• An addendum to Rule 3 regarding fan-translated works of things such as Web Novels has been made. Please see here for details.
  • We've issued a clarification on our policy on AI-generated work.
  • Our mod selection process has completed. Please welcome our new moderators.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

God of War - Karmic Cycle [AU]

Chapter 34 - Weapons of Mass Destruction New
The Vanara curled himself into a ball as the attacker overwhelmed him. The man was essentially everywhere and nowhere at once as he flitted across the field at impossible speeds. Every fraction of a second, a delayed explosion rattled the Vanara as the man fired off his explosive arrows.

The monkey, in turn, tried to crawl away. He hoped to create distance, but the man would appear out of nowhere and expend suppressive fire to reroute him. The damage the arrows inflicted was merely concussive. Essentially, they were insufficient to seriously hurt the Vanara. It was clear to him that the man's objective was just to destroy the herb, not to actually kill him. It was all a cruel and calculated game.

After a rapid yet short-lived volley of attacks, the Vanara noticed a pattern. The attacks were being honed in on the exact same location each time. The man had not been firing haphazardly. He was trying to scope out the weakest points in the Vanara's defences.

After noticing the Vanara flinch when an arrow struck near his right shoulder, the man started to direct his attacks solely at that target.

The Vanara tried to dodge or shield himself with other parts of his body, but it did little to help. The man was faster than sound itself. He would appear in the perfect position to attack the Vanara's weakness with another explosive arrow.

Gritting his teeth, the Vanara made a run for it. Right as he took off with an impulse that cracked the earth beneath him, two arrows whizzed past. They exploded in unison right in front of his face. His momentum was immediately curbed, causing him to tumble and fall. And as he fell, more and more arrows started to pelt him. The impacts were jarring and, as a result, the precious pouch was knocked from his grasp.

Two more controlled explosions pushed the pouch away from the Vanara. It tumbled across the barren ground and rolled to a stop, hitting the attacker's right foot.

The man smirked. With a decisive move, he lifted his foot and brought it down on the pouch.

But right as his foot was about to make contact, he immediately disappeared from the spot. A split-second later, an axe hurtled through the space where he was originally standing and embedded itself deep into the barren ground a few metres away.

A tremor echoed all around as the Vanara collapsed into the ground like a hurtling meteorite. He let out half a relieved sigh and hacked out a cough to clear the dirt from his airways before scrambling towards the pouch. After taking a quick look inside and verifying that the herb wasn't damaged. He let go of the other half of the sigh.

His eyes skimmed to the side and locked onto the axe in the ground. A moment of contemplation followed before a spark of recognition flashed across his face.

"This isn't your fight," the Vanara's opponent said as he appeared by his chariot. "I'm giving you a chance to leave… again."

Kratos walked over with measured and casual steps while raising his palm to call back the axe.

"What're you doin'?" The Vanara exclaimed. "Go!"

"Listen to the monkey," the man suggested with a smirk. "Or I promise you that you won't be leaving this battle alive."

Kratos snorted with faint amusement, "I accept that offer."

"Okay…" the man said with a chuckle. "Then it will be your honour to die by the hands of Meghanad, Crown Prince of-"

The man halted mid-boast and disappeared as an axe hurtled through where he stood.

"It is customary to exchange introductions in a duel," the voice came from behind Kratos. Kratos swivelled and brought his elbow in a downward arc to strike at the sound's source, but the swing only met air.

"If you don't give me a name, I will be forced to assign you one," the voice mocked once again from Kratos' blind spot. Kratos swung back, but halted midway and immediately punched where his blindspot would have shifted to.

His fist barely clipped the man's right shoulder as he appeared there instantaneously.

"Aren't you a smart one," Meghanad mocked. "Smarter than the monkey, at least."

"What are you waiting for?" Brahma yelled at the gawking Vanara. "Fly, you fool!"

The monkey snapped out of his shock and turned to leap away, but a barrage of concussive shots intercepted him again.

"I didn't say you could leave," Meghanad drawled with a derisive sing-song voice as he appeared before them atop his chariot.

He clicked his tongue and complained, "One against two and two-fifteenth, doesn't seem fair."

"Two-fifteenth?" The Vanara repeated while scratching his head in confusion.

"He is referring to me," Brahma explained in a low voice. It did not convince the monkey, as he still returned a blank look. "Proportionally, a human body is around seven-and-a-half heads tall. Since I am just a head, I am two-fifteenth of a human."

The monkey let out an audible hum of understanding. "Is he just trying to act smart by bringing in mathematics in the middle of a fight..." he murmured.

"I think it's only fair to even the playing field," Meghanad expressed before bringing the pinky finger of his palms to his lips and letting out a shrill whistle.

The whistle echoed across the battlefield for a beat. Then, a sound akin to an approaching locust swarm started to buzz, growing louder and louder with each passing second.

As Kratos looked into the distance, he saw a sparse cloud approaching them rapidly. As it grew closer, he realised that the swarm was not made of locusts. It was a horde of small, goblin-like winged Rakshasas. They were varied in appearance, but they all looked like tiny, unarmed imps with leathery wings and malicious grins.

The swarm descended on Kratos and the monkey with extreme prejudice. Tiny claws and sharp teeth met Kratos's skin. He quickly found himself peppered with countless small slashes and bites. It was not substantial damage. Each individual attack was no more than a pinprick. But it was quickly starting to accumulate. Blood started to spurt out from every part of his exposed skin.

Then, for a split second, the horde parted like a curtain. Kratos caught a glimpse of Meghanad smirking from his chariot. An arrow flew through the narrow gap and exploded right in front of him, causing a staggering, concussive blast. This pattern repeated five more times. The imps would part, the arrow would fly, and the explosion would rock him. On the sixth, Kratos anticipated the parting. He hurled the axe through the clearing. But Meghanad was not there. The concussive shot came from above, this time, slamming him into the dirt.

