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My Servant Is An Elf Knight From Another World

Chapter 24
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All That Remains

No motel rooms in sight.

That was the first thing to register. Second was the pain.

I woke up throbbing and aching all over, groggy movements and groans that no hangover could compare.

Blood had dried and crusted over the wound on my palm, one thing I noticed among plenty of others. Like the fact that I was lying on dusty floorboards, staring at a ceiling that had been decaying for a quite a long time now.

“Matriarchs…” I heard myself whisper.

It all started coming back to me like a pull of a lever.

So it was all in my head, was it? Matriarchs can just enter someone’s mind willy-nilly just like that? Those two are far from what I expected of immortal beings of death. ????n????????????????????. ????????????

Now I’m awake with no sense or clue of my location. Which could only mean one thing: they brought me to their nest.

.....

An abandoned decrepit building at the corner of a desolate street.

Going by what the angry, feisty sister had said to me, it was only a matter of time before I got to be served up on a silver platter. I had to do something.

“Protect me, my ass… where the hell are you, Irene?” I muttered under a heavy breath, straining myself steady to my feet.

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No sign of her anywhere… Where was she?

As much as I would like to sit flat on my ass, twiddling my thumbs and waiting for rescue, I’m afraid I might be on my own for the time being so that wasn’t exactly an option.

What was an option, then?

Roaming. Exploring the place. My would-be killers hadn’t reached me yet, I might as well, right? Maybe I might find Ash… that was the main priority now. That, and staying alive.

The soles of my shoes crackled against shattered glass and debris as I passed over the doorway from where I woke to a long narrow hallway that was equally as dilapidated.

Haven’t the faintest clue what the building was formerly used for, whatever it was, it certainly needed a lot of empty rooms. Couldn’t go five meters without coming across another on either side of the hall. Office building, perhaps?

The lack of light from a broken window down by the furthest end of the corridor told me that it was night. A quick look down and simple depth perception clarified two things.

Number one: I was standing at the top floor of a sixth-storey building.

Two: Escape wasn’t going to be an option for me unless I somehow make it to the ground floor and I’m not exactly too keen on playing hide and seek with vampires in an abandoned building.

Gotta keep moving.

For now, I turned, walked a few steps, then, staring straight ahead, froze immediately.

A dark figure stood at the far end of another corridor. Still as a statue.

I felt my body stiffen at once.

Darkness adjusted my sight, and after a while, I could finally see that it wasn’t one of the Matriarchs. Regardless, there was certainly a person there, someone burly, big, judging by their silhouette.

Cautiously, I went on an approach.

“Hello?” I said and got no answer.

Unresponsive, unmoving, and not a Matriarch. A closer look revealed the outline of a middle-aged man, his clothes stained and ripped in places, with dried blood clinging to the surface of his throat. His expression was as blank as his hundred-yard stare… like he wasn’t at all conscious, meaning…

“Victim 2…”

I recognized his face from the news article of his disappearance. If he’s here, zombified, then that also means…

I practically raced around the corner to the next stretch of rooms just to confirm my hunch, slowing down to a walk… my breath held tight in anticipation for what next I’d find.

It didn’t take long for the next to show itself.

Victim 3, a teenage boy with ruffled hair, was bent over with his hands around his knees in the darkest corner of the room to the left. A drawled moan crackling from the depths of his throat.

Seemingly comatose, Victim 6 laid flat against a moth-eaten mattress. Upwards were her eyes, staring blankly at the ceiling, muttering silent nothings to herself in her own little corner of the room to the right.

7 was out, standing as still as a statue in the middle of the corridor. As I walked by him I could faintly smell the fragrance of cologne on him. His girlfriend stated that she last saw him walking back to his car.

Number 4 and 5 were nowhere to be seen.

All that were left was Amanda, the first victim and Ash, the eighth. They too were nowhere in sight.

Not until I turned the next corner.

The next corner…

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“Amanda…”

Being the first, and the longest held captive, Amanda was the worst looking of all the eight. Her skin was pale, verging on an unhealthy shade of a corpse. The cheer and liveliness on her face was gone and gaunt, reduced to mere haggard skin and bones. Stray hair clung to her lips, which drooled a hefty amount of saliva that dribbled down her chin and onto the floor.

She was practically a dead woman walking. I could hardly believe she was still alive let alone standing upright.

Compared to the rest of the victims with the exception of 4 and 5, Ash remained the only one I saw in perfect health.

But that was hours ago now.

The sister’s voice echoed profoundly in my mind.

“I’m killing the Elf.”

Did she take her? Was that why I couldn’t find her?

If so… I couldn’t waste any time.

Amanda made a noise as I slowly walked past her. A small sound, it could have been a grunt. Maybe she knew… maybe she recognized me, saw me… and realized that I was leaving her behind.

A grunt. Maybe it was nothing.

I want to think it was nothing.

Because there was nothing I could do.

“I’m sorry,” was all that I could give.

Whether or not she understood me, I didn’t know. I’d like to think she did.

I discovered a stairwell that led further down to the lower levels. Each step descending was like an echo magnified by a hundred.

From the last step of the fifth floor, that was when I heard it. An echo reverberating from the sixth.

An echo of a grunt.