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 +~~NOTOC~~
 +{{ :gemini_generated_image_tmcryntmcryntmcr.png?400|}}
 +===== Chapter I — Iron Howl =====
 +
 +Metal screamed over bone.
 +
 +Not outside. Inside.
 +
 +Inside the armor, breathing wasn’t breathing—it was a growl, resonating through the skull like a second heart trying to overwrite the rhythm of the first. Every step tore into the ground. Every movement felt like the body wanted to stop—but the armor refused.
 +
 +The first demon came from the left.
 +
 +No name. No face. Just mass and teeth.
 +
 +The katana flashed.
 +
 +Not a wide arc, not brute force—just a fast, surgical cut. The neck opened. Blood sprayed across the armor and steamed as if it had struck heated iron.
 +
 +The next came immediately. And the third.
 +
 +Hundreds.
 +
 +Not the end of the world. Not infinite darkness. Just a large, furious clash where both sides knew exactly why they were there.
 +
 +She moved.
 +
 +The movement wasn’t entirely hers anymore.
 +
 +Inside the Berserk armor, the world narrowed into angles, distances, strike vectors. The demons’ screams became a single low static hum. The green glow of the katanas tore shadows open with every motion.
 +
 +One grabbed her arm.
 +
 +A bone grip.
 +
 +The armor responded before pain could rise. A jaw-like iron mechanism snapped shut, crushing the attacker’s limb—and at the same time her own shoulder jerked out of alignment.
 +
 +She didn’t stop.
 +
 +The second katana cut upward. The torso split. Entrails spilled onto the ground.
 +
 +The sand turned to mud with blood.
 +
 +Something inside her began to laugh.
 +
 +Not out loud. Not yet.
 +
 +The armor tightened. Beneath its joints, a deep, hungry vibration stirred. The edges of her vision darkened, as if the world had narrowed into a tunnel with only the next target at the end.
 +
 +Strike. Step. Turn. Thrust.
 +
 +The katanas grew heavier—but faster. Precision didn’t fade—it sharpened. Every demon fell in one or two cuts. She stopped counting.
 +
 +Blood coated the black surfaces of the armor. Horn-like arcs rose along the helmet’s edges like warning signs.
 +
 +One of them landed a hit.
 +
 +Claws scraped across the chest plate, sparks flying. The force drove her to her knees. The ground shuddered.
 +
 +Around her, the swarm closed in. Hundreds of movements. Hundreds of breaths. Hundreds of hungers.
 +
 +She rose slowly.
 +
 +Inside the armor, something whispered:
 +
 +Let go.
 +
 +Her fingers tightened around the hilts.
 +
 +“No.”
 +
 +Not a shout. A growl.
 +
 +The next wave hit.
 +
 +One katana pierced a stomach. The other split a spine. She spun, kicked, crushed a skull into the ground. Demon blood ran into the seams, but the armor didn’t slip. It kept her moving, even as her muscles would have stopped.
 +
 +Breathing grew heavier. Not because of lungs.
 +
 +Because something inside wanted more.
 +
 +The battlefield wasn’t chaos anymore.
 +
 +It was rhythm.
 +
 +Strike. Strike. Strike.
 +
 +Then—
 +
 +A horn.
 +
 +Not a demonic howl. Not a distorted sound.
 +
 +Clear. Bright. Martial.
 +
 +It carried from the mountain beyond the battlefield, cutting through the noise like steel through air.
 +
 +Her head turned.
 +
 +On the horizon, along the slope—two figures.
 +
 +One stood upright, white cloak flowing, wings like shadows against the sun.
 +
 +Falcon.
 +
 +The other—heavy, dark, helmet shaped like a skull, sword like a broken moon.
 +
 +Skull Knight.
 +
 +The demons hesitated.
 +
 +Only for a second.
 +
 +Then the battle continued—
 +
 +But it was no longer fought alone.
 +
 +=====   =====
 +
 +Chapter II — Three Vectors
 +
 +The echo of the horn didn’t fade. It lingered, like an unseen command even the demons understood.
 +
 +The first to move was Falcon.
 +
 +He didn’t descend. He didn’t hesitate.
 +
 +He dove.
 +
 +The cloak cut the air like a blade. The landing wasn’t light—it was deliberate. The foot that struck the ground crushed a demon’s ribcage; the next motion cut clean through two more in a single, precise sweep.
 +
 +No spectacle. No proclamation.
 +
 +Just movement.
 +
 +Ace didn’t watch for long. Her gaze snapped back to the nearest target. The katana drove through a jaw, twisted out the back of the skull.
 +
 +Skull Knight descended the slope more slowly.
 +
 +No rush.
 +
 +But every step meant something. Demons parted before him—not from fear, but instinct. His sword wasn’t fast, but when it moved, nothing remained intact.
 +
 +The first was split from shoulder to hip. The second lost its head before it could scream.
 +
 +Ace felt it.
 +
 +The rhythm changed.
 +
 +No longer a solitary fight for survival.
 +
 +Three points on the field.
 +
 +Three forces.
 +
 +Falcon moved on the right, cutting through a winged demon and turning immediately to cover the rear. His motion was controlled—almost calm—but every strike was final.
 +
 +Ace surged forward through the center. The armor shrieked, horns slicing the air. She was no longer a retreating point.
 +
 +She was an advancing front.
 +
 +Skull Knight held the left.
 +
 +Heavy. Decisive.
 +
 +A demon leapt over him, claws extended.
 +
 +He didn’t even look.
