"Mother-loving, son of a—" Adom ducked as fangs snapped shut where his throat had been a heartbeat earlier. "—dung beetle!"
For someone who had lived a couple lifetimes, his curse vocabulary remained... disappointingly tame at times. Something to work on, perhaps, though it was currently low on his priority list of skills to develop.
The Shadowmane lunged again, its wolf-like body moving with unnatural speed. Four glowing yellow eyes tracked his every movement, saliva dripping from jaws that could crush bone like kindling.
Adom's fingers twitched, instinctively forming the first sign of a [Flame Lance] spell. The mana rose within him, ready to be channeled into a devastating blast that would reduce the beast to ash.
He stopped himself.
That would be admitting defeat. The whole point of this exercise was to grow stronger without relying on magic. To build his physical foundation.
The Shadowmane sensed his hesitation and lunged forward, jaws wide.
Adom pivoted at the last possible second, the creature's teeth grazing his shoulder as he spun away. Pain flared where fangs tore through his tunic and scraped skin.
"You caught me at a bad time," Adom growled, backing up to create space. "I was just trying to eat lunch."
The remains of his meal lay scattered where he'd been sitting minutes earlier. He'd just finished hunting a pack of prismatic scorpions—nasty creatures with color-changing carapaces that made them nearly invisible in the right light. The fight had been exhausting but successful.
Then this thing had appeared from nowhere while he was trying to rest.
The Shadowmane circled him, muscles rippling beneath its midnight-black fur. Unlike normal wolves, its shoulders stood as high as Adom's chest, and a ridge of bone spikes ran along its spine. The creature moved with deliberate patience, waiting for Adom to make a mistake.
Zuni watched and chirped from his perch atop John, who stood motionless nearby. Adom had ordered the golem to protect the quillick, not intervene. This fight was his alone.
[Identify]
Shadowmane Alpha (High threat)
A predator that hunts by sensing fear. Capable of short-range shadow stepping.
"Of course you can teleport," Adom muttered. "Why wouldn't you?"
The Shadowmane's ear twitched. Then it vanished.
Adom threw himself forward on pure instinct, [Flow Prediction] slowing the world just so. Just enough for him to see it come. The creature materialized where he'd been standing, jaws clamping shut on empty air.
Adom rolled to his feet and charged before it could recover, driving a gauntleted fist toward its flank.
The Shadowmane spun, meeting his charge with teeth bared. Adom barely managed to redirect his punch, catching the creature's jaw instead of being caught in its maw.
WAM.
The impact reverberated up his arm as Fluid-enhanced metal connected with bone. The Shadowmane's head snapped sideways, but it recovered with terrifying speed, its front paw slashing out.
Claws like curved daggers tore through Adom's thigh.
He hissed through clenched teeth as blood immediately soaked his pant leg. The pain was electric, sharp and immediate. A healing potion would help, but the wounds were deep—this would take time to close.
The Shadowmane pressed its advantage, lunging again. Adom stepped inside its reach—a risky move, but the right one. As the creature's momentum carried it forward, Adom delivered an uppercut to its throat.
BAM.
The strike should have crushed its windpipe. Instead, the creature seemed to partially dissolve into shadow at the moment of impact, the blow passing through with reduced effect.
"That's cheating," Adom gasped as the Shadowmane reformed and whirled on him.
It answered with a growl that seemed to come from everywhere at once.
Adom circled left, keeping his guard high. Blood dripped steadily from his leg wound, leaving a red trail on the forest floor. Bad. If this fight dragged on, blood loss would become a serious problem.
The Shadowmane lunged again, this time feinting right before vanishing. Adom didn't fall for it—he'd noticed a slight shimmer in the air before each teleport. He turned, already bringing his fist up as the creature reappeared behind him.
His timing was perfect. WAM connected with the creature's snout as it materialized, sending it staggering backward with a yelp of surprise and pain.
Adom pressed forward, not giving it time to recover. A straight jab to the chest. A cross to the jaw. Each blow drove the creature back another step, each impact sending shockwaves through its body.
WAM. BAM. WAM.
The Shadowmane tried to teleport again, but Adom had its timing down now. As it began to dissolve, he tracked the shimmer in the air and was already moving to intercept. When it reformed, he was waiting with a devastating hook that caught it just below the ear.