"Too predictable!" Meghanad's mocking voice carried through the cacophony of shrieks. The imps swarmed him again, their laughter mixing with their master's, and amped up the attack. Some latched onto Kratos and started to gnaw at him with rabid madness.

With an annoyed growl, Kratos ripped the imp, tossed it to the ground and stomped its head in one decisive move. Its skull exploded like a ripe watermelon, painting his feet in a deep and viscous crimson liquid. The action unnerved his attackers as they subconsciously gave him a wider berth. The space was enough for Kratos to approach and shake the monkey. The Vanara was once again curled up in a tight ball, trying only to protect the herb. Kratos grabbed the monkey's long, white tail and tied it firmly around his own waist. "Take me to him!" Kratos yelled over the noise.

The monkey grunted in affirmation. His tail expanded instantaneously, and its length shot out like a rope. It pulled Kratos with incredible force, yanking him free from the swarm. He was carried through the storm of bodies and launched directly towards the flying chariot.

Meghanad did not expect this gambit. Unlike on land, where his speed was unmatched, the golden chariot had a hard time turning midair. Kratos collided against the side of the chariot with a heavy thud. He quickly stabilised himself and stood to face the incredulous stare of Meghanad. The man dodged Kratos' first jab and immediately responded with a headbutt that barely affected the Spartan.

A wry smile twisted Meghanad's lips. He unsheathed a katar from his waist. It was a wicked, serrated blade about his forearm in length and extended out from his knuckles. He curled his fist tight around the weapon's handle and punched Kratos with the blade.

Kratos did not flinch. He let the blade latch deep in between his ribs. Meghanad's hand was now inadvertently captured as his weapon was stuck fast in Kratos' body. Kratos seized the opportunity and started to pummel the man with a barrage of wild and brutal haymakers.

Kratos did not hold back on his punches. It was evident by the sounds of bone cracking as his fist dipped deep into Meghanad's skull. But to his surprise, the man was completely unscathed after every attack. His face remained unbroken, and his smile remained unfaltering.

"You fought well," Meghanad commended. Right as Kratos' next fist was about to connect, he jerked his head aside. In the same motion, he pulled himself deeper into Kratos' sphere of attack, ignoring the fist that grazed his temple.

"Unfortunately, your enemy was I," he added. He yanked the katar free from Kratos's ribs and swiftly pushed the blade into Kratos' jugular. In one continuous, brutal motion, he twisted the weapon and severed Kratos' spine.

Meghanad pushed the corpse off the side of the chariot. He did not deign to watch it fall, as he proceeded to rearm himself with his bow. Right as he nocked an arrow, a piercing pain spiked through his spine. He reached behind him, and his hand grasped cold steel. An axe was embedded deep in his back.

As he turned, his eyes wide with disbelief. He saw Kratos climbing back up the side of the chariot, completely undamaged.

Meghanad snarled. He gripped the handle of the axe, ripped it from his back, and tossed it aside contemptuously. He seized the chariot's controls and swerved hard to the left. The chariot banked at a ninety-degree angle, but Kratos' grip was like iron. He was not dislodged. Meghanad sent the chariot into a barrel roll, then a sharp dive, and tried to use the wind itself to tear the man free. No matter how crazy the manoeuvre, Kratos was not deterred. He just kept drawing closer, hand over hand, with unhurried movements.

Kratos hauled himself up with one smooth, powerful pull and stood face to face with Meghanad once more. The two did not waste time on words. The fight resumed instantly.

The discrepancy in their techniques was stark. Meghanad was a blur of motion. His style was all speed, precision, and elaborate technique. He flowed like water, striking with palm heels, knife-hand chops, and rapid-fire punches aimed at Kratos' joints, throat, and eyes. He never stayed in one place; his feet danced continuously and took full advantage of even the limited space on the chariot's floor. His every move was designed to disable, to find a weakness, and exploit it with flawless, economical grace.

Kratos was the opposite. He was like a stone wall. His movements were measured, economical, and unforgivably powerful. He did not dance; he planted himself. He took the flurry of strikes because he knew his body could bear it. His defence was simple: he blocked what he could and endured what he could not. He knew immediately that dodging or parrying would be a waste of energy.

Where Meghanad was fast, Kratos was patient. He waited. His eyes tracked his opponent's impossible speed and anticipated the rhythm.

Then he countered. His fist moved like a piston. He threw a single, devastating right hook. Meghanad was forced to abandon his attack. And with that, his momentum was cut short, and he was forced to alter his speed towards defence as he ducked under the blow. The wind from the punch alone made his hair whip across his face. The force of it shook the entire chariot. Kratos followed with a heavy left, then a brutal uppercut. Meghanad weaved and dodged flawlessly. The attacks were straightforward, and their trajectory was predictable.

The problem was that they didn't provide a single opening. In order to create one, Meghanad would have to block or even body an attack. But a single clean hit, he knew, would be catastrophic.

The two were evenly matched. Meghanad's blinding speed was frustrated by Kratos' immovable resilience. Kratos' raw power was, in turn, nullified by Meghanad's impossible agility.

When a fight reached a stalemate, the victor was not decided by skill. It was decided by endurance. The man who could last the longest would eventually win.

Meghanad quickly surmised that he had made a mistake. He had underestimated his opponent. He had figured that by overwhelming the ashen man with speed, he could secure a quick victory. Unfortunately, the man had seen right through the gambit. He had rationed his energy well.

It was also odd, Meghanad noted, that the man hadn't tired one bit. At this point, Meghanad had an excellent measure of his opponent. The man's attacks had not diminished in speed or intensity since their fight began.

And another thing Meghanad found out was that the man could not die. At least, the conditions had not been met to kill him. But that was of no consequence, though. As long as Meghanad stood in his chariot, he could not die either. However, this also meant that continuing this farce was meaningless.

