The Anomaly's Path-Chapter 85: The Sundering Blade
The air didn’t just grow cold. It turned stagnant, heavy, like the inside of a tomb that had been sealed for centuries.
The power I had just bled to reach—my new rank, my fresh breakthrough—felt like a flickering match compared to the icy pressure suddenly descending upon the ravine. It pressed down on my shoulders, my chest, my lungs. It was hard to breathe and think.
From the darkness of the treeline, two eyes opened.
They were a deep, baleful purple, swirling with a mist that looked like bruised starlight. They sat far too high off the ground for any normal predator. Whatever was attached to those eyes was massive.
I tried to push myself up, but the mere presence of the thing felt like lead weights were tied to my soul. My newly formed core shivered, sensing a predator that was leagues above anything I had ever faced.
"R-Roran..." I wheezed, my voice cracking. "What... what is that thing?"
Roran didn’t look back at me. He stood with his back straight, his massive frame looking like an immovable mountain against the darkening jungle. He reached up and drew the sword from his back—not the wooden practice blade he used on me, but his real weapon.
The steel was dark, almost black, and it seemed to drink the fading light around it.
"...That," Roran said, his voice terrifyingly calm, "is a Grave-Steel Behemoth. Grade 5 — Mid. It’s a specialized evolution of a mountain bear, but instead of fur, its hide is reinforced with organic iron and mana-conductive marrow. It doesn’t hunt for meat, Leo. It hunts for mana cores. Yours must have smelled like a fresh steak when you broke through."
My blood ran cold. Grade 5. Mid rank. That was not just a rank above me. It was a whole different world. The Spine-Cutter was Grade 2-low, and it nearly killed me. This thing was three full grades higher.
I had never seen anything like it. In the game, monsters had health bars and levels. You could see what you were up against.
But here?
Here, all I had was my eyes, my instincts, and the cold dread pooling in my stomach.
The Behemoth stepped into the light.
It was a titan of metal and muscle. Its body was covered in overlapping plates of dark, dull steel that seemed to grow directly out of its flesh. Each plate was thick, jagged, and scarred from countless battles. Its shoulders were massive, wider than a wagon, and its legs were thick as tree trunks.
Its head was low to the ground, with four horns curving backward from its skull—not bone, but jagged lightning rods, pulsing with that same baleful purple energy. Its eyes burned with intelligence. T
his was not a mindless beast. It was a... hunter.
"Sit up, Leo," Roran commanded. "Watch every step. Watch how the mana moves. You want to see my sword art right? I will show you. It’s called The Sundering Blade. Watch me and don’t you dare blink."
The Behemoth roared—a sound that felt like grinding tectonic plates—and charged. The ground shattered under its weight. It was a mountain of iron moving with the speed of a falling star.
But Roran did not run. He raised his sword.
"First Form," he said, his voice calm, almost bored. "Gale-Force Pivot."
As the monster slammed into him, Roran did not meet the force head-on. He twisted his hips, his feet dancing across the mud in a blur that I could barely follow. A localized swirl of Wind mana erupted around his boots, acting like a lubricant for reality.
The Behemoth’s massive shoulder passed an inch from Roran’s chest. The wind from its passing pulled at Roran’s coat, but his body remained perfectly still. He had not dodged. He had redirected. He had let the monster’s own momentum carry it past him while he stayed exactly where he was.
With a casual flick, Roran tapped the creature’s rear leg with his blade.
Crack!
The sound was like a thunderclap. The Behemoth’s leg buckled. The metal plates dented inward as if hit by a siege ram. The monster went skidding through the ravine, its claws tearing up the earth, its massive body crashing through trees and snapping them like twigs.
It took the Behemoth a full three seconds to stop.
I stared, my mouth hanging open.
"See that?" Roran called out over his shoulder. "I used its own weight against it. You don’t fight a mountain by pushing it, you fight it by making it trip over its own height."
The Behemoth shook its massive head and turned around. Its purple eyes were glowing brighter now. Angrier. It had realized its physical speed wouldn’t work. It planted its front paws, and the Earth began to tremble.
Jagged spikes of iron-laced stone erupted from the ground, racing toward us like a wave of death.
"Second Form," Roran said, slamming the pommel of his sword into the dirt. "Earth-Binder’s Girdle."
A dome of translucent brown energy flared out from the impact point. It surrounded us both, humming with a deep, resonant power. When the stone spikes hit the barrier, they did not just stop. They shattered into dust, their mana stripped away by Roran’s superior control.
Spike after spike after spike crashed against the dome, and each one crumbled to nothing.
"Control the elements, Leo," Roran muttered, his eyes fixed on the monster, "and you control the battlefield. Earth feeds wind. Wind feeds fire. Fire feeds lightning. They are not separate. They are a chain. Break one link, and the whole system collapses. Use everything you have to win."
The Behemoth growled, frustrated. Its horns began to glow brighter, the purple energy arcing between them like living lightning. It was preparing something big.
