Chapter: 206
Now snake venom was no longer his object of fear.
When the snake venom was absorbed, the swelling in Pyo-wol�s body had noticeably been reduced. Finally, when all of the poison was gone, his physical body was able to move.
Pyo-wol moved his finger.
When the strange movement was felt, the snakes went mad.
Snakes nearby immediately bit Pyo-wol with their fangs. Pyo-wol did not resist and accepted the venom of the snakes. Then, when he felt hungry, he reached out and grabbed a snake nearby.
Pyo-wol caught a small snake that bit the back of his hand. He then took a bite of the snake�s head with his mouth.
Wagzak!
The snake�s head shattered in Pyo-wol�s mouth.
The flesh he chewed came with a fishy smell.
He didn�t know how long it had been since he had last tasted food. He didn�t think it was disgusting. He even felt ecstatic about the flesh that he ate after such a long time.
The snakes here also ate each other to survive until now. The strong have endured for a long time by eating the weak.� It was not a sin to eat other creatures here.
The same was true for Pyo-wol.�
He survived by imitating snakes, so there was no reason to feel guilty about eating them.�
Living with snakes, the snake�s survival instinct naturally melted into Pyo-wol.
As Pyo-wol lived in a snake pit, whenever he became hungry, he would eat the snakes. Although his body recovered to some extent and he was able to climb out of the snake pit on his own, Pyo-wol chose not to.�
Because there was so much more to be gained here than trying to go out.
An animal such as the snake made Pyo-wol experienced many things.
Their bodies and developed senses, which were focused on survival, were something Pyo-wol still have to learn.
So Pyo-wol continued to willingly live with snakes to observe their behavior.�
As a result, he noticed that the eyesight of snakes was different from that of other animals. The vertically split eyes of the snakes could see into areas that humans and other animals could not see.
One of the things Pyo-wol discovered was that snakes were excellent at detecting body temperature given their particularly sensitive senses. Rather than relying on their eyes to see the shape of the living creature, they used it to sense and distinguish a creature�s body temperature.1�
Pyo-wol came to know this fact while learning the Sub-Thunder Snake Cultivation method.�
If he looked at an object while using the Sub-Thunder Snake Cultivation method, he could see its temperature with his eyes. At first he didn�t know what the change in his perspective meant, but as time went on, he realized that it was how a snake�s vision works.�
Seeing the world through the eyes of a snake was different.�
Pyo-wol has already adapted to the darkness to the point that it was like daytime even in places without a single light.
The expansion of his field of vision also came with� the expansion of his senses.
Pyo-wol opened his senses as he assimilated with the snakes.
He didn�t know how much time had passed.
It was almost impossible to capture the flow of time in a place where not a single point of light could enter. Because of that, Pyo-wol didn�t even know how long he had been trapped in the snake pit.
He could only guess that he had spent quite a long time with the snakes because his hair and beard had grown quite long. JrNovels.com