Chapter 151: Chapter 150: The Breach of Veiled Winds
Timeline: TC1853.01.26 (Late Afternoon)
Location: Veiled Winds City Wall → Outer District
The beast that charged Veiled Winds had been a boar once.
Raven could see traces of its original form buried under layers of corruption that had twisted a natural creature into a cosmic nightmare. The tusks that sprouted from three separate skulls—each growing from flesh that had split and multiplied like cancer given physical form—still carried the curved shape of wild pig ancestry. But everything else had been consumed by mutation that defied natural law.
Twenty meters tall. Four legs that bent at seven joints each, bones visible through translucent hide that pulsed with sickly yellow light. The corruption had stretched its body like clay worked by a mad sculptor—torso elongated until ribs showed through skin thin as parchment, muscle fibers visible as dark ropes that contracted and expanded with movements that suggested pain with every step.
And the spiritual energy radiating from it—wrong. Fundamentally, cosmically wrong. Like reality itself recoiling from the beast’s presence.
"By the Light," Commander Yorin breathed beside her. "What could do that to a living creature?"
"Dimensional instability meeting ley-line corruption." Raven felt the Phoenix Bead pulse in her soul space—recognition of kindred wrongness, warning that this thing shouldn’t exist. "Something’s pulling power from the spaces between realities and forcing it into organic matter. The boar’s body is trying to adapt and failing."
The beast roared again—three mouths howling in disharmony that made stone crack and ears bleed. Guards on the wall stumbled, hands clapped over their ears as sound waves carrying spiritual corruption washed over them like a toxic flood.
Two kilometers out now. Moving faster despite a size that should have made speed impossible. Each footfall shook the ground hard enough to register on the wall’s foundations.
Raven’s mind shifted into combat mode—cataloging threats, assessing capabilities, building tactical response from fragments of information processed at speeds that made conscious thought feel sluggish.
The storm overhead still gathered, responding to her earlier call. Good. She’d need atmospheric support for what came next.
"Blackhawks!" Her voice cut through chaos with authority that demanded attention. "Formation Alpha-Three! Naida—high ground, eastern tower! Jace—left flank position, wait for opening! Taron—civilian evacuation, inner district! Mira—establish healing station, west courtyard!"
No hesitation. The team moved like they’d been training together for years instead of days, responding to commands with professional efficiency that suggested trust earned through recent combat.
Commander Thorne appeared at her side, shield already drawn, weathered face showing tactical assessment rather than fear. "What’s your plan?"
"Draw it away from the wall. Kill it in open ground where collateral damage won’t destroy the city." Raven felt spiritual energy coiling in her meridians—preparation for channeling forces that would push her current cultivation base to its absolute limits. "I’ll need three minutes to position properly."
"You’ll have two." Thorne’s expression showed grim pragmatism. "After that, it breaches the wall, and we’re fighting in streets where every missed attack kills civilians."
"Then I’ll work fast." Raven vaulted off the wall’s inner edge, dropping fifteen meters to land in a crouch that would’ve shattered normal human legs. Her Dragon Bead-enhanced bones absorbed the impact without strain, spiritual energy cushioning the force.
She sprinted toward the main gate, enhanced speed carrying her across the courtyard in seconds. Behind her, Yorin was shouting orders—city guards scrambling to defensive positions, spiritual formations activating along the walls with amber light that competed with Federation electrical barriers.
The gate groaned open at her approach. She burst through into open ground beyond the city, putting fifty meters between herself and the wall before turning to face the approaching nightmare.
One kilometer out. The beast had accelerated, charging with momentum that would punch through stone like parchment. Its three skulls tracked her movement—six eyes glowing with corruption that suggested intelligence beyond simple animal awareness.
Raven raised both hands toward the storm overhead, feeling spiritual energy surge through meridians that burned with the effort of channeling forces meant for cultivators several realms above her current development.
And the sky answered.
