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Ogre Tyrant: Chapter 77 - Fear the Reaper - Part One

  Ogre Tyrant: Chapter 77 - Fear the Reaper - Part One

  Memories flooded Sebet’s mind in an endless loop, overlapping and repeating themselves faster than she could react or process them. Dragging her deeper into a suffocating embrace from which she could not escape.

  There was nothing wrong with the memories themselves. In fact, many of her most recent memories brought Sebet an unexpected degree of entertainment, and even...comfort...

  Ignoring the memories imposing themselves on her mind as best she could, Sebet’s thoughts turned to her consort, Clarice.

  The fiery-tempered Human had initially intended as nothing more than an outlet for her carnal and sadistic impulses. However, the predatory empathy unique to Sebet’s Species had proved to be her undoing.

  In normal circumstances, a Succubus would leverage what it learned from invasive telepathy and manipulate its prey into surrendering everything up to and including their life. However, the Tyrant’s laws, Oaths, and the Contract that bound her soul had left Sebet in a situation where she could not indulge her instincts outside of specifically dictated circumstances.

  Full of repressed neurosis, shame, and doubt, Clarice had been comically effortless to read and seduce.

  The problems began after bedding her.

  Compelled by instincts deeply rooted in her subconscious, Sebet had come within a hair's breadth of breaking her Contract and ending her own life. The intervention of equally powerful self-preservation instincts had bought Sebet enough time for her rational mind to intervene and seize control.

  Presenting Sebet figuratively stranded and unsure how to proceed.

  Sebet knew, on a primal level, that she was supposed to feed on her prey when they were at their most vulnerable. Until that moment, she hadn’t understood why.

  The same tools that made her kind unparalleled predators also created a weakness.

  Empathy.

  If the prey of a Succubus could survive long enough, the same empathy that allowed a Succubus to effortlessly manipulate and disarm its prey would introduce a cascade of increasingly complicated emotional attachments. Made more complicated by the lustful encounters that preceded feeding.

  To sate her ego, Sebet had almost convinced herself that the flaw was deliberate. Intended as a means to secure a mate and ensure the proliferation of her Species. However, this flimsy rationalisation had collapsed under minimal scrutiny. Succubi did not require consent to secure a mate. Domination proved more than sufficient at securing the necessary Bond and could be established as the Succubi required it.

  Which left Sebet and Clarice bound to one another by codependency.

  “Pathetic...” The overlapping memories collapsed into darkness, revealing Gric’s cold calculating eyes. “While you slumbered, the Tyrant was assaulted...” The Daemon’s thoughts radiated a numbingly intense hatred and loathing.

  “Attacked?...” Regaining her mental bearings was difficult, but she was not so far gone that she couldn’t recognise the danger.

  “Fatally wounded!” Gric’s eyes burned with emerald flames and Sebet felt a sharp pain building in the core of her being.

  She could tell that he was not attacking her on purpose, but it didn’t make much difference. A petty rivalry wasn’t worth her life. So, Sebet screamed for all she was worth, giving voice to the pain.

  The intensity in Gric’s disembodied eyes did not diminish, but the pain receded almost immediately. “Our enemies laid an ambush. Anchors tore us from the Tyrant’s side, preventing us from returning...” His voice wavered and Sebet realised that his anger hadn’t been directed toward her but toward himself. “We failed him...”

  Memories taken from the Tyrant’s mind played out around her, immersing Sebet in the Tyrant’s desperate battle for survival.

  Almost immediately, Sebet recognised the presence attacking the Tyrant’s mind. Fragments of the same presence were present within the final streams of consciousness from her other selves.

  Able to sense the Tyrant’s pain, Sebet quickly concluded that her other selves had most likely been terminated by a similar attack. Caught off guard, it wouldn’t have been difficult to overwhelm their mental defences.

  As the battle wore on, Sebet became increasingly surprised by the Tyrant’s mental fortitude. In isolation, his choices were subpar at best. However, when accounting for the pain disrupting his thoughts, his decisions were better than Sebet would have otherwise expected.

  Her opinion changed when it became clear the Tyrant held no intentions of retreating from the battle.

  “Stupid...” Sebet hissed, chastising the Tyrant as he weathered another glancing blow from the enemy’s claws. “You did everything you could! Just leave! Run! Live to fight another day!”

  Sebet felt the Tyrant’s resolve and knew he wouldn’t make the smart decision. The CORRECT decision.

  He knew he couldn’t win, and he remained anyway. Committing himself to die.

  “WHY?!” Sebet shrieked, raging at the Tyrant’s monumental stupidity. “What good would dying here serve?!”

  Sebet briefly felt Gric’s thoughts align with her own and was reminded that she was not alone.

