Chapter 74 - 69: Pack Mentality - Weaves of Ashes - NovelsTime

Weaves of Ashes

Chapter 74 - 69: Pack Mentality

Author: Tracy_Dunwoodie
updatedAt: 2026-01-10

CHAPTER 74: CHAPTER 69: PACK MENTALITY

Location: Dark Forest - Mid Ring | Doha (Lower Realm)

Time: Day 435, Early Morning

The mist rolled through the Mid Ring like living smoke, turning ancient ashwoods into ghost-shapes and shadows into questions. Perfect hunting weather—if you were the one doing the stalking.

Jayde crouched behind a moss-covered boulder, her enhanced blade held low against her thigh to prevent reflections. The runic channels along its fuller pulsed faintly with her Ember Qi, a warm counterpoint to the morning chill that made her breath fog.

Two heat signatures. Sixty meters northeast. Moving in synchronized patterns. Assessment: Coordinated behavior.

(They’re hunting together. Like... actually together.)

Through the grey curtain of fog, she could make out the shapes—low-slung, four-legged, maybe three feet at the shoulder. Mistwraith cats, according to the Old Man’s journals. Mid-tier Flamewrought beasts that used the fog as camouflage, their grey-blue fur practically invisible in conditions like this.

The journal had mentioned they sometimes hunted in pairs. Mated couples, probably. But the notes hadn’t detailed just how coordinated they could be.

She watched them move through the underbrush—one circling left while the other held position, then switching roles with timing so precise it felt rehearsed. Military flanking maneuvers. Standard tactical doctrine for establishing fields of fire and eliminating escape routes.

Federation pattern recognition: Bounding overwatch. One moves while the other provides security. Professional execution.

(They’re not just hunting together. They’re actually coordinating.)

The lead cat—slightly larger, probably male—froze mid-step, head swiveling toward something Jayde couldn’t see. The female immediately dropped into a crouch, belly to the ground, muscles coiled. Silent communication through body language and positioning.

Then they moved as one.

The male exploded from cover, a blur of grey fur and gleaming fangs. His partner circled wide, cutting off the prey’s retreat before it even knew to run. A panicked squeal cut through the mist—some small forest creature—then silence.

Efficient. Brutal. Professional.

Threat assessment revised upward. These opponents demonstrate tactical sophistication beyond typical beast behavior. Recommend enhanced caution.

(We’ve fought packs before. The ember foxes—)

Those were mob tactics. Overwhelming numbers with poor coordination. This is different. This is teamwork.

Jayde’s grip tightened on her blade. She’d studied pack dynamics extensively in the Federation—wolf packs, coordinated infantry units, squadron formations. The principle was always the same: working together multiplied effectiveness beyond simple addition. Two coordinated fighters weren’t twice as dangerous as one. They were three or four times as dangerous because they covered each other’s weaknesses.

But she needed the points. Mistwraith cats were worth thirty to forty Merits each according to her Divine Tome’s bestiary. Sixty to eighty total for the pair. That was significant progress toward her goals.

The cats finished their kill quickly, tearing into their prey with coordinated efficiency. One ate while the other kept watch. Then they switched, never leaving themselves vulnerable.

(Okay. So. How do we do this?)

Standard anti-pack doctrine: Separate and eliminate. Force them to fight as individuals rather than as a unit. Use terrain to create choke points. Employ area-effect techniques to pressure both simultaneously.

She had Inferno Burst now—a thirty-five Qi area attack with a three-meter radius. If she could catch them both in the blast zone, she might disrupt their coordination long enough to press an advantage. The Flame Whip could control space, keep one at bay while she dealt with the other.

But she’d need to close the distance first. Get them both focused on her, then spring the trap.

Jayde pulled a Qi restoration pill from her storage ring, holding it ready but not consuming it yet. Better to save resources until she needed them. Her Qi pool was full—2,225 points, more than enough for a sustained engagement.

She shifted position, deliberately stepping on a dry branch.

The crack echoed through the mist like a gunshot.

Both cats’ heads snapped toward her position, ears flat against skulls, lips pulling back from fangs that gleamed wet with their recent kill’s blood. Eyes that burned like embers in the grey dawn, intelligent and cold and hungry.

The female yowled—a sound like tearing silk mixed with falling glass, sharp and wrong and meant to intimidate.

