The beast erupted from the darkness all at once.
There was no gradual reveal. One mont the chamber was full of growling and shadow. The next, the Skullrend was simply there — the whole of it, filling the space with a reality so imdiate and so enormous that Renji’s mind took a full second to process it as a single living thing rather than the cave itself moving.
It was big. Not in the way the wolf had been big, or the bear — those had been threats he could asure instinctively, size against experience, danger against preparation. This was different. The Skullrend stretched low and wide, its body filling the tunnel the way a river filled a channel, not by force but by simple occupation of all available space. Mineral-fused plates of fur and bone covered its fra in irregular ridges that caught the faint cave light in dull, scraping flashes. Where it moved, it didn’t just move — it displaced. The walls didn’t slow it. They gave up grooves instead, carved by the sheer mass of the creature shifting its weight, stone surrendering to sothing that hadn’t bothered to ask permission.
When it roared, the sound didn’t echo.
It pressed.
The air compressed against Renji’s chest like a physical thing, and sowhere above him he heard the sharp crack of rock parting from the ceiling and hitting the ground behind them. His ears rang. His feet were already moving.
"Guys scatter!"
The word left his mouth before conscious thought had caught up to it, which was probably the only reason it was fast enough to matter.
Aya moved first.
He felt the pressure shift in the air — that particular wrongness that ant she was exerting force, the shimr that was more sensation than sight. She drove it against the Skullrend montum with everything she had.
The beast barely slowed.
It was like watching soone try to stop a collapsing cliff face with open hands. The telekinesis caught, held for a fraction of a second, then was simply dragged apart by the mass behind it. Aya’s breath ca out hard. She reset, repositioned, tried again from a different angle. The Skullrend adjusted its shoulder by three degrees and continued forward, and the ground fractured beneath each impact with a sound like splitting timber, the shockwaves rolling out through the cave floor and arriving at Renji’s feet as a stuttering wrongness that made his footing feel provisional.
Kaede was already at its flank.
She moved the way she always moved in a fight — quietly, efficiently, reading the angles before they fully opened. Her blade found the joint of its left foreleg, clean and fast. Then the shoulder line. Then lower, chasing exposed gaps in the plating.
Sparks jumped where steel t bone.
She was landing the strikes. That wasn’t the problem. The problem was that the Skullrend did not register them. Not in the way that armored creatures sotis pushed through pain — this was different. The cuts simply weren’t reaching anything that mattered. The bone ridges ran too deep, the mineral plating too dense, and whatever lay beneath was insulated from surface damage by layers that Kaede’s blade wasn’t built to get through in single strikes.
The beast turned its body.
It didn’t swing a limb. It didn’t lunge. It simply rotated its mass, the way a boulder rotates when it begins rolling, and the shockwave that preceded the movent alone was enough to force Kaede back three steps or be crushed by sothing that hadn’t specifically targeted her.
She retreated without breaking composure. But she retreated.
Behind him, Renji could hear Rei’s breathing. He didn’t need to look to know what it ant — that particular uneven rhythm, the way the exhales were coming slightly too fast, signaled that the damage was stacking faster than she could pull it back. He caught a glimpse of her in his peripheral vision, hands moving between two scouts who’d been thrown by the ground shockwaves. Her hands were shaking. Not badly. But enough.
’We can’t sustain this.’
He was trying to build structure out of what they had. Calling positions, timing, spacing — the architecture of a fight that could be won by coordination rather than raw power. But the Skullrend dismantled architecture. Every ti a formation started to cohere, one stomp reset it. Every charge was a new room they had to navigate from scratch. The beast wasn’t strategic. It didn’t need to be. It was simply so comprehensively present that the idea of organizing against it felt like trying to schedule sothing in the middle of a rockslide.
Renji threw himself sideways as a foreleg ca down where he’d been standing. The impact sent a fissure running through the stone two feet in every direction from the point of contact.
He landed hard, rolled, found his feet.
’There has to be a rhythm.’
There was always a rhythm. Every creature had one — a pattern of movent, a sequence it defaulted to, the logic that lived underneath the chaos. Find the rhythm and you found the gap. Find the gap and the fight changed shape.
He forced himself to stop reacting and start watching.
It was harder than it sounded when the thing you were watching was also actively trying to kill you. But he tracked the charges — the weight shift that preceded each one, the way the hindquarters compressed a half-second before the mass ca forward. He tracked the turns, the way it prioritized targets, the specific sequence it ran when more than one thing was drawing its attention at once.
Aya disrupted its left side. It turned right and drove toward Kaede.
Kaede retreated and struck from the flank. It ignored the strike and angled back toward Aya.
Renji repositioned and drew its focus. It recalibrated, adjusted course, and—
He went still.
’Wait.’
He watched it happen again. The sa sequence, the sa priority, the sa adjustnt at the sa point in the sequence. He almost dismissed it. Almost filed it under the general chaos and moved on to the next imdiate problem.
But it happened a third ti.
Exactly the sa.
His eyes widened. "Oh no."
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