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Part 3 — What Gnaws Beneath the Bark

  Part

  3 — What Gnaws Beneath the Bark

  Vincent noticed the

  tightness around his face during his eighth kill, a twitching thing

  with too many shoulders that he'd dispatched with what he was now

  calling "tactical efficiency." As he knelt to feed, he

  raised a hand to his cheek and felt something wrong.

  The surface was

  smooth. Too smooth. Not skin anymore, but something else. Something

  harder, colder, like wax that had cooled and solidified over his

  features.

  He found a

  puddle—black, still, mirror-smooth—and knelt beside it. The

  reflection stared back, and Vincent's breath caught in his throat.

  His face was gone. Not

  removed, but replaced. A smooth, featureless surface of dirty-white

  wax covered where his features had been. No nose, no lips, no

  expression. Just three black holes—two where his eyes should be,

  one where his mouth had been—staring back at him like voids punched

  through reality.

  He touched it. The

  surface was seamless, fused directly to his skin—or was his skin

  now, impossible to tell where one ended and the other began. The

  texture was like old candle wax left too long in the sun: smooth but

  slightly grainy, yielding but resistant.

  He tried to open his

  mouth. The black hole stretched slightly, the edges pulling back like

  torn fabric, revealing darkness inside. No teeth visible, no tongue,

  just an abyss.

  What the fuck?

  This is... this is a cosmetic bug, right? Character model glitch? I

  didn't customize anything. This wasn't in the options.

  
[Transformation

  Progress: 8%]

  [Class

  Assignment: In Progress]

  [Physical

  adaptation detected]

  [Psyche:

  78%]

  Transformation?

  Class assignment? What does that mean?

  
[Irreversible

  changes: Accepted per Terms of Service, Section 12.4]

  [Continue?]

  Wait,

  irreversible? I didn't... I didn't agree to permanent changes. That

  wasn't in the... okay, it was probably in the Terms I didn't read,

  but still. This is fucked. This is bad design.

  The system didn't wait

  for his answer. It never had.

  Vincent stood, staring

  at his reflection. The mask—because that's what it was now, a mask

  fused to his skull—stared back. The three black holes tracked his

  vision, following his gaze in a way that shouldn't have been

  possible.

  Okay. Okay. It's

  fine. It's just cosmetics. Visual character progression. Like how

  your armor changes in RPGs. It doesn't mean anything. It's just...

  flavor.

  He turned away from

  the puddle and continued walking. If he walked long enough, maybe he

  could outpace the creeping sensation that he'd crossed a line he

  didn't fully understand.

  It's fine. I'm

  adapting. I'm evolving. That's what the game wants. That's what gets

  you to level 100.

  By level 3, Vincent

  had established what he considered a "territory." A section

  of the forest roughly a hundred meters across, centered on a large,

  cracked boulder that sat between three twisted skin-trees like a

  makeshift throne.

  He'd decided this was

  his hunting ground, his base of operations, his domain. The decision

  was arbitrary and meaningless, but it gave him a sense of control,

  and control was in short supply.

  He sat on the boulder

  exactly like Watchdog Man from his favorite manga: knees bent, weight

  on his heels, palms flat on the cold stone. With his featureless

  white wax body and that dirty-white mask, the resemblance was almost

  haunting. He remained perfectly still, a silent sentinel "chilling

  between sessions" to look like a pro guarding a strategic point.

  This is tactical

  positioning. Zone control. I'm not camping—I'm establishing

  dominance. Watchdog Man never leaves his city, and look how respected

  he is. People don't understand that stillness is a power move.

  He'd eaten two

  creatures that morning. Well, "morning"—there was no real

  sun here, just that unchanging grey light, but his body told him it

  was time. One had been almost cute, with large round eyes and a

  clumsy gait. The other simply hadn't been fast enough. [Feral

  Leap]

  had triggered automatically, the mask's mouth-hole had found the

  neck, and it was over.

  The system hadn't

  flinched. No alerts, no crashes. Just the usual notifications—[HP

  Recovered],

  [Fragment

  Absorbed],

  [Stable

  Progression].

  See? I've got this

  down to a science. Efficient kills, optimal feeding, zero wasted

  movement. I'm basically speedrunning character progression.

  He was not

  speedrunning anything. He was barely surviving while his body slowly

  transformed into something that could survive in this place.

  
[Level:

  3][Integrity:

  94%]

  [Psyche:

  71%]

  [Transformation:

  Stable (1/10)]

  [Public

  Class: Brawler]

  [Internal

  Class: Wìdjigò-Phase]

  Wìdjigò-Phase.