(Oh gods, that’s horrible.)

Psychological warfare. Ignore it. Focus on tactical positioning.

Jayde stepped out from behind the boulder, blade held in a mid-guard position that could transition to offense or defense depending on their approach. Her armor’s runic arrays hummed to life, essence-resistance coating her torso and limbs with an almost imperceptible shimmer.

The cats split immediately.

Male circling right, low and predatory, each step deliberate. Female mirroring left, wider arc, setting up a pincer that would trap Jayde between them with no good escape route. Textbook flanking maneuver executed with terrifying precision.

Thirty seconds to envelope completion. Recommend immediate action to disrupt formation.

Jayde activated Heat Sense, letting thermal vision overlay her normal sight. The world shifted to gradients of temperature—cold mist in blues and purples, warm earth in oranges, and the cats burning bright red-gold with the Inferno essence in their blood.

She could see their muscles tensing, could track the micro-movements that telegraphed their intentions a split-second before they committed.

The male lunged first.

Not at her—at her right side, forcing her to rotate and expose her back to the female. Classic pack tactic, using one attacker to create openings for the other.

Jayde pivoted, blade coming up in a diagonal rising cut that should’ve intercepted his trajectory—

The male twisted mid-air, impossibly agile, claws raking across her blade rather than meeting it edge-on. Sparks screamed where essence-reinforced claws met runic steel, and the impact jarred her grip, sending numbing shock up her forearm.

(He baited the cut!)

Behind her—left side now, the rotation had turned her—the female charged.

Incoming. Three meters. Point-seven seconds to impact.

Jayde dropped into a flat dive, cheek grazing moss that smelled of rot and rain, tasting copper-dust earth as the female’s claws whistled overhead close enough to tear strands from her ponytail. She rolled, blade coming around in a horizontal slash that caught nothing but mist as both cats melted back into the grey.

Her heart hammered. Ice in her veins but fire in her limbs, adrenaline singing combat-readiness through every nerve.

Separation failed. They’re maintaining tactical cohesion. Reassess.

The cats circled, visible only as heat-shimmer shapes through her thermal vision. Prowling at the edge of her effective range, patient and coordinated, waiting for her to make a mistake.

(They’re not rushing. They’re hunting. Actually hunting.)

Affirmative. These are experienced predators who’ve successfully killed cultivators before. Evidence: Confidence in approach, patience in execution, tactical discipline.

Another yowl—this time from both cats simultaneously, the sound overlapping and harmonizing in a way that made her teeth ache. Psychological pressure, keeping her heart rate elevated, her muscles tense, and burning energy.

Can’t wait for them to dictate the engagement. Need to force action on my terms.

Jayde shaped Ember Qi with practiced efficiency, burning twenty-five points to manifest a Flame Lance. The spear of compressed Inferno essence materialized in her off-hand, two feet of white-hot death that turned the surrounding mist to steam.

She hurled it at the male’s heat signature.

The cat dodged—of course he did, the telegraph was obvious—but the Lance forced him to break formation, to move in a predictable direction away from the threat.

Exactly where she needed him.

Jayde was already moving, closing on the female’s position with an explosive sprint that ate distance in heartbeats. Her blade came down in a descending cut, edge screaming through mist and aimed at the cat’s spine—

The female rolled under the strike with liquid grace, coming up inside Jayde’s guard, claws extended toward her throat.

Too close for the blade. Jayde released her grip, left hand snapping up to catch the cat’s foreleg just behind the paw. Bone and muscle slammed into her palm—smaller than expected but dense with cultivated strength, fur slick with morning dew.

She wrenched sideways, using the cat’s own momentum against it, and activated Heat Palm. Two Qi per minute poured into her grip, her skin heating to temperatures that could cauterize wounds or cook flesh.

The mistwraith cat shrieked, that awful glass-tearing sound pitched higher with real pain. Burning fur stank like sulfur and char, the smell gagging-thick.

Then the male hit her from behind.

Eighty pounds of Flamewrought-tier predator slammed into her shoulders, claws scoring lines of fire across her armor’s essence-resistant coating. The runic array absorbed most of the impact—she felt it drain, protective enchantments burning through their charge to prevent her back from being shredded—but the force drove her forward, stumbling.

