Lear was also riding on a fierce wild lizard.
The owner of this fierce wild lizard was riding along with another person.
The structure of the fierce wild lizard was very suitable for riding, with a high front and back and a concave area in the middle.
It's shaped like a bottle's indentation, once seated, a slight adjustment in posture would secure you tightly, making it difficult to dismount.
Yet, such a structure, amazingly, did not affect its flexibility.
It was very suitable for mounted combat.
Lear was riding a fierce wild lizard for the first time, watching the three-meter-shoulder-high beast gallop through the swamp, his spirits were high.
The wind howled past his ears, the scenery retreated beneath him, and everything on the ground lay trampled underfoot.
The view was wide and open, everything seemed diminished.
This feeling was incredible.
What surprised Lear was that under such high-speed marching, the divine life, the Flesh Butcher, kept up.
