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At sunset, the tracks of the pigs beca more difficult to follow, despite the large number of hoof prints. Nevertheless, the signs of other creatures’ passage beca more apparent, especially those of the Digestors.

One of them was larger than the ones Jake had faced. Very different footprints preceded the herd. The size of the footprints looked like a bear’s, and a big one to make matters worse.

The big mystery was that the pigs were following in his footsteps, covering his tracks. The carnivorous mammal being their predator, the pigs should have taken a different direction instead of following it.

The conclusion to draw was that it was running away from the sa thing. And since no pig carcass had been found after that, not even blood, it ant that the Digestors were not interested in them.

"Why would they ignore an easy prey? Aether? "Jake wondered frowning as he analyzed a sequence of mixed footprints, which seed to indicate that the Digestors were moving through the herd of pigs without taking action.

’They’re hunting a bear.’ He concluded ntally.

"From now on, nobody talks anymore." Jake ordered in a commanding tone. "In general, imitate my movents. If any of you scream or endanger us, I’ll knock you out myself. Questions?"

"No questions..." Amy and Will mumbled, their throats tight and dripping with sweat.

"Then let’s get going."

A kilotre later, they began to hear those famous shrill cackles of misfortune. From ti to ti, a hoarse roar answered, followed by the restless squeals of the pigs.

Two kiloters later, the cries were getting closer and closer and more roars were added to the first one. Five kiloters further on, they ca upon a lonely, living pig.

The pig had broken its leg during its desperate escape and seed to be at the end of its rope. Jake slaughtered it rcilessly and absorbed its Aether.

Forsaking the dead pig, he noticed a trail of blood associated with the paw prints of what appeared to be a bear. A debilitating wound, considering the amount of blood loss. The predator was living out its last monts and wouldn’t get very far. If it moved quickly, it had a chance to stop the Digestors’ pack from feasting on its corpse.

"We’re speeding up." Jake warned, starting to run at twice the speed he was running at before.

Will and Amy looked at each other without saying a word, sighed, and then began to run behind him. Over the next three kiloters, they discovered more and more blood, and more and more isolated pigs. So dead from fatigue, others mortally wounded by a fall, and a few rare lacerated but alive.

In any case, the Aether filants had not been harvested and the group picked them up with great joy. Nevertheless, their passionate harvest had to stop abruptly, or else they too would be harvested in atrocious suffering.

As the trees in the forest beca more and more scattered, and the wild grasses were replaced by an eccentric translucent cyan sand, the group arrived at the foot of a slope a few ters high.

"GROOOAAAARR!!"

A roar out of all proportion to anything they’d heard before, paralyzed them with terror. The trees were vibrating, the earth was shaking. Their violated eardrums began to bleed, a tinnitus sound adding to the surrounding cacophony.

Panicked pigs were running towards them, terrified of what they had just encountered. Jake intercepted with his machete all the pigs that crossed his blade, despite his stupor.

Considering the urgency, he sucked up the Aether without concern for Amy and Will and rushed up the hill. What he saw there forever changed his view of the world, of which he was but an insignificant pawn.

A few ters away, lying at his feet, the remains of a Kodiak bear, among the largest he had ever seen in a photo. Gutted from side to side, it had bled to death up to here, not without taking several Digestors in death with it, as attested by the silvery blood-covered corpses.

A few dozen ters further on, a similar bear emitted squeaks of agony, its front paws severed and a gaping wound in its lower abdon revealing its intestines. It was dood. But the real horror scene was two hundred ters away, at the edge of the forest.

A Digestor more massive than anything Jake had ever seen before. Almost four ters at the withers, seven ters standing.

The chitin on the hind legs now extended to the rest of the body, forming a surprisingly harmonious armor. A piece of chitin covered the monster’s skull, forming a helt very similar to the visored helts of knights, except that here the visor struggled to hide the pulsating white light from the creature’s three silvery eyes.

The arms had split into a pair of sharp tal wings more than ten tres wide, while the original arms had taken the form of a huge round shield and a blade as long as the creature.

The tal tail resembled that of a mouse, but was now as long and thick as a boa and dragged along the ground behind the monster. From which alien species this Digestor was inspired to take this shape, Jake had no idea.

In front of this abyssal creature was a titanic and completely rabid Kodiak bear.

The bears lying in front of Jake, he understood, were her children, and he could have sworn that tears were streaming from the predatory mother’s brown eyes. Such an emotion of sadness and anger, the giant bear seed almost human.

If the cubs were the size of a large adult bear, was it necessary to give the mother’s asurents? Here they co anyway: Six ters at the withers, eleven ters long, ten tons at the very least.

A singularly shiny brown fur, as if they were thin steel blades rather than hair. Sharp black claws half a tre long and fangs in the sa vein. With each roar, it spat out enough to fill a small bathtub.

What did Jake do when he saw a scene like that out of a fantasy book? Nothing glorious. He threw himself to the ground on the other side of the field.

The Aether of the Bear and the dead Digestors hadn’t been picked up, but he wasn’t one of those who risked his life for a lost cause, oh no. The huge Digestor wasn’t alone. Other monsters, as big as those he had fought, were assisting it.

Two other frightened cubs were hiding in their mother’s paws, but foolish would be the one to underestimate them. After all, one of them had torn the neck of a full-grown pig out of a mouthful anyway. Goddamn it, how long had those bears been on this planet?!

For a brief mont, hesitation almost made him lose his mind, but the gaze of a group of Digestors in his direction acted as a perfect cold shower. Although he had gained confidence since his first fights, he knew his limits.

To shoot one of these things down, neither his gun nor his machete was cut out for the role. It would require explosives or a much more powerful firearm than he had at his disposal. He always had his assault rifle warm in his pack, but that would not change anything.

Just as he was about to head back down the slope, the status quo was broken when a Digestor sneaked between the mother bear’s hind legs to bite the tendons of one of the cubs.

A roar of rage covered the victim’s squeak of suffering and a second later, the guilty Digestor, a creature much larger than those he had defeated, was torn into four pieces by a claw of extre violence. The torso, chitinous legs and head flew off in three different directions, while the monster’s hooves remained planted on the ground.

When Jake saw this, he turned pale. Until now, he thought that a mammal this size would be slow, like the dinosaurs of old. He was wrong. That was without counting on the Aether.

The move was so fast, the air whistled during the attack, projecting a gust of wind that was perceptible from his hiding place. He could barely keep up with his eyes. The Digestor wannabe knight uttered a shrill, screeching cackling sound that rattled his eardrums in response to the bear’s display of strength.

A second later, the two enraged titans charged towards each other.

Jake didn’t stay to witness the fight of the century. He leapt down the slope, only to be caught up by a sound wave similar to two shells exploding against each other.

Amy and Will, who hadn’t moved since his last instruction, were so pale-looking and immobile that he wondered if they had died forgetting to breathe. There was no ti to coddle them.

"Let’s get the fuck out of here!" Their improvised leader shouted out, sprinting around the battlefield without turning back.

"Don’t stop if you want to live."

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