She lost her grip on the female’s leg. Both cats disengaged immediately, melting back into defensive positions with that same eerie coordination.

Armor integrity: Seventy percent. Three more hits of that magnitude will exhaust protective enchantments.

Jayde’s shoulders throbbed where claws had impacted, bruises forming even through the armor. Her blade lay three feet away where she’d dropped it. The cats prowled between her and the weapon, cutting off easy retrieval.

(This is bad. This is really bad.)

Assessment: Current tactical approach is insufficient. Pack dynamics require simultaneous pressure to prevent mutual support. Recommendation: Area denial combined with zone control.

Right. Stop trying to fight them one at a time. Make them deal with threats to both of them at once.

Jayde shaped fifteen Qi into Flame Whip, the technique manifesting as five meters of flexible Inferno essence that writhed in her grip like a living thing. She cracked it forward—not at either cat specifically, but at the space between them, forcing them to split apart or risk being entangled.

They split. Of course they did. Professional opponents didn’t bunch up.

But that gave her the opening she needed.

Thirty-five Qi burned away in a single explosive release. Inferno Burst detonated at her feet, a three-meter sphere of roiling flame that expanded outward like a miniature sun going nova. The technique didn’t distinguish friend from foe—she’d be caught in it too—but her Inferno affinity gave her resistance the cats lacked.

The world turned orange and gold and screaming-white. Heat slammed into her like a physical wall, singeing the hair on her arms, flash-evaporating the moisture from her clothes. Her armor’s enchantments flared one final time, then failed completely, protective magic exhausted.

But the cats had it worse.

Both were caught on the edge of the blast radius, fur igniting, high-pitched shrieks cutting through the roar of flames. They scattered, instincts overriding tactical discipline for the first time since the engagement started.

Window of opportunity. Four-point-two seconds before they recover and re-coordinate.

Jayde dove for her blade, fingers closing around the hilt, runic channels responding instantly to her Qi. She came up in a roll, thermal vision cutting through the smoke and steam to track both heat signatures.

The male—closer, still recovering, fur smoldering in patches along his flanks.

She closed the distance in two explosive steps, blade coming around in a horizontal arc that caught all the light filtering through smoke and mist, edge gleaming like a falling star.

Steel met flesh just behind the cat’s shoulder, cutting deep into muscle and bone. The runic enhancement did its work, Ember Qi channeling through the blade to sear the wound even as it opened, cauterizing and killing in the same motion.

Blood sprayed in an arterial fan, droplets hanging in the smoke-thick air like rubies before gravity claimed them. The cat’s shriek cut off mid-cry, legs collapsing, weight dragging the blade down as the body fell.

Hostile one eliminated. Hostile two re-engaging.

The female came at her like a grey blur, all fury and desperation now that her mate was down. No more tactics. No more patience. Just rage and claws and fangs aimed at Jayde’s exposed throat.

Jayde yanked her blade free—it came loose with a wet sucking sound, blood sheeting down the fuller—and threw up an Ember Shield with her off-hand. Twelve Qi burned away to manifest two feet of compressed defensive essence.

The cat’s skull cracked against the barrier hard enough that Jayde felt the impact reverberate up her arm. The shield held for exactly two seconds before shattering, but those two seconds let her get her blade into position.

The mistwraith cat dropped beneath her guard, going for her legs—smart, disable her mobility—but Jayde had fought pack tactics before in a hundred different forms. She knew the patterns.

Her blade came down point-first in a brutal descending thrust, edge punching through the cat’s spine just behind the skull. The strike was inelegant, graceless, but effective. Steel grated on vertebrae, Qi-channeling turning bone to splinters and nerves to ash.

The female convulsed once, then went still.

Jayde stood there for three heartbeats, breathing hard, blade still buried in the cat’s corpse. Smoke drifted around her, carrying the stench of burned fur and spilled blood. Her shoulders ached where claws had hit armor. Her arms trembled with spent adrenaline.

But she was alive.

They weren’t.

***

Twenty minutes later, Jayde sat on the moss-covered boulder she’d used for initial observation, systematically field-dressing both kills. The work was mechanical now, muscle memory from too many hunts making her hands efficient even while her mind processed the engagement.

