Chapter 67: An Order is an Order - SSS Rank: Strongest Beast Master - NovelsTime

SSS Rank: Strongest Beast Master

Chapter 67: An Order is an Order

Author: ttfavourite
updatedAt: 2025-09-01

The cavern was quiet, except for the soft, wet beat of the hundreds of growing pods hanging like a monstrous fruit from the ceiling.

The ASTF team stood still in the shadows, the Broodmother's sad story weighing heavily on them. The mission, which was once just about destroying, had now become a difficult moral problem.

What had begun as a simple mission, go in, wipe out the threat, secure the mine had twisted into something else. Something complicated. Something human.

Benita, the medic, was the first to find her voice. It was a mixture of horror and compassion. "Seraph, we can't," she pleaded, her eyes fixed on the terrifying creature that watched them from the darkness. "It's a victim. It's a prisoner of what was done to it. Killing it now… it would be an execution, not a battle. It would be inhumane."

Jax shifted where he stood, arms crossed over his broad chest, jaw clenched. The tough, sharp-edged hunter in him hated hesitation. But something in his eyes had changed. He'd seen Jonah create life to save his own. That image didn't fade easily.

"I don't like it either, Doc," he admitted, his voice a low growl. "But a smart predator is the most dangerous kind. It talks, it thinks, it plans. That doesn't make it a person; it makes it a better killer."

"But its children are just children!" Benita shot back, her voice rising with passion. "It's only trying to survive, to create a legacy for itself. That's an instinct we all share!"

"I wouldn't birth an army to wipe out a city!" Jax snapped back. "Those 'children' dissolved an entire town. You want to feel sorry for them, fine. Just don't forget what they did."

The discussion was a storm of opposing beliefs. For every plea Benita made for mercy, Jax had a grim reply, firmly based on the cruel facts of survival. Vanessa stood beside Jonah, silent, her expression tight. She was usually the one with a calm, logical voice. but now, she had none to offer. Her thoughts were tangled in contradiction. How could something capable of such terrifying violence also speak with such tragic grace?

It was Titus who broke the deadlock.

The by-the-book warrior, who had been a silent statue of discipline, took a single, heavy step forward. His voice was a low rumble that carried an unshakeable finality.

"It's intelligence is exactly why it must be destroyed," he stated, his gaze fixed on the Broodmother. "It's a thinking weapon that can destroy everything. We cannot reason with it. We cannot contain it. If it escapes this mine, it will not stop. It will redesign entire ecosystems to suit its needs. It is a plague that can think. Our feelings do not matter. The threat is absolute."

His cold words were spoken into the tense silence. They felt like a final, bad judgment.

The final decision fell to Seraph.

She stood still, her face a serious, blank mask. Jonah watched her, seeing the quiet battle happening in her eyes. He saw her look at Benita's hopeful, begging face, which wished for a kinder solution. He saw her look at Jax's tough expression, the face of a man who had made countless hard decisions to survive. He saw her meet Titus's gaze, which showed pure, strict duty.

Finally, her eyes settled on Jonah. She saw the boy who had brought them this impossible choice, the creator who now had to face the consequences of another's creation.

The struggle on her face, the hint of empathy and doubt, lasted for only a moment. Then, it was gone, replaced by the unbreakable will of a commander. Her expression hardened into something cold and sharp.

"It doesn't matter what it was," she said, her voice leaving no room for argument. "What it is, is a threat capable of overrunning this continent. We have our orders."

Her eyes were fixed on Jonah, and her stare was intense and unmoving.

"Neutralize the target."

The Broodmother knew what they had decided. The calm, asking voice in Jonah's mind didn't become angry right away. Instead, it broke apart. It turned into a sound of deep sadness. This soon changed into a cold, dark rage.

The calm, feminine voice returned to his mind, no longer a plea, but a verdict.

[Then you are no different from the metal men.]

A strong wave of mental sadness swept over Jonah, so powerful it nearly made him fall to his knees.

[You will not have my children!]

When the creature cried out in its mind, a change swept through the nursery. The slow, rhythmic pulsing of the pods hanging from the ceiling sped up, becoming a wild, panicked beat.

One pod twitched, its skin stretching thin. It split open, and a newborn Chimera, slick with fluid, dropped to the ground. Then another. And another.

A horrifying chain reaction began. Dozens of pods began to hatch prematurely, a rapid stream of unnatural birth. The cavern floor, which had been empty, quickly filled with a mass of twisting, scuttling, newly born drones. Their high, sharp cries echoed through the chamber, sounding like a song of hunger and anger.

The Broodmother had made her decision.

If she was to die, she would not go quietly

The final battle had begun.

Jonah stood frozen for a half-second, the Broodmother's sorrow still echoing in his soul. He had to fight. He had to give the order to destroy a creature he now understood, a creature he pitied. He watched the masses of creatures moving below, and then the sorrowful queen who had brought them forth from her pain.

This wasn't a righteous fight. There were no heroes here.

This was a graveyard built by decisions no one remembered.

A nightmare born from someone else's war.

And now, he was the one holding the blade.

He clenched his fists.

This was not the ending he wanted.

But it was the one they had to live with.

And Jonah of Cinderfall, the Beast Weaver, would be its executioner.

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