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Chapter 5 - Edge of Reach

Mission: Edge of Reach

The wheat fields looked like oceans

under a golden sun — waves of soft grain brushing against one another, stirred

by the same slow wind that carried the taste of dust and distance. There was

nothing out here but silence and the swaying of stalks. No screams. No

movement. No obvious threat. And that was already too strange.

 

Flare Nacht stepped from the transport

first, his boots crunching through the dry edge of the gravel road before

sinking slightly into soil. He scanned the horizon instinctively, his

blue-green eyes narrowed beneath the faint flicker of the sunshield interface

in his visor. Dust swirled at ankle height. The quiet rustled like a warning.

He could feel it in his bones — not the pulse of danger, not yet, but the shape

of something off.

 

"Definitely looks like we're just

outside the boundary," Marcos said from behind him, dropping down with a thud

that vibrated through the ground. "GPS clocked it fifteen meters past our

city's jurisdiction line. Technically, this should be Rural Squad Two's mess."

He was smiling, but it didn't reach his eyes.

 

Flare grunted. "You think Rural Squad

Two is gonna respond to a distress signal way the hell out here?"

 

"Not if their paychecks are as shitty

as their response times."

 

Maria hopped out next, rolling her

shoulders like a boxer before a bout. Her chain-sickle was clipped securely to

her belt, but her fingers itched around the weapon's grip already. "They said

it's a monster, right? Not just another Ashen?"

 

"Didn't say much at all," Flare

replied. "Just panic. Breathing hard. Then static. Dispatch finally got a hold

of the farm's backup relay. Looks like someone got their hands on some older

tech — we'll have to talk to them through an entry console."

 

"Classy," Maria muttered.

 

Caim and Claire exited last. He looked

out of place in the sun, his red armor catching too much light, too bright

against the fields. He shuffled his greatsword from his shoulder to his back

and adjusted the straps nervously.

 

Claire stretched high, groaning

dramatically. "Oooh, do you feel that? That's a kill waiting in the grass."

 

"Could be nothing," Caim muttered,

already doubting himself. "Just a sensor malfunction or, like, a cow."

 

"A cow that needed a panic room?"

Claire teased. "C'mon, fireball, loosen up."

 

It's not nothing, Flare thought to

himself, eyes still scanning the gentle rise of the land ahead. It's too still.

They approached the house slowly — a

farmhouse buried in the center of a wide plain. Two silos stood like twin

guardians beside it, casting long shadows in the afternoon light. Everything

looked like a photograph of peace. But the team didn't let their guard down.

Not here.

 

The panic button beacon led them to a

tall pole by the front gate, where an old but still functional video doorbell

console buzzed with a faint green LED. Flare tapped the surface. The screen

flickered, distorted… then focused.

 

On the screen, a frightened older

woman appeared, her face pale and streaked with sweat. Behind her were other

shapes — three, maybe four adults huddled in what looked like a concrete-walled

panic room.

 

"Please—please tell me you're the

Slayers."

 

"We are," Flare said calmly. "This is

Lieutenant Nacht. We're your local district's active squad."

 

She seemed on the verge of tears. "It

was my husband. He went out to check the generator this morning. We—we heard

him screaming. But it wasn't pain, it was rage. Like he was fighting someone.

When I looked from the bedroom window… I swear to God, he was still wearing his

clothes, but he wasn't human anymore. He—he had horns. And claws. And he was

tearing up the barn like it insulted him."

 

Her voice cracked.

 

"I locked everyone in here. Please…

please stop him. Or it. I don't know anymore."

 

Flare exchanged a glance with Marcos.

 

"Did he die recently?" Maria asked

gently, stepping forward.

 

The woman blinked. "Heart problems.

Years of it. He always worked too hard. He said he just needed air—"

 

"That's all we need," Marcos cut in, tone

oddly soft. "Ma'am, you did good. Stay inside. We'll handle it from here."

 

The screen went dark.

They found the barn half-collapsed.

 

Wheat dust filled the air like smoke.

Flare held up a fist, signaling silence. The team fanned out — Flare and Marcos

moved forward, shoulder to shoulder, while the twins peeled left and Maria hung

right near the tree line. The wind shifted again, and with it came a deep

snorting sound, like a bull's breath amplified by a throat no longer meant for

breathing.

 

Then came the footsteps.

 

Heavy. Slow. Deliberate.

 

From the remains of the barn emerged a

thing that had once been a man.

 

Its skin was cracked and dry, torn

like paper over wood, revealing the unnatural muscle beneath. It had the

skeletal form of a Minotaur — not one of legend, but a corrupted, malformed

version. It stood easily ten feet tall, horns curved forward like blades. Its

face still bore the tattered remnants of a human beard — just white, singed

threads clinging to a warped jaw.

 

Claire stopped bouncing on her heels.

"That's not a cow."

 

Caim muttered, "That was a person."

 

"No time to mourn," Flare said.

 

The creature charged.

The twins met it first.

 

Claire lunged high, flipping off a

fallen beam and slicing at its elbow. Her acidic blades bit in, sizzling flesh

and spraying black, corrupted blood. Caim followed from below, shouting,

"Explosion!" as his blade detonated into its side, rocking the beast slightly

off-balance.

 

But it didn't roar. It didn't flail.

 

It shifted, its weight deliberately

moved to feint collapse, then snapped its massive arm sideways — aiming right

for Caim.

 

Flare's heart stuttered.

 

Ashen don't do that.

They don't trick. They rush. They

attack. They don't feint.

 

"Caim, MOVE!" Marcos bellowed.

 

But Caim, caught in his

follow-through, didn't see the blow coming.

 

He didn't have to.

 

Because Flare was already there.

 

A crack of thunder split the air as

Flare's sword — lightning-infused and thrumming with violent arcs — sliced

clean through the creature's forearm just before it struck. Blood sprayed in a

steaming arc. The limb hit the ground with a heavy thud, twitching violently.

 

Caim stumbled back, eyes wide. Ash

splattered across his face, his armor. He panted hard, blinking at Flare, guilt

twisting his features.

 

"I—"

 

"Later," Flare snapped.

The creature staggered, screaming for

the first time — a horrid, wet bellow that echoed into the sky. Claire landed

behind it, slicing its hamstring before darting back.

 

Caim clenched his grip again, this

time without hesitation.

 

"FOR THE BARN!" he shouted.

 

His blade plunged into the beast's

chest — and detonated again, this time deeper, ripping its core apart from the

inside. The creature stumbled backward… then fell.

 

When it hit the ground, it didn't

thrash. It didn't reach. It simply lay there, trembling.

 

Its horned face tilted slightly toward

Flare.

 

And for a moment… its eyes cleared.

 

Just for a second.

 

And in that second, Flare saw the

pain.

 

The sorrow.

 

The soul.

 

And then it turned to ash.

Caim dropped to one knee. "I should've

seen that. I— I thought I had the opening."

 

Claire squatted beside him, poking his

face. "Hey. Don't mope. You didn't die. And I didn't die. And Lieutenant Daddy

Lightning saved you, so chin up."

 

Maria approached with a canteen.

"Drink. Shake it off. That was… not normal."

 

"No," Marcos said, slower this time.

His gaze hadn't left the fading remains of the Minotaur. "It wasn't."

 

Flare finally broke his silence.

 

"Ashen don't set traps."

 

"No," Marcos agreed. "They don't."

 

His jaw clenched.

 

"But this one did."

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