  “Why did he do that?...” Sebet asked despondently. Watching The Tyrant’s inevitable collapse had wearied her to an extent she hadn’t thought possible.

  “The Tyrant could not leave them...” Gric replied, drawing several instances of the memory into focus, directing Sebet’s attention to the Humans fleeing and cowering in the periphery of the battle.

  Her anger all but spent, Sebet felt a fresh stab of irritation stoke the embers. However, before she could give voice to her grievances, new memories of past events joined those from the battle.

  Pale and bloated bodies are left to rot in the sun. A massacred village of Goblins, their small pale bodies left to rot and bloat in the sun. A Goblin child impaled on a spear and pinned to a tree.

  Humans, men, women, and so many children...haphazardly discarded in the corners of dark and fore-stained rooms. Their pale lifeless faces locked in expressions of pain and terror.

  A city of shambling corpses. More children...

  “I’m seeing a pattern...” Sebet commented wryly.

  Gric gave the impression that he was about to reply but abruptly stopped short of doing so. Distracted, the presence of his mind turned elsewhere.

  Sensing a mounting feeling of alarm, Sebet attempted to force her beleaguered consciousness back into the waking world.

  Opening her eyes for what felt like the first time in over a century, Sebet began to rise from the unfamiliar bed but stopped herself upon realising she wasn’t alone.

  Hair slick with grease and clothes breaking of sweat and fear, Clarice was awkwardly slumped over her midriff with her legs hanging over the side of the bed. Were it not for her arms wrapped around Sebet’s midsection, Clarice probably would have fallen off of the bed.

  Feeling blood begin to rush to her groyne, Sebet was quite suddenly made aware that the changes she had last made to her body had not been reversed during her incapacitation. Seeing no point in letting the opportunity go to waste, Sebet reached for Clarice’s head with one hand while drawing away the blankets with the other.

  Less than an inch from touching Clarice’s hair, Sebet froze.

  Two death notifications had appeared in rapid succession.

  Before Sebet could process what had happened, five more notifications joined the others.

  Through force of will, Sebet forced her mind into action.

  Every one of her Acolytes was protected by extensive Contracts. To die while within Tim’s realm meant their attackers were capable of inflicting injuries that could bypass the Contracts.

  Casting her mind toward her tower and hastily rereading the notifications, Sebet was shocked to learn that her Acolytes had all been slain by the same individual.

  Anuk’ra.

  Not recognising the name, Sebet decided to exercise her limited authority and move her Acolytes to safety.

  In other circumstances, she would not have been overly concerned for their well-being or general survival. After all, each Acolyte’s death made her ever so slightly stronger. However, there were three key issues.

  Firstly, Sebet didn’t have so many Acolytes that she could let them die so frivolously. Secondly, she had spent a considerable amount of time grooming several talented individuals and didn’t want to see that investment expended for no discernable benefit. Lastly, but most importantly, the Tyrant would not be pleased to learn she had allowed so many of her subordinates to die.

  Sebet didn’t have permission to move her Human Acolytes to Sanctuary. So she settled for depositing them in a Human city instead. Intending to interrogate them in person, Sebet released a stressed sigh and shook Clarice awake.

  “B’wah?” Lips and chin slick with drool, Clarice blinked tiredly while staring blankly at the far wall. Pawing away the drool with her wrist and forearm, a host of complicated emotions raged behind her eyes.

  As a Human, Clarice couldn’t see in the dark. However, her prey instincts had set her on edge. Alerting her that she was being observed and causing her to look toward the faint traces of light filtering under the door at the far side of the room.

  Unable to help herself, Sebet silently extended her already elongated tongue and lashed it across Clarice’s cheek, aiming at the lingering traces of drool.

  True to form, Clarice let out a shriek and swung a vicious backhanded blow through the air beside her face as she scrambled back from the bed. Just as quickly as she had retreated, Clarice leapt forward again, advancing on her unseen enemy.

  Incidentally, causing her to stumble over Sebet’s bed and land in a deliciously compromising and accommodating position.

  Before Sebet could act on her lustful intentions, Gric made his presence known in her mind.

   Gric announced grimly, sharing a disturbingly vivid memory of several large chitinous warriors bearing down on him from the remains of what had once been Sebet’s tower.

   Sebet replied hurriedly, silencing Clarice’s cries of alarm by fiercely pressing her lips over Clarice’s mouth and forcing her tongue down her throat.

   Gric stated bluntly and then severed the connection.

  Drawing Clarice closer, Sebet squeezed the fiery redhead’s tight muscled buttocks with a clawed hand. Taking care to pierce the skin just enough to generate the pain her consort desired without going so far as to cause a meaningful injury.

  With a force of will, Sebet drew herself away. Gazing at Clarice’s flushed face and dazed expression, she felt an immense degree of satisfaction. Her consort was not a particularly difficult individual to seduce, but there was a measure of pride to be found in a job knowing she had her in the palm of her hand.