BAM!
Bone cracked audibly. The creature stumbled, disoriented. One of its four eyes was swollen shut, and blood matted the fur around its muzzle.
But it wasn't finished. With a snarl that vibrated through Adom's chest, the Shadowmane launched itself at him in pure desperation. Teeth and claws slashed toward his face.
Adom met it head-on. As jaws gaped to tear out his throat, he drove his fist directly into its mouth.
WAM!
Teeth shattered. The creature howled in agony, thrashing its head to free itself from the brutal counter.
Adom didn't relent. His other fist hammered into the creature's exposed throat. Then its eye. Then the soft spot behind its jaw.
BAM. WAM. BAM.
Each impact drove the creature further into the ground. Its struggles weakened. Its growls turned to whimpers.
Still Adom continued, something primal taking over as he straddled the beast and rained blows upon its skull.
WAM. BAM. WAM. BAM.
Blood and brain matter spattered his face and chest. Bone gave way beneath his gauntlets. The creature's body twitched, then went still.
Adom delivered one final blow, driving his fist through what remained of the Shadowmane's skull into the ground beneath.
Silence fell over the clearing.
Adom remained there, straddling the corpse, chest heaving. Blood—both his and the creature's—covered him from head to toe. His leg wound throbbed painfully, though the bleeding had slowed thanks to Healing Factor. Various cuts and scratches covered his arms and torso.
He pushed himself to his feet, legs shaking with exhaustion. When he looked down at his hands, both gauntlets were slick with gore, the enchanted metal humming faintly as it processed the battle energy.
A notification appeared in his awareness:
[White Wyrm's Body has reached level 11!]
Your body now has a little more than twice the resilience of a normal human. Muscles, tendons, and skin are more resistant to tearing and puncture. Your bones are also less prone to breaking.
[Healing Factor has reached level 3!]
Your healing rate is now 6 times faster than a normal human's. Wounds close rapidly, broken bones mend in days rather than weeks. Your body optimizes itself during rest.
[Your Mana Pool has increased from 702 to 705!]
Your capacity for holding magical energy has expanded significantly. Recovery rate increased to 6.7 units per hour. Channels have strengthened, allowing for more powerful spell casting with less strain.
[Boxing Mastery has reached level 12!]
Your strikes now carry perfect weight transfer from foot to fist. Footwork has become instinctively efficient, allowing you to maintain optimal positioning.
[Flow Prediction has reached level 8! (Active -> Full Passive)]
Your ability to predict movement has become nearly instinctive. You can often sense attacks from outside your field of vision and anticipate movements more efficiently.
Adom's theory was simple: if his natural healing was already accelerated, a healing potion should have amplified effects. The stimulants in the solution would trigger processes already working overtime.
He uncorked the vial, the sharp medicinal smell making his nose wrinkle. With a steadying breath, he poured the viscous green liquid directly onto the claw wounds.
"Son of a—" Adom hissed through clenched teeth as liquid fire seemed to spread across his leg. The sensation was like strong alcohol on an open cut, but multiplied tenfold.
Seriously. It hurt like a bit-
"Owww!"
The solution hissed and bubbled on contact with his wounds, wisps of white smoke rising from the damaged tissue. The scientific explanation was straightforward, if unsettling—the accelerated cellular activity generated heat, the rapid division and multiplication of cells consuming oxygen and nutrients at such a rate that the surrounding tissues actually steamed.
Adom watched in fascination as the deep punctures visibly closed before his eyes. The edges of torn flesh drew together, new skin spreading across the wounds like ice forming on a pond. Within minutes, only faint pink scars remained where deadly claws had torn him open.
"Works better than expected," he murmured, running his fingers over the newly healed skin.
According to his own theories, as [Healing Factor] continued to develop, Adom would eventually reach a point where external healing aids became unnecessary. His body would simply repair itself with incredible speed, regardless of the damage.
And then there was the other implication—one that Biggins had mentioned almost casually, as if it weren't potentially life-altering.
Aging was, in essence, a failure of cellular repair. As the body grew older, its ability to replace damaged cells diminished. But with an ever-increasing healing factor? That process might slow, stop, or even reverse.