One thing his father taught him was that in any confrontation, there must always be a victor and a loser. Fighting towards a stalemate was a waste of time and energy. In fact, fighting this man wasn't part of the plan. It was a coincidental detour, which was turning out to be a separate journey in and of itself. A journey Meghanad had no intention of taking to term. Thus, it was time to fast-track his original objective and disengage from this irksome man.

Meghanad leapt up. He used Kratos's shoulder as a springboard, pushed himself high into the air and away from the chariot. While midair, he nocked his bow and took aim. But his target was not Kratos. Meghanad jerked the bow and aimed it square at the monkey, who was still curled up in a bloodied mess on the ground.

By some unseen command, the swarm of Rakshasas parted and dispersed, and cleared the line of fire.

Meghanad opened his mouth and started to chant. Instead of his voice, the world just went silent. At the peak of his parabolic trajectory, his entire body halted. He was suspended in midair, as if held by some invisible rope hanging from the clouds.

The clouds, in turn, started to swirl and turn darker. Thunder and lightning started to rumble, drowning out the silence with a tense, electrical hum.

"Oh no…" Brahma evoked from Kratos' waist. His voice was tight with sudden realisation. "K-K-Kratos-"

The arrow nocked in Meghanad's bow started to crackle with light. It grew brighter and brighter, and shone with a terrible, contained power.

Kratos' gaze narrowed with recognition.

This build-up… he had seen it before. It was not the exact same, but the feeling gnawing at the back of his neck felt far too familiar.

He delved into his memories. It did not take long for him to find what sparked this recognition.

He remembered the vision he had experienced from Rama's past. That time on the battlefield where the man had summoned an attack of catastrophic proportions. He recollected the primal feeling that attack had evoked. It was the same emotion he was experiencing right now. His fight or flight mechanism was blaring haphazardly. This spoke volumes. Even though his mind knew that he could not die, his body still felt apprehension when facing this power.

"The Vanara's life is forfeit," Brahma lamented. "I did not know that man knew how to wield my Astra."

"What?" Kratos probed, his voice a low growl.

"The weapon he is calling forth," Brahma explained, "is one I developed in the primordial eras."

Kratos hefted his axe. He hurled it with all his strength towards the hovering man. But the axe simply bounced off, as though it had hit an invisible force field.

"You cannot interrupt its invocation," Brahma explained. "I… I had originally created it to protect the learned ascetics who worshipped me. It was for self-defence. But the warrior caste recognised its destructive potential and co-opted it."

"How do you stop it?" Kratos asked, while his eyes remained affixed on the growing light.

"You can't," Brahma responded with a morose tone. "Once invoked, it cannot be stopped. It will not cease until it has annihilated the target it was meant to strike. Anything that stands in its way is destroyed along with it."

Kratos averted his gaze from the man and looked down at the monkey. It seemed the Vanara, too, had recognised the attack. But to Kratos's shock, he did not see the same primal fear he felt internally.

Instead, the monkey straightened up. He knelt on the ground with a tranquil expression, as though he were inviting the attack.

"We did all that we could," Brahma expressed with a sigh. "I guess it is time to go."

"You give up, just like that?" Kratos probed, his voice laced with incredulity.

"There is no way around this," Brahma explained. "Unless you can pull out an Astra of equal or greater power, which I am sure you will be hard-pressed to find, there is no way to counter the Brahmastra."

"You made this weapon. Teach me how to summon it," Kratos demanded.

"It does not work that way," Brahma answered. "It is not a spell that I can just bestow upon you. Learning the invocation comes in multiple stages. It takes time and dedication."

Kratos observed as the nocked arrow gained a luminescence bordering that of the sun. The weapon was just moments away from being released.

In a moment of quick thinking, Kratos leapt off the chariot. He landed hard on the cracked earth and used the tail tied around his waist to yank himself towards the monkey.

"Traveller! Knowledgeable Head! What are you doing? Go, quickly now!" The Vanara urged hastily. His expression was warped with concern for them.

Kratos ignored the monkey. He planted himself firmly in front of the kneeling Vanara and raised his palm, calling his axe back to him.

At that exact moment, with a deafening crack that sounded like a hundred lightning storms converging at once, the world flashed white.

Kratos felt the hairs on the back of his neck stand up straight. He felt the wave of pure danger draw close.

The moment the wood of the axe's handle slapped into his palm, he rotated swiftly. He brought the flat of the axe head up just in time to meet the blinding flash of energy.

There was only pain after that. Kratos felt his skin melting from his frame and his bones turning into ash. He went in and out of consciousness multiple times. He was likely dying and being brought back to life by the axe, over and over. But he did not relent. He gritted his teeth and held on strong against the impossible, annihilating power of the attack.

In the minuscule instances between his fading consciousness, Kratos managed to feel out the intriguing nature of the attack. While it had arrived like a charging bull, it lacked the kind of momentum one would expect from a projectile. It had the piercing behaviour of a jabbing spear, as it was attempting to burrow through him and hit its target. To that end, Kratos didn't feel himself being pushed back while the axe blocked the weapon's charge. The axe, in turn, vibrated like an excited child as it absorbed the attack's power in the process.

Kratos could feel that as time progressed, the rate of his rejuvenation was amplifying. It got to the point that he was no longer losing consciousness - the axe was able to regenerate the damage as it was being inflicted.

But that was not all.

As time progressed, Kratos felt it bubbling up again.

The rage. The bloodlust.

He had no reason to feel it. He wasn't emotionally involved in this conflict in any way. He shouldn't be feeling… anything. Why was he getting angry?

That was the last strand of his thoughts while he still remained in control. Because the moment the attack dissipated, all Kratos saw was red.



"WHAT?!" Meganad bellowed in shock with a hint of fear. "What did you do?!"

"Y-You saved me!" The Vanara muttered when he saw the ash-skinned man regain his ashen skin as the man's scalded and molten dermal layer regenerated before his very eyes. He scanned his eyes all around him and absorbed the utter devastation the Brahmastra had wrought to his surroundings.