  That sounds rare. That sounds exclusive. A hidden class most

  players won't unlock. I bet the wiki's going to go crazy trying to

  figure out how I got this. Unique class. One user at a time.Four percent completion rate. Yeah. That tracks.

  He'd even started

  "testing his senses"—sniffing the air like a hound,

  turning the three black holes of his mask toward distant noises. He

  took himself seriously, playing the "Predatory Instinct"

  role to the hilt, mimicking the stoic poses of his favorite

  characters. It reassured him to pretend.

  I'm a specialist.

  A tactical asset. Just like him. Q-City has its protector, and this

  forest has me.

  — Customer service

  is currently closed, — he rasped to the empty woods, his voice a

  hollow rattle behind the mask. The sound came from somewhere deep in

  the void behind his face, echoing strangely. — Management reserves

  the right to refuse service to all trespassers. Zero stars.

  The forest, as always,

  declined to comment.

  Then he heard

  something. A scraping sound, distant at first, then closer. Not

  footsteps—too continuous. A dry, deep, rasping sound, as if the

  earth itself were being scraped by something hard and deliberate.

  Vincent stood slowly,

  every muscle of his white waxy body tensing at once. Another

  mob? Good. I need the exp. Probably something small. Easy farm.

  He wanted to track it

  by scent, but the smell had no direction—it came from everywhere,

  saturating the air like acrid, green, vegetal dust. The impression of

  an angry forest.

  And then he saw it.

  The Wolf.

  It wasn't massive. It

  was constructed.

  A body made of brambles woven with surgical accuracy, every vegetal

  fiber articulated like tendons. The eyes were two white stones,

  opaque and unblinking. And when they locked onto Vincent, something

  in his chest—his black heart, visible now through the increasingly

  translucent wax of his skin—beat faster.

  The Wolf looked at

  him. Vincent looked back.

  Okay. Bigger mob.

  That's fine. I've handled bigger. Probably a mini-boss. This is what

  separates good players from great ones. You don't run from

  challenges, you—

  The Wolf moved.

  Not walked. Moved. One

  moment it was fifteen meters away, the next it was five, and Vincent

  hadn't seen the transition. Just frames skipped, like lag, like the

  world had blinked and rearranged itself.

  Vincent stumbled

  backward. What

  the fuck? That's bullshit. That's broken hitbox mechanics. That's—

  The Wolf lunged.

  Vincent tried to dodge, to leap sideways like he'd done a dozen times

  before, but his body was too slow, his instincts too dull. The Wolf's

  bramble-claws raked across his chest, tearing through the waxy flesh

  like paper.

  
[-34%

  Integrity]

  [Deep

  lacerations]

  [Structural

  damage to torso]

  Vincent screamed. The

  sound came out distorted through the mask, hollow and broken. He hit

  the ground hard, rolled, tried to scramble to his feet. The Wolf was

  already there, looming over him, white stone eyes staring with

  something that might have been contempt if stones could express

  emotion.

  This isn't fair.

  I'm level 3. This thing is obviously scaled wrong. This is bad

  design. This is—

  The Wolf bit down on

  his shoulder. Not with teeth—it didn't have teeth—but with a

  mouth lined with thorns, hooks that dug in and held and pulled.

  Vincent felt his shoulder dislocate, felt something tear that

  shouldn't tear.

  
[-28%

  Integrity]

  [Critical

  damage]

  [Integrity:

  32%]

  [HP

  Stock: 123]

  He thrashed, clawed at

  the Wolf's face with his black-tipped fingers, but the brambles just

  reformed, weaving back together faster than he could damage them. The

  Wolf shook him like a dog with a rat, and Vincent felt ribs crack,

  felt his vision blur.

  The narrative has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the infringement.

  I'm going to die.

  Oh shit, I'm actually going to die. This is bullshit. This is broken.

  I was doing so well. I was—

  Another strike. The

  Wolf's claws tore across his side, and Vincent felt something vital

  rupture inside him.

  
[-18%

  Integrity]

  [Critical

  state]

  [Integrity:

  14%]

  [Warning:

  Fatal threshold approaching]

  No. No no no. Not

  like this. I'm not dying to some fucking bush monster. I bought that

  regen skill. I have HP stored. I can—

  He activated

  [Regeneration

  Stimulation]

  without thinking, pure survival instinct overriding conscious

  thought.

