Elven Invasion
Chapter 84: Tide of Beasts
POV 1: SOLOMON KANE – TANZANIAN SHORELINE, GROUND ZERO
The wind howled as the waves began to churn with unnatural rhythm. Solomon Kane stood on the crumbling seawall, his trench coat flapping violently, his boots sunk into salt-soaked rubble. Beneath him, the sea had turned dark—not from nightfall, but from shadow.
The Leviathan was awake.
It moved with agonizing slowness, its serpentine body unfurling like tectonic plates shifting. Scales the size of ancient shields gleamed as the creature’s spine broke the surface for the first time in millennia. Its breathing came in wet, heaving bellows, and every exhale sent tremors through the concrete beneath Solomon’s feet.
He muttered, “It’s not just big. It’s the damn ocean with teeth.”
Jamie’s voice came through his earpiece, tense. “We’re watching it from satellite. It’s not hunting. It’s… reacting. Agitated. Disoriented.”
“That makes two of us,” Solomon replied, raising his flare.
Then he saw the first mistake—two Indian Navy fighter jets breaking through the clouds, drawn like moths to flame. They’d ignored the no-fly orders, or maybe didn’t believe the reports. Either way, they got too close.
The Leviathan reared up—not in defiance, but as an animal might when startled. Its maw opened, a gaping void lined with rows of obsidian teeth. From it came a bellow—not magical, not divine, just… ancient. A sound meant to clear the ocean of intruders.
The sonic shockwave hit the jets like a hammer.
One engine caught fire mid-air. The other spiraled down, trailing smoke, before disappearing into the surf.
Solomon watched in silence. “We need to stop poking it.”
POV 2: ASHA OKONKWO – COMMAND DECK, INS VIKRANT
“Two jets down!” the radar operator shouted.
Asha gritted her teeth. “I ordered a no-fly zone! That thing isn’t an enemy—it’s a force. You don’t fight a tsunami with missiles.”
Behind her, the screen showed the Leviathan in grim clarity. Its head alone was the size of the Vikrant. Its eyes—dull, amber, reptilian—did not reflect thought. Only instinct.
Jamie came on comms. “It’s not attacking on purpose. It’s thrashing, confused. Waking up after a million-year nap under tons of pressure and silence.”
“Like a bear we kicked in the ribs,” Asha muttered. “Status on Mary’s Ice Worms?”
“Four remain. One is encircling near Madagascar, the others have moved inland in East Africa. But the Core is still pulsing—it’s pulling energy from the Moon again.”
Asha turned to her aide. “Get me Vaelin Thorne. And Dyana. We need coordination. If any of them try to control or kill that thing, the backlash could make the tsunami look like a puddle.”
POV 3: VAELIN THORNE – NEUTRALIST BASE, AMAZON HIGH COMMAND
Vaelin watched the live feed from her command room, her expression unreadable.
The Leviathan dwarfed everything.
So old, so primal, it defied reason. Not a weapon. Not a tool. Just being—life stripped down to its most elemental.
One of her lieutenants approached. “Reports confirm Solomon is still there. Observing it.”
“And not dead yet,” Vaelin replied softly. “Interesting.”
Another technician added, “Mary’s forces are still operating the Moonlight Core. Its resonance is deepening. It might be the only thing the Leviathan is reacting to.”
Vaelin nodded. “Then we must take it from her. She is pulling a predator toward her with prey-song and thinks it will kneel.”
She turned toward the holographic map. “Order our stealth squadron to infiltrate the Core Shrine. Disable it. Don’t engage Mary directly. We’re not here for glory.”
“And the humans?”
“We aid them,” Vaelin said. “Quietly, but effectively. This isn’t a war anymore. It’s survival.”
POV 4: DYANA – SKY-CROWN ORBITAL COMMAND
Dyana’s hands trembled as she dismissed the projections. She wasn’t afraid. She was angry.
Mary had gone too far.
The Ice Worms were one thing—created by Moonlight and legacy. But the Leviathan was not theirs to use. It was not born of Forestia or magic. It was Earth’s beast, and Earth’s curse.
