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Chapter 013 - Glimpse of a Predator

  A muted blast echoed

  from inside the direwolf. It twitched once, then immediately went limp.

  Smoke and blood poured out from its eyes and mouth. Yes, I internally celebrated. I managed to keep the explosion inside it.

  The shadows around the wolf’s body dissipated, revealing its true

  form: a wolf with a furless white hide. It was also of note that its

  hide was clean, like it had no scars aside from the stab wound earlier. No scars? They don’t have a regenerative ability, do they?

  I wondered. It’s either that, or it meant that this Level 7

  Shadowflesh Direwolf was still considered a baby in its habitat if it

  had no meaningful scars from its “hunts.” I put that thought aside from

  now as a panel appeared, confirming the kill for the direwolf.

  [Elimination Quest complete!]

  [The rewards will now be distributed to its slayer momentarily. Please wait…]

  [The following rewards have been issued to Yuna.]

  


      
  • (D-Tier Artifact) Magi-Silicon Sneakers


  •   
  • (D-Tier Talisman) Stamina-Boosting Talisman


  •   


  The red border of the stage shimmered away. Relief washed over me as I

  let go of the wolf’s limp corpse, confirming that the battle was

  finally over—and then, I collapsed onto my back. The moment the

  adrenaline faded and its pain-dulling effect wore off, the extreme pain

  in my right arm finally caught up to me.

  I clutched it and looked down.

  It was mangled. Deep jaw marks were dug into my flesh, with blood

  seeping freely from them. My arm was dislocated in several places, with

  parts of bone and muscle exposed to the air. Fuck…

  I groaned, barely holding back the pain as limping footsteps approached

  me, and that was Yuna who had now stopped beside me. She lightly kicked

  my temple with the tip of her black sneakers.

  “Ow,” I reacted blankly.

  “You do realize you could’ve died at any moment during that fight.

  And if you died, I’d be the next to go,” Yuna sighed. “Take this. We’re

  even now.”

  She pulled out her own Potion of Moderate Healing, squatted beside

  me, and lightly slammed the glass potion against my forehead. I sat up

  and took it from her hand, chugging it down.

  I didn’t register the taste at first but unlike the cold lemonade-ish

  flavor of the lesser potion, this one tasted like overly sweet

  chocolate milk. As it flowed down my throat, the smaller wounds began

  sealing themselves shut, bones grinding as they fixed and slid back into

  place on their own.

  But the residual pain was still present. I still couldn’t move it

  properly. My other arm, though, had already fully healed. During the

  fight, it had only taken—what? One or two minutes to heal? I sat up,

  groaning as I felt like my entire body was in an aching pain. Yuna sat

  beside me on the ground, wincing a bit as she extended her still-wounded

  thigh on the pavement. The medical bandage did a good job keeping her

  wound closed. Although she only moved a little bit, it looked like it

  needed another replacement soon.

  “You should’ve used that potion on yourself, Yuna.”

  She looked at me with a disgusted face. “I’d puke if I had to see

  that bloody arm of yours again. Besides, you’re not done helping me deal

  with those fleshwolves, right?”

  I nodded in realization. “Right… You haven’t cleared the wave yet.”

  “Thankfully, I also got credit for killing the fleshwolf’s pack

  leader, so I only need to kill twenty more monsters,” Then Yuna pivoted

  to the topic to what happened earlier, ”Did you shove something else in

  its mouth? I wasn’t expecting the explosion to be that violent. My

  puppets weren’t even scratching its hide.”

  I explained the Ammonium Nitrate Cube to her, then added my own

  theory. “Its hide was likely absurdly tough. My longsword alone couldn’t

  pierce it properly but my skills allowed me to pierce through it. I

  wouldn’t have stood a chance if we let the fight go any further,

  though.”

  I pushed myself up the ground with both my arms, which I managed to

  do so with both of them nearly completely healed. I walked up to the

  dead direwolf, and I placed both my hands into its chest.

