Chapter 402: Two Teams
The Green Hydra – The Fall of Millbrook’s Ruins
The second hydra moved south from the ashes of Millbrook, its pale green scales slick with the blood of innocents. Eight heads swayed in a hypnotic rhythm, each pair of eyes scanning for new prey. Behind it, the city lay in smoking ruins, its people scattered like broken dolls.
The hunting party found it at dusk.
They came from the east, a squad of twelve—six knights, six mages. Their leader was a woman named Seris, her hair cropped short, her eyes the color of thunderclouds. She carried no weapon but lightning crackled around her fists. Purple level. Law of Lightning. She had faced hydras before, in the northern wars. She knew what they could do.
"Formation," she said, her voice calm, cutting through the wind. "Knights front. Mages back. Healers center. No one engages alone."
The squad moved into position. Three knights with Law of Wind took the flanks, their swords humming with compressed air. Two knights with Law of Earth took the center, their shields raised, their bodies rooted to the ground. Seris took the point, lightning dancing along her arms.
Behind them, the mages prepared. Two with Law of Fire, their hands already glowing. Two with Law of Water, their palms dripping with liquid shields. Two with Law of Light, their eyes bright with healing energy.
The hydra saw them. Its eight heads turned, eight mouths opened, and a hiss emerged that raised the hair on every neck. It recognized the formation. It had fought such squads before. It had killed them.
It charged.
Seris did not wait. "Lightning Net!" She thrust her hands forward, and a web of golden electricity shot from her fingers, spreading wide, catching the hydra’s leading heads. The creature recoiled, its muscles seizing, its advance halted for a precious second.
The Wind knights moved. They circled left and right, their swords trailing arcs of compressed air, and struck at the hydra’s flanks. The blades cut deep, opening gashes in the necks, but the wounds sealed almost instantly, the hydra’s regeneration already at work.
"We need to take all eight at once!" Seris shouted. "Mages, prepare the synchronized strike. Knights, hold the heads still!"
The Earth knights stepped forward, their shields raised. They slammed their feet into the ground, and the earth answered. Stone spikes erupted from the soil, wrapping around two of the hydra’s heads, pinning them to the ground. The beast roared, its remaining heads thrashing, but the Wind knights were already on them, their swords binding necks with cutting air.
Seris took two heads herself. She leaped, lightning carrying her above the hydra’s reach, and landed on its back. Her hands closed around a neck, and lightning poured from her palms, stunning the head, freezing it in place.
"Mages, now!"
The Fire mages unleashed their flames, twin jets of white-hot fury aimed at two heads. The Water mages followed, not with attack, but with containment—liquid spheres engulfing the heads, preventing them from spewing poison. The Light mages focused their energy on the knights, healing the burns from the hydra’s venomous breath, keeping them alive.
Eight heads were immobilized. Eight necks were exposed.
Seris drew her sword—a blade of pure lightning, condensed from her core. She raised it high, and the other knights did the same, their weapons blazing with wind, earth, and lightning.
"Together!" she roared.
They struck.
Eight blades descended in perfect synchrony. Eight heads separated from eight necks. The hydra’s body convulsed, its remaining stumps spraying black blood that sizzled on the ground. For a moment, the heads lay still, their eyes still burning, their jaws still snapping.
Then the regeneration began. The necks started to writhe, new flesh budding, new heads forming.
"Now, Fire mages! Burn the stumps!"
The Fire mages didn’t hesitate. They poured everything into their flames, torrents of white heat that engulfed the hydra’s body. The stumps charred, blackened, turned to ash. The regeneration faltered, stopped. The hydra’s eight heads, severed and separate, finally went still.
The beast collapsed, its massive body crashing to the earth, sending up a cloud of dust and ash.
Seris stood over it, her chest heaving, her lightning fading. Behind her, the knights and mages were exhausted, wounded, some barely standing. But they were alive. The hydra was dead.
"Report to the fortress," she said, sheathing her sword. "The northern pass is now secure."