Immortality. Or something close to it.
For most people, the prospect of endless life would be cause for celebration. But Adom had already lived a whole lifetime. He had already watched friends age and die while he continued on. He had already felt the particular loneliness of being the one who remained.
The thought of potentially outliving everyone—again—sat like a stone in his stomach. Would he watch Sam grow old and die? What about his soon-to-be born little sister? Would he attend her funeral decades from now? Would he form connections knowing they would inevitably be severed by time?
This thought was... breaking something in him.
A small weight landed on his thigh, disrupting his spiraling thoughts.
Zuni stood there, head tilted curiously. The quillick's ears twitched as he studied Adom's face, apparently sensing his companion's melancholy. Then, with deliberate movement, Zuni flipped onto his back, presenting his surprisingly fuzzy belly. It was a posture Adom had never seen from him before.
"What's this?" Adom asked, the weight of eternity momentarily forgotten. "Since when do you want belly rubs?"
Zuni chirped insistently, tiny paws batting at the air.
Adom smiled despite himself and obliged, running his fingers through the soft fur of Zuni's stomach. The quillick squirmed in apparent delight.
Then it happened.
A sound Adom had never heard from Zuni—a high-pitched, trilling noise that rose and fell like... laughter? It was unmistakably an expression of joy, bubbling and bright, remarkably similar to a child's giggle but in a register that seemed almost musical.
"You're laughing," Adom said, wonder replacing his earlier heaviness. "I didn't know you could do that."
Zuni responded with another peal of quillick laughter, the sound light and contagious. Adom found himself chuckling in response, the morbid thoughts of eternal loneliness temporarily banished by this small moment of connection.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, Adom's stomach let out a gurgle so violent it sounded like a small animal was trying to escape.
The massive wolf corpse swirled and compressed before vanishing.
"Time to move," Adom said to Zuni, who was still busy with the last of his nuts. "The silverback won't wait forever."
The quillick chirped once, then scampered up John's leg to reclaim his favorite perch.
Adom checked the position of the sun through gaps in the canopy. He'd spent nearly half the day fighting his way through the dungeon's outer rings. He still had a few hours before the portal closed, but he'd need to be efficient. If he got trapped inside when the dungeon closed...
He pushed the thought away and resumed his trek, checking Biggins' map frequently to confirm his route. The vegetation grew denser as they moved deeper into the dungeon, the trees larger and more twisted. Strange fluorescent fungi clung to the bark, pulsing gently with inner light. The air became heavier, carrying the scent of rot and musk.
The last few hours had been a brutal gauntlet of one fight after another. Twin-tailed scorpions with poison that made your blood feel like acid. Crag hoppers with serrated limbs that could slice through leather like paper. Amber wasps that exploded into clouds of paralytic spores when killed.
And for what? A handful of skill increases that still fell far short of what he needed.
Adom checked his notifications again:
[White Wyrm's Body]: Level 11
[Healing Factor]: Level 3
[Boxing Mastery]: Level 12
[Flow Prediction]: Level 8
According to Biggins, the ideal would be to have [White Wyrm's Body] at level 15 and [Healing Factor] at level 5 at minimum before attempting a direct confrontation with the silverback. At his current rate, he'd need another week of dungeon diving to reach those targets.
But the dungeon was closing today.
"Almost there," Adom muttered as he pushed through a particularly thick section of underbrush. "Just need to see what we're up against."
The path gradually inclined upward, leading toward what appeared to be a ridgeline. As they neared the top, Adom heard it—a sound that made the hair on the back of his neck stand up.
A roar. Deep, primal, and so powerful he felt it in his chest more than heard it with his ears.
Then came another sound—higher pitched, desperate. A scream that was equal parts rage and terror.
Adom quickened his pace, reaching the ridgeline and dropping low to remain concealed. He parted the foliage carefully, peering down into a wide clearing below.
His eyes widened.
"Holy—"
The silverback stood in the center of the clearing, and Adom immediately understood why Biggins had insisted on such preparation. It wasn't a gorilla as he'd expected—it was something far more primeval, far more terrifying.
