Somewhere in the domain of white fog, hidden and moving, the creature attacked.
It came for Kassie firstādescended upon her like an avalanche given teeth and malice. The Spirit Beast fought with brutal efficiency, using its crystalline hand as some kind of bludgeon, twisting and rolling through the snowstorm with terrifying speed that turned the blizzard into its ally.
Kassie held her sword across her face, blocking the combo strikes where they mattered most.
āHer reflexes are sharp.ā
But the beastās force was relentless, driving her back step by step. As it finished another rolling strike and pulled back to gather momentum, something changed. A malevolent auraādark and crimsonāerupted around her form, and she burst forward like a blood-red comet.
Everything increased. Her speed. Her strength. Even my own.
Somehow, I just knew.
āHer Dominion Aura.ā
Since it was a passive ability, it was always thereāthat oppressive presence that made Kassie dominate any space she occupied, no matter who else was around. But right now it felt intensified, weaponized. Not just dominating the air but exploiting that dominance, converting superiority into raw power that bolstered both her strength and mine through our bond.
The moment she exploded forward, the snow fog cleared in her wake like a curtain torn aside.
She collided with the beastāknee driving into its chest with a sound like thunder cracking ice. The creature folded, blown back by the devastating strike. Following through, her sword came from the side in a vicious arc, crashed into the crystals on its shoulders.
The beast froze.
Literally froze like a game character stuttering from server lag, caught mid-motion in some glitch of reality.
āThe crystals on their shoulders definitely are their weaknesses!ā
Kassie didnāt waste the opening. She twisted her sword into a reverse grip, spread her stance while swinging the blade back as though it weighed nothing at all. Then she brought it forward in a swift, wide arc trailed by flowing obsidian and crimson light.
The creature threw up its arm to block.
The sword passed through it like they were made of morning mist.
The arm was separated at the elbow, and the blade bit deep into its neckābut didnāt finish the job. Because the beast caught the blade mid-slash with its remaining hand, crystalline fingers clamping down on the steel.
It snarled at Kassie, fury and desperation mixing in that inhuman sound.
She only gazed down at it, her featureless helmet tilted slightly.
āLike sheās looking at a worm thatās still trying to struggle. Christ.ā
Her leg flew up and smashed into its head with a sound that made me winceābone and crystal meeting boot in a devastating collision. The monster mustāve seen white, staggering back while somehow still gripping her sword with stubborn, dying strength.
Kassie was cold. Brutal. Efficient.
She raised her leg straight up again, and with the sharp heel of her boot, drove downward into the beastās face. The pointed edge punched through, and blue blood sprayed into the air as the Blizzard Mauler grandpa was smashed back into the cavern wall, its face caved inward like shattered porcelain.
Then she dragged her boot upward, slashing through nose and bone, tearing half its face away in another gory spray.
Now its grip weakened.
She applied more pressure, and her sword completed its arcāseparating head from shoulders in one clean motion.
The beastās mangled head tumbled through the air, spinning end over end, and hit someone with a wet thud.
"Owww!"
Kaelās voice. Of course.
[You have killed a Primal Elite (Tier 4+) Spirit Beast: Glacial Patriarch]
āGlacial Patriarch. A befitting name for something that old and stubborn.ā
As the Glacial Patriarch fell, the snow fog dissipated like smoke, revealing the cavernās full expanse. Emperor Rex stood in one corner, Kai in another. Since Kai had been totally blinded by the fog, there was no way he couldāve commanded his summon properly.
āThese people were really suffering. Pitifulā
"You did it?"
I shrugged, glancing at Kassie, who stood straight and still, holding her sword to the ground like some blood-soaked statue.
"Practically my summon did."
Kai laughed, that easy sound echoing off the ice walls.
"You should learn to take credit for the win, Cade. Itās just a Fortitude 1.0 summonāif not for your amazing cognizance and stuff, it wouldnāt be able to fight like that. You really deserve a strong summon, you know? Iām sure you wouldāve done even better if you were A-rank like Elena and Maxwell."
I gave him a long look, then sighed.
āHere we go with the what-ifs.ā
"Well, Iām not. No use entertaining ourselves with pointless hypotheticals."
He looked at me with that small smile, admiration clear in his eyes.
It made me frown.
"What?"
"Youāre so cool. Satisfied and all. Sometimes I think about myself in your shoes, and I just knowāI wouldāve broken down."
I gave him a slight frown, an absurd look.
"And who said I havenāt?"
He shook his head, smiling like it was a disease he couldnāt shake.
"Well, you donāt look like it."
I chuckled dryly.
"The eye is easily deceived because it relies on sight, Kai. This may merely be a mask." I looked around at the cavern, at the blue blood still steaming on the ice. "Anyway, we should go find wood."
But then I paused, looking at the fallen beastās massive form.
"Actually... maybe we can use this beastās fur to create fire?"
I glanced at Kassie, who stood motionless. The mental communication came back instantlyānot in words, but in pure understanding that filtered through our bond.
āPermission granted.ā
Kael appeared at that moment, looking at Kai with obvious admiration, scratching the back of his neck. The guyās luck at this point had to be cosmically blessed. First it was A-ranks and C-ranks protecting him, now he was standing next to an S-rank.
His smile said it all.
Kai didnāt pay him much attentionājust nodded in response to his greeting before turning back to me.
"We do need fire. And Iām not going to lie..." He rubbed his stomach sheepishly. "Iām sort of... hungry."
I laughed shortly.
"I am too. We donāt even know how long weāve been here."
We moved toward the beastās corpse together, boots crunching on frost.
"I think it ought to have been more than ten hours," Kai mused, rolling his shoulders. "My body feels sore, this tiredness... it has to be. But all around the gate, itās bright as day. I donāt think thereās going to be night in this gate."
āPerpetual daylight. Wonderful. Thatāll make tracking time even more impossible.ā
I pulled out my dagger and handed him one. Together, we began slicing through the Glacial Patriarchās body, cutting away strips of fur and hide while Kael gathered them and carried them to the pit Kassie had dug earlier. We fell into an easy rhythm, occasionally exchanging observations.
"Damn! This meat is tough!"
āNo kidding. Primal Elite beast hide isnāt exactly designed to be easy to work with.ā