The mont hung suspended, like a breath caught between heartbeats.
Silken Fang stood still, his cane tapping once against the tal floor. The faint sound echoed through the ruined outpost like a countdown. He made no move, yet the tension in the air crackled—taut, electric.
"Who the hell is this clown?" Zeyna’s stance shifted, hand twitching toward her blade.
"Don’t," Fade said, his voice low—final. He didn’t turn to face her. "This one’s mine."
Kaela opened her mouth, but one glance from Fade silenced her. Even Arven paused, his instincts at war with his trust. Silence pressed down like weight.
The stranger tilted his head slightly, eyes gleaming beneath perfect bangs of raven-black hair. "Interesting," he mused. "You’ve got discipline. I like that."
Without waiting for a reply, he took a step forward. Then another. No sudden movents—only confidence. A dance had begun, and only two were invited.
Fade stepped out from the others, the dull lighting painting shadows beneath his eyes. His ID band flickered red once, almost like a heartbeat. The ruined outpost behind him lood with battle scars—sared blood on the walls, scorch marks on consoles, shattered gear left to rust. This wasn’t a mission gone quiet. It was a ssage wrapped in silence.
"He’s strong. Strong like you." Zeyna’s voice dropped to a whisper.
"Stronger in so ways," Fade murmured, still watching the figure ahead. "But loud. That’s a weakness."
[System Notification Suppressed — Combat Mode Initiated Manually]
[Observation Protocols Engaged — Recording Interference Detected]
The air between them shifted. A pulse—not from the system, but from them.
Silken Fang smiled again, not wide, not fake. Real. Sharp.
"Well then," he said, adjusting the cuffs of his immaculate jacket. "Shall we see how far your silence echoes?"
The ground felt smaller between them now.
And no one else dared move.
The first clash was silent.
No flare of energy. No explosive system prompts. Just the eting of motion and intent.
Fade moved first—swift, grounded. Not a lunge, but a test. Silken Fang deflected with ease, his cane spinning like silk through fingers trained by violence and ti. Their feet scraped the floor—no wasted effort, no grand theatrics.
The others watched from a distance, barely breathing.
"We should help—" Zeyna’s fists were clenched at her sides.
"No," Kaela said sharply. "We’d slow him down."
"That’s what scares ," Arven muttered.
Silken Fang twirled away from a jab, his body loose like thread caught in wind. When he struck back, it was with the tip of the cane—quick, precise. Fade blocked, pivoted, retaliated with a low sweep that forced Fang into a backflip that looked too elegant to be practical—but it worked.
[Manual Tracking Active – Combat Intensity: Moderate]
[Fade: Power Output Suppressed — 42%]
[Unknown Entity: Power Trace Obscured]
The system struggled to catalog the exchange. Everything happened just beneath the threshold.
Fade felt it clearly: This wasn’t a duel to win. It was a duel to reveal.
Silken Fang spun again, this ti extending a hand briefly. From beneath his coat, sothing unfolded—curled limbs, spindly and segnted, barely visible in the flickering light. They didn’t fully erge. Just enough to warn.
"You’re not hiding your nature very well." Fade’s eyes narrowed.
"I’m not trying to. I just prefer... subtle introductions." Fang shrugged.
He ca forward again, this ti faster, slicing the air with his cane like it weighed nothing. Fade deflected one strike, absorbed another, but didn’t counter. Not fully.
They both knew what a real hit would an.
They both chose not to land one.
"You’re holding back," Fang said between moves.
"So are you."
Fang smiled wider now. "Isn’t that polite of us?"
And they clashed again—this ti with just a hint more weight.
Not enough to wound.
Just enough to warn.
The rhythm of the fight shifted—less force, more finesse.
Their steps traced a strange geotry: sharp turns, mirrored feints, glancing blows that spoke louder than strikes ever could. Neither of them needed system buffs or flashy skills. What unfolded was pure—dangerously pure.
A dance of philosophies.
Flesh and will.
Silken Fang ducked beneath a sweep and rolled to Fade’s flank. "You’ve trained against chaos," he said mid-motion. "But now you’re trying to contain it."
Fade turned, parried, and their eyes locked. "And you’ve embraced it."
Fang tilted his head. "No. I’ve studied it. Chaos is honest. Systems... lie."
A beat passed. Then their blades—tal and bone—kissed again in sparks.
"They’re talking while fighting. Is that normal?" Zeyna shifted her weight nervously.
"For people like them? It’s how they fight." Darin answered quietly.
Fade launched a counter—low, precise—but Fang twisted aside with serpentine grace. From beneath his coat, the faint shimr of webbing flickered, absorbed by the air.
"Why the restraint?" Fang asked. "You could’ve ended this. Or tried."
"So could you," Fade replied, watching him closely.
"I don’t kill what I don’t understand," Fang said, cane resting lightly on his shoulder. "And you’re a delightful puzzle."