  “What are you doing?” asked Yuna.

  “The System said that its jaws are valuable. I might be able to make

  use of it once we get out of this EVENT—Oh, it worked,” I answered as

  the direwolf’s carcass lit up into small beams of light and disappeared,

  now stored into my inventory as a new item called:

  [(D-Tier Carcass) Dead Shadowflesh Direwolf]

  [(Heavy) This item takes up five inventory spaces.]

  It still fit into my inventory, thankfully, now putting my total number of filled spaces from 2 to 7.

  “Now that you mention it,” she said slowly, “You wrestled that

  direwolf with your bare hands and looked like you could’ve fought it

  without your sword. Meanwhile, I was struggling to hold my against one

  of those smaller ones…”

  I nodded. “It’s probably the level and stat difference. I was level

  5, and the wolf was level 7. I had a skill that grants me plus-two to

  all of my stats and plus-five to my strength and constitution. The

  latter is a skill that attracts monsters—”

  Stolen story; please report.

  I stopped. I remembered I still have Beast Attractor active. I shut

  it off immediately. My eyes now scanned the surroundings as my

  nervousness spiked.

  “Oh! So that’s why I wasn’t getting attacked by the direwolf! Smart

  move, Devon—” Yuna stood up too having noticed my sudden alertness. She

  was oblivious to what felt like impending danger about to come for us.

  “What is it?”

  “After I killed the direwolf, the fleshwolves are gone.”

  “So?” she replied casually. “Monsters outside the Elimination Stage

  can’t hear anything inside it. And even if they could, skills from the

  inside can’t influence the environment from the outside. I know that

  much since I experienced it last wave.”

  “Yeah, but…” I said, tension creeping into my voice. “I only turned it off just now.”

  Yuna frowned. “Is that a problem…? We’re not being attacked.”

  “That’s exactly what worries me,” I said quietly. “Because if they were nearby, why can’t I hear them?”

  If I were to take the behavior of the goblins from last wave, it

  meant that Pack Leaders always traveled with those they’re commanding.

  The fleshwolves were no exception, as they also traveled in packs. The

  Elimination Stage only instructed us to kill the direwolf. So if its

  pack had been nearby, they should have shown themselves the moment the

  red border vanished.

  “Devon…” Yuna’s voice suddenly trembled. “W-what the hell is that?”

  She was looking behind me, so I turned and followed her gaze.

  Suddenly, at the far end of the street, a massive black silhouette

  spanning two stories tall marched into view. Each step it took was

  extremely quiet, highly unusual for a creature its size. I could make

  out three individual heads moving independently, each one with baring

  its jaws and faintly glowing eyes buried beneath layers of writhing

  shadow. Its body resembled a wolf with three heads, but distorted and

  overbuilt, as if several beasts had been forced together into a single

  frame. A cerberus.

  Every hair on my body stood on end. It was not looking at us. It was

  not even walking in our direction. And yet, my legs refused to move.

  [You are now in a combat encounter.]

  Despite that notice, the monster did not turn its heads. It continued

  forward, crushing debris beneath its feet, indifferent to our

  existence. I scooped Yuna off the ground and into my shoulders without

  warning, ignoring her startled yelp, and bolted toward the nearest

  alleyway. I didn’t even know if this was the way to the bakery we stayed

  on. My Goblin Longsword slipped from my grasp and clattered onto the

  pavement behind us, but I did not slow down to retrieve it.

  I ran without looking back, without listening, without caring about

  anything except the narrowing space ahead of me. Even when the combat

  encounter notification faded from my vision, I did not stop. I focused

  entirely on what’s in front of me. After a few minutes of running, I

  reached the end of the alleys as I exited on an open space. A plaza,

  decorated with a non-working fountain and neatly trimmed hedges over the

  grass. It was only the entrance leading to a building called the Azalos City Public Library, with its name embossed on the marbled archway above the circular revolving door.

