Leon's brows knit slightly when Valeria said it, but his voice stayed steady - like they were discussing sothing technical, not the state of his own mind.
"I'll check it later," he said calmly, not even turning his eyes from Ragnar writhing on the ground. "First, I'm getting rid of him."
Valeria didn't smile the way she usually did.
She frowned.
"If I'm not mistaken," she began more slowly, her gaze sweeping over him from head to toe, "your ntal state isn't normal. You shouldn't be this cold and ruthless while you're killing soone. Look at yourself. Your hand isn't even trembling. There's no hesitation in your eyes, no tension in the way you move. Do you honestly think you would've acted like this before?"
Her thoughts weren't light or teasing for once. Leon had lived through more in the last week than most people did in a lifeti - that much was true. But a change this abrupt, this smooth - going from an ordinary student to soone who could snap another man's legs without the faintest flicker of emotion - shouldn't happen so seamlessly.
Sothing had to be influencing him.
Sothing beyond experience alone.
For the first ti in minutes, Leon actually hesitated.
His brow furrowed deeper.
She wasn't wrong.
He didn't feel like he was doing anything wrong. He didn't feel fear. He didn't even feel anger in the way he expected to.
Everything was… clean. Logical.
Ragnar was a threat.
Threats got eliminated.
A simple equation.
Leon looked at Valeria.
"He tried to kill first," he said evenly. "He beca my enemy. Isn't it obvious enemies should be removed as quickly as possible? Am I doing sothing wrong?"
Valeria shook her head.
"No. It isn't wrong…"
And she ant it. In a world where the System handed out Essence only to those who could kill, hesitation ant death. She was glad Leon understood that - glad he wasn't one of those naive idealists pretending the old rules still mattered.
But…
What she was seeing now wasn't ordinary resolve.
He looked like soone who'd stopped viewing opponents as human a long ti ago. Like a being standing above it all, removing obstacles without caring about their screams. Like soone who'd killed millions and didn't take it personally.
That wasn't normal for a boy who, a week ago, had been worried about his family.
A shrill scream ripped through the air.
Leon had tossed Ragnar aside like a rag several ters away, and now zombies were inching toward the broken figure, drawn by the scent of fresh blood and the noise of the fight. Their steps were slow and uneven - yet relentless.
"No! No!" Ragnar shrieked, trying to push himself up on shattered legs. "Fuck - don't co closer!"
He tried to activate his ability, but pain, fear, and panic tore his focus to pieces. The air around him twitched weakly… and then fell still.
Leon looked away from Valeria and stared at him with blank indifference.
Valeria felt irritation flare.
For the first ti since she'd appeared, she was genuinely angry.
Her long black hair lifted slightly, as if stirred by an invisible gust, and a gleam entered her eyes that held nothing sweet or coquettish.
"Leon!" she raised her voice, the vibration in it sharper than usual. "Check your passive skills. Imdiately."
Leon froze.
He looked at her.
Valeria's face was serious. Her gaze was hard, focused - almost… commanding.
He had never seen her like this.
And then, completely irrationally, sothing clenched inside him, like not obeying her was sothing he simply couldn't do.
Leon frowned, holding her stare for another second, as if trying to decide whether there was truly a reason to worry - or if she was just dramatizing again in her usual style. But her normally playful red eyes were growing more intense, like sothing was burning behind them, and her expression held no trace of flirting or humor.
At last, he let out a quiet breath and opened the System interface.
A translucent window appeared in front of him.
He scrolled through the list.
Then stopped - and frowned harder.
"Cold Mind is gone," he said calmly, not even looking at Valeria. "It disappeared."
The fingers she'd had clenched near her chest twitched.
"What's in its place?" she asked softly, but her voice was tight.
Leon's eyes moved lower.
[Predator's Equilibrium (Evolved Passive Skill) – Phase Two Skill – Tier: Novice]
[Description: An evolved passive skill originating from Cold Mind. Establishes a stabilized state of predatory ntal equilibrium, suppressing emotional interference and converting hostile intent into lethal clarity. Upon identifying a target as an enemy, the user's perception instinctively shifts - dehumanizing the target into prey and drastically reducing hesitation toward lethal action. Combat cognition is partially automated, guiding the user toward efficient disablent and execution pathways with cold precision. Effectiveness scales with Willpower, Intelligence, and ntal Resistance. Prolonged use may degrade empathy, distort enemy recognition, and impose lasting psychological alterations.]
For a mont, he said nothing.
"It got replaced," Leon said at last. "With a new skill. Predator's Equilibrium."
Valeria's frown deepened.
