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Chapter 4 - The moment before

The first strike did not feel like a choice.

It felt like falling.

One moment, something small and wounded had dragged itself through the blood between him and the next doorway.

The next, Kael was on top of it.

Striking.

Again.

Again.

Again.

The screwdriver came down with both hands behind it.

Not cleanly.

Not skillfully.

It slipped against bone, scraped, caught, sank, tore loose, then sank again. The creature beneath him jerked with each impact, its skull pinned against the shattered stone, one eye already collapsed into black pulp.

Kael breathed in broken animal sounds.

His ankle screamed beneath him.

His ribs burned.

His hands slipped.

Blood made the world hard to hold.

Old blood.

New blood.

Human.

Not human.

All of it mixed across his fingers until there was no point asking which body had given what.

He struck anyway.

THUNK.

The screwdriver bit deep.

Warmth burst against his cheek.

Wet.

Metallic.

Too close to tears.

He pulled it free.

Struck again.

THUNK.

The thing spasmed once.

Then went still.

Kael froze above it, shoulders rising and falling, mouth open around breaths that hurt too much to be air.

He waited.

For the pulse.

For the shimmer.

For the answer he had seen pass into the boy by the wall.

Nothing came.

No light.

No heat.

No cold thread entering his hands.

Only the dead thing beneath him.

Only the screwdriver trembling between his fingers.

Only his own heart, stupid and frantic, hammering inside a body that had gained nothing from surviving.

It had not fought him.

Not really.

It had only failed to die fast enough.

Kael stared.

No.

The word was quiet.

Small.

Almost polite.

Then his hand moved again.

The point fell.

Again.

And again.

Not to kill.

It was already dead.

Not to win.

There had been no victory.

He struck because his body had not understood how to stop being afraid. He struck because stopping meant listening. He struck because somewhere in the back of his mind, the new world had made a promise and then refused to keep it.

Blood ran down the handle.

Over his wrist.

Into his sleeve.

The air burned with iron.

A scream rose behind him.

Distant.

Near.

Everywhere.

Kael stumbled off the corpse and nearly fell. His ankle buckled. Pain shot up his leg, white and clean. He caught himself with one hand, screwdriver raised in the other.

A mockery of a blade.

Small.

Rusted.

Ridiculous.

And still his fingers clung to it as if letting go would mean agreeing to die.

Around him, the courtyard continued to devour itself.

Bones broke.

Jaws snapped.

Rain struck blood and turned it thin at the edges.

Monsters tore into students.

Students tore into monsters.

And sometimes, after the tearing, something answered.

Kael saw it now.

Not fully.

Never fully.

But enough.

A pulse passing from the dead to the living.

A change under skin.

A tightening of muscle.

A sharpening of movement.

The survivors who killed did not look saved.

They looked corrected.

As if the world had found a flaw in them and adjusted the body accordingly.

A boy with half his face covered in blood drove a metal shard into a creature's throat. A second later, the tremor in his knees vanished. He stood straighter, eyes widening in horror as his own breath steadied without permission.

A monster with three broken ribs buried its teeth into another's neck.

The air rippled.

Its back arched.

New bone pushed through its shoulder.

A limb unfolded from the wound.

Wet.

White.

Wrong.

It lifted the new arm, screamed with a voice almost human, and crushed two skulls against the ground before they had time to finish dying.

Kael gagged.

Metal flooded his mouth.

They were changing.

They were not discovering the rule.

They were obeying it.

Not evolving.

Evolution belonged to years.

To hunger.

To birth.

To death repeated slowly enough for nature to pretend patience.

This was faster.

Dirtier.

A verdict hammered directly into flesh.

They grew stronger by killing.

And him?

Kael looked down at the corpse beneath him.

Nothing.

No answer.

No proof.

No reward.

Only a thing too weak, too broken, too already finished to mean anything.

The new world had looked at what he had done and found it insufficient.

The rule had opened for others.

For him, it had stayed shut.

Scrap.

That was what he was.

A rat in a pit learning that even rats had rules to obey.

His jaw tightened until his teeth hurt.

He staggered back.

One step.

Another.

His injured ankle burned with each movement, but pain was at least honest. Pain did not pretend to be justice.

The screwdriver shook in his hand.

Absurd.

Laughable.

His last anchor.

Then something moved through the blood.

Kael turned.

A creature limped toward him.

Not the one he had killed.

Another.

Mangled.

One eye gone.

A leg dragging uselessly behind.

Its jaw hung crooked, drool spilling from broken teeth in black threads.

But it was moving.

Toward him.

Always toward him.

Around it, stronger things fed. No one cared about this one. No one had noticed it.

For one insane second, Kael saw what the world had offered him.

A target.

Weak.

Alone.

Still alive.

His heart kicked against his ribs.

Not hope.

Worse.

Calculation.

His fingers tightened around the screwdriver until the edge of the handle bit into his palm.

This time.

The creature staggered closer. A wet, rattling growl crawled out of its throat.

Kael stepped forward. His ankle almost failed. He forced it to hold.