The Divine Tome’s interface floated in her vision, golden text scrolling updates:

SPIRIT BEASTS ELIMINATED (2)

Species: Mistwraith Cat (Mated Pair)

Cultivation Tier: Flamewrought (Mid)

Points Earned: 200

Conversion: 20 Nexus Merits

Hunt Bonuses:

Difficulty (Both mid-tier): +30

Numerical Overmatch (2v1): +10

Efficiency (Minimal damage): +8

Total Points This Hunt: 248

Total Merits Earned: 24.8

New Merit Balance: 406.50

Mission Progress: 1.63% toward Level 3 Contractor

(Nearly twenty-five Merits. That’s... that’s really good.)

Affirmative. Hunt bonuses significantly increased total yield. The efficiency modifier in particular—taking minimal damage against coordinated opponents, demonstrates tactical superiority.

She carefully wrapped the pelts—grey-blue fur that shimmered like mist even in death, worth good money to the right traders. The essence cores pulsed faintly with residual Inferno energy, warm against her palms as she stored them in her void ring.

But her hands kept returning to that moment when the male had twisted mid-air, when the female had used her committed attack as an opening. The precision of it. The trust it required between partners.

(They were so coordinated. Like they could read each other’s minds.)

Not telepathy. Experience and practice. Mated pairs that hunt together for years develop synchronized behavioral patterns. Each learns to predict the other’s actions through repetition and trust.

Trust. That was the key difference between the mistwraith cats and the ember foxes she’d fought months ago. The foxes had been a mob—overwhelming numbers with poor organization. But these cats had been a unit. A team.

Federation tactical doctrine addresses this differential. Individual combatants can be defeated through superior skill. Coordinated teams require tactical superiority—force multiplication through area denial, simultaneous pressure, or unit separation.

The Inferno Burst had been the right call. Catch them both in the blast radius, disrupt their coordination, and create the individual engagement opportunities she needed. But it had been expensive—thirty-five Qi for a single technique, plus the twelve for the shield, plus the Flame Lance and Whip.

Sixty-seven Qi total for that fight. Less than three percent of her pool, but still significant against only two opponents.

(What if there’d been three? Or four?)

Then we would have required different tactics. Multiple area attacks, environmental exploitation, and possibly tactical withdrawal to force them to pursue through prepared killzones.

Jayde stood, stretching muscles that had gone tight from the adrenaline crash. The mist was burning off now, morning sun filtering through the canopy in golden shafts that turned dewdrops to diamonds.

The Old Man’s journals had listed other pack hunters in the Mid Ring. Ashwolves that ran in groups of five to eight. Razorback boars that defended territory in family units. Even some of the flying beasts—the galehawks she’d killed before—formed nesting colonies that could swarm threats.

She’d gotten lucky with the cats. Mated pairs were manageable. But larger groups?

That would require new strategies.

Recommendation: Develop a doctrine for multi-opponent engagements. Prioritize techniques with area coverage. Consider trap-based approaches using Forgeweaving arrays. Acquire additional crowd-control capabilities.

(We’ll need to hunt smarter. Can’t just rely on being better than them individually anymore.)

Correct. Professional military operations succeed through preparation and tactical superiority, not merely superior firepower. You have the knowledge. Apply it.

Jayde looked out into the Mid Ring, where ancient trees cast long shadows and dangerous things prowled in coordinated silence. The galehawk hunt had taught her that preparation beat raw power. Today’s fight reinforced that lesson—coordination multiplied danger in ways simple strength couldn’t match.

But it also showed her the counter.

Disrupt their teamwork. Force them to fight as individuals. Use their own tactics against them by understanding how they operated.

The Federation had trained her to think like this. To analyze enemy doctrine, identify weaknesses, and develop countermeasures. Sixty years of tactical experience wasn’t just useful against human opponents. It applied to any threat that could think, plan, and coordinate.

Even mistwraith cats hunting in the mist.

She gathered her gear, checked her armor’s runic arrays—depleted but intact, would need six hours to recharge—and consulted the Divine Tome’s map. Other hunting zones deeper in the Mid Ring, other opportunities to test her growing understanding.

But for today?

Today she’d learned something important.

Pack hunters required a different approach than solo beasts. Required thinking three moves ahead, controlling space, denying their ability to support each other.

Required tactics.

And tactics? That was what she did best.

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