Standing at least twelve feet tall, its broad shoulders spanned wider than John was tall. Four massive arms bulged with muscle beneath silvery-gray fur that gleamed like metal in the dappled sunlight. Its face was a nightmarish blend of ape and something decidedly not—fangs protruding from its bottom jaw, brow ridge so pronounced it shadowed eyes that glowed with amber intelligence. Bony plates ran along its shoulders and back, natural armor that would turn aside most weapons.
But it wasn't alone.
The silverback was locked in combat with another creature—a massive reptilian monster that looked like evolution had taken a crocodile, crossed it with a monitor lizard, and scaled the result up to the size of a small house. Its hide was a mottled green-black, covered in armor-like scales with ridges of bone running along its spine.
[Identify]
Graven Scale Wyrm (Deadly threat)
A territorial apex predator with crushing bite force and regenerative scales.
The two monsters circled each other, neither willing to yield ground. The clearing around them was already devastated—trees uprooted, earth torn up in great furrows, blood (both red and an oily black) spattered across the vegetation.
The Graven Scale lunged first, its massive jaws opening to reveal rows of teeth like serrated daggers. It moved with shocking speed for something so large, its muscular tail propelling it forward in a burst of acceleration.
The silverback didn't dodge. It met the charge head-on, its lower arms bracing against the ground while its upper pair shot forward to catch the wyrm's jaws.
The impact was like a thunderclap. Adom felt the percussion wave even from his position on the ridge.
The silverback's muscles bulged, veins standing out like ropes as it held the snapping jaws at bay. The wyrm thrashed, tail whipping furiously, claws digging deep furrows in the earth as it tried to force its jaws closed on the ape's body.
For a moment, they seemed evenly matched—raw power against raw power.
Then the silverback did something Adom hadn't expected. It shifted its weight, using the wyrm's own momentum against it, and twisted. The maneuver pulled the reptile off balance, sending it crashing onto its side with an impact that shook the ground.
Before the wyrm could recover, the silverback was on it. Three arms pinned the thrashing reptile while the fourth—the upper right—began hammering down on the wyrm's head with devastating force.
BOOM. BOOM. BOOM.
Each impact sounded like a blacksmith's hammer on an anvil. Scales cracked. Bone splintered. The wyrm's struggles grew more frantic, its tail whipping in wide arcs that uprooted bushes and sent debris flying.
A lashing tail caught the silverback across the chest, opening a deep gash that immediately began to weep red. The ape monster roared in pain and fury, redoubling its assault. Its fist came down again, and something cracked loudly in the wyrm's skull.
The reptile bucked with newfound desperation, twisting its body in a way that should have been impossible for something with a spine. Its jaws snapped at the silverback's arm, managing to catch the limb between its teeth.
The silverback bellowed as teeth punctured muscle. But instead of pulling away, it drove forward, forcing its arm deeper into the wyrm's mouth while its other three limbs secured a better grip on the thrashing reptile.
Then, in a display of strength that defied belief, the silverback's free arms seized the top and bottom of the wyrm's jaw.
And pulled.
The sound was obscene—a wet, cracking tear as ligaments stretched and bone reached its breaking point. The wyrm's struggles reached a fever pitch, its body convulsing as it realized what was happening.
Too late.
With a final, terrible heave, the silverback tore the wyrm's jaw completely apart. The bottom half came free with a spray of black blood and a sound like a tree being uprooted. The wyrm's body spasmed, a gurgling scream escaping from what remained of its throat.
The silverback wasn't finished. It discarded the jaw fragment, hands now slick with blood. Then, it seized the wyrm's head with all four hands and twisted.
The crack echoed across the clearing like a gunshot. The wyrm's body went limp, its tail giving one final twitch before going still.
The silverback rose, chest heaving, blood—both its own and the wyrm's—matting its silver fur. It tilted its head back and unleashed a victory roar that seemed to make the very air vibrate with its power.
Adom remained frozen, barely breathing. Biggins' warnings now seemed woefully inadequate. This wasn't just a dangerous monster—it was a force of nature with limbs.
Then, as the echo of its roar faded, the silverback went still. Its nostrils flared.
It turned.
Four amber eyes locked directly onto the spot where Adom was hiding.
Its lips drew back, revealing teeth stained black with wyrm blood.
"Oh shi—"