  This building’s architecture seemed more like a mix between a Roman

  courthouse with massive marble pillars which seemed like it was only

  built for decoration, yet beyond those pillars was a solid cemented wall

  filled with four stories of windows symmetrically placed beside each

  other.

  What’s more peculiar was the place should’ve been crawling with

  wolves,; but there wasn’t a single one of them on sight. It was likely

  because of the boss monster being nearby.

  As I pushed the revolving door open, I carried Yuna inside, deep into

  the aisles of books to hide us from the absent threat we were still

  running from. As I set the silver-haired girl down the carpeted

  flooring, Yuna’s puppets gathered around her. They must have latched

  onto her while we were running.

  “What the hell was that…?” Yuna said with an unsteady voice.

  I bent over slightly, hands on my knees as I tried to catch my

  breath. The info panel for the monster was still lingering at the edge

  of my vision. “I’ll read it for you,” so I told her.

  [Shadowflesh Cerberus]

  [LVL. 20]

  [The Shadowflesh Cerberus—most

  commonly referred to simply as Cerberus—is the apex predator of the

  continent of Raven Noth. Abandoned at birth, it is thrown into survival

  the moment it opens its eyes. They hear everything, eat everything, and

  most dangerous of all… its extremely keen eyes amplify not only its

  vision, but all of its other senses. This makes its eyes a commodity for

  magical artifacts. Unlike the other fleshwolves, they act alone. They

  treat everything as their prey, including their own kind. If you see it

  and it ignores you, consider yourself fucked—because it would only take a

  moment before one of its heads emerges from the shadows beneath you.

  But why is its lesser counterpart’s magi-calcite jaws more valuable than

  Cerberus’ sense-amplifying eyeballs? That’s because of its one

  weakness—]

  “So at that moment, if you didn’t run off with me when it passed by the street…”

  “Yeah,” I gulped. “We would’ve died then.”

  That morbid realization made me lean against the bookshelf, refusing

  to sit down as I didn’t want relief to take hold of me. I told Yuna, “I

  still think you should’ve took that potion for yourself. Your leg’s a

  liability.”

  “Oh shut up,” Yuna retorted. She was tending her thigh wound again by

  tightening the bandage even more. “I’m not a fast runner. I still

  would’ve made you carry me at that moment.”

  With all of my skills in cooldown, I cannot afford to make another

  mistake or get into another fight. I still resolved to help Yuna get her

  kills, so I told her, “Let me know once you’re done there. I’ll try to

  see what we can do next.”

  The easiest case scenario would be if there were direwolves outside

  of the building. We can try attracting them one by one and fighting them

  as per our original plan, but without the safety of the alleys, we’d

  have to find another way to fight them. I already lost my Goblin

  Longsword when we escaped from the Cerberus earlier, so Yuna would be

  left defenseless again. I’d have to use this building to my advantage…

  somehow.

  As my eyes scanned around the library, I looked above—illuminating

  the vacant seats and tables was a grand, golden chandelier with smaller

  ones chandeliers beside it. It seemed too grand, too overkill for a

  public library, but I stared it… for a bit too long, it seems. The

  lights were already searing into my eyes, but I couldn’t look away. Not

  when a hypothetical was forming in my mind at this very moment. What if, I thought. What if we didn’t need to hunt any more fleshwolves?

  But I was broken out of my stupor when one of Yuna’s puppets squeaked

  below me. It was pulling on the sleeve of my pants, gesturing to

  follow. It then started running to the direction I came from, so I

  eventually followed it. I found Yuna on the far end of aisle standing by

  herself. She was still using the bookshelves as support. As we locked

  eyes, she handed me the multi-shifting blade that I had lent her. She

  put a finger on her mouth, gesturing me to keep quiet.

  “Don’t make too much noise,” she said in a whisper. “We’re not alone here.”

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