
- Chapter 42 42: Recruitment
- Chapter 41 41: Only one left
- Chapter 40 40: Fallen curse Blessing
- Chapter 39 39: Weak half-brother
- Chapter 38 38: Only five
- Chapter 37 37: Simple mission
- Chapter 36 36: Dramatic recall
- Chapter 35 35: Brother's reunion
- Chapter 34 34: Rumble: One versus All
- Chapter 33 33: Crash and Burn
- Chapter 32 32: Vance
- Chapter 31 31: Fixed Position: Side-Character
- Chapter 30 30: Convenient frog evolution
- Chapter 29 29: Useless frog summon
- Chapter 28 28: Crimson Doom?
- Chapter 27 27: The forgotten reward
- Chapter 26 26: Fuck it, we ball!
- Chapter 25 25: Dangerous personality
- Chapter 24 24: Vonjo's nerves
- Chapter 23 23: Insignificant
- Chapter 22 22: Following
- Chapter 21 21: Proof of skill
- Chapter 20 20: Bluffing Vonjo
- Chapter 19 19: Helping out
- Chapter 18 18: Shooting skill
- Chapter 17 17: Arrow Expertise
- Chapter 16 16: Lend it to me
- Chapter 15 15: Rewards 1/2
- Chapter 14 14: Stronger
- Chapter 13 13: We'll bring you down instead
- Chapter 12 12: Bring down the House of Sutterfouse
- Chapter 11 11: Family problems
- Chapter 10 10: On one condition
- Chapter 9 9: You are weak
- Chapter 8 8: One hit
- Chapter 7 7: Battle
- Chapter 6 6: Face off
- Chapter 5 5: Let's show off
- Chapter 4 4: OP System starter pack
- Chapter 3 3: Fulfill thy role
- Chapter 2 2: Condition met
- Chapter 1 1: Vonjo Sutterfouse