The creature lunged badly, too slow, its ruined leg slipping beneath it.

Kael screamed and struck.

Once.

The screwdriver glanced off bone.

Twice.

It caught.

He drove all his weight behind the third strike.

CRACK.

The tip pierced the temple.

Black fluid burst free, thick and scalding, splashing across his hand.

The creature dropped to one knee.

Shuddered.

Its remaining eye fixed on him.

For the first time since the morning began, Kael thought he might have done something that counted.

Then a hiss cut the air.

A blur.

Another creature hit the dying body from the side.

Bigger.

Faster.

Almost graceful.

It tore into the corpse before the last tremor had left it.

Flesh ripped in long, wet strips. Tendons snapped. Bones popped. Something inside the thing burst open and steamed against the cold rain.

Kael staggered back.

"No…"

The bigger creature swallowed, shook, and grew still for half a breath.

Then the pulse came.

Not to Kael.

To it.

A dark shimmer slid over its spine. Its muscles tightened. Its claws lengthened by the width of a knife.

It lifted its head, stronger than it had been seconds before.

Kael stared.

The corpse was gone.

The proof was gone.

The answer was gone.

Stolen.

Again.

Even his violence had arrived too late.

Something inside him cracked without making a sound.

His hands shook so violently the screwdriver nearly slipped free.

"Why?"

The word fell out of him.

Small.

Useless.

Then louder.

"Why?"

The creature did not answer.

Of course it did not.

The world did not owe explanations to things that failed.

Kael's throat tightened. Tears burned through the grime on his face.

"Why do they take everything from me?"

His voice broke before the sentence ended.

Not a roar.

Nothing heroic.

A boy's voice.

Raw.

Humiliated.

Too young for the amount of blood on his hands.

He looked down at those hands.

Red.

Split.

Shaking.

The screwdriver quivered between them.

I'm useless.

The thought was not new.

Only louder.

Even here.

A laugh crawled somewhere in the distance.

A scream answered it.

Even now.

He clenched his jaw.

Even with all this rage, I'm nothing.

Then the sky screamed.

Not the campus.

Not a monster.

The sky.

A howl tore through the air so vast it swallowed every other sound and left only pressure behind. Windows shattered across the buildings in a glittering wave. Flames bent flat. Rain froze in crooked lines for half a heartbeat before falling again.

Kael threw an arm over his face.

The shockwave hit.

Dust.

Iron.

Ash.

Something immense struck the earth somewhere beyond the courtyard.

The ground jumped.

Stone cracked outward in pale veins.

A car flipped onto its side and did not finish falling.

For a moment, it simply hung there.

Half-turned.

Impossible.

Then it crashed down all at once.

Silence followed.

It was not absence.

It was command.

Around him, the corpses stopped bleeding.

Not because they were empty.

Because everything had been ordered to wait.

The monsters stopped.

The humans stopped.

Even the wounded seemed to forget how to groan.

One of the larger beasts folded itself close to the ground.

It was not wounded.

It was waiting.

Kael stood in the middle of the courtyard, screwdriver raised in one trembling hand, and felt the world withdraw from itself.

Dust hung in the air.

Too slow.

Rain touched his cheek one drop at a time.

Too separate.

Then even that changed.

The rain did not stop falling.

It simply forgot how to reach the ground.

The notification did not vanish.

It dimmed.

As if even translation had lowered its voice.

His heartbeat became enormous.

Too loud.

Something was coming.

No footsteps.

No roar.

Only pressure.

A weight bending the air before it arrived.

The screwdriver trembled.

Not from Kael's hand.

From proximity.

The rusted metal whined softly, a thin, miserable sound, as if even dead iron understood it had been brought too close to something it should never touch.

Kael's lungs locked.

The air thickened.

Each breath became colder than the last.

Denser.

Crueler.

Less his.

A step landed somewhere beyond the smoke.

One.

Heavy.

Final.

The ground cracked without sound.

Not beneath the step.

Around it.

Kael stepped back.

His eyes swept the courtyard.

None of the corpses moved.

Some were collapsing inward.

Drained.

Hollowed.

Emptied of whatever still made them worth eating.

Another step.

Dust quivered with each beat of Kael's heart.

And then—

everything stopped.

No wind.

No rain.

No cries.

Even fear held its breath.

Time waited.

Kael lowered his gaze.

A shadow stretched across the ground at his feet.

Not his.

Not entirely.

It moved.

Slowly.

Like a breath.

The shape did not match anything standing behind him.

It lengthened across the blood.

Touched the dead.

Passed over the screwdriver.

The metal went still.

Kael could not turn.

Could not run.

Could not pray.

And without knowing how, without seeing a face, without hearing a voice, he understood.

Something was looking at him.

Not at the battlefield.

Not at the dead.

Not at the stronger creatures.

At him.

The rat.

The scrap.

The boy who had failed to make the world answer.

For the first time since the sky cracked open, Kael wanted the monsters to start screaming again.

But nothing moved.

Nothing dared.

Only the shadow breathed at his feet.

Waiting.

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