Taming the Wild Beast of Alamina-Chapter 83: Contamination

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Chapter 83: Chapter 83: Contamination

The drop was violent, highly precise, and silent. Arion landed in a crouch, with the impact absorbed by his gear’s reinforced joints. The snow beneath his boots was a sickly gray, stained with something that glistened like oil in the weak afternoon light.

The air struck him like a physical blow, thick with the stench of decay, musk, and something unsettlingly sweet, like overripe fruit left to rot. The pheromone miasma was so strong that it could be seen as a faint, shimmering haze that clung to the ground and coiled around the blackened tree trunks.

The two agents with him, Kael and Roric, landed in sync. Their breaths were immediately sharp and ragged, even through the filtration systems of their masks. Kael gave a clipped, choked cough into his comm. "Saturation is extreme. Inhibitors are at 80% capacity."

Arion didn’t need the report. He could feel the air being actively hostile. It pressed in on him, a weight that tried to seep into his lungs and cloud his mind. But his biology, the very thing that made him indispensable in situations like this, kept it at bay. His unadulterated dominance pheromones simply eliminated the incoming signal. It was like standing in a hurricane and not feeling the wind. The effect was absolute, but it wasn’t comfortable.

"Move out," Arion’s voice was a low growl, cutting through the hiss of the comms. "Visuals on target."

The village, or what was left of it, lay ahead.

The structures were sagging, as if their very molecular structure had been compromised. The wood splintered and warped with impossible geometry. Windows had not shattered but rather flowed like molten glass, freezing in grotesque, weeping patterns down the wall. A pickup truck was folded in half, its steel frame groaning around a tree trunk that had grown through its engine block in just a few minutes.

’Corruption’ was the only word for what Arion was actively seeing.

They found the first one near what had been the village square. It was exactly as Team Alpha had described: boar-sized and wolf-built, but the description failed completely.

Its hide was a mottled, shifting patchwork of black and bruised purple, with no eyes. Instead, a smooth, bony plate covered its face, revealing a shimmering haze of pheromones that pulsed in visible waves.

"Contact, front and center," Roric grunted, his voice tight with strain as he fought the air itself. "It’s just... standing there."

"No," Arion corrected, his gaze sweeping past the beast. "It’s not."

He pointed. Trailing behind the creature, a thick, viscous slime coated the ground. Where it touched, the snow sizzled, and from the sizzling earth, pale, sickly fungi sprouted, unfurling like ghostly fingers. Small rodents, caught in the miasma, were twitching, their bodies contorted, their spines arched in agony as they were forced to mimic the beast’s destructive impulses, mindlessly gnawing at their own limbs. 𝗳𝐫𝚎𝗲𝚠𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝘃𝚎𝗹.𝗰𝗼𝗺

Arion didn’t talk again.

The beast stood in the ruined square as if it had always belonged there, as if the village had simply been built around it.

The bony plate where its face should have been pulsed with pheromones so dense they became a kind of light, a low, sick glow that caught on the air and made it look unclean.

Behind Arion, Kael and Roric shifted in small, disciplined movements that still couldn’t hide the strain. Their masks filtered and filtered, but their breaths remained sharp, the sound of men struggling not to inhale the wrong thought.

The miasma thickened as Arion took one step forward, and for a moment the air behaved like water. The corruption on the ground responded too, like it had been waiting for permission to continue. The slime trail shivered, viscous and hungry, and the pale fungi along its edge unfurled again in a slow, obscene bloom of life imitation.

Arion’s dominance rose quickly.

The miasma stuttered.

It didn’t vanish, but it warped, its rhythm disrupted, the directed pressure that had been pushing toward Kael and Roric buckling as if it had met something too sharp to swallow.

Kael made a sound into his communicator - half cough, half curse - and his inhibitor canister hissed louder, fighting to keep his mind from wandering off.

Arion didn’t look back. He could feel them. He could feel how close the air was to turning their training into an idea they couldn’t hold.

The beast reacted.

The plate at its face flexed. The shimmer spiked toward them in the form of a spear, and Arion sensed the moment it chose direction. He felt its intention sharpen and aim.

Roric’s boots scraped back an inch on grey snow.

Arion drew his blade.

The blade drank the weak light, making it appear smaller, as if the weapon was designed to cut through nightmares rather than flesh.

The beast lunged.

It was too fast for a body that size. That was the first lie: built like a boar, moving like a starving and weightless creature. The second lie was the air around it, the way the miasma surged in its wake like a tide drawn by gravity.

Arion stepped into it, his shoulder sliding past the creature’s charge so close that the thick fur and corrupted hide brushed the edge of his sleeve, and for a flicker of a second the directed pheromones slammed at him - trying to pour fog into his mind, trying to turn his instincts into someone else’s property.

It met nothing... Or rather, it met him.

His biology answered with a clean, brutal refusal. Dominance was so absolute that it erased the incoming signal.

Arion took the fraction of disrupted momentum and turned it fatal.

The blade went in low, angled up under the beast’s heavy chest. He buried the blade to the hilt.

The beast made a noise that was not animal. It was wet. Wrong. Like breath dragged through rotting lungs.

It crashed into him with sheer force, trying to take him down out of rage or pain or some corrupted echo of survival.

Arion braced. Boots biting into stained snow. One hand locked into the beast’s shoulder fur, fingers sinking deep enough to find strength under filth. The other held the hilt steady as the creature convulsed around the blade, trying to turn its own death into violence.

The miasma surged off it in a thick plume.

Kael’s knees dipped like the air had punched him. Roric’s head snapped slightly, a reflexive flinch from a scent that didn’t belong in a human skull.

Arion felt the surge as pressure against his skin and his bones.

The beast was trying to spread, to make every living thing in range a limb of its own.

His jaw tightened from the effort and twisted the blade.

The creature convulsed more violently, and the bony faceplate cracked with a brittle sound that cut through the muffle of masks and wind, like a bone breaking. Spiderweb fractures spread, and the pheromone shimmer erupted in a violent, visible spill like smoke emanating from a sealed room.

For a heartbeat, the corruption on the ground reacted as if it had been wounded too, eager and mindless, trying to reclaim what was being taken.

Arion didn’t step back.

He tore the blade free with a single controlled motion and finished it in the same breath, a second cut across the throat where even nightmares had weak lines.

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