Even before the battlefield was subject to the aftereffects of the Astra, it was by no means a paradise to stay in. But it was at least palatable if not drab. But now…

The ground where the man stood was the epicenter of a new, massive crater with an expanding cone behind him that was unaffected. The earth wasn't just scorched, it was gone. In its place was a gleaming, glassy sheet of black obsidian where the sheer heat of the Astra had melted the rock and sand instantly. Wisps of acrid smoke rose from the vitrified ground, carrying a sharp, ozone smell that burned the nostrils.

Further out, the barren plains were riddled with deep gouges, as if someone had taken a giant rake to the land. What little vegetation had clung to life was now nothing but white ash that danced in the superheated wind. The air itself felt thin and sterile, and a suffocating heat radiated from the impact zone, making every breath a chore.

This wasn't the first time Meghanad had summoned the Brahmastra. The Vanara had witnessed it being summoned in the previous confrontations. But at least at that time, his Lord was present to counteract the Brahmastra with his own invocation of the weapon. So luckily, he didn't have to experience the after-effects of the attack.

But what confused the monkey was that, according to his knowledge, nothing should have stopped the weapon from striking its target. Unless-

His eyes darted to the axe in the Traveller's hand, and a realisation struck him.

That weapon had to be in the same league, if not more powerful, than the Brahmastra itself!

"Monkey!" The Knowledgeable Head yelled. "Go! NOW!"

The Vanara stuttered and stumbled, but the Head's admonishing glare sent him stumbling. After a running start, he leapt with force in the direction of his Lord's retinue and encampment.



Meghanad found himself entertaining the unfamiliar notion of regret. It turned out that kicking a metaphorical hornet's nest had all the delightful consequences of kicking a real one.

As he saw the monkey flying away, he realised that not only had he failed to achieve his original objective, he had tangled himself with a very, very dangerous man. A man more dangerous than Indra himself - because the King of Devas, too, was forced to kneel before the might of Meghanad's arsenal of Divine Astras. Only one other had come close to matching Meghanad in his prowess, and it was that dastardly exiled prince.

But this man evoked a sense of danger that trumped the exiled prince.

The man stood like an eerie statue amidst the carnage as his body regenerated at an observable pace. His exposed skull started to regrow its clothing to finally reveal an impossibly enraged mien.

The bloodlust oozing out of the man's red eyes was enough to send a shiver down Meghanad's spine.

Without a second thought, Meghanad let out a shrill whistle and called the chariot towards himself. After launching the Astra, he had descended to the ground preemptively to celebrate the demise of his opponents. But his haste had left him vulnerable.

His chariot was just a few metres away from him before a piercing strike to his spine incapacitated him completely. He fell to the ground and rolled to his side, just in time to see the ashen man charging towards him like an enraged bull. He scuttled hurriedly towards the rapidly approaching chariot, but the man caught his leg and, with a swift twist, shattered his ankle.

But at this point, the chariot was right next to Meghanad. He suppressed a painful moan and let out another variation of a shrill whistle. The horse closest to him responded in kind. It rotated its body and sent a swift kick targeting the ashen man.

Meghanad did not wait to see the aftermath of the attack. He quickly ascended the chariot, and as its magic amended the damage, he urged his horses to fly away.

Once he was stable, he risked a glance back at the ground to search for the ashen man. He wasn't there. The question had barely formed in Meghanad's mind when the horse to his far right suddenly whinnied in agony and thrashed wildly in its harness.

The chariot jerked violently, almost throwing him from his feet. It was then that Meghanad saw him. The ashen man was hanging underneath the horse, gripping its exposed entrails like a rope, with his face coated in fresh, crimson blood, amplifying the emanating aura of pure, murderous rage.

Meghanad scrambled for his bow and nocked an arrow, but the man immediately swung under the horse's belly and disappeared from his line of sight. A second later, Meghanad's second horse let out the same pained, gurgling shriek.

The chariot was now hurtling towards the ground dangerously.

In a moment of quick thinking, Meghanad took one of his arrows and exploded it at an angle behind his chariot, causing it to veer off-course.

It was time to take emergency measures. If he couldn't defeat the man in a neutral battleground, he had to leverage home-court advantage.

And his home-court was his father's kingdom - Lanka.
 
As he saw the monkey flying away, he realised that not only had he failed to achieve his original objective, he had tangled himself with a very, very dangerous man. A man more dangerous than Indra himself - because the King of Devas, too, was forced to kneel before the might of Meghanad's arsenal of Divine Astras. Only one other had come close to matching Meghanad in his prowess, and it was that dastardly exiled prince
My boy , with how many time indra had to kneel or fled during his reign . You aint that special lol.
 
Chapter 35 - The Two Princes New
The world was a screaming blur of wind and terror. White-knuckled, Meghanad wrestled with the reins as his heart frantically drummed against his ribs. The chariot lurched perilously as his second horse succumbed to its injuries and collapsed like the first. With two down, the strain fell entirely on his third. In an attempt to alleviate the burden, Meghanad drew out his sword and swiftly dispatched the rope and chains tethering the disembowelled beasts to his chariot.

As they fell, Meghanad noticed something peculiar. A red rope was streaming out of the bowels of his second steed. Before he could determine what it was, something obscene and wet coiled around the neck of his last remaining steed. Just one look, and Meghanad knew - intestines. The brute below was using the guts of a dead horse like some makeshift lasso.

The horse shrieked a high-pitched sound of pure terror. And immediately, it yanked its head violently to the side. The chariot veered sharply and went off-course, forcing Meghanad to fight to regain his balance. From the corner of his eye, he saw the ashen man use the momentum from the chaotic turn to propel himself upwards in an arc akin to a pendulum, where the man was the mass suspended at the end of a length of intestine-turned-rope. He crashed onto the chariot's ornate floor, further destabilising the platform.