Lightning gathered between clouds with crackling intensity, drawn to her call like iron shavings to a lodestone. But not random discharge—controlled accumulation, power building according to patterns she directed with precision that required absolute focus.
The cost hit immediately.
Her meridians screamed—spiritual pathways not yet fully developed for this level of power conduction, Dragon Bead’s enhancements buying her tolerance she shouldn’t possess, but not eliminating the fundamental strain of forcing too much energy through insufficient channels.
Pain lanced up her arms as minor meridian branches began tearing—microscopic damage that would require days to heal, blood vessels rupturing under spiritual pressure as power exceeded safe thresholds.
She held the pattern steady through sheer determination, feeling warmth trickle from her nose. Blood. The physical cost of conducting atmospheric forces with a cultivation base still anchored in the Essence Gathering realm.
The beast closed to five hundred meters. Raven could smell it now—corruption like rotting meat mixed with ozone, spiritual taint that made the air itself feel contaminated.
"Now," she whispered.
Lightning struck.
Not a random bolt. Directed discharge—three separate streams that converged on the beast’s leading shoulder with the combined force of calculated destruction.
The effect was immediate and visceral.
Electricity doesn’t just shock. It burns. Cooks. Destroys on a cellular level through thermal damage that turns flesh to charcoal and boils fluids inside their containers.
The lightning hit the corrupted hide and detonated.
Skin vaporized instantly—moisture in organic tissue converting to superheated steam that exploded outward with enough force to tear muscle from bone. The smell hit Raven’s enhanced senses like a physical blow—burning meat and cooked blood, spiritual corruption combusting under electrical assault.
The beast’s forward charge faltered as its leading leg buckled, bone exposed where flesh had burned away completely, yellow corruption-light flickering as the dimensional energy sustaining mutations struggled to maintain cohesion against elemental assault.
It roared—pain now, not aggression. Three mouths screaming in agony as nerve endings designed for natural sensation tried to process damage on a cosmic scale.
But it didn’t fall. Corruption flooded the wound, reconstructing flesh even as lightning continued to burn it away. Dimensional instability made a mockery of normal biology—the beast’s body pulling matter from spaces between realities to replace what fire destroyed.
Raven felt her meridians tear further under sustained channeling. More blood from her nose, copper taste in her mouth, vision blurring at the edges as spiritual pressure exceeded safe tolerances.
Can’t maintain this. Need to shift tactics.
She cut the lightning stream, meridians shrieking relief at reduced load. The beast recovered immediately, charging forward with renewed fury despite massive burns covering its shoulder.
Three hundred meters. Close enough to see individual corruption pustules pulsing under translucent hide, close enough to feel the wrongness radiating from its form like heat from a forge.
Raven shifted stance, drawing on different combat principles. Not overwhelming power. Precision. Redirection. Using the beast’s momentum against itself.
She moved.
Not running—dancing. Footwork that flowed like water around obstacles, positioning that suggested combat experience far beyond her apparent years. Training from across multiple disciplines synthesized into movement that looked effortless while requiring absolute concentration.
The beast’s first strike came fast—massive clawed foot descending toward where she’d been standing half a heartbeat earlier. Raven twisted left, letting the attack pass close enough to feel displaced air, already positioning for counter-strike.
Her hand shot out—palm strike channeling concentrated spiritual energy directly into exposed bone where lightning had burned away protective flesh.
Impact.
Not explosive. Focused. The energy transmitted through calcified tissue and shattered it from within—molecular bonds breaking under spiritual resonance tuned specifically to disrupt corrupted matter.
The beast’s leg buckled completely this time, bone fragments erupting through skin as structural integrity failed under the combined assault of electrical burns and spiritual disruption.
It crashed down hard, three heads snapping toward her with fury that transcended simple animal rage.
Raven felt the counter-attack coming through combat instincts honed sharp by necessity. She dove right as spiritual corruption erupted from the beast’s mouths—yellow energy that burned where it touched ground, leaving scorched earth that smoked with dimensional taint.
