Trigger Warning:
One of this chapter's sections contains explicit descriptions of blood and gore. There is little detail or focus on bodily gore itself, but the descriptions of blood and its presence are (intended to be) vivid and may be unnerving to some readers. If you find such things make you uncomfortable or queasy, it may be better to skip this chapter!
Moonbeast
"Recognized, 003-O, Loki. Recognized, 009-O, 'Amm. Recognized, 062-A, Sirius Wisteria. Recognized, 024-O, Anbay-2. Recognized, 001-O, God. Unsealing."
All of them stepped into the room as soon as the vault door unlatched and admitted them. As their long shadows cast over the inside alongside the faint light of the hall behind them, a chain rattled in the darkness, followed shortly by a grim chuckle.
"I don't think you should be laughing."
"Oh?" An array of teeth bloomed in the darkness, a grin of milk-white shade betraying utter amusement. "And why not?"
"We'll have to ask you a favor." There was a pause, a rustle of papers, and then a document was tossed across the room. It landed with the scrape of the manila folder on the floor in front of the chained figure. "As per usual. But this one is slightly different."
---
"Hey, I'm 'ma head out," Zane said, moving into the vestry to reclaim his brand new winter jacket, camel-shade with black buttons.
It was cold as shit outside and the first snows of November had shown themselves on the streets of New York, alongside gales. It was around thirty Fahrenheit in the mild sections of the city, where the streets were shielded by large buildings and an excess of impure smoke in the air.
"Yo? Priest?"
There was no response from the stringent Father Nicholas, no 'how rude' or a lecture on disrespect. He was staring at his papers and writing something, about as concerned with Zane's leaving of the church - the sort of action that he often advocated against, wherever possible, due to its inherent risk - as he would've been with a coin in a vault.
"I'm going on a date?"
"A date, hmm?" Father Nicholas chose not to question him further, showing a moderate but polite level of disinterest.
Zane quirked an eyebrow at the man. "Not going to give me the talk, Father?"
"Song of Solomon, chapter eight, verse seven. Many waters cannot quench love; rivers cannot wash it away. It'd be pointless if even your uncle's words - and the dire situation at hand - fail to quench your teenage tempest of heart. Don't be out too late."
After blinking disbelievingly on the spot - and deciding maybe to drop this topic of conversation, Zane nodded. "Alright, have a good one."
---
"New York, here I come," he muttered.
Around him were the dark, cold streets - damp with mud near the sidewalks, splashing around with ice that was something between liquid and goo. All of the world's prey surrounded him, carrying umbrellas and backpacks, thick coats and briefcases, unaware of the wolf among them. All of them on their way to some vague, nebulous ends, to work or to lunch, yet so perfectly oblivious to the nature of the reality they lived in - the fact they only survived by his sufferance, by the fact the beast within him didn't hunger with its endless maw for now, for it had already supped richly on the starlight nourishing their symbols.
He chuckled, swayed drunkenly, giddy with frenzy. The beast stirred in his chest, hungering even in spite of the starlight's consumption, its maw reaching out like an invisible dark set of teeth to dine on the souls of the mortals around him.
A brief impulse of self-control, compassion, and it was checked, the instincts folded back, until he was simply a man in a coat, hyperventilating with unnaturally wide pupils. And then, the guilt of almost killing hundreds again wore off, and he chuckled at the absurdity of the situation.
And then he kept walking, mostly unnoticed despite his outburst.
---
It came as no surprise that the location of their double date was a small family joint, unassuming and perhaps - some would say - unrefined, at four stars. It was far below what they could afford, but they had to be secure, especially in times like these.
However, nobody complained, and the night was decently pleasant. At first, Zane had believed that Spike would goof off and make stupid remarks, but his friend was composed as he usually was during alley side business meetings - in adult mode, rather than kid mode, so to speak. It made for a startlingly mature experience, and Zane felt somewhat insecure given their future prospects; it made him consider the fact they were dining in some random place instead of his uncle's restaurant, and the reasons for that. Even now, there were people after him - gangsters and worse, and they wouldn't stop coming.
"And you'll keep training?"
"Huh?" Zane was broken out of his thoughts, dropping the fork spooled with spaghetti that he'd been twiddling around with. "What?"