It did not take long for Meghanad to recover his balance; he'd traversed the chariot through worse conditions, after all. And once he'd stabilised himself, he quickly closed the space between himself and the ashen intruder in less than a heartbeat.

Meghanad noticed that the man was distracted. Unlike their earlier contest of close-quarters combat, Meghanad could see an endless number of openings. His first strike was a palm-heel thrust aimed directly under the man's chin. Under normal conditions, this blow would certainly snap the victim's neck. And connect, it did. The result was also within expectation as a crack was heard over the howling winds. But the consequence was not as Meghanad had calculated.

The man healed almost instantaneously! In essence, the attack barely distressed him. Undeterred, Meghanad flowed into his next attack, which was a rigid knife-hand slicing at the thick cords of muscle in the warrior's neck. Again, the attack connected, the result was felt, but the after-effect was subpar. He pivoted with a low sweeping kick aimed at the back of the man's knee while simultaneously jabbing two stiffened fingers toward the eyes. It was a flawless, coordinated assault meant to cripple and blind in a single motion.

For a second, Meghanad felt like he was punching cotton. The attacks succeeded, but the man reverted almost instantly. The irony wasn't lost on Meghanad either; this was probably how all his opponents felt when they confronted him.

But what irked Meghanad the most was that the man didn't even seem to register his attacks. He was completely unfazed. He just stood there and weathered the barrage, with his crimson eyes fixed on Meghanad with a glint that was unlike that of a predator. Because a predator's purpose was just to fill its hunger. This man was purely on a mission to demolish.

Meghanad committed to a final, devastating punch aimed at the warrior's throat. But this time, the man moved. He took half a step back, and right as Meghanad's fist was an inch away from grazing his face, he cocked his head back and brought it forward. Meghanad's fist cracked, sending a jolt of pain through his nervous system. As his shattered appendage was repairing itself under the chariot's power, the man caught Meghanad by his armour and jerked him forward.

The man's skull collided against Meghanad's, and his world exploded into a silent, searing flash of white light. He was thrown sideways as a sound like a thousand temple gongs rang in his ears. His mind was a discombobulated mess. And although the physical damage healed at a steady pace, the disorientation took a bit longer to fade.

What surprised Meghanad was that there was no follow-up. Why had the man just left him? As his focus returned, Meghanad realised why, as he was greeted with a chilling sight.

The man had turned his back on him. He stood at the edge of the chariot while gripping the large, golden-spoked wheel. His back and shoulder muscles knotted into granite-like bulges under the strain. Wood groaned and metal screamed in protest. With a final, inhuman roar, he ripped the entire wheel assembly from the axle.

Meghanad stared awestruck. His shock momentarily overrode the lingering, dizzying pain in his head. He watched the beast of a man heft the heavy wheel and use it as a battering ram. He slammed it again and again into the axle of the second wheel. Splinters flew. Metal bent, then shattered. With a final, percussive crash, the second wheel was torn from the chassis and sent spinning into the clouds below.

The chariot, now crippled, began to buck and fishtail wildly, threatening to tear itself apart in mid-air.

It was in that moment of dawning horror that Meghanad finally understood. The ashen man wasn't trying to kill him. He was trying to kill his immortality. He'd figured it out!

A new, frantic energy surged through Meghanad. He scrambled for his bow and immediately nocked an explosive arrow. He amplified the magic that generated the explosion and fired at point-blank range. The resulting blast engulfed them both, searing flesh and metal alike. The ashen man was thrown back as his body was riddled with shrapnel. For a moment, Meghanad could see the light leave his eyes. But it was only momentary, as he had already begun healing.

Meghanad, caught in his own blast, felt his armour singe and his skin blister. The wounds began to close, but he noticed, with a spike of cold dread, that the process was a fraction slower than before. Worse yet, his opponent was recuperating faster than he was.

He knew that he could not let himself get separated from the chariot while facing this invulnerable opponent. His eyes darted around and landed on a heavy length of chain that was initially used to tether the horses to the chariot. With anxious hands, he wrapped the loose end tightly around his right leg and checked that the other end was secured to a metal ring bolted to the chariot's floor.

At that moment, Meghanad looked up and met his opponent's gaze. And then it all happened within a fraction of a second.

Meghanad saw a dark hue falling on them - a shadow. Before he could turn to gauge the source, he saw the ashen man leap forward from his spot. He barely had enough time to move to his defence when his world collapsed in a thunderous crunch of splintering wood and shattered stone.

The chariot slammed into the sheer face of a mountain.

The impact shouldn't have affected Meghanad, and the man knew that. Which was why the ashen attacker acted to maximise the pain inflicted. He gripped Meghanad by the throat and chest and pinned him against the rapidly approaching wall of rock. Meghanad became the buffer between the man and the mountain.

Darkness swallowed them as they bored into the stone. The noise was deafening. It was like a constant, grinding roar that vibrated in Meghanad's marrow. He felt his bones snap, pulverise, and turn to dust, only for the chariot's magic to force them back together in the next instant. He was unmade and remade a dozen times in the span of a few seconds. It was at this moment that Meghanad regretted his conditional invulnerability, because the endless pain made him wish that he were dead. Jagged rocks flayed his skin, tearing away muscle and sinew, dragging him through a claustrophobic hell of friction and pressure. He tried to scream, but his mouth was filled with grit and blood.

He was a plough, driven by the unstoppable force of the ashen man and the momentum of his celestial chariot as he churned through the mountain's heart.

Then, as abruptly as the torment had begun, the pressure vanished. He burst out the other side of the peak in a shower of debris. With his momentum hampered, gravity reclaimed him. The chariot, which was now little more than a twisted wreck of frame and axle, plummeted toward the churning waters far below. The sudden jerk of the fall snapped the chain taut, leaving Meghanad dangling upside down by his right leg.

He swung wildly in the gale, blinking the dust and blood from his eyes. To his left, he saw what remained of his last steed. The impact had turned the majestic beast into nothing more than red mulch smeared against the twisted wreckage of the chassis.