 +
 +The sword moved.
 +
 +The attacker split in half mid-air.
 +
 +Blood fell like black rain.
 +
 +Ace growled.
 +
 +Another demon struck her side. This time the claws pierced the outer layer of the armor—not deep, but enough.
 +
 +The armor reacted.
 +
 +Pain became motion. Vision blurred. The world reddened.
 +
 +Falcon was beside her in an instant. One precise cut—the attacker fell.
 +
 +No words.
 +
 +Ace didn’t thank him. There was no need.
 +
 +They moved like they had done this a hundred times before.
 +
 +Skull Knight stopped for a moment.
 +
 +The remaining mass of demons gathered for one final rush. Dozens now. Fragments of what had been hundreds.
 +
 +Ace charged.
 +
 +The katana pierced, twisted, tore. The armor screamed inside her, demanding more.
 +
 +Let go.
 +
 +She tightened her grip.
 +
 +“No.”
 +
 +The final wave broke around them.
 +
 +Falcon’s blade severed a neck. Skull Knight crushed a chest. Ace snapped a spine.
 +
 +Silence didn’t arrive instantly.
 +
 +It seeped in.
 +
 +One demon still crawled—bloody, furious.
 +
 +Ace stepped on it.
 +
 +The katana drove down.
 +
 +Movement stopped.
 +
 +The sand steamed. Blood flowed through channels that hadn’t existed moments before.
 +
 +She stood in the center of the field, breathing heavy, the armor dark and alive around her.
 +
 +Falcon stood a few steps away, gaze sharp, wings shadowing the fading light.
 +
 +Skull Knight behind him.
 +
 +No wounds. No fatigue.
 +
 +Only waiting.
 +
 +Ace felt the beast inside her still trembling. It wasn’t satisfied. It never was.
 +
 +She turned her gaze to Skull Knight.
 +
 +No question. No thanks.
 +
 +Just a direct, measuring look.
 +
 +He didn’t raise his sword. Didn’t shift his stance.
 +
 +His voice didn’t echo.
 +
 +It was close.
 +
 +Too close.
 +
 +“Time to wake up, little Berserk.”
 +
 +The world cut.
 +
 +No shattering. No flash.
 +
 +Just—
 +
 +A break.
 +
 +=====   =====
 +
 +Chapter III — Static
 +
 +The air didn’t taste like blood.
 +
 +That was the first thing.
 +
 +No iron on the tongue. No smoke in the lungs. No pressure of armor crushing the ribs.
 +
 +She was sitting upright.
 +
 +A room.
 +
 +Dark. Silent. Real.
 +
 +Breathing came too fast, too heavy for a world that wasn’t moving. Her hands were still clenched, fingers curled as if gripping hilts.
 +
 +No katanas.
 +
 +No armor.
 +
 +Just sheets tangled around her legs like a grotesque parody of a battlefield.
 +
 +Three seconds.
 +
 +One.
 +
 +Two.
 +
 +Three.
 +
 +“DAMN YOU, KONRAD!!!”
 +
 +It came from the spine. Not thought. Not considered.
 +
 +Raw.
 +
 +The room didn’t answer.
 +
 +No echo. No horn. No laughter from the mountain.
 +
 +Just silence.
 +
 +Her heart still hammered like inside the armor. Muscles tense as if the next strike was coming. A faint ache in her side—not a wound, but a memory.
 +
 +Breathing slowed.
 +
 +The beast’s voice wasn’t there anymore.
 +
 +But the imprint was.
 +
 +The rustle of sheets to the right.
 +
 +Mai didn’t startle. Didn’t jump. Didn’t ask what happened like someone afraid of the answer.
 +
 +Her voice was low. Calm.
 +
 +“Nightmares, I assume.”
 +
 +No sarcasm. No concern.
 +
 +Just a dry observation.
 +
 +Ace dragged a hand across her face. Fingers paused at her forehead, as if confirming the helmet’s sharp edges were gone.
 +
 +“Yeah.”
 +
 +One word.
 +
 +Short.
 +
 +She leaned forward, elbows on her knees, shoulders still tight. In the dark room, shadows were just shadows. Walls didn’t move. The air didn’t whisper.
 +
 +But the feeling was too clear.
 +
 +It wasn’t a random dream.
 +
 +She hadn’t invented it.
 +
 +The voice on the mountainside wasn’t unfamiliar. Not demonic. Not distorted.
 +
 +Annoyingly familiar.
 +
 +Mai shifted onto her side. Her gaze lingered on Ace just a fraction longer than the moment required.
 +
 +“The same one?”
 +
 +Ace exhaled through her nose.
 +
 +“Yeah.”
 +
 +Silence.
 +
 +No fear.
 +
 +No panic.
 +
 +Just a small, irritating certainty that somewhere—on some level—someone had pulled the curtain shut mid-act.
 +
 +Ace dropped her feet to the floor. The cool surface anchored her instantly back into her body.
 +
 +She stood.
 +
 +The night was normal.
 +
 +The world was normal.
 +
 +But she knew one thing for certain:
 +
 +That voice hadn’t been a dream.
 +
 +She lifted her gaze toward a dark corner, as if expecting to see the silhouette of heavy armor.
 +
 +Nothing.
 +
 +Just shadow.
 +
 +“Damn you, Konrad…”
 +
 +Not a shout anymore.
 +
 +Just a mutter.
 +
 +And somewhere—
 +
 +far outside time and space—
 +
 +or maybe not so far—
 +
 +someone might have smiled.
 +