For a mont, they stood still. The broken architecture of the outpost surrounded them—walls scarred, beams exposed. A forgotten place, hosting a fight neither side truly wanted to finish.
"People like us," Fang continued, "we don’t et by accident. We orbit the sa gravity."
Fade didn’t deny it.
Fang’s gaze grew more focused. "You protect them," he said, gesturing toward the group. "That’s your flaw."
"And you don’t care about anyone," Fade answered. "That’s yours."
"Maybe. But I’m not the one bound to break."
He moved again, and Fade followed—one more clash, one more exchange of truth in motion.
No death.
No victory.
Just a question left hanging in the air.
Their final exchange ca not as a blow—but as a pause.
A breath shared between adversaries.
Fade and Silken Fang stood a few paces apart, weapons lowered, but not discarded. No blood had been drawn. No power had been unleashed in full. And yet, the weight in the air suggested a battle more profound than blades alone.
The team watched in frozen silence. Even Zeyna—normally the first to speak, to act—felt the unspoken command in the atmosphere. This was not their fight. It never had been.
"They’re... reading each other." Kaela’s voice broke the quiet, just above a whisper.
"Like predators deciding if the other’s worth the risk." Arven grunted.
"No. Like mirrors arguing which one’s real." Darin, anwhile, looked unsettled.
Silken Fang exhaled slowly, brushing invisible dust off his coat. His expression was unreadable—still elegant, still self-assured, but sothing behind his eyes flickered. Calculation.
He spoke first. "You’re holding back. Still trying to protect your mask."
Fade didn’t move. "You’re doing the sa."
Fang offered a small, tilted smile. "No. I’m studying you."
The silence stretched.
Then, Fang took a deliberate step backward. Just one.
"That’s enough," he said. "I didn’t co here to destroy you. I ca to see you."
Fade’s gaze didn’t waver. "And what did you see?"
"A contradiction," Fang replied. "Leashed chaos. A creature born of shadow walking in the light."
Fade didn’t respond. Not with words.
Fang let his hand brush the hilt of his cane, but didn’t lift it. "I was curious. Now I’m satisfied."
He glanced toward the others. "Protect them well. The ga you’ve stepped into has no second rounds."
"Who are you?" Zeyna bristled.
Fang looked over his shoulder, eyes gleaming with amusent. "Just another monster with manners."
He turned fully now, walking toward the exit with a loose, confident stride.
Then—he paused at the doorway.
Without turning, he said:
"You’ll et the others. Eventually."
Fade’s fingers tensed slightly. "Others?"
Fang chuckled softly. "There are six of us. You’ve just t number six."
The silence that followed wasn’t empty—it was loaded.
And then he was gone.
Just like that.
The outpost felt colder without him. Not because of fear. But because of what he represented.
An enemy who chose to leave.
A predator with purpose.
Silken Fang’s footsteps faded into the corridor’s silence, but the weight of his presence lingered like smoke clinging to cracked stone.
No one spoke at first.
Not even Zeyna.
Fade stood still for a mont longer, eyes locked on the place where Fang had disappeared—half expecting another taunt, another flicker of motion. But none ca.
Just the whisper of shifting wind through fractured vents.
Kaela finally stepped forward. "He didn’t fight to win."
"Neither did Fade," Arven muttered. "Which scares more."
Zeyna’s fists unclenched, slow and reluctant. "We could’ve helped."
Fade turned, his voice even. "No. You couldn’t."
Not cruel. Just true.
He walked past them, toward the deeper part of the outpost. The mission—whatever remained of it—wasn’t over. But sothing had changed. Sothing inside.
Kaela moved beside him. "You knew he wouldn’t kill you."
"I didn’t," Fade answered. "I only knew he wasn’t here to try."
A few paces ahead, they reached a corridor lined with cracked glass and long-dead terminals. The walls were scorched. Signs of struggle—real, recent—clung to the space.
Blood sared along a doorway. A broken helt. Scattered data slates still flickering faintly.
Darin crouched beside a shattered comm panel. "This place didn’t go silent by accident."
"No," Fade said, scanning the damage with narrowed eyes. "It was silenced."
Zeyna knelt near the blood trail, fingers grazing a spiderweb of deep claw marks in the floor. "He didn’t do this, though."
"No," Kaela confird. "He arrived after it happened. And stayed."
"Why?" Arven asked. "To what end?"
Fade said nothing.
Because the answer wasn’t just tactical.
It was personal.
[Update Logged – Observation Complete]
[Target Zone: Fringe Outpost C-12]
[Hostile Entity Presence Confird – Status: Unknown]
[Data Forwarded – Awaiting Directive]
The system blinked. Brief. Cold.
Fade looked toward the west-facing window, where the do’s outer layers t the horizon.
Beyond it, a storm brewed.
"Whatever this place was..." he murmured, "it isn’t ours anymore."
Zeyna placed a hand on his shoulder. "Then let’s make sure what cos next is."
Fade didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
Reviews
All reviews (0)