As clarity poured in, the pain ceased, and his body was remade once more. Meghanad quickly tried to hoist himself up to undo himself from the chains. At that moment, a boom echoed from above.

Meghanad twisted his neck to look up.

The patch of rock he had just exited exploded outward. Through the cloud of dust, the ashen man stepped out into the open air. He grabbed onto the jutting rock faces of the steep side of the mountain and methodically made his way down.

Once he was beside Meghanad, the man stopped. Even upside down, Meghanad met his eyes. They were calmed now, but the rage bubbling within was still blaring like an unending siren through them.

The man extended his hand to the side.

From the wreckage of the mountain, a silver blur whistled through the air. The man's axe spun end over end and returned to its master with unerring accuracy. It slapped into the man's palm with a heavy thud.

In one smooth, fluid motion, the man used the momentum of the catch to swing the weapon downward.

Meghanad screamed as the axe bit through armour, flesh, and bone. There was no resistance. The blade separated his leg cleanly just above the ankle.

The connection to the chariot was severed.

Meghanad plummeted.

His scream was swallowed by the wind as he fell away from the healing magic, away from the mountain, and into the waiting abyss below. He hit the water with the force of a cannonball.

The cold was a shock to his system, momentarily stunning him. The torrential currents grabbed him, tossing him like a rag doll against the tide. He thrashed. His lungs burned. He fought the urge to inhale the ocean. With a desperate kick, he broke the surface, gasping for air that tasted of salt and copper.

He wiped the water from his eyes and looked up, searching for the sky.

Instead, he saw a shadow growing larger. The ashen man was diving straight for him headfirst.

A small, ironic smirk touched Meghanad's lips. It was the only defiance he had left.

Then, the world went dark.


The wind howling over the ocean was replaced by the low, restless murmur of a massive encampment. Miles of fabric rippled in the coastal breeze, forming a sea of tents that stretched as far as the eye could see. To a distant observer, it might have looked like any other army awaiting the horn of war. But a closer look revealed a strange peculiarity.

These were not men. Not… entirely men.

Tails twitched nervously. Fur bristled in the damp air. The soldiers crouched on their haunches or paced with agile, restless energy. The army consisted entirely of Vanaras.

In the centre of this sprawling formation stood a large tent. Its heavy flaps were secured against the wind. Inside, the air was thick with the scent of herbs and the weight of silence. A man sat patiently by the bedside of another. His posture was rigid with a quiet, terrifying focus. Both were dressed in the same humble attire - plain rags that contrasted sharply with the regal bearing that they couldn't quite hide. Their hair was pulled back into tight top-knots, revealing faces that bore the same noble structure.

But the resemblance ended there. The man who sat in vigil possessed skin the colour of dark and rich rain-laden clouds. The figure on the bed was naturally lighter, fair like the moon, but now he was rapidly turning the colour of ash. His chest barely rose. The pallor of death was creeping up his neck, stealing the life from him, breath by shallow breath.

A dull, thundering boom echoed from somewhere far across the water. The ground beneath the tent trembled ever so slightly.

The dark-skinned man's eyes snapped open. He had been deep in meditation, but the sound pulled him back to the waking world. The faint lines of worry that had etched themselves into his forehead smoothed out, replaced by a wash of profound relief.

The tent flaps swung open, admitting a gust of fresh air and a massive figure. A large bear walked in on two legs with uncharacteristic agility and poise.

"Lord Ram!" The bear spoke with a deep, vibrating growl. "Hanuman has returned! He's found the herb."

"I didn't doubt him for a moment," Ram said as he stood, with a small, weary smile touching his lips.

Before the bear could reply, the flap opened again. A Vanara rushed in, breathless and frantic, carrying the scent of ozone. He collapsed to his knees, slid slightly on the rug, and raised his hand high above his head in offering.

In his open palm rested a pouch. Its contents spilt out slightly to reveal the lush leaves of the herb.

Ram stepped forward. He collected the pouch from the trembling hand and turned to the bear, extending the medicine towards him.

"Jambawan, I must trouble you to brew the poultice."

The bear reached out nimbly. His large claws collected the herb with surprising delicateness. He bowed low and retreated to the corner of the tent where a mortar and pestle lay waiting.

Ram turned back to thank the kneeling Vanara and to express his heartfelt gratitude. But the spot on the rug was empty.

Ram blinked. He stepped out of the tent and scanned the bustling camp. A short distance away, he spotted the monkey overturning a stack of weapon crates, lifting heavy stones, and peering frantically under wagons.

"Has ANYONE seen my Gada?" Hanuman shouted with his voice cracking in panic.

"Didn't you carry it with you when you went?" Ram said as he approached.

The Vanara slapped his forehead in annoyance as the realisation dawned on him. He then turned to the crowd and yelled, "Can ANYONE get me A Gada?!"

"What's with the anxiousness?" Ram asked as he placed a gentle palm on the panicking monkey's shoulder.

"I do 'pologise, my Lord, but I must return," Hanuman explained, with his characteristic drawl. The monkey massaged his jaw as he spoke, drawing Ram's attention to the conspicuous scar by his chin.

Ram was one of the very few who called Hanuman by his given name. Most just referred to him as Hanuman - the one with the disfigured jaw. Although the Vanara didn't appear affected by this designation, Ram could feel that the name drudged up some unpleasant memories.

Besides, Maruti was too beautiful a name to be buried in obscurity.

"What's the hurry?" Ram queried.

"A gallant Traveller and Knowledgeable Head helped me find the herb," Maruti quickly expounded. "I also wouldn't 'ave been able to protect it without their intervention."

"Protect it?" Ram asked with a frown.

"Meghanad intercepted me as I flew back," Maruti continued. "He even used the Brahmastra on me."

That revelation sent a shockwave of silence across the campsite.