  “I will be back later,” Sebet purred, raising her consort’s chin affectionately with a clawed finger and forcing her to meet her gaze. “Be ready for my return...” Before Clarice had the chance to react, Sebet used her limited authority to relocate to Acheron.

  Debating whether the increased testosterone would be a boon, Sebet ignored the stares of the Tyrant’s Bodyguards and began donning her stone armour. It wouldn’t provide the same degree of protection it afforded while in her Human form, but its near indestructible composition would provide an invaluable benefit all the same.

  While Sebet was occupied donning her armour, Several of the most prominent Daemons, as well as the Tyrant’s champions, appeared on the surrounding plains.

  If she had not experienced the Tyrant’s desperate battle for herself, Sebet would have been tempted to think Gric was overestimating their enemies' capabilities. As it was, she wouldn’t be ashamed to admit that she felt a certain degree of relief as the massive scaled form of a dragon blocked out the sun and cast them all in shadow.

  Another one of the Tyrant’s ‘rescues’, the dragon, Ushu, was truly massive. Close to two hundred feet long from snout to tail and thirty feet tall at the shoulder, his pale green and blue scales shimmered with a sickly venomous iridescence as they caught the light. Born aloft by huge leathery wings, not all that different from her own, the beating of Ushu’s wings was strong enough to force the few Humans in attendance to huddle together or risk being blown off their feet.

  It was just as well they had taken the precaution.

  Making his landing, Ushu’s immense weight and intense speed caused the ground to shake treacherously underfoot. This caused several of the Tyrant’s Bodyguards to lose their balance and fall to the ground.

  For their part, the Daemons were radiating an intense aura of violent anticipation. Each a unique abomination unto themselves, Sebet was unsettled to learn that she was unfamiliar with the majority's capabilities.

  She was aware of Gric, Qreet, Dar and Senn, as the key players amongst the Tyrant’s menagerie of Daemons. Each of them playing a key combat or administrative role within the realm.

  Almost as large as the dragon, Dar was a mountain of muscle, bony protrusions and heavily scaled flesh.

  Although small in comparison to Dar, Senn’s serpentine lower body afforded her a considerable degree of height as she required it. Allowing the four-armed Daemon to strike at a deceptively greater distance than an enemy would otherwise anticipate. Bearing two blood-forged stone spears and a pair of blood-forged wave-bladed swords, Senn was one of the few Daemons equipped with manufactured weaponry.

  The overwhelming majority of the Daemons wore no armour and carried no weapons, seemingly trusting in their claws, teeth and unnaturally resilient hides to carry them through the battle.

  Even Qreet, a spindly-limbed female Daemon with a deep amethyst hide, seemed content to go to war in nothing more than a dark tattered robe and a magical staff.

  Of course, Gric was a notable exception. Wearing the blood-forged stone armour created by the Tyrant, Gric had retracted his wings into his body, no doubt to eliminate a potential weakness.

  The sudden arrival of the Fallen Angel, Ophelia, brought a momentary lull to the anxious murmuring of the Tyrant’s mortal servants. Even the Orcs, who had no history of worshipping the Angels, fell silent and looked upon her radiant aura with awe.

  Presented to the Humans as an avatar of war, Ophelia had grown incredibly powerful feeding on the Humans' worship and faith. Every article of clothing, her armour, and weapons were low-level relics. Sanctified by repeated exposure to raw Divinity and given purpose by her Divine Portfolio. Were she not one of the Fallen, and a fellow servant of the Tyrant, Ophelia’s presence would have given Sebet considerable cause for alarm.

  The pair of Fallen Angels had been reinvesting almost all of their accumulated Divinity into cultivating the Humans' religious fervour. However, even without the relics, Ophelia was incredibly dangerous. A true masochist, the Fallen Angel revelled in her own pain and drew strength from it, making her a greater threat as any engagement dragged on.

  Which was thankfully more than could be said for her progenitor, Orphiel. Little more than a foppish minstrel, it was a wonder he had agreed to join the battle at all. When the fighting started, Sebet wouldn’t be at all surprised if he were to flee at the first sign of danger.

  At Gric’s telepathic command, the gathered forces of the Tyrant spread across the open field. Each group or powerful individual claiming a section of ground as their own.

  Gric’s plan at its core was simple. He intended to use his limited authority to draw invaders from Tartarus in small numbers and position them for execution within Acheron. All the while providing support through the same authority.

  Sebet couldn’t fault the plan at face value, but the plan would fall apart if the both of them were somehow compromised. So it came as no surprise when Gric strongly advised her to stay out of the battle and remain an observer.

   Gric admitted through a private connection.

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