The energy grazed her left arm.
Pain exploded—not just burning, but wrongness. Corruption trying to force its way into her spiritual channels, attempting to rewrite her meridians according to dimensional patterns that would unmake human biology.
Her Dragon Bead flared hot in soul space, fire immunity activating to burn away the taint before it could take root. But the damage remained—skin blackened where corruption touched, flesh cooked beneath, nerves screaming messages that made thought nearly impossible.
Raven rolled back to her feet, left arm hanging useless, blood running freely from her nose and mouth now as continued combat pushed her body past sustainable thresholds.
The beast struggled upright on three functioning legs, corruption already working to repair the shattered fourth. Yellow light pulsed faster, drawing more power from dimensional fractures, accelerating its healing at the cost of further mutation.
This thing can’t be allowed to recover. End it. Now.
Raven raised her right hand toward the storm—the only arm still functioning properly—and pulled.
Every remaining scrap of spiritual energy she possessed flooded into her meridians. The pain was transcendent—pathways not meant for this level of conduction, tearing wholesale as power exceeded design tolerances by orders of magnitude.
Blood vessels ruptured throughout her body. Internal bleeding painted her vision red. Meridians that had been merely strained before began fracturing completely, spiritual channels suffering damage that would take weeks to heal even with proper medical attention.
But the power came.
Lightning condensed overhead into a single, massive bolt—atmospheric discharge concentrated to a point where electrical potential exceeded natural limits. Not diffuse shock. Focused destruction. Every joule of energy directed at a single target with precision that required consciousness rapidly approaching its breaking point.
The beast sensed the attack coming. It tried to move, corruption flooding through remaining legs to generate speed that defied physics.
Too slow.
Raven released the lightning.
The bolt that struck the beast wasn’t white. It was violet-blue—spiritually enhanced electrical discharge that carried more than simple voltage. It transmitted fundamental rejection—the universe itself recoiling from dimensional corruption, expressing that rejection through concentrated elemental force.
Impact.
The beast’s central head exploded.
Not metaphorically. Literally detonated as superheated electricity vaporized brain matter instantaneously, a pressure wave blowing outward with enough force to tear skull fragments through corrupted flesh like shrapnel.
The lightning continued through the body—following spiritual pathways with malicious precision, seeking out corruption nodes and detonating them systematically. Each pustule of dimensional taint exploded in sequence, yellow light flickering out as the energy sustaining mutations encountered force specifically designed to unmake it.
The beast collapsed.
Not dying—already dead. The lightning had cooked it from within, boiling blood in its veins, carbonizing organs, reducing internal structure to ash held together by rapidly cooling hide.
It hit the ground with an impact that shook the earth, sending a dust plume rising twenty meters high.
And in that final moment—as consciousness faded and corruption released its hold on stolen flesh—the beast made one last sound.
Not roar. Not howl of pain or fury.
A cry. High-pitched. Terrified. Childlike.
The sound of a six-year-old boy screaming for help that would never come.
Raven’s knees buckled. She hit the ground hard, right arm refusing to support her weight, left arm still useless and blackened. Blood poured from her nose and mouth—internal damage from meridian rupture, combining with spiritual exhaustion to push her body toward complete shutdown.
But she couldn’t stop hearing it.
That cry. That terrible, heartbreaking cry that echoed the distant resonance she’d been sensing since this journey began. The child’s voice. The same fundamental frequency. Like the beast had carried a fragment of that innocent soul’s spiritual signature, twisted and corrupted and forced into monstrous form.
Connection. Causation. The corruption spreading through Western territories wasn’t a random mutation. It was purposeful. Something was taking spiritual resonance from the child—from children?—and using it to corrupt natural creatures into dimensional nightmares.
Footsteps approached. Multiple people running toward her position.
"Raven!" Jace’s voice, carrying worry poorly disguised as tactical concern. "Light above, you’re bleeding everywhere—"
"Mira!" Taron’s command cut through rising panic. "Get over here! Now!"
