ShadowBound: The Need For Power-Chapter 599: Killing A Dire Lynx
The Dire Lynx is a solitary predator, highly intelligent and patient in its hunting. Unlike pack hunters, it relies on stealth, observation, and careful tracking rather than sheer numbers or brute force. Its elongated limbs and oversized paws allow it to move almost silently across diverse terrain, while its acute senses—particularly smell, sight, and hearing—make it an expert at detecting even the faintest traces of prey. The lynx is opportunistic, preferring to stalk and wear down its target, striking only when it is certain of success. Its dark, patterned fur provides perfect camouflage in forested environments, making it a relentless and elusive threat.
And Liam was acutely aware of the solitary predator beneath him, fully understanding just how formidable and cunning the Dire Lynx could be. The intelligence of the animal meant that any misstep could turn the hunter into the hunted, and Liam braced himself for the challenge ahead.
'For now, I'm safe,' he thought, keeping a steady gaze on the Dire Lynx below. 'They don't excel in vertical ambushes from above. Their strength lies in ground and lateral maneuvers, not against a target perched high where they can't reach easily.'
'But if it catches even the slightest sound from me now, this tree will practically become my permanent residence. It'll linger until I make a move, and it won't be patient about it,' he added inwardly, narrowing his eyes.
'I could use my flames, but that would likely attract other predators lurking nearby. Void Passage would allow me to approach undetected and strike, but the myst output is far too high. If the instructors sense it, that's an immediate failure.'
He kept his gaze locked on the Dire Lynx as it prowled carefully, sniffing and listening to the forest around it. Liam exhaled softly and muttered under his breath, "Guess I'll go for the more aggressive approach." Summoning his twin daggers, he focused intently on the predator, calculating every movement and angle.
In the next instant, Liam let himself fall from the branch, descending rapidly toward the Dire Lynx. As he neared the animal, he twisted his body in a perfect wheel rotation, arm extending forward to slice through the neck of the predator, aiming to end the fight quickly and efficiently.
However, just as he had anticipated could happen, the Dire Lynx had registered the faint sound of his descent. In a swift, fluid motion, it leapt backward, narrowly evading Liam's blade.
The missed strike didn't leave Liam off-balance; instead, he used the momentum to flip, landing gracefully on the ground before rolling into a crouched stance. Crimson eyes glimmering with calculated focus, he watched the predator, which now assumed a defensive, poised position, ready to retaliate at any sudden move.
"Hopefully I can make this quick and get back on my path," Liam muttered, a low edge in his voice, as he cast a Silent spell to envelop both himself and the Dire Lynx within a radius of absolute quiet.
'As long as I maintain this radius, no sound we make will attract anything else lurking nearby,' he thought. Rising to his feet, he held his daggers in a reverse grip, advancing slowly and deliberately, each step measured as his side eyes tracked the Dire Lynx.
The predator mirrored him, never breaking its gaze, never blinking, its muscles coiled like springs as if waiting for the precise moment to strike. Liam's every sense sharpened, fully aware that this was no ordinary prey. The forest seemed to shrink around them, tension so thick it pressed against his chest, each movement a delicate dance between hunter and hunter, predator and predator, where one mistake could be fatal.
Step by deliberate step, they circled, each calculating, each probing, until the forest itself felt like it had grown silent just to bear witness to this deadly standoff.
The Dire Lynx moved first.
Without warning, its body exploded into motion, the forest floor blurring beneath its oversized paws as it launched itself at Liam with terrifying speed. One moment it was coiled and waiting, the next it was a streak of dark fur and muscle tearing through the air, claws extended, jaws parted just enough to reveal curved fangs meant to crush bone.
Liam reacted on instinct alone. He twisted his body sideways at the last possible moment, the lynx's claws slicing through the space where his throat had been a heartbeat earlier. The force of the missed strike still clipped him, ripping across his shoulder and sending a sharp line of pain through his flesh as fabric tore and blood welled instantly. But he didn't slow.
