The creature moved before thought could fully form, its body cutting through the distance with a speed that broke the rhythm of everything they had faced before. It wasn’t just fast—it was intentional. Arata Kurozawa stepped forward instead of back, his body aligning instinctively as the attack ca. The mont stretched thin, every movent sharpened, every detail amplified. The creature’s arm lashed out, not wildly, but with direction, targeting center mass with precision that no ordinary infected should possess. Arata shifted his weight at the last second, the strike grazing past him instead of landing cleanly, and his counter ca imdiately, a direct strike aid at its neck. The impact connected—but the reaction wasn’t normal. The creature didn’t stagger. It absorbed, adjusted, and twisted away with unnatural control, its eyes locking onto him with sothing far more dangerous than hunger. Recognition.
Yuna moved in from the side without waiting, her bat crashing down toward the creature’s shoulder with enough force to shatter bone. The hit landed, but instead of breaking, the creature dropped low, rolling its body under the strike and sweeping its leg outward. Yuna reacted fast, jumping back just in ti, her grin widening slightly. "...Yeah," she muttered, excitent rising. "This is different." Reina fired imdiately, her shots controlled and precise, aid at joints, at movent points—but the creature didn’t panic. It moved between trajectories, its body bending and shifting in ways that made prediction harder. Miyu stepped slightly back, her voice calm but sharper than before. "It’s not reacting—it’s anticipating. Adjust pattern. Don’t repeat movent." Arata didn’t respond verbally, but his stance changed instantly, abandoning standard rhythm, shifting into irregular motion.
The creature lunged again, this ti not just toward Arata, but cutting slightly to the side, aiming to break formation. That decision alone confird it—this thing understood groups. Arata intercepted it mid-motion, their bodies colliding with controlled force. His grip locked onto its arm for a fraction of a second, enough to redirect montum, and he drove his knee upward into its torso. The impact forced a reaction this ti—a slight recoil, not pain, but disruption. That was enough. Reina adjusted angle and fired again, this ti catching its side, forcing it to disengage and retreat a few steps.
Silence hit for half a second.
Not peace.
Assessnt.
Yuna stepped forward slowly, her grip tightening. "It’s learning mid-fight," she said. Miyu nodded. "No. It already knows. It’s adapting to us." Reina’s eyes narrowed. "Then we don’t give it ti." Arata’s gaze remained fixed on the creature. "We end it quickly."
The creature tilted its head slightly.
Watching, Processing, Then—It smiled, Not like a human, Not fully, But enough to feel wrong.
Airi felt it from behind the formation, her breath catching slightly as she gripped the dical kit tighter. This wasn’t like before. This wasn’t just danger—it was pressure. The kind that made your body hesitate even when your mind told you to move. But she didn’t step back. She held position. Observed. Stayed ready.
The creature moved again, Faster, This ti its target shifted—straight toward Reina, A deliberate choice.
Reina reacted instantly, shifting back while firing, but the creature closed distance faster than expected, its arm deflecting her weapon aside as it moved in. Yuna intercepted, her bat slamming into its side, forcing it off course. The impact this ti made it stagger half a step.
"Got you," Yuna muttered.
But the creature twisted mid-motion and struck back, its attack grazing her shoulder, the force enough to push her off balance. Not a deep hit—but not light either.
Arata was already there.
His movent cut the space instantly, his strike landing clean against its head, forcing a full reaction this ti. The creature stumbled back, its balance broken for the first ti.
"Now," Arata said, Reina adjusted position, Yuna recovered.
Miyu stepped slightly forward, her voice precise. "It prioritizes threats. Arata first, then high damage, then ranged. We exploit that."
The formation shifted, Not random, Designed.
Arata advanced directly, drawing focus. The creature responded exactly as expected, its attention locking onto him. Yuna moved from the side, her strikes heavier now, forcing defensive reactions. Reina maintained pressure from range, controlling space. Miyu guided movent, adjusting timing.
Airi watched, Every second, Every pattern, And sothing changed, Not outside, Inside her, She stepped forward, Just slightly, Closer than before, Yuna noticed mid-combat, Didn’t react, Didn’t comnt, But she saw.
Arata pushed forward again, forcing close-range engagent. The creature adapted, countering faster now, but its pattern had been exposed. It wasn’t unpredictable anymore—it was learning within limits.
"Left feint, right strike," Miyu said quietly.
Arata followed instantly.
The creature reacted to the feint—And missed the real attack, The hit landed clean.
For the first ti—Damage, Real damage.
The creature recoiled, its movent breaking rhythm completely.
Yuna didn’t wait.
Her bat ca down with full force, connecting with its shoulder, forcing it lower.
Reina fired, Direct hit.
The creature staggered back again, This ti—It didn’t recover imdiately, Arata stepped forward slowly, Controlled, Final.
The creature looked up at him, And for a mont—It hesitated.
Not from fear, From recognition, That brief mont—Was enough.
Arata moved, Fast, Precise, Decisive.
The final strike landed clean, The creature collapsed, Silence followed.
Heavy, Real.
No one moved imdiately, Not because they were tired.
But because they understood—This wasn’t just another enemy, This was sothing new.
Yuna exhaled slowly, rolling her shoulder. "...That was worth it," she said, her grin returning. Reina lowered her weapon, her gaze still sharp. "If more of these appear, we need to adapt faster." Miyu nodded. "...This confirms higher evolution stages."
Arata didn’t speak, He looked at the body, Then beyond it, Because sothing else lingered.
A feeling, Not gone, Not finished.
Airi stepped closer now, her movents careful but steady. "You’re hurt," she said quietly, looking at Yuna’s shoulder. Yuna glanced at her, then shrugged slightly. "It’s nothing." Airi didn’t argue. She stepped closer anyway. "...Let check."
Yuna paused Just for a second, Then didn’t move away.
"...Fine," she said.
That small mont—Didn’t go unnoticed.
Reina saw it, Miyu definitely saw it.
And Arata—Registered it.
Airi worked quickly, her hands steady, her focus clear. "...You moved too close," she said softly. Yuna smirked faintly. "That’s how you hit harder." Airi didn’t respond to that. She finished quickly, then stepped back.
"...Be careful," she said.
Yuna looked at her for a mont, Then nodded once.
"...Yeah."
Simple, But real.
Arata turned his gaze outward again, Because the city felt different now.
Not just dangerous, Aware.
And as the wind moved through the broken streets, carrying distant echoes from deeper within the ruins, one truth beca clear.
This wasn’t the peak, It was the beginning.
Sothing out there—Had just noticed them.
And it was watching, Waiting, Learning.
The sa way they were, And soon—It would co.
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