"Any sign of them?" Devon asked Alex over the communicator.
"Not yet sir. I have my men searching throughout the swamp-"
"I don't want excuses, Alex. I want answers." Devon cut him off, "It's not the loss of Inhumans that bothers me, but the circ.u.mstances. We are in a dire situation. A sword is hanging above our necks. We cannot afford to make any mistakes now or it would be the last mistake we ever make. I don't care about what happens to me, but Gary is innocent in all this and I have to ensure his safety before anything else."
Alex couldn't muster a reply. He knew Devon had already given up on himself but he wasn't going to give up on his son. Especially after dragging him back from the afterlife. Still, this wasn't the leader he wanted to serve. The leader he knew would never give up on himself and give his attackers a run for his blood, but now... It seemed as if Devon was only waiting for someone to arrive and kill him.
"Understood sir. I will find the culprit behind-"
"Sir!" Ajek's voice roared behind Alex, once again cutting him off. But this time Alex wasn't pleased with it at all. He never liked getting interrupted but now things were getting on his nerves.
"WHAT IS IT!?" Alex roared back, viciously looking at the rest of his platoon.
"W-We found something..." Ajek mumbled but his half-assed reply only made Alex madder.
"I KNOW YOU FOUND SOMETHING, YOU FCKING MORON! I'M ASKING WHAT DID YOU FIND?" Alex's mood got progressively worse and worse.
All of the soldiers there were stunned. In all the years they had known Alex, they had never seen him so enraged. They couldn't recognize Alex anymore. Just like Alex couldn't recognize Devon. With every passing moment, things were getting worse.
Alex realised what was going on and immediately calmed himself down. The life in the swamp coupled with the stress of being attacked was getting on his nerves and it wasn't a good sign. He had always been calm and collected but now... He was just a mess. At that moment Devon's voice echoed from the communicator.
"It's not you." He mumbled, "It seems your mind is adapting to the personality of the lizardmen. Always lashing out at the littlest things. I suggest you leave the rest to your soldiers and come back and I'll run some tests on you."
"Understood sir." Alex ended the call and went ahead to see what Ajek had found, "A treehouse? Here in the middle of the swamps?"
The others were as confused as him. A few thought that since the soldiers frequently patrolled this area, they might have made it to rest there briefly. But this theory was quickly debunked. Because Ajek was on one of the patrol teams as well and this was his first time seeing the treehouse.
Moreover, no one could've possibly bent the trees in such weird shapes. As insane as it sounds, he felt as if the trees had changed their shape on their own free will. But he didn't call Alex to lay his eyes on the treehouse, but on what they found inside. Something he thought was more disturbing than watching lizardmen go all rumpy-pumpy with each other.
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