"Uhm," Helene took a brief look around to ensure no one could hear them, "Your Knight Arm. You'll keep training until you reach Royal Rank in it?"
"I'm close to it," Zane said. He picked up his fork again, started to gather up the pasta and some of the meat to consume as he answered. "I was planning to get done with it as soon as I came back from the date, and then I could join you guys in the fight." He ate.
"Not a lot of it left," Jennifer mused, looking at him with an odd expression - sad, almost, but in a pitying way, and yet also disinterested. Almost like he'd failed her on a personal level and now she was feigning detachment.
"Point taken. Don't guilt-trip me," Zane murmured in defeat.
"Can't win against a sorceress," she whispered to Helene, prompting an eye-roll from her and Spike.
He couldn't make himself eat after that remark, shoveling the spaghetti and then munching on it slowly, letting the sauce sink deep beneath his teeth, running his tongue over it, and contemplating when to swallow.
"Do you guys want to go see Hamilton after this?" Helene offered a distraction. "I've never seen it. It's on Broadway now, right?"
"Sure. If there are any tickets," Spike said with a chuckle, bending over to cut his steak. As his knife made its movement and cut, thick barbecue sauce spilled from the steak, almost like...
---
Blood - endless blood, in every direction. Blood; putrid, fecal, smelling like copper and iron, sweet and salty; filling and rich. It stained his fingers, greasy and wet, and drying rapidly in other places, under his fingernails and over his knuckles, almost like a stain from tomato soup more than bodily fluid.
He stared down at his own hands, bending his fingers, feeling the dry coat of blood, uncomprehending. In the corner of his vision, he could see the mangled corpses at the end of the alleyway - the massacre he'd made. He felt almost like he was in a dream.
He could feel the blood, pooling around his feet, sinking past the soles of his shoes and his socks to let his toes dip into it. He was sitting down in a fetal position against the wall and could feel the warm blood around his butt, like warm water, smearing as he twitched and moved.
Almost unconsciously, he'd moved his hand closer to his mouth, and was smelling the blood. He felt ravenous. It smelled so fucking good.
A single lick, hesitant, shameful, and then a full one when he realized what bliss its flavor contained. He continued to suck down on the blood, almost a slave to his own animal self, with so much force and thrashing that he opened cuts on his own fingers with his teeth.
---
"Dear Mr. Hamilton, John Addams doesn't stand a chance, so who are you promoting..."
As they left behind the off-Broadway theater, Zane couldn't help but feel there was something off about the air tonight. It was supposed to be a new moon, but looking up, he found that he could see the remaining crescent edge of the moon, stained with a reddish tint. "How did you find it?"
Zane looked back down to the rest of the team. After the last song, Spike looked a little somber, as if on the edge of crying, and now he stood - clearly cathartic but also sad. At some point, Jennifer had acquired a small packet of French fries and was chewing on them, offering them to the others occasionally with a questioning rattle. It was Helene who'd questioned him, quirking an eyebrow at how distracted he was, clearly amused by it. He didn't much share her amusement, too weirded out by the evening's... aura.
"Hm? The play?"
"Musical, technically," said Spike.
He almost felt, like a thin premonition, that something bad was going to happen soon. It was weak enough a feeling that he couldn't place it or word it precisely, and yet strong enough that he paused before continuing - a pause long enough for everyone to notice and stare at him in concern.
"It was alright, I suppose. I'm sad that Philip died. It was excessive."
"You do realize that it's based on historic events, right, guy?" Spike looked at Zane as if he were wearing a tutu, on the border of laughter.
"At least I didn't cry when he died."
"Hey! I wasn't crying."
"Those were manly tears," Zane said, to assuage his friend's injured manhood. "It's okay to cry about something that unfair and epic."
"Rrright," Jennifer drawled, looking at her date with amusement. Both of the girls chuckled.
---
And they were silent, again and again. He stared down at their bodies, unmoving - frozen in picture-perfect stillness, like ovals of varied color on a circle of red on a background of drab gray stone. He'd left them surprisingly immaculate - not mangled, as the newspapers had said.
It was the feast that usually led to the mangling, in most cases.
"Enough of this, Connor."
He turned, scratching at his beard on instinct. There hadn't been a chance for him to shave for a month. Had it been a month?