Hands on her shoulders—gentle, careful. Grandpa Coop’s weathered voice close to her ear. "Easy, girl. Don’t try to move. You pushed too hard."
"Had to." Raven’s words came out slurred, consciousness wavering at the edges. "It was... feeding. Had to end it before..."
Before what? Before it evolved further? Before it reached the city? Before the corruption could spread?
Before she had to hear that child’s cry again, coming from a beast that wore a stolen spiritual signature like a mask?
Healing energy washed over her—Mira’s power, shaky but functional, channeling life force to stabilize the worst damage. Not fixing everything. Couldn’t fix meridian tears or internal bleeding completely. But enough to pull her back from the edge where consciousness threatened to slip away entirely.
"That was..." Naida’s quiet voice, filled with awe that went beyond simple admiration. "I’ve never seen anyone channel that much power at Essence Gathering realm. You should be dead."
"Give it time." Raven managed something resembling dark humor. "Day’s not over yet."
Commander Yorin arrived with a contingent of city guards, their expressions mixing relief with deep unease. "The beast is dead. City’s safe. But..." He gestured at the corpse, still smoking from electrical assault. "We need to understand what did that to a natural creature. And more importantly, we need to know if there are more of them."
"There are." Raven accepted Jace’s help, sitting upright, vision still swimming but consciousness stabilizing. "The corruption’s spreading. Villages vanishing, ley-lines fracturing, dimensional boundaries weakening. This wasn’t an isolated incident. It’s a systematic collapse."
She looked toward the western horizon, where Thornhaven waited with its quarantined child and Federation authorities planning dissection in the name of research.
"And at the center of it," she continued quietly, "is a six-year-old boy whose spiritual signature just echoed from that beast’s death cry. Whatever’s corrupting the western territories, it’s connected to him. Using his resonance. Twisting it into something that turns living creatures into monsters."
Silence settled over the group—heavy with implications that painted a target on the child beyond simple Federation curiosity.
"We have to get to him," Mira whispered. "Before whatever’s doing this..."
"Before it succeeds in whatever it’s planning." Raven tried to stand, made it halfway before legs gave out. Taron caught her with steady hands, supporting her weight without comment. "How long until I can travel?"
"You can’t," Mira said firmly, surprising everyone with uncharacteristic authority. "Your meridians are shredded. Internal bleeding, spiritual exhaustion, and corruption damage on your left arm. You need at least three days of complete rest, or you risk permanent cultivation crippling."
"Don’t have three days." Raven’s voice carried absolute certainty. "The child’s transfer happens in seventy-two hours. We’re still four days from Thornhaven under normal travel speed."
"Then we’ll have to move faster than normal." Commander Thorne appeared from the city gate, his expression showing tactical calculation already running travel scenarios. "Push through nights, cut rest periods, take risks on unstable routes."
"And her?" Yorin gestured at Raven, who currently couldn’t stand without support. "She won’t survive an aggressive travel schedule in this condition."
"Then I heal fast." Raven met his gaze directly despite pain making focus nearly impossible. "I’ve survived worse."
"Worse than shredded meridians and spiritual exhaustion?" Naida’s skepticism showed clear.
"Yes." Simple truth. She had survived worse—across lifetimes she couldn’t reference, through trials that would sound insane if spoken aloud. This was just another obstacle to overcome through determination and refusal to accept failure as an option.
Yorin studied her for a long moment, dark eyes weighing capabilities against damage, potential against reality. Finally, he sighed—resignation mixing with something that might have been respect.
"You’re insane. You know that, right?"
"Frequently told." Raven managed a smile that probably looked more like a grimace. "Usually by people with considerably more sense than me."
The City Commander’s expression shifted to something darker. Troubled. "The beast’s death cry. You said it echoed the child’s spiritual signature."
"Yes."