Vaelin’s message replayed in her mind:
“If it wakes fully, it will not distinguish between Mary, you, or the humans.”
Dyana turned to her High Command. “Deploy our lunar anchors to counterbalance the Core’s pull. Disable Mary’s signal. Do not—do not—engage the Leviathan.”
“But Lady Dyana, our fleet—”
“Is not prepared for a beast the size of a continent. I will not lose this war to arrogance.”
A silent pause.
Then one of her younger officers murmured, “Do you think it can be killed?”
Dyana closed her eyes. “I think… it remembers drowning gods. Let that answer your question.”
POV 5: MARY – MOONLIT SHRINE, DEEP INDIAN OCEAN
Mary stumbled, blood trickling from her nose. The Core’s energy had grown chaotic, its light no longer pure lunar silver—but tinged with red and violet.
“Control it!” she shouted at her priestesses. “Stabilize the flow!”
One of them collapsed, her body seizing from magical feedback.
Another wept openly. “It’s not listening, High Priestess! Something else is echoing back!”
Mary’s lips curled in fury. “It’s only resisting because it’s raw. Wild. I will shape it. Bend it.”
But even as she said it, a massive tremor shook the platform.
The Leviathan had moved.
Not toward her, but around her—circling, sensing.
Like an animal sniffing an unfamiliar scent.
Mary clutched the Core tighter. “Come to me,” she whispered. “You are power. You are mine.”
In answer, the sea churned.
And a tail larger than the shrine itself passed beneath.
The Moonlight Core flickered again. A pulse surged backward into Mary’s mind—and in that second, she felt what the Leviathan felt.
Cold. Hunger. Confusion. Rage.
It didn’t understand her magic.
It didn’t care.
It wanted silence again.
And it would not ask.
It would take.
Mary screamed as the connection shattered, throwing her across the chamber.
POV 6: JAMIE LANCASTER – SEYCHELLES MONITORING STATION
Jamie’s hands flew across keyboards.
“Magical feedback from the Core has reached critical. The Leviathan is accelerating.”
“Accelerating?” Asha’s voice barked through.
“It’s moving,” Jamie confirmed. “Not toward land. Not toward ships. Just… moving. Like it’s trying to get away from the signal.”
Jamie paused. “It might be scared.”
“Scared? That thing?”
“Yes,” Jamie said. “It woke up. It doesn’t understand what’s happening. It’s not intelligent. It’s not evil. It’s… a beast. Ancient. You just yanked it out of the deepest sleep imaginable and blasted a magical siren in its ear.”
Asha’s reply was soft. “Then we turn the siren off.”
FINAL SCENE: TANZANIAN COAST – SOLOMON KANE
Solomon stood in silence.
The Leviathan had risen half above the water now, stretching like a mountain coming to life. Its breath sent steam into the sky. Its body curved back toward the depths, away from the ice worms and away from the Moonlight Core.
And then, with a mighty roll, it began to dive again.
Retreating into darkness.
Not defeated.
Just escaping.
Solomon lowered his flare.
“Let it sleep again,” he said.
Above, the clouds parted just enough to let the moonlight fall on the ocean.
But for the first time in hours…
The sea was still.
EPILOGUE: GLOBAL SITUATION REPORT
* Leviathan: Awakened. Location confirmed near Tanzanian shoreline. No hostile intent observed. Currently retreating into deep ocean.
* Moonlight Core: Temporarily destabilized. Magical feedback has incapacitated several priestesses. Mary remains active but shaken.
* Neutralist Forces: Begun covert operations to disable Core. Have declared alliance with humans and Dyana.
* Aristocrat Faction (Dyana): Actively deploying countermeasures. No engagement with Leviathan authorized.
* Humanity (Asha, Solomon, Jamie): Coordinated observation and communication. Prioritizing global safety.
* Current Operation: Operation Worldwake—focus shifting from warfare to containment and coordination.
The ancient beast had risen…
And—for now—it had chosen not to fight.
But the world had changed forever.