  
[Regeneration

  Stimulation: ACTIVE][HP

  Stock: 123 → Draining]

  [Regeneration:

  +2HP/sec]

  [Duration:

  Until HP Stock depleted]

  The effect was

  immediate. Not a full heal, but a slow, steady flow of restoration

  that pushed back against the damage, kept him just barely above the

  threshold of death. His Integrity ticked upward—16%, 18%, 20%—while

  the Wolf continued its assault.

  It's working. Holy

  shit, it's working. Just need to hold on. Just need to—

  The Wolf slammed him

  into the ground again. More damage. But the regen kept pace, kept him

  alive, kept him conscious.

  
[Integrity:

  18%]

  [HP

  Stock: 98]

  [Regeneration:

  Active]

  Vincent's body moved

  without his permission, driven by something deeper than conscious

  thought. The Hunger roared to life, amplified by desperation, by the

  proximity of death, by the taste of his own blood in his mouth. His

  black claws found purchase in the Wolf's bramble flesh, digging deep,

  tearing. His mask's mouth-hole stretched impossibly wide, the jagged

  edges extending like shards of broken bone, and he bit down on the

  Wolf's neck with everything he had.

  The Wolf thrashed,

  trying to shake him off, but Vincent held on. His claws hooked

  deeper, his teeth ground through the woven brambles, found something

  vital, something that felt almost like sinew.

  
[Critical

  Hit: Core Structure]

  [Enemy

  Integrity: 73%]

  [Integrity:

  22%]

  [HP

  Stock: 71]

  It's working. I'm

  doing damage. Just need to outlast it. Just need to—

  The Wolf threw itself

  sideways, slamming Vincent into a tree. His Integrity dropped, but

  the regen pushed back, kept him alive.

  
[Integrity:

  19%]

  [HP

  Stock: 58]

  He ripped his claws

  through the Wolf's torso, felt the brambles come apart in clumps,

  revealing something beneath. Not organs exactly, but dense masses of

  woven root and vine, pulsing faintly with a sickly green light.

  The core. That's

  the core. That's what I need to—

  Vincent bit down

  again, this time on the exposed core tissue. The taste was nothing

  like meat or blood. It was bitter, vegetal, alive in a way that made

  his entire body recoil. But he swallowed anyway, because that's what

  the game demanded, because that's what survival meant here.

  
[Core

  tissue consumed: Living]

  [Enemy

  Integrity: 51%]

  [Integrity:

  +8%]

  [HP

  Stock: +22]

  [Warning:

  Consumption of active entity detected]

  The Wolf's movements

  became more frantic, less coordinated. Vincent could feel it

  weakening, could feel the structural integrity of its body failing as

  he tore away more and more of its core. The white stone eyes

  flickered, dimmed, like lights on a dying circuit.

  The battle became a

  test of endurance. The Wolf attacking, Vincent's regen keeping him

  alive, Vincent tearing away pieces of the Wolf's core with every

  bite. His HP Stock drained steadily—45, 38, 29—but the Wolf was

  dying faster.

  
[Integrity:

  26%]

  [HP

  Stock: 23]

  [Enemy

  Integrity: 28%]

  The Wolf made one last

  attempt to throw him off, rearing back with all its remaining

  strength. Vincent lost his grip, flew backward, hit the spongy ground

  hard enough to see stars.

  
[Integrity:

  22%]

  [HP

  Stock: 18]

  He lay there for a

  moment, gasping, every part of him screaming in pain. The Wolf stood

  ten meters away, swaying, its body half-collapsed, brambles hanging

  loose where Vincent had torn them free. The white stone eyes locked

  onto him one last time.

  Then, slowly,

  deliberately, the Wolf charged.

  Not fast anymore. Not

  coordinated. Just momentum and dying spite.

  Vincent rolled to the

  side—barely, his body protesting every movement—and the Wolf

  crashed past him, unable to stop, unable to correct. It hit a tree,

  and something inside it snapped. The brambles began to unravel, the

  woven structure coming apart like a sweater with a pulled thread.

  The Wolf collapsed.

  Twitched once. Went still.

  
[Enemy

  Defeated: Bramble Wolf - Elite]

  [+180

  EXP]

  [LEVEL

  UP!]

  
[EchoZero]

  [Level:

  4]

  [Integrity:

  24%]

  [HP

  Stock: 12]

  [Regeneration:

  Active - Low reserves]

  Vincent lay there,

  staring at the notifications, not quite believing he was still alive.

  Level 4. He'd survived. Barely, but he'd survived.