Her mind imdiately started analyzing. Cold Mind was ant to cool emotions, stabilize the mind under threat, protect against panic and combat stress - almost mandatory for anyone who fought monsters regularly in this new world.
But what she'd been seeing in Leon wasn't re stabilization anymore.
It was a shift into sothing far more ruthless.
"Read it out loud," she said slowly.
Leon didn't understand the tension in her voice, but he started reading.
He read without emotion, line by line, exactly as the description appeared. Valeria listened in silence, not interrupting once - yet with every phrase, her face grew more and more serious.
"…dehumanizing the target into prey…"
Her eyes narrowed slightly.
"…drastically reducing hesitation toward lethal action…"
"…combat cognition is partially automated…"
"…prolonged use may degrade empathy, distort enemy recognition, and impose lasting psychological alterations."
When Leon finished, silence fell - broken only by distant zombie moans and Ragnar's choked sobs as he tried to drag himself away on broken legs.
Valeria understood.
This wasn't a simple power-up.
This was evolution forced by experience.
Cold Mind hadn't just dampened emotion - it had adapted. Over the last few days, Leon had used it over and over in extre danger, forcing his mind to operate past its natural limits. He'd analyzed enemies, cut away hesitation, treated combat like an equation to solve.
And the System had responded.
The sa way it responded to killing, to gaining Essence, to the growth of the body.
It had responded to the growth of the mind.
"Do you understand what this ans?" Valeria asked quietly at last.
Leon didn't answer right away.
He looked at the description again.
"Dehumanizing the target into prey."
So that was why Ragnar didn't feel like a person anymore.
Not because Leon hated him.
Not because he was furious.
Simply because the mont he identified Ragnar as an enemy, his mind automatically shifted into predator mode.
Target.
Obstacle.
Eliminate.
"That's why…" Valeria spoke more softly now, almost to herself. "You don't feel anything. The skill turns your hostility into a killer's clarity. It automates part of your combat thinking. It simplifies the world into '' and 'victim.'"
She watched him in silence for several seconds, her face stripped of all teasing and provocation - serious in a way Leon had never seen on her. Only when she was sure he was listening did she speak again, slower, choosing each word with care.
"You have to handle this skill carefully," she said quietly but firmly. "This isn't a normal passive. It ddles with your mind. And not gently."
Her red eyes flashed with warning.
"It's Phase Two. Do you understand what that ans?" She lifted a brow. "This isn't a minor evolution. It's a jump. The output is much stronger - and the influence… deeper. The System isn't only strengthening your body, Leon. It's starting to shape your psyche for survival."
Leon listened without speaking, his gaze drifting back to the description hovering before him.
"If you aren't careful," she continued, "you could forget who you are. This ability reduces the world to 'predator and prey.' If you let it take control, you could slip into a state where anyone who gets in your way gets classified as an enemy. And then you won't see people anymore. Only targets."
Her voice turned colder.
"And you know what happens then?" she asked quietly. "You won't be Leon anymore. You'll be a machine. A very effective machine. But only a machine."
For a mont, a heavy, unnatural silence hung between them - completely out of place with the chaos a few ters away, where Ragnar was still crawling across the ground, leaving a sar of blood behind him.
Leon finally frowned.
He didn't deny it.
He didn't protest.
"I mostly agree with you," he said calmly. "If sothing is starting to affect how I think… I should control it before it controls ."
He exhaled lightly.
"I'll try to be careful."
Valeria studied him for another mont, as if judging whether he ant it or was simply trying to end the conversation.
Then her expression changed. The tension vanished, replaced by her familiar, sweetly flirtatious smile.
"If you keep your word," she murmured, peeking up at him through her lashes, "you'll get a very nice surprise from soday."
She gave him a slow blink, lips curving, her tone once again dripping with the exaggerated sweetness she loved using to needle him.
Despite everything, Leon smiled faintly - almost without realizing it.
Valeria caught it imdiately and gave a small nod, as if she'd just confird that sothing inside him was still in the right place.
And then Ragnar's scream cut through the air.
Not fury this ti.
Pure, animal terror.
The zombies were only a few steps away now, dragging their feet, reaching with rotting hands as he tried to crawl - only to slip in his own blood.
Leon looked his way.
His smile disappeared.
His eyes turned cold again.
"Every enemy of mine has to be erased without hesitation," he said flatly.
It didn't sound like a statent ant for anyone else.
More like a reminder.
To himself.
He turned and started walking toward Ragnar, slow and unhurried, muttering the words under his breath like he was engraving them into his mind - like he needed to be sure this was the right path, that it was his decision guiding him…
Not the skill.
But even Leon wasn't completely sure anymore where one ended - and the other began.
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