Shout-out and thanks to Leo_Micado for beta-reading this chapter.
____
Hearing no response, Jean started to inch closer towards the source of the hushed sounds, while keeping her mana senses extended to their limits. The sphere of mana spread outwards and immediately intercepted two figures hiding under the floorboards of the house. Jean furrowed her brows and shoved her hand into the wood and pulled it out.
A shriek oveid on top of a deathly cough resounded, as the forms of a dishevelled girl hunched defensively over herying mother came into view. It would have been a wee sight, if not for the fact that the mother was coveredpletely in ck blisters of which a few had already ruptured and gotten onto the skin and face of the girl. Jean immediately bent over and yanked the girl away from her mother.
"NO!" The girl yelled. "Let me go!"
"You will die!" Jean shot back.
*What does this remind you of?*
''Not. Now.''
"Let me go! Mom!" The little girl yelled frantically as she tried to w herself away from Jean''s grasp.
"You will be in danger! Please, listen to me," Jean implored.
"NO! LET ME GO!" The girl cried. "MOM!"
The woman, who was visibly dehydrated and deathly pale, released a pained cough, "Kili..."
"MOM! I''m here- MOM!"
"Don''t...e..." the woman groaned through heavy breath. The girl went limp in Jean''s hand and started to whimper sorrowfully. The woman turned her head slightly and looked at Jean through zed-over eyes.
"Protect... her..." Those were the woman''s final words before her breath seized and her heart stopped.
"Mom?" The girl yelped. Jean immediately pressed her fingers against the side of the girl''s neck and overloaded the motor nerve bundles altogether, knocking her out.
*You let another mother die!* The voice taunted.
#She was already on herst leg by the time we arrived. There was nothing you could do-#
*Excuses!*
Jean retreated and pressed her back against the wall, and covered her face with her palms. Her breath started to grow frantic. In her mind, the image of the deceased woman started to ovep with her mother.
*You killed me!*
*MURDERER!*
*MURDERER! MURDERER! MURDERER! KILL YOURSELF! KILL YOURSELF! KILL-*
"Young Miss!" Josie''s voice cut through the malicious din polluting her thoughts.
"Josie? Y-You''re here! W-What happened?" Jean shot back sessively.
"Well-"
____
Every animal learns through reinforcement. When an action begets a positive reaction, it is something to be repeated. When an action begets a negative reaction, it is something to be avoided. This is the basic equation that governs every sentient creature''s life. But as these creatures gain intelligence and self-determination, they learn to find the benefits that can be gained from an action that begets a negative reaction and vice versa. It is the process of evaluating opportunity costs.
To cultivate this ability, one must either take the least favourable step voluntarily, on must face a loss so serious that they are forced to take that step.
The Rat King had hit a bottleneck. He''d learned that the more he exuded the heat umting near his core, the stronger he became. He''d learned that the more he assimted, the stronger he became. Following these base instincts helped him be more powerful. All the pests living in his territory started to submit to his prowess and perished, while his own empire grew uninhibited.
After he realised his potential, the Rat King never had to approach the pests in his garden personally. His subjects could spread his presence, culling the locals, and then he could swoop in and clean up after. It was a streamlined process.
It was just another day, cleaning up after his subjects. The Rat King had truly sumbed to acedia, letting himself assimte with his kind and grow into a form that suited his process. He had highly stic appendages made of his kin that he had subsumed. All he had to do was let those appendages reap his harvest and move on to the next location. Recently, the ''crops'' in his kingdom were growing scarcer, he anticipated expanding outwards. But his subjects brought word of stronger pests cordoning his borders. He was confident he could take them on, just like he did with those dastardly worms, but it couldn''t be achieved immediately. He was close to advancement, he could feel it, but something was holding him back.
Suddenly, the Rat King felt one of his appendages disappearing. The pain radiated through his body, amplifying as each of the subsumed mindsprising his body started to scream in pain. Then another one was lost, and then another-
Who dares!<novelnext></novelnext>
For the first time in a long while, in rat years, the Rat King left his throne and burrowed through the ground in the direction of his lost appendages. The ground shook as he moved, and the burrows his kind had built groaned as they tried to amodate his overgrown size.