  I did it. Holy

  shit. I actually did it. That regen skill saved my life. That's what

  separates pros from casuals. Knowing when to use your resources.

  He'd nearly died.

  Multiple times. The only thing that had kept him alive was the HP

  Stock he'd accumulated and the regen skill he'd bought. But Vincent,

  as always, reframed near-death as tactical brilliance.

  He crawled to the

  Wolf's corpse, every movement agony, his regen still trickling. The

  body was still half-intact, the core still pulsing faintly with that

  sickly green light.

  Vincent tore into it,

  found the central mass—larger than any heart he'd consumed before,

  dense and fibrous and ancient—and ripped it free. He hesitated for

  only a moment before bringing it to his mask and biting down.

  The taste was

  overwhelming. Bitter, vegetal, but underneath it something else.

  Something that had grown for years in this twisted forest, something

  that knew how to survive, something that had killed dozens of

  creatures before Vincent.

  
[Core

  tissue consumed: Elite - Bramble Wolf]

  [Integrity:

  +58%]

  [Hunger:

  Sated]

  [HP

  Stock: +280]

  [Skill

  Absorption: Processing...]

  
[Trait

  Acquired: Way of the Beast]

  [Transformation

  Level: 1/10 → 2/10]

  [Physical

  Bonuses: x1.3]

  [Vision:

  Night Vision Acquired]

  [Olfaction:

  Active - Scent tracking enabled]

  
[Unlocked

  Skills:]

  [Beast

  Form]

  - Temporary enhancement of physical capabilities

  [Pure

  Brutality]

  - Damage increased when HP below 30%

  [Growl]

  - Intimidation effect on lesser creatures

  [Muscular

  Retention]

  - Reduced physical degradation

  [Targeted

  Fracture]

  - Increased critical hit chance on joints

  
[Hunger:

  Active phase beginning]

  [Targeting

  Profile: Fresh flesh / High genetic similarity]

  [Psyche:

  72% → 68%]

  Vincent stared at the

  cascade of notifications, his mind struggling to process the sheer

  volume of changes. His body felt different. Stronger. Denser. The

  black veins beneath his translucent skin pulsed with new vigor, the

  network spreading further, reaching his jaw now, his temples.

  And his vision. The

  grey forest suddenly had depth, dimension, clarity he'd never noticed

  before. He could see in the darkness between the trees, could pick

  out movement where before there had been only shadow.

  And the smells. Oh,

  the smells. The forest exploded into a symphony of scents—decay,

  growth, blood, life, death. Each creature left a trail, a signature,

  a story written in chemical language his new senses could read.

  This is... this is

  insane. This is a massive power spike. Elite kills are broken. This

  is speedrun tech. This is—

  He stood slowly,

  testing his body. The pain was still there, but manageable. His

  Integrity sat at 82%, and his HP Stock had jumped to 292. He felt

  fundamentally different. Not just stronger, but changed.

  The mask's three black

  holes shifted slightly, adjusting to his new vision. His claws had

  grown sharper, longer. His body moved with a fluidity it hadn't

  possessed before.

  He looked at the

  Wolf's collapsed form, at what he'd accomplished, and felt something

  that was definitely pride mixed with something else. Something

  darker.

  That's how you do

  it. You find the hard content, you push through with the right build,

  you optimize. I just unlocked an entire skill tree from one kill.

  He sat on his boulder,

  assumed the Watchdog Man pose—easier now, his body more flexible,

  more adapted—and surveyed his territory with new eyes.

  The forest looked

  different. Smelled different. Felt

  different. He could sense things moving in the distance, could track

  the chemical signatures of creatures he couldn't even see, could read

  the environment in ways that hadn't been possible before.

  This zone is mine.

  I own this. And now I can actually defend it.

  The system had

  rewarded him for his violence, for his hunger, for his willingness to

  tear and bite and consume and nearly die in the process.

  And Vincent, as

  always, interpreted this as validation.

  I'm not just

  surviving. I'm evolving. This is what peak performance looks like.

  The forest breathed

  around him, and Vincent breathed with it, his new senses drinking in

  information, his new instincts cataloging threats and prey with cold

  efficiency.

  He'd killed an elite.

  He'd absorbed its essence. He'd crossed the [1/10 Threshold] and

  gained genuine power.

  And he'd paid for it

  with 12% of his Psyche and a transformation that was only just

  beginning.

  The forest, patient as

  always, made no comment. It had seen this story before. It knew how

  it ended.

  But Vincent didn't

  need to know that yet.

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