"He invoked the Brahmastra for such a paltry reason?" Ram scorned. "How dishonourable!"

But then something clicked, "Wait a minute! He used the Brahmastra on you, and yet here you stand?"

"I was saved again, thanks to the Traveller's assistance. He blocked the Brahmastra!" Maruti evoked with excitement.

"He blocked it, AND survived?" Ram probed further. To which the Vanara nodded. At this point, four Vanaras walked in carrying a heavy Gada. Maruti picked it up with ease and turned to face Ram again.

"I must take my leave, my Lord," he said. "I 'ave left my saviour to fight my battle for me. I must go and save them."

"Wait!" Ram yelled right as Maruti was about to leap away. "Take me with you."

"My Lord?" Maruti expressed disbelief.

"Meghanad is a tricky opponent," Ram explained. "He fights dishonourably. It won't hurt to have some support."

Ram collected his bow and arrow and ran forward as Maruti slowly hovered above the ground. As the Vanara started to pick up speed, he grabbed Maruti's dangling tail, and the duo ascended into the clouds.


The transition from the lush, if chaotic, encampment to the battlefield was jarring. It was like stepping from a forest directly into a kiln.

Ram stood silently at the edge of the devastation. Beside him, Maruti shifted his weight from foot to foot. His tail twitched with nervous energy. The landscape before them had been fundamentally rewritten. The natural undulations of the plains were gone, replaced by a smooth, terrifyingly flat sheet of black glass. The heat was still rising from it in shimmering waves and distorting the air.

Ram crouched down. His fingers hovered inches above the vitrified earth. He didn't need to touch it to feel the lingering resonance. It hummed with a frequency he knew intimately.

"The Brahmastra," Ram stated softly.

"Yes, my Lord," Maruti replied with a subdued voice. "The Crown Prince fired it. I… I fled, as the Knowledgeable Head instructed. But the Traveller… he stayed."

"You keep repeating the designations of these… characters," Ram commented. "The Traveller and the Head, who are they?"

Maruti scratched his head sheepishly, "I forgot to ask their name," he admitted. "The Traveller was large. Maybe a foot or so taller than you, my Lord. The Knowledgeable Head was… jus' a head that could talk."

"I am no closer to knowing who these people are," Ram muttered as he rose and walked towards the epicentre.

"The Traveller was as white as snow," Maruti continued as he tried to recollect the details from his memory. He rubbed his skin and said, "I think 'twas ash. You could see the peach of his skin peeking 'round his eyes and on his lips. He wore only a tiger-skin tunic."

"A follower of Lord Shiva, then," Ram murmured as he walked around. The glass cracked and crunched beneath his sandals, which was the only sound in the dead air. He stopped at the very centre of the blast radius. Here, the destruction halted abruptly. Behind this point, the ground fanned out in a cone of untouched earth, protected by some immovable object that had stood right where Ram was standing now.

"Impossible," Ram whispered with his brow furrowing.

He looked at the ground. There were footprints burned into the rock - deep indentations where someone had dug in their heels against a significant opposing force.

"I know you aren't one to lie, Maruti. But I must admit I was sceptical when you described how he blocked the attack. However, seeing this… The Astra wasn't dodged - which is obviously impossible to do given that it's the Brahmastra - nor was it countered with another Astra," Ram observed with surprise in his eyes as they traced the clean lines where the annihilation stopped. "It was absorbed!"

Maruti looked around frantically, scanning the horizon and the sky. "But where is he? There is no body here. If he survived… where'd he go?"

Ram turned his gaze from the ground to the sky. He narrowed his eyes, tracking nigh imperceptible hints that were laid bare all around him. "Meghanad is arrogant, but he is not foolish. If his ultimate weapon failed, he would not stay to trade blows on the ground. He would retreat to the air."

Ram walked a few paces to the right, pointing to a patch of ground that hadn't been glassed but was riddled with deep, charred gouges.

"See here? Explosive arrows are fired at a sharp downward angle. Meghanad is an exceptional marksman. He would not miss. So, one can deduce that these were not fired with the intention to attack, but for utility. He was correcting a drift." Ram traced the trajectory with his hand. His finger moved like a compass needle until it settled on the distant, jagged silhouette of the mountains to the south. "The chariot was unstable. He was fleeing, but there was an unwelcome passenger aboard."

Ram turned to Maruti. "To the mountains, Maruti. We must cover the distance quickly."

Maruti knelt, offering his back. Ram climbed on, securing his grip, and in a heartbeat, the scorched earth fell away. Maruti launched himself into the air, the wind rushing past them as he bounded across the landscape with earth-shattering leaps.

They moved fast, but the journey was not short. The mountains were merely a hazy purple line on the horizon when they started. As they crossed the miles of barren terrain, Ram kept his eyes fixed on the ground below, reading the story of the chase in the debris left behind.

"There," Ram called out over the rushing wind, pointing to a crater that marred the valley floor miles from the blast site.

Inside the impact zone lay two massive, golden wheels. They were embedded deep in the earth, with their spokes twisted like dry twigs.

"He lost his wheels here," Ram analysed with a sharp and calculating voice. "The chariot would have listed heavily to…," he squinted while calculating mentally, "…the right. He would have had to fight the reins just to keep it airborne."

Maruti pushed harder. His powerful legs ate up the miles in a heartbeat. As the foothills began to rise beneath them, the debris trail grew denser. Splinters of painted wood and torn metal littered the rocky slopes like confetti, marking a desperate, erratic flight path.

"He was losing altitude," Ram noted.

They crested the final ridge, and they reached the high peaks. Maruti slowed and landed softly on a jagged outcropping.

"There," Ram said, pointing toward the sheer face of the cliff ahead. The devastation here was evident. The chariot had gone straight through. The sole horse that remained was turned into a skidmark of gore. On the other side were the remains of Meghanad's celestial chariot - the pride of Lanka's armoury. It hung precariously, with a leg alongside it.

"It seems the Traveller won," Ram commented.