"Oh, Blake, Josh, and... haha, whaw..."
Not only them but also their friends. At least ten Maenads outfitted in full combat gear, armed with sickles and spears, dressed up in seemingly whatever armor had been available, all of them wearing red cloaks. There were the Crosses, and the sixth Cardbearer, the one that Connor didn't recognize. They'd never met, he thought.
"What are you doing, Connor? What have you been doing? You're killing people," Blake said - pointed out - with painful slowness as if he were speaking to a child with some kind of mental... what was the word again? Deficiency?
Instead, Connor found himself replying to his outrage with blatant disregard, "And?"
"'And?' You insane motherfucker," said the male Cross. Aaron? Something on A. "You've brought too much attention on us. At this rate, the police will track you down and notice this. As a matter of fact, we already know they have a lead that paints this as your next strike zone. You fucking moron."
"Let's slow down," Blake said, noticing how Connor had unclenched his fists, revealing claws. "We can solve this. Have you thought about eating animal meat? You don't have to kill people, Connor."
Wrath gripped him, then, so powerful that he felt every muscle in his knees clench simultaneously. So powerful that a whirlwind blew over the warehouse as if the world had responded to the fiery rage in his chest, like a lump of iron that had been set on fire with a flamethrower.
"Do you think I haven't thought of that, you stupid arrogant fuck? Do you think you're better than me, Blake? You're always so fucking smart-assed! Yes, I've thought of it, and it doesn't work! Do you know what it feels like, to be so empty for days on over? We're all pawns in the hands of Olympus! All of you are FUCKING PAWNS! They are using you! All of you! Your lust, your envy, and your sloth," he shouted, pointing first at Yolanda, then at Aaron, and finally at Blake.
Even in his shouting, he couldn't find something to fault Josh for. It was sufficient to cause him to burst out into surreal laughter - a reaction that clearly unnerved the others deeply, as they realized they weren't dealing with someone who's ready to calmly sit down and discuss the circumstances.
And that realization changed the atmosphere instantly, from one of attempted reconciliation and negotiation to one of combative realization.
Both sides were separated only by a space of sixty feet, empty save for a couple of decommissioned machines of the warehouse they were in. They sized each other up.
As his laughter stopped and Connor was forced to put instinct aside in favor of tactical thinking, he considered his foes. Could he really take them on? He'd grown more powerful. His Compatibility meter was at over 3000% at this point, whereas the others had been - last time he checked - stuck at below 200%.
It had been one full moon since then; a full growth cycle for all parties, but his own growth was more than tenfold of their own.
So could he take all of them, at the same time? An intoxicating thought - that he'd finally get to feast on that little bitch Blake's flesh.
He shifted, snarling and growling. His muscles bulged, clothes breaking, pants and boots ripping apart into shreds as he suddenly elevated to become almost three feet taller, mouth distorting into a monstrous snout lined with ivory fangs, eyes like yellow moonlight, pale fur shining with the radiance of a devil moon. He stalked around them in a circle, seeking weakness, when one of the Maenads dashed for him, followed by her sisters. All of them moved in an elegant and instinctive formation, striking from multiple angles and places, using careful distancing and positioning to limit his ability to strike at them and to dodge. And he dodged anyway, too fast.
As he dodged yet more strikes, he kept backpedaling and dodging, sending an occasional claw swipe down at the Maenads, mostly working to disarm them and fend them off, moving fast enough none of them could truly even strike at him - and where they did nick him, the wounds healed in seconds, fast enough he could feel the heat of them pass by in the span of breaths, excruciating and then almost pleasantly tingling against his skin.
As he dodged and stalled for time, he also grew, becoming more wolf than wolf-man; faster, tougher, stronger. As he grew, their spears began to do nothing more against him than scratch against his skin. His eyes were vulnerable, still, and other bodily openings, but he maneuvered with that in mind.
He expected something from the cowards - at least a token desire to cling to their unfairly given godly power and the more temporal power they'd gathered using the former, a desire to stop him - but none of the Cardbearers attacked, letting their minions do their work; fear ruling over their other vices. He hated them so much. He'd always hated them, but only in giving in to his animal did he realize the full extent - the full extent of how much a person or a group could be hated for something, for anything.
