Chapter 355: Ch 355: New Players- Part 4
The puppet drifted through the camp like a shadow on a quiet evening—silent, steady, and terrifying.
It made no move to attack unless someone raised their weapon first. But those who did… didn't last long enough to regret it.
A flash of divine energy, a flick of its delicate hand, and the would-be defenders were down in an instant—alive, but unconscious, like their mana had been sealed away.
Word spread like wildfire.
"Don't touch it!"
"Don't even look at it the wrong way!"
"Just let it pass!"
Soldiers parted like waves before it, making way while whispering prayers, each man and woman too afraid to engage and too confused to understand what this thing wanted.
Some of them swore it wasn't even hostile—just searching, observing, haunting.
No one dared to follow it as it passed into the inner ward of the camp.
The tension finally snapped when the puppet crossed into the healer's quarters—where the most vulnerable, including Silvy, were resting. Shouts and worried voices echoed in the outer hall.
"Commander Armstrong must be told!"
"Someone fetch the young master, now!"
But there was no need. At that very moment, Kyle and Melissa arrived at the edge of the chaos.
People immediately surrounded them.
"Young Master Kyle! A creature—it's in the camp!"
"It's not human, sir. We tried to stop it—"
"We're not equipped to fight that kind of monster!"
Kyle raised his hand, silencing the rising panic. His eyes narrowed in the direction of the healer's quarters.
He could feel it—the dense divine mana that soaked the air like fog. And it was heading right toward where Silvy was resting.
He didn't waste a second.
"Melissa, empty the camp. Everyone leaves. Now."
He said quietly.
She blinked, startled by the gravity in his voice.
"What about you?"
"I'll deal with it."
There was no hesitation in her after that. Melissa nodded and turned on her heel, barking orders at soldiers with unrelenting authority.
"Clear the camp! Move the wounded! Evacuate now!"
Kyle watched her for a moment. She had grown. He was proud of her.
Then he took a deep breath and turned toward the healer's ward. His boots crushed the gravel beneath him with measured steps, each one faster than the last.
He would not let that thing anywhere near Silvy.
The deeper he went, the thicker the divine aura became. The walls of the tent seemed to pulse. His skin prickled. The puppet was close.
And then he saw it.
Standing in front of Silvy's room, a delicate figure in a pristine white robe, with long, doll-like limbs and featureless porcelain skin. Its eyes, void of soul, fixed themselves upon the unconscious Silvy.
Kyle's jaw clenched. He drew his blade, mana beginning to crackle around him.
The puppet didn't flinch.
It slowly turned its head toward Kyle, tilting it ever so slightly—as if trying to recognize something. Something buried deep within him.
"Turn around and face me."
Kyle said, voice cold and sharp as steel.
The puppet didn't react.
It remained by Silvy's bedside, long, delicate fingers stretching toward her pale cheek. The divine mana pulsing from its core was enough to make the air shimmer.
And yet, it touched nothing—hovering just a breath away, as if sensing, tasting, judging.
Kyle's grip on his sword tightened. "I said—turn around."
Still no response.
Kyle's patience snapped. With a flash of blue mana, he lunged forward, his blade humming as it sliced through the air in an arc meant to strike the puppet's side, away from Silvy.
The sword never landed.
At the last second, the puppet shifted—elegant and eerily graceful, like it had been expecting the strike.
Kyle's blade scraped across its arm, drawing a violent crack across its porcelain-like surface. A web of fractures spread from the point of contact, and then, from within that cracked mask, a familiar face began to emerge.
Kyle froze.
His breath hitched.
For a split second, he was staring at someone—someone whose features tugged at distant memories. Not fully formed. Not quite alive. But hauntingly real.
The puppet didn't give him time to recover.
Without a sound, it spun and slammed into him with a palm strike so forceful it sent Kyle skidding back across the floor.
The air was knocked from his lungs, his boots carving a trench in the soil as he barely managed to stay upright.
Kyle gritted his teeth and looked up, raising his blade again. The puppet was standing tall, the cracks in its form glowing faintly with divine mana as they slowly mended.
"It's stronger, and faster."
He muttered.
The puppet launched forward again. Kyle blocked with his blade, but the force behind the strike rattled his bones.
Each blow was clean, precise, relentless. It moved without hesitation, without flaw—an artificial warrior crafted by a divine hand.
He countered with a sharp burst of mana, sending a wave of wind outward, but the puppet simply ducked and swept low, nearly landing another strike against his side.
Kyle twisted just in time, his blade flashing again. He struck the puppet's leg, but this time, it didn't even crack.
Whatever hesitation or weakness it had shown earlier was gone.
"Damn it. What are you made out of….? Why and how are you so sturdy?"
Kyle hissed, backpedaling.
The puppet raised its hand and summoned a spear of divine energy—its tip glowing with harsh golden light.
It hurled the weapon toward Kyle, and he barely managed to deflect it, the spear exploding behind him in a burst of holy fire.
Kyle's patience snapped.
He surged forward, his sword gleaming with concentrated mana. He struck with all his strength, blow after blow, until finally—
Crack.
A final strike severed the divine tether he had sensed pulsing through the puppet's core.
The light in its eyes faded instantly.
The spear it had been summoning vanished.
And like a marionette with its strings cut, the puppet collapsed forward, falling silently to the ground in a heap. Its elegant arms sprawled beside it, unmoving.
Kyle stood there, chest heaving.
He expected to feel relief.
But instead, something heavy pressed down on his heart. He stepped closer and knelt, brushing back some of the white hair that had spilled across the puppet's face.
Those eyes—frozen, glassy—still stared directly at him.
Unblinking.
Unwavering.
Even in death, it hadn't looked away from him.
Kyle looked down at his blade. His hand was still shaking slightly. He didn't know why.
He had won.
He had stopped it.
But he didn't feel like a victor.
There was something behind those eyes… something too human.
And for a moment, Kyle couldn't help but wonder—
Was this truly just a puppet? Or something more?
Kyle remained crouched beside the fallen puppet, unease settling into his bones. He reached out slowly, brushing his fingers against its face—smooth, cold, far too lifelike.
"Who were you really…?"
He muttered. There was no answer. Just the silent form of a creation too perfect to be mere wood or magic.
He rose at last, eyes narrowing. The divine signature lingering in the air still pulsed faintly, like a taunt. This wasn't over. This was a message.
A message that the divine won't let Kyle do as he wishes any longer….not that he needed their permission anyway.