"But I don't see him anywhere!" Maruti shrieked anxiously. His eyes scanned the treacherous waters below, hoping not to see a body floating down there.

"What do you think, Maruti?" Ram asked.

"Why do you ask me, my Lord? What would I know?" Maruti responded with a sheepish grin.

Ram raised his brows inquisitively, "I can only speculate based on what I see. But you were actually there. Besides, Maruti, you underestimate your own deductive capacity."

Maruti furrowed his brows in thought.

"Given all the evidence," he expressed. "'tis clear that the Traveller is a formidable warrior. If he can go toe-t'-toe with Meghanad while the latter is moun'ed on his chariot, and is also able to block the Brahmastra, then that must mean the Traveller is either extremely durable or invulnerable, and wields a weapon of great power. Furthermore, his invulnerability may have a less stringen' condition compared to that of Meghanad. Which must mean that he is still alive."

Ram nodded in agreement, "Let us search the vicinity of this site. If his body isn't here, then we must make haste to Lanka."

"Lanka?" Maruti parrotted.

"Ravana just lost his son," Ram pointed out. "He won't let the killer pass peacefully. And if the killer is invulnerable, death will be the least of the Traveller's worries."

Maruti shuddered at the thought, before his eyes narrowed with resolve. He nodded to Ram before leaping into the waters below.

As Ram observed his companion's body disappear into the murky and torrential waters, his forehead scrunched up with a frown.

Who was this Traveller? Was his presence truly a coincidence, or was there some higher power in play?


Kratos woke with a start. His state, as always, was dreamless and silent. One moment, there was darkness, and the next, his eyes snapped open, alert and scanning for threats.

He pushed himself up. His body felt heavy. It wasn't fatigue. It was the strange, lingering lethargy that usually followed his episodes of uncontrolled fury.

"What happened?" Kratos rasped. His throat felt like he had swallowed a handful of desert sand. He looked down at his waist.

"Rage," Brahma answered. The head sounded tired. His voice lacked its usual haughty cadence. "Unadulterated rage. I tried to speak to you. I tried to grab your attention, but I could not get through to you at all. It was like shouting at a hurricane."

Kratos massaged his forehead. A dull throb pulsed behind his eyes. He tried to reach back into his memory to find the moment the fight ended, but there was nothing. Just a red haze and the sensation of impact.

"What happened to the man?" Kratos asked.

"You don't remember?" The head asked, a note of genuine surprise in his tone. "You killed him. Pretty brutally, if I do say so myself."

Kratos froze. He looked down at his hands. They were clean, scrubbed of blood. It was all just too hard to believe. Usually, a bout of rage-addled destruction didn't leave him so spotless.

"What did I do?" Kratos asked. He didn't want to know, but he needed to.

"You drowned him," a gravelly voice spoke from the shadows.

The ground rumbled with the depth of the sound. Kratos swivelled his head, and his muscles tensed.

For the first time, he took in his surroundings. He wasn't in a cell or a cave. He was in a palace. The room was cavernous, illuminated by the soft, golden glow of oil lamps set in alcoves. The floor was polished marble, veined with gold. Heavy curtains of red silk hung from the high ceiling, swaying gently in a draft he couldn't feel.

He was sitting on a bed large enough to sleep a family of bears, covered in sheets that felt like woven water.

Kratos turned fully, and his eyes caught a movement above the bed. A massive portrait hung there. It was framed in heavy, gilded wood. It depicted a warrior standing proudly in a golden chariot, a bow in his hand and a confident, arrogant smirk on his lips.

It was the man he had fought. The man he had killed.

"You stripped his jaw," the voice continued. It grew louder, closer, vibrating through the stone floor. "You tore the bone from the muscle, making it impossible for him to close his mouth. You made it impossible for him to stop the water from filling his lungs."

Kratos shifted his legs over the side of the bed and stood up. He reached for his axe, but it was nowhere to be seen. He raised his palm and called it.

"And in his final moments," the voice grated, "you crushed his head in."

The heavy double doors at the far end of the room burst open. Wood splintered and flew inward as a massive foot stepped across the threshold.

A giant entered. He had to duck to clear the archway, even though it was built for tall men. He stood at least eight feet tall, like a mountain of muscle and malice. His skin was the colour of dried blood - a deep, reddish-black that seemed to absorb the light around him. His fingers ended in nails that were more like talons, sharp and black, an inch long and curved for tearing.

But Kratos barely registered the body. His eyes were drawn upward, to the horror that sat upon the giant's broad shoulders.

Ten heads.

They didn't sit in a row but seemed to cluster, undulate, shift and move with a life of their own. Ten pairs of eyes blinked in unison. Ten mouths grimaced.

"You killed my son," the heads spoke simultaneously. The sound was a cacophonous chorus of grief and rage that hit Kratos like a physical blow.

The axe arrived in his grasp with a satisfying thunk, and Kratos prepared himself.
 
Oh boy ,ravanna gonna be in for a surprise 🫢

As they fell, Meghanad noticed something peculiar. A red rope was streaming out of the bowels of his second steed. Before he could determine what it was, something obscene and wet coiled around the neck of his last remaining steed. Just one look, and Meghanad knew - intestines. The brute below was using the guts of a dead horse like some makeshift lasso
Kratos in his natural habit lol
 
Last edited:
Oh boy ,ravanna gonna be in for a surprise 🫢


Kratos in his natural habit lol
I think one thing that put Kratos apart from other fighters (at least in the GoW universe) is his resourcefulness. He knows how to take advantage of his environment. Using intestines as a lasso just made sense to me, I could see him doing that.
 
I think one thing that put Kratos apart from other fighters (at least in the GoW universe) is his resourcefulness. He knows how to take advantage of his environment. Using intestines as a lasso just made sense to me, I could see him doing that.
Yup, it was either that or he abused the immortality aspect and straight up jam his hand into the wheel :V
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top