He sensed an alteration in the battle pattern of the Maenads. As they shifted positions and stances, his eyes tracked them, narrowing in displeasure.
Unfortunately for them, he'd already grown into a big boy. His final stage: the Wolf Unchained.
A few sniffs and a lupine bark revealed the intent of the Maenads in their next round of attacks, their deception bending to his fear - to his domination of raw instinct over complex tactics. It was folly to approach the beast itself with a plan of capture, for the beast knew nothing of plans. It simply devoured.
As the Maenads' plan collapsed, they were left as nothing more than little girls dressed in red cloaks, falling over onto their butts and backs, barely able to crawl away in their terror - and in front of them was a big bad wolf, slowly approaching with grinning teeth.
A swipe of the paw killed them - he didn't even bother using the claws or eating them. It wouldn't nourish him anyhow.
It was sufficient to realize he was far, far stronger than his former friends. As expected of them, Blake and Josh escaped instantly into the former's pocket dimension, having sensed their plan wouldn't work seconds before he slew the Maenads, disappearing in a sudden anima of floating burgundy velvet ribbons, leaving behind the others to be chewed and eaten. The Crosses and the sixth Cardbearer attempted to escape in more mundane manners, running for the doors and windows in some cases. He didn't allow them, moving faster than sound to catch them one by one into his jaws, like a stack of apples, biting down and tossing them back into the middle of the room.
No escape, he growled, and they could understand. Only death.
It was moments later that the police broke down the doors and opened fire on him as he was feasting, leading to his rampage.
---
You have 2.7 Ambrosia. Fusion of Forms and Absolute Favor of Invocation [Sheathe the Blade + Echoes of the Brawler] won last round; Zane will unlock his Royal Rank Knight Arm at the next appropriately narrative moment (ie: as soon as he starts fighting the Mangler.)
A player has purchased 2x "defensive measures" for this encounter, of different kinds. Your odds of survival have increased very considerably!
At the moment, you possess two activations of Brawler of Midwood. Given the magnitude of this enemy, a single activation of this perk will only protect you from death for the span of ten attacks rather than a whole encounter, and it will do so through retroactive causal alteration rather than dumb luck - in other words, instead of luckily dodging, the fight will simply start 'ten attacks culminating in death' later than normal, giving Zane some more in-character time to make use of tactics for an escape plan.
Alternatively, you can spend a single activation of Brawler of Midwood to triple your odds of victory (rather than dice rolled) in this encounter. Unadvisable, statistically, barring good tactics.
[ ] Activate Brawler - Spends a single activation.
[ ] Brace For Impact - Don't activate.
After that, one choice remains...
What is the Mangler's preferred strategy?
[ ] Stalk and Hunt
After catching his scent, the Mangler will prowl the streets of New York in search of Zane Li Black, intent on simply killing him in broad daylight - and fuck the middleman called subtlety. As a result of Brawler of Midwood, the Mangler won't attack from hiding - such as by leaping off a rooftop to engulf Zane in his jaws within an eyeblink to consume him instantly - as he usually would be tempted to, but will instead approach Zane and exchange a few words prior to killing him.
"It's been nice knowing you, kid, but we're all pawns."
*Endangers your friends - if the Mangler can't kill you, he might choose to kill them.
*Endangers the public - almost regardless of tactic or approach, some people will die.
*Better odds of success along all axes, since your friends will be there to support you - not to mention the defensive measures obtained!
*Rough odds of victory: 7.85%
*Rough odds of escape: 88.5%
*Estimated collateral - at least hundreds of bystanders, and as much as potentially billions of dollars in infrastructure destroyed
[ ] Wait and Feast
Why run after the rabbit when you can simply wait for it to hop down into your waiting jaws? Instead of hunting him down, the Mangler will head on over to the church where the scent of Zane Li Black lingers most strongly, intent on simply killing him as he returns. Instead of killing Zane instantly, however, Brawler of Midwood will cause him to find the boy oddly curious for whatever reason and invite him to sit down and have a brief exchange of words first.
"Good talk. Now die."
*Endangers Constantine - he could still be working at the church.
*Rough odds of victory: 1.5%.
*Rough odds of escape: 65%.
*Estimated collateral - at least a few rooms in a church, potentially an entire church; maybe a few bystanders if they are nearby when it collapses