He released a majestic roar as he let his form breach into the sunlight, and prepared to face the pest that caused him so much pain.
''This one looks like them? How did she hurt me so?'' It was a question bordering between rage, fear and curiosity. In his experience, the smooth-skinned pests with fur growing solely on their heads were weak. They were the quickest to sumb to his presence. Yet this one hadn''t... strange... But it was also a cause for concern. But for the Rat King, who was filled with arrogance after coasting through his long life, in rat years, this was just a slightly stronger pest that needed his direct attention.
And so he burst into action, his appendages iled in a maddened rage and his jaws spread open invitingly.
However, the confrontation did not go the way he expected. The pest was standing its ground annoyingly well. With his new form, the Rat King had the advantage of sight and flexibility so by his estimates the victory should have been quick. But the fight just kept going on and on, and he was starting to take more and more damage as it progressed, while the pest remained rtively unharmed.
Then suddenly, the pest exuded even greater pressure. His instincts screamed out warning signs, and he knew that the fight would quickly be unfavourable. And it did. One by one, the pest started to slice away at his limbs. He tried to regrow them by assimting more of his brethren, but he recognised that this was not sustainable in the long run - the pest did not show any signs of slowing its attacks at all!
The pest''s attacks grew even more fearsome, and the Rat King found himself getting pushed further and further towards his demise. That was it!
He decided he''d had enough.
He started to circte his mana and tap into the heat in his core. The pest had made a huge mistake, and it ought to be taught a valuable lesson!
He endured the damage the pest inflicted on him as he prepared for the finale.
His body expanded and, a secondter, discharged a magnificent wave of ck gas.
He saw on as the pest drowned in the dark flurry, and awaited its inevitable demise. He would relish its measly offering of flesh!
But the world yed a cruel trick on him. It came out the other side, unscathed and unaffected.
The pest uttered a few words the Rat King did not understand, but its aura grew more ferocious.
He had lost.
Miserably.
It was at this moment, that the Rat King considered a choice he''d written off ages back, in rat years. All that rats cared about was survival. There was no pride, no territorialism, just survival by any means necessary. If surviving meant that one had to sacrifice a limb or tail, a rat would do it readily. This was written into the instincts of his kind and was something he''d suppressed in trying to grow stronger. But as he came face to face with death, all of his assumed instincts dissipated. It was either fight or flight, and he was all out of fight.
In a decisive move, the Rat King sacrificed his kingly form - that was falling apart after the pest''s vicious attacks - and receded into one of the forms of his brethren. He sacrificed arge chunk of power he''d umted to distract the pest, just as those worms with legs dropped their tails at the sign of danger.
From his peripheral vision, he observed the pest summon a massive ball of whirling wind. Right as the pest tossed the ball towards his shedding shell, he leapt and receded into the hole he''d used earlier to arrive at this location.
____
"This ve killed it," Josie responded. "It was responsible for the illness- for everything."
"I realised after seeing it release that cloud," Jean affirmed. "What exactly was it?"
"This ve does not know. I have not heard of or seen anything like this before. Research is necessary on this matter. Though it is evident through extraption that it used rats as the vector to spread the illness," Josie surmised.
"Should we report to the Balen Duchy about this?" Jean asked with a faintly hopeful tone.
"This ve doesn''t expect anything toe off of it. This decision to sequester the area was probably implemented in finality. They have officially given up on this region in hopes of salvaging it in a few years," Josie reminded. "This ve believes that a viable cure is necessary to properly convince the Duchy to take any action."
A sombre silence hung in the air after those words were said. It was a sad truth that Jean still wasn''t ready to believe. Nheless, she was here to save the people, so a cure should only be an eventuality... hopefully.
"What are you nning to do now?" Jean followed up, breaking the silence.
"Now that this ve knows the cause, she will continue to cull the rat poption," Josie dered. "And, I shall be on the lookout for the creature."
"I thought you said, you killed it," Jean blurted out.
"It built its body out of rats," Josie reminded. "Therefore its mind must work like one. If I know rats and believe me when I say that you can find no other more intimate with those pests, that thing should have chopped its arm to save its body."
"Meaning..."
"Meaning that this is probably not thest we will see of that creature," Josie muttered ominously. "So this ve suggests that the Young Miss keep herself prepared."