°°°
The Black Hydra – The Fall of Thornwall’s Gate
The black hydra had destroyed Thornwall in seventeen minutes. Now it moved south, its eight heads weaving a pattern of death, its scales drinking the last light of the dying sun. Behind it, the city smoldered, its people either dead or fled. It had fed well. It was hungry for more.
The second hunting party intercepted it at the river crossing, a narrow bridge that spanned the Whitewater Gorge. The squad was led by a man named Corin, his face scarred, his eyes hard. He carried a greatsword of black steel, and earth clung to his boots as if he had grown from the ground itself. Purple level. Law of Earth. He had lost friends to hydras. He would not lose more.
"Hold the bridge," he ordered. "Knights, form a wall. Mages, prepare to counter the poison. Healers, stay behind the line. No one breaks."
The squad took their positions. Three knights with Law of Lightning stood at the bridge’s edge, their swords crackling. Two knights with Law of Wind took the flanks, ready to strike. Corin stood in the center, his greatsword planted in the stone.
Behind them, the mages prepared. Two with Law of Fire, their flames already rising. Two with Law of Water, their hands weaving liquid barriers. Two with Law of Light, their eyes scanning for wounds.
The hydra saw them. It did not hesitate. It charged across the bridge, its massive body shaking the stone, its eight heads lunging.
"Earth Wall!" Corin slammed his fist into the ground. A wall of solid rock erupted before him, blocking the hydra’s advance. The beast’s heads smashed into the stone, cracking it but not breaking through.
"Lightning knights, now!"
The three Lightning knights leaped over the wall, their swords blazing. They struck at three heads, golden electricity searing the flesh, stunning the hydra. The creature recoiled, its heads flailing, but the Wind knights were already there, their blades cutting at the necks, opening wounds that bled black.
The hydra roared. Its remaining heads opened their mouths, and a cloud of poison gas billowed forth, rolling over the bridge.
"Water mages, barrier!" Corin shouted.
The two Water mages raised their hands, and a shimmering dome of liquid formed over the squad, deflecting the poison, letting it slide harmlessly into the gorge below. The Light mages worked quickly, healing the burns on the knights who had been too close.
"We need to take all eight at once," Corin said, his voice grim.
"The bridge is narrow. We can’t surround it. We have to draw it in."
He stepped forward, past the earth wall, and raised his greatsword. "Hydra! Face me!"
The beast’s heads turned. Its eyes fixed on him. It lunged, all eight heads striking at once.
Corin did not dodge. He dropped to one knee and slammed his fist into the ground. "Earth Grave!"
The bridge beneath the hydra’s feet collapsed. Stone crumbled, support pillars shattered, and the beast plunged into the gorge, its bodies twisting, its heads snapping. It hit the water a hundred feet below with a thunderous splash.
But it was not dead. It thrashed, climbed, began to scale the cliff.
"Fire mages, burn the water! Lightning knights, strike from above!"
The Fire mages unleashed torrents of flame into the gorge, turning the river to steam. The Lightning knights leaped from the bridge, their bodies crackling, and plunged their swords into the hydra’s backs as it climbed. The creature screamed, its heads lashing out, but the Wind knights were already on the cliff edges, their blades cutting at the necks.
Corin jumped.
He fell toward the hydra, his greatsword raised, earth gathering around the blade, making it heavier than any steel had a right to be. He struck the beast’s central body, driving the sword deep, and the earth answered. Stone erupted from the cliff walls, pinning the hydra’s heads one by one, crushing them against the rock.
"All together!" he roared.
The Lightning knights struck. The Wind knights struck. Corin pulled his greatsword free and struck again. Eight heads, severed in a single moment, fell into the boiling water below.
The hydra’s body went limp. Its grip on the cliff failed. It fell, crashing into the river, and the current took it, tumbling it downstream, its heads already dissolving into ash.
Corin climbed back to the bridge, his body bleeding from a dozen small wounds, his greatsword heavy in his hand. His squad gathered around him—exhausted, wounded, but alive.
"Report to the fortress," he said. "The southern pass is clear."
The sun had set. The river ran red. But the hydras were dead.
