Corridor 16’s walls were scarred. Long horizontal gouges lined the full length of the corridor at varying heights, like sothing with an enormous wingspan had passed through repeatedly and simply hadn’t registered the stone as worth avoiding.
Finn walked through without slowing, barely even turning his head to observe his surroundings. His focus was dead set in the large chamber opening right in front of him.
He stepped through not long after, arriving into the chamber of the Ferropteryx Eagle.
The chamber opened around him and he was imdiately hit with a blast of wind not specifically directed at him. The whole chamber was naturally filled with high winds ricocheting around dangerously. A statent to the kind of environnt the Ferropteryx liked.
Finn looked up imdiately as he entered, spotting the Ferropteryx Eagle. It occupied the upper third of the chamber, resting and staring down at him with the ease of sothing that had never once considered whether it belonged anywhere. Like wherever it existed naturally belonged to it.
Finn stared at the creature. Its size wasn’t mind boggling. It was massive, yes. With a wingspan of about thirty ters carrying its tal-feathered body. But Finn had faced sothing as widespread as the Collective microbes of chamber 17. Sothing that could control even larger bodies. Yet this Ferropteryx, with a much smaller body, was ranked stronger than that...
That in itself just showed how much caution Finn needed to show.
The Ferropteryx’s eyes found his across the distance, and for a second, they both held each other in regard.
That damn pride in your eyes...
Finn rembered those eyes very well. From the Tyrant’s trial, and from his own future mories. From months of managing the soul debt this creature had inflicted on him in Xanth.
That debilitating pride that had forced him to restructure his daily existence around managing a consciousness that had treated being inside him as a temporary inconvenience it intended to resolve. The toll it had extracted.
The specific quality of suffering that ca from carrying sothing this arrogant through every waking hour.
...I’m gonna wipe it out entirely.
Finn’s gaze turned nacing, challenging the nonchalance of Eagle as it regarded him with the total absence of the possibility that he mattered.
That look of challenge wasn’t taken kindly, though.
The Ferropteryx Eagle was spurred into action, taking Finn’s look as an insult to its sovereignty.
The Eagle waved its large wings, and a powerful wind wall slamd into Finn — a physical force that caught him and dragged him three steps back before his soul density planted him against it. tal feathers launched simultaneously, coming from different angles, each one independently guided like honing missiles. But Finn reacted quickly, using the adaptive soul mass to adjust, and three of the tal feathers shattered against him. The fourth caught his ribs, opening a clean line.
Finn drove forward into the wind, using all the Tyrant’s strength to simply walk through the force the Eagle had generated to stop things in their tracks, closing the distance while the creature recalibrated.
The prideful Eagle had descended to the ground, and despite watching Finn forge a path through its wind barrage, it did nothing to evade even as Finn got into range and drove his fist into its chest with everything the Tyrant carried.
The impact connected properly. Feathers compressed, the body behind them rocking back. But the Ferropteryx Eagle recovered fast, taking the hit like a tank and generating a burst of wind right back at Finn in the sa motion.
Finn was spun off his feet, having to struggle to gain footing again.
He sent ice next. Frost building at his hands and launching in spears. The Eagle’s own wind tore his formations apart mid-air, shredding them to powder before they could land, and in that mont Finn understood with full clarity what the Tyrant had truly faced.
The wind wasn’t a tool the Eagle used. The wind was the Eagle, extending outward. Every current in this chamber was part of it.
The Ferropteryx launched itself into the air, then descended like a missile with its talons spread out fully, slamming him down and closing around his body tightly.
Finn felt the crushing weight of the Ferropteryx’s grip strength squeezing him from every side, about to pop his body like a balloon. If not for his strengthened body and adaptive defenses, he would have been turned into mush in an instant.
But he powered through, roaring as he activated his fla ability in response, his fire soul mass driving heat through every contact point until the iron feathers glowed and the Ferropteryx’s grip released.
Finn was dropped to the ground like scalding iron.
And imdiately he landed on the ground, he released the collective.
The microscopic organisms dispersed outward from his body in a quiet wave, flowing into the moving air, threading into every current the Eagle generated, settling into the vibration running through the wall shards. A trillion separate contact points spreading through every part of the space at once, each one feeding back to him continuously.
The chamber beca completely legible — the Eagle’s next wind wall readable four seconds before it arrived through the micro-adjustnts in its feathers, each tal shard signaling its launch through every little specific shift. The creature’s exact position and vector beca imdiately trackable through the pressure differential its body created as it moved.
Finn stopped reacting entirely and started knowing.
They exchanged three more tis. The Eagle was faster than anything else in this temple, its control of the air absolute, and it was learning his patterns as it fought. Every exchange cost Finn sothing — a deeper cut, a blow to his shoulder that carried real force behind it. The creature adapted continuously, refusing to repeat an approach he’d already handled.
But Finn was reading every move before it arrived, and the Eagle didn’t know that.
Then through the collective, Finn felt sothing begin to gather.
Every wind current in the chamber started pulling inward toward the Eagle’s position simultaneously. The wall shards shifted to a new unified frequency, harmonizing into a single note. Every feather aligned. The Eagle was pulling in its entire domain — every current, every shard, every particle of air it had ever influenced in this space — and organizing it into one absolute strike.
Finn understood what he was looking at. This was the thing the Eagle had never needed to use. In the Tyrant’s mory, in his own future recollections, there was no record of the Eagle ever having to bring everything, because nothing had survived long enough to require it. The concept of needing reserves had simply never been sothing it had had to do.
Which ant it had never learned what using everything cost.
Finn planted his feet and let everything build simultaneously. The Tyrant’s defiance ran through him from the ground up. The fire soul mass pushed heat through every cell until the air around him shimred and the stone under his feet cracked from the temperature differential. Ice built down his arms in dense gauntlets, the Frost Tiger’s cold clarity sharpening his focus. The malevolent aura of the evil creature spread outward as a final layer. Six soul masses worth of accumulated density bearing down on this one mont.
The Eagle struck.
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