Darkness was its cradle.
The Dungeon Boss did not sleep — sleep was a mortal defect, reserved for flesh that feared the dark. It was the dark. It fed on the quiet between heartbeats, the thinning moments when hope gave way to despair.
It hovered above the broken city like a thought half-formed — a colossal mass of chitin and bone, obsidian wings folded close to its monstrous frame. Its eyes were not eyes but rifts, four slits smoldering like molten embers.
Deep inside its chest, where blood should flow, there was only a hollow — and within that hollow, the Harvested writhed. Souls pressed against the inside of its ribs, hands and faces contorted in eternal silent screams, fueling its existence.
It listened.
To footsteps. To hunger. To fear.
Every heartbeat in the Shroud was a signal. Every sharp breath, a map of weakness.
The humans — new, weak, foolish — scurried like ants inside its streets. Hunted. Starving. Fighting one another more than the Crawlers.
Good.
Flesh fed the body.
Fear fed the soul.
And souls belonged to it.
Each Crawler mind was part of it — threads woven into a web. A thousand eyes, a thousand senses. From fractured rooftops to sewer depths, it felt everything:
the sharp taste of Bright's fear pulsing again and again
the cunning coil of Silas's ambitions
the rising hunger in the company's bones
the desperate leadership burning in Roegan's thoughts
Small flames.
Soon to be snuffed.
It inhaled — and the Shroud answered.
Fog rolled like living silk across the dead streets. Every tendril carried whispers only the Crawlers understood:
Drive them.
Break them.
Bleed them.
The humans had survived the projection — a test, nothing more. A flicker of the Boss's power, injected into a lesser beast. They should have been crushed. Instead… the shard of soul it had used was destroyed.
Interesting.
A pair of humans glowed brighter than expected. One with a wild serenity — the knight of bone. One with a spark of intuition — the one who sees danger.
Not allowed.
Not acceptable.
The Shroud would correct this anomaly.
The Boss extended its reach — twisting the Shroud's rules. It stole scents from the wind:
Food spoiled twice as fast.
Water tasted faintly of iron and ash.
The meat of Crawlers festered with toxins.
Every bite pushed them closer to unraveling — mind first, body second.
Adam cracked first.
The Boss didn't need to see him to know. It felt the shift inside him — moral flesh rotting, instinct taking over. Cannibalism was the only way to keep the strength he had gotten from the shroud.
It smiled inside.
One would fall to instinct.
One to ambition.
One to fear.
The others? They would kneel.
The Boss unfolded its wings, talons scraping through stone as it shifted its vantage atop the ruined tower. The cathedral where the humans slept flickered at the edge of vision.
It could take them now.
It could swoop down, peel back flesh, and drink their souls before they screamed.
But humans were fascinating when afraid.
Afraid humans grew flavor.
So instead, it flexed its power through the web — igniting the Crawlers.
Dozens crawled into formation below — some tiny like spiders, others hulking with swollen limbs. Their bodies shook as the Boss carved precise Commands into their small minds:
Divide them.
Make them bleed — not die.
Bring their souls alive.
One Crawler hesitated — its tiny brain resisting instinct.
With a flick of will, the Boss crushed it from within — the creature's spine bursting outward like snapped roots.
The others obeyed.
Further away, the sly one hunted.
Silas Drey's aura curled sharply — ambition mixed with desperation. The Boss watched him stalk a Silent Stalker beast built for ambush. Clever. Dangerous.
Silas wanted to improve his physique to the limit so he flickered in and out, fighting each and every monster he faced, because there was no ambition without effort.
"A hunter seeking to disappear from predator's sight. Not ideal." The boss said,
The Boss pressed its mind deeper — threading unease through him.
You are prey.
Invisible prey still dies.
Bessia noticed his tremor.
She was loyal… but loyalty frayed in fear.
The Boss would pick at that soon.
The Danger-seer.
His instincts pierced the fog too often — almost brushing the Boss's thoughts.
He must be broken early.
The Boss let the fog carry a phantom pulse — just for Bright.
You are watched.
You are hunted.
Every step is wrong.
Bright stumbled — hand snapping to his chest.
Good.
Fear made souls tender.
Roegan — The Flickering Shield
The lone initiate — strong bone, brittle mind.
He was an obstacle. A leader who still believed in order amidst anarchy. The Boss admired his stubbornness — admired the desperation in his eyes as he forced structure on the doomed.
Roegan thought he was resisting chaos.
But he was feeding it.
Pressure cracked resolve.
Cracked leaders made exquisite meals.
The humans had retreated into a broken temple — as though stone and symbols could protect them from a god of the dark.
The Boss pressed its talons into the tower — a silent promise.
When they slept deepest…
When desperation peaked…
It would peel the cathedral open like a fruit.
Inside—
Duncan knelt, staring at his arms, bone plates shimmering faintly. Pride… but sick beneath it. Venom gnawed at his strength, thinning his muscles.
His soul flickered like a candle burning low.
Not yet, little knight.
You will taste better soon.
The souls in the Boss's chest pulsed — crooning like underwater screams.
They were hungry too.
One soul surged forward — a man with fractured eyes.
"Kill them… all of them…" the face mouthed soundlessly from inside the Boss.
It silenced the soul with a squeeze of will. The spirit's shape shattered into motes of blue agony.
The rest fell quiet again.
With a slow, monstrous grace, the Boss spread its wings — a cathedral-wide shadow enveloping the skyline.
This was its territory.
Its law.
None leave the Maw alive.
The souls inside its chest chanted this truth — endlessly — their agony fueling prophecy:
Only one fate awaits.
They enter as flesh.
They leave as screams.
The Boss extended its claw toward the humans — marking them in its mind.
The hunt was no longer preparation.
It was the beginning of the Harvest.