It lunged again, but this time it did not charge. It jumped. 𝘧𝘳𝘦ℯ𝓌𝘦𝒷𝘯𝑜𝑣𝘦𝓁.𝒸𝘰𝓂
The monster launched itself into the air, its massive body blocking out the sky. Its front claws glowed with void energy, dark and hungry. It was aiming to crush us both.
"Third Form," Roran said, and for the first time, I heard something in his voice. Excitement. "Sundering Sky-Fall."
Roran’s aura exploded.
The Wind mana around him turned sharp, slicing the falling raindrops into mist. He leapt—not away from the beast, but directly toward it. In mid-air, his sword glowed with a dull, golden light. He swung, a vertical arc that seemed to split the very air in half.
The sword hit the Behemoth’s armored skull.
BOOM!
A shockwave of pure Wind and Earth energy erupted from the point of impact. The sound was deafening. The pressure wave slammed into me, pushing me back into the mud. I covered my ears, but it did not help.
The Behemoth wasn’t just hit, it was driven into the earth with such force that the entire ravine floor sank three feet. The metal plates on its head shattered, revealing the glowing purple marrow beneath.
The beast struggled, its breaths coming in wet, metallic rattles. It was not dead yet. It tried to rise, tried to lift its massive head. Its horns crackled with dying energy, preparing one final attack.
"Final Form," Roran whispered.
He landed softly on the monster’s snout. He held his sword with one hand, pointing the tip directly between the creature’s eyes.
"World-Stillness."
The chaos of the wind stopped. The shaking of the earth died. For a heartbeat, there was no sound in the world.
He thrust the sword forward. It didn’t pierce the armor—it ignored it. A needle-thin spike of concentrated mana shot from the tip, drilling through the iron, the skull, and the core in a single micro-second.
One moment the Behemoth was alive. The next, it was not.
The purple light in its eyes flickered and died. The massive body went limp, the metal plates losing their luster. The weight of its death settled over the ravine like a blanket.
I sat there in the mud, my heart pounding, my breath coming in short gasps. I had just watched a man kill a Grade 5 monster with four moves.
Roran jumped down from the corpse and landed beside me. He exhaled a long, thin trail of steam. He looked at his sword—still clean, still dark—and slid it back into the sheath on his back.
"A sword is just an extension of the Vessel, Leo," he said, turning to look at me. I was staring at the carcass, my mind trying to process the sheer scale of the technique I had just witnessed. "If your Vessel is strong enough, even a twig can kill a god. If it’s weak, the best blade in the world is just fancy jewelry."
He walked over and offered me a hand, his face returning to that tired, grumpy scowl.
"Can you stand, or do I have to carry you like a sack of grain? We’re going home. Martha’s making stew, and I’m not missing it because you’re busy being impressed."
I grabbed his hand, feeling the callouses and the steady warmth of a man who had truly mastered the world around him.
I pulled myself up. My legs and whole body were shaking.
But I was standing.
I looked at the dead Behemoth, then at Roran.
I had a long way to go. A very long way.
But for the first time, I understood what the top looked like.
...And I wanted it.
_
Author’s Note — Grave-Steel Behemoth
Monster Name: Grave-Steel Behemoth
Grade: Grade 5 — Elite (Mid)
Description:
The Grave-Steel Behemoth is a rare and terrifying predator found in the deepest, most dangerous jungles. It is a specialized evolution of a mountain bear, but instead of fur, its hide is reinforced with organic iron and mana-conductive marrow. This gives it a natural armor that can deflect most blades and spells.
Its body is covered in overlapping plates of dark, dull steel that grow directly from its flesh. Each plate is thick, jagged, and scarred from countless battles. Its four horns are not bone—they are jagged lightning rods that pulse with purple void energy.
Its eyes are deep purple, swirling with mist that looks like bruised starlight.
Behavior:
The Grave-Steel Behemoth does not hunt for meat. It hunts for mana cores. It is drawn to the scent of fresh breakthroughs and powerful mana signatures. It is a patient hunter, willing to stalk its prey for days before striking.
Once it engages, it does not retreat. It fights with overwhelming power, using its massive size, iron armor, and earth-shaking abilities to crush its enemies.
Abilities:
Iron Hide: Its steel plates are nearly impenetrable. Standard blades will shatter on impact.
Earth Spikes: It can summon jagged spikes of iron-laced stone from the ground.
Void Horns: Its horns can store and release purple void energy, which it can use to enhance its claws or fire as projectiles.
Mana Core Detection: It can sense the mana cores of other creatures, making it an efficient hunter.
Weaknesses:
The gaps between its bone plates are vulnerable, especially the neck and underside. Its size makes it slow to turn, leaving its flanks exposed. The plates on its head are thick, but a concentrated attack to the skull can shatter them. It relies on its armor for defense; if the armor is broken, the flesh beneath is soft