"Which means something out there is already using his resonance to create these monsters. Already corrupting natural creatures by forcing dimensional energy through patterns stolen from an innocent six-year-old." Yorin’s jaw tightened. "The Federation won’t stop that by dissecting him in a research facility. They’ll make it worse."
"Exactly." Raven felt her consciousness wavering again, exhaustion finally catching up with adrenaline crash. "Which is why we can’t fail. Can’t be late. Can’t let them transfer him before we arrive."
"Three days," Mira repeated. "You need three days minimum, or you risk permanent damage."
"Then I’ll risk it." Raven’s voice dropped to a whisper. "Because that child’s running out of time, and I’m the only one who can hear him crying."
Silence. Then Yorin spoke with the weight of a decision that would reshape the immediate future.
"The vanished villages. Springhollow and Mistbrook. They’re on the direct route to Thornhaven." He pulled out a map, unfolding it to show the territory between Veiled Winds and the Federation border. "I was going to request a guild investigation. But given your... personal investment in reaching the child, perhaps we can make an arrangement."
"What kind of arrangement?" Thorne’s tactical mind was already processing implications.
"You investigate the villages on your way west. Document what you find, report back through messenger hawk. In exchange, I provide fresh horses, emergency medical supplies, and authorization to use imperial way-stations that would normally be restricted to official personnel only."
The Commander’s gaze settled on Raven. "That cuts half a day off your travel time. Gets you to Thornhaven in three days instead of four. Might give you the margin you need to intercept the transfer."
Raven felt hope kindle despite exhaustion threatening to pull her into unconsciousness. "And if the villages have been completely consumed by corruption? If there’s nothing left to investigate?"
"Then document that." Yorin’s expression showed grim determination. "Because the Empire needs to know what’s coming from the west. Needs to understand that this isn’t random chaos—it’s purposeful corruption spreading like an infection."
He paused, then added quietly: "And if you do manage to save that child... bring him east instead of leaving him to Federation authorities. The Empire isn’t perfect, but we won’t dissect an innocent six-year-old in the name of scientific progress."
Thorne extended his hand. "You have a deal, Commander."
They shook—professional agreement that would reshape travel plans and potentially save a child’s life if everything went perfectly.
Which, Raven knew from experience, it valued across lifetimes she couldn’t reference, never actually happened.
But they’d try anyway. Because that’s what people with principles did when faced with impossible situations—they tried anyway, accepting risk and pain and potential failure as acceptable costs for doing what was right.
"Get her to medical bay," Yorin ordered, gesturing at Raven. "Best healers in the city will work on her overnight. We’ll have horses and supplies ready at dawn."
"Dawn?" Mira protested. "She needs rest—"
"She needs to reach Thornhaven before the child’s transfer." Yorin’s tone allowed no argument. "Which means dawn departure, aggressive travel schedule, and praying her constitution is as resilient as her determination."
Raven felt herself being lifted—Taron and Jace working together to carry her weight without jarring injuries. The world spun, consciousness threatening to slip away completely now that the immediate crisis had passed.
But before darkness claimed her, she turned her head toward the western horizon one final time.
Thornhaven. Three days. A child who cried with the same spiritual resonance that had echoed from a corrupted beast’s death.
Hold on, she thought toward that distant presence. I’m coming. Whatever they’re doing to you, whatever’s using your resonance to corrupt the world—I’m coming.
The sun descended toward dusk, painting the sky in shades of amber and blood-red.
And in the medical bay of Veiled Winds, healers worked through the night to repair damage that should have killed the seventeen-year-old girl who’d just saved their city from cosmic nightmare.
Outside the walls, the corrupted beast cooled. Its flesh slowly dissolving as dimensional energy sustaining mutations finally released its hold on stolen matter.
And somewhere to the west, in a Federation quarantine facility, a six-year-old boy with impossible spiritual resonance curled into a ball and cried for help that might—if luck and determination and desperate rushing arrived in time—actually come.