Steel flashed as his daggers came up in a cross-guard, intercepting the follow-up swipe aimed for his ribs. The impact rang through his arms like a hammer blow, the sheer strength behind the lynx's strike forcing him back several steps, boots skidding across dirt and crushed leaves. Liam gritted his teeth, muscles screaming as he redirected the momentum rather than trying to stop it outright.
'For its size, this bastard is very fast, and strong. Stronger than I expected.'
The Dire Lynx pivoted mid-motion with unsettling grace, landing and immediately rebounding, its tail snapping through the air to stabilize its movement as it circled him in a low, predatory arc. Its paws barely made a sound. Its eyes never left him.
Liam pushed myst through his body inwardly as he reinforces his muscle fibers, sharpened reaction time, and heightened balance. His senses sharpened to a razor's edge, every twitch of the lynx's shoulders and hips broadcasting intent.
Then it lunged again.
This time Liam met it head-on. He ducked beneath snapping jaws, rolled across the ground as claws raked where his spine had been, and came up inside the creature's reach. One dagger slashed upward in a clean, precise arc meant to open its flank from belly to chest.
The blade struck—and stopped.
The sound was wrong. Not the wet tear of flesh he expected, but a dull, resistant scrape, as if steel had been dragged across thick leather layered over hardened muscle. The fur parted, a shallow wound forming, but not nearly deep enough.
Liam's eyes narrowed instantly.
'So that's how it is.'
The Dire Lynx snarled, a deep, vibrating sound rumbling from its chest as it twisted violently, its shoulder smashing into Liam and sending him skidding backward. He rolled, came up low, and narrowly avoided a downward stomp that cracked the earth where his head had been. Another slash tore across his forearm as he blocked too late, blood dripping down his fingers and darkening the grip of his dagger.
Pain flared, but he ignored it.
The fight stretched on in brutal, breathless exchanges. The lynx pressed relentlessly, alternating between explosive charges and sudden feints, forcing Liam to stay moving or be torn apart. Trees shattered where claws missed him by inches. Dirt and leaves flew with every impact. Liam adapted as he fought, learning its rhythm, timing his counters more precisely, slipping past attacks instead of blocking them outright.
Still, it wasn't enough.
He needed deeper cuts.
As the lynx lunged again, Liam twisted inside its arc and whispered a single word under his breath. The edge of his dagger ignited—not in a blaze, but in a thin, controlled sheath of heat. Inferno Edge. Minimal output.
Then he struck.
The blade slid into the side of the Dire Lynx's neck, heat biting past fur and into flesh at last. The creature shrieked, a raw, furious sound, stumbling as blood sprayed across the forest floor. The wound was deep—deep enough to stagger it—but not fatal. The short blade couldn't reach far enough.
The lynx thrashed, claws flailing wildly as it tried to tear away.
Liam didn't hesitate.
He dismissed the dagger instantly, letting it dissolve as the creature's movement pulled the wound wider—and in the same breath, his longsword materialized in his hands, its weight solid and familiar. Every drop of myst he could spare flooded inward, reinforcing his muscles, locking his stance, turning his body into a single, focused weapon.
The Dire Lynx tried to recover, but it didn't get the chance.
Liam stepped in, planting his foot, ignoring the burning pain screaming through his injured arm, and swung. The blade moved in a clean, brutal arc, powered not by magic flares but by sheer, concentrated strength.
Steel met flesh. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦
The head separated from the body in a spray of blood, tumbling across the ground as the Dire Lynx's massive form collapsed mid-motion, crashing into the dirt with a final, lifeless thud.
Liam stood there for a moment, chest rising and falling steadily despite the cuts along his arms and shoulder. Blood dripped from his blade as he looked down at the corpse, crimson eyes cold and unimpressed.
"Tch," he scoffed, wiping his sword clean. "All that effort… and you still weren't worth the detour."
He dismissed the weapon, turned away without another glance, and resumed his path northward, footsteps steady as if the fight had been nothing more than a minor inconvenience.







