Chapter 26: The Curse Of Mummy Part 1

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3rd POV:

In Dracula's Castle.

When Dracula finally got Yuki and she was brought be here in the castle and he was looking at her was unconscious and she was barely alive by him....the motherfucking vampire want her alive because he was really want her to become a vampire queen. The lord of vampires was going back to sat on the throne by himself and he was turn his head to look around and he seen the bride was gonna be prepare for become his bride and she wasn't like him and she doesn't like this motherfucker.

Then (Y/N) was different than anyone else....like Dracula and Kaname that the two of them were something else...but they were almost yandere for themselves and (Y/N) wouldn't want Yuki to going along with this motherfucker...and (Y/N) need to save her and take this motherfucker out.

Dracula: "Hmmmm....." He was thinking.

???: "What are you thinking, my lord?" He asked him and make the vampire was turn to look at the mummy who was stood right there with his mummified all over himself and looks like he want to know what Dracula plan to do right now.

???: "What are you thinking, my lord?" He asked him and make the vampire was turn to look at the mummy who was stood right there with his mummified all over himself and looks like he want to know what Dracula plan to do right now

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The Living Mummy.

The story of the Living Mummy begins some three thousand years ago in ancient Egypt. During the reign of Pharaoh Aram-Set, Egypt enslaved hundreds of Sub-Saharan Africans belonging to the Swarili tribe. Among them was the Swarili chieftain, N'Kantu.

N'Kantu was the son of the warrior chief T'Chombi. By the age of twenty-one, N'Kantu endured a rite of passage known as the Test of the Lion. By single-handedly slaying a lion, he proved his mettle to the Swarili, and was considered a warrior. Upon T'Chombi's death in his sleep seven months later, N'Kantu succeeded him as chieftain.

Many months later, the armies of Aram-Set raided the Swarili villages, capturing hundreds of natives and pressing them into bondage. Being the strongest and hardiest among the Swarili, N'Kantu's lot was the hardest. He was kept in chains and forced to endure great hardship and labor. Aram-Set tried his hardest to break N'Kantu's spirit, but the chieftain's strength and resolve, established him as a veritable Moses to his people.

During this time, he ran afoul of the necromancer Rakses. Little is known of what transpired between the two, but they became bitter enemies, and Rakses would remember his old foe for centuries to come.

By night, N'Kantu would gather his tribe together, and raise them from their pain and despair with words of hope, and the promise of escape. Before long, he was ready to shake off the shackles of slavery forever. He led a bloody revolt against the armies of Aram-Set, personally slaying the Pharaoh with a thrust from his spear.

He entered the temple of Aram-Set where he confronted Nephrus, the royal wizard. Nephrus was prepared for N'Kantu's treachery and splashed him with a chemical agent causing immediate paralysis of N'Kantu's limbs. He brought him down to a private dungeon laboratory where he bound him with linen, and injected him with a special fluid. This fluid granted N'Kantu immortality, but at the price of his mobility. Nephrus sealed him inside of a sarcophagus, promising that he would suffer as a Living Mummy for all eternity.

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