Ultimate Magus in Cultivation World-Chapter 267: Hunt III

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The echoes of growls slowly faded, replaced by the steady rhythm of breathing—human and beast alike.

The Shadowfang Alphas strained against the bindings, muscles coiling beneath dark fur, amber eyes burning with intelligence rather than blind rage. They were restrained, not broken. Watching. Learning.

Ling didn't lower her guard.

"Secure the knots again," she said quietly. "No rush. Assume they'll test us one last time."

Lei Feng moved first, re-anchoring the ropes into the rock with practiced efficiency.

"…They're strong," he muttered. "…but they've stopped resisting blindly. They're gauging us."

"That's what makes them dangerous," Yue replied, tightening a binding near the Alpha's hind leg. "…They adapt."

Mu Chen planted his staff firmly, sensing the ground.

"…No incoming movement. The rest of the pack has withdrawn. This was a probe—and we passed."

Han Yi straightened, wiping sweat from his brow, eyes never leaving the restrained predators.

"…They wanted to see if we'd fracture. One mistake… one person isolated…"

Ling nodded once.

"…And they would've dismantled us."

She stepped closer to the lead Alpha, meeting its gaze. There was no fear there—only calculation. Respect, perhaps.

"…You lost today," she said softly, more to herself than the beast. "…But you're still alive. Learn from it."

With careful coordination, they applied the final restraint seals—non-lethal suppressors designed to dull aggressive response without damaging the creature's core. Slowly, the Alphas ceased struggling, muscles relaxing into tense stillness.

Only when the last seal was set did Ling finally lower her hand.

"…Mission complete. No casualties. No lethal damage."

Silence followed.

Then—slow footsteps echoed from behind.

The mist parted as Tian Lei emerged from the canyon's upper path, cloak stirring faintly in the cold air. His eyes swept over the scene in one measured glance: the bound Alpha pack, the intact formation, the team still standing—exhausted, but whole.

"…Acceptable," he said. 𝕗𝐫𝚎𝗲𝘄𝐞𝕓𝐧𝕠𝘃𝕖𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝚖

Not praise. Not yet.

The team straightened instinctively.

"You were pressured," Tian Lei continued, walking among them. "Outnumbered. Surrounded. Facing predators that exploit impatience and ego."

He stopped beside Ling.

"…And yet you did not rush. You did not chase victory—you controlled it."

His gaze shifted to each of them in turn.

"Han Yi—your footwork kept the first breach from becoming a collapse."

"Mu Chen—you read the ground before the enemy committed."

"Yue—your precision prevented escalation."

"Lei Feng—you shaped the battlefield before the battle truly began."

Finally, back to Ling.

"And you," he said quietly, "…never lost the rhythm of your team."

Ling inhaled slowly, shoulders finally relaxing.

"…We trusted the process. Step by step… together."

Tian Lei nodded once.

"…Good. Because this was not the real test."

The team stiffened.

"The Shadowfang Alphas were intelligent," he continued. "But they were still predators."

He turned toward the canyon's deeper stretch, where the mist thickened and the light dimmed unnaturally.

"…What awaits next will not hunt you for hunger. It will hunt you for intent."

Lei Feng's grin returned—thin, eager.

"…So this was just the threshold."

"…Yes," Tian Lei replied. "…And you crossed it alive."

He gestured upward.

"Recover. Tend to your injuries. Tonight, you rest."

His eyes sharpened.

"Tomorrow, you learn what it means to fight something that understands formation as well as you do."

The wind shifted through the canyon, carrying a low, unfamiliar resonance—something deeper than a growl, heavier than a footstep.

Ling felt it in her chest.

She met her team's gaze, resolve settling back into place.

"…Step by step," she said.

Han Yi smiled tiredly.

"…Together."

And somewhere beyond the canyon walls, something listened.

The return was quieter than the descent.

The canyon released them slowly, mist thinning as the path widened, the oppressive weight lifting just enough for fatigue to settle in properly. No one spoke much. They didn't need to. Every step back toward the academy was measured, synchronized by habit now rather than command.

By the time the lantern-lit gates came into view, their muscles burned and their breaths were steady but heavy—controlled exhaustion, the kind earned through survival.

The healers were waiting.

Minor wounds were treated in silence: claw grazes sealed, bruises eased, strained tendons bound. Nothing serious. That, in itself, was a victory.

Only after the last bandage was tied did Tian Lei dismiss them with a single nod.

"Rest," he said. "But do not let your minds dull. Tomorrow begins before dawn."

That night, sleep came unevenly.

Han Yi dreamed of mist closing in from all sides—no beasts visible, only shifting shadows that moved in perfect coordination. Every time he struck, the target wasn't there anymore.

Mu Chen lay awake longer than the others, staff resting across his palms. The ground beneath the academy felt… quieter than usual. Not calm. Watchful.

Yue sharpened her blades slowly, deliberately, replaying every movement from the canyon. Where she had hesitated. Where she had nearly overcommitted. She corrected the motions again and again until her hands moved without thought.

Lei Feng studied maps by lantern light, marking elevation changes and choke points with increasing frustration.

"…If it's thinking like a unit," he muttered, "…then traps alone won't be enough."

And Ling—

Ling stood by the open window of the strategy hall, looking out toward the northern cliffs. The wind carried that same low resonance again, faint but unmistakable.

It wasn't the sound of a beast.

It was rhythm.

"…Formation-aware," she whispered. "…So it observes. Anticipates. Learns."

For the first time since becoming team lead, the weight on her shoulders felt heavier—not because of doubt, but because the next opponent wouldn't test strength or speed.

It would test decision-making under pressure.

Dawn came sharp and cold.

The team assembled before the bells, gear ready, eyes clear despite the fatigue. Tian Lei waited for them at the edge of the inner training grounds—not with maps this time, but with empty space.

"You adapted to predators," he said without preamble. "Now you will adapt to opposition."

He raised one hand.

The ground shuddered.

From the far end of the training grounds, five figures emerged—humanoid in silhouette, wrapped in muted armor etched with faint formation sigils. Their movements were synchronized down to the angle of their steps.

Training constructs.

But not ordinary ones.

"They will mirror you," Tian Lei said calmly. "Your spacing. Your timing. Your habits."

The constructs stopped, perfectly aligned.

"…They will exploit any pattern you repeat."

Han Yi swallowed.

"…So if we fight like ourselves—"

"…You lose," Tian Lei finished. "Unless you evolve mid-battle."

Ling exhaled slowly, eyes narrowing—not at the constructs, but at her own team.

"…Then we don't fight as we did yesterday."

She raised her hand—not in command, but in invitation.

"…We break rhythm. Change roles. Adapt faster than they can copy."

Yue's lips curved slightly.

"…Unpredictable synchronization."

Lei Feng cracked his knuckles.

"…Now that sounds fun."

Mu Chen planted his staff.

"…I'll disrupt their readings. Force misinterpretation."

Han Yi rolled his shoulders, stance loosening.

"…Guess we stop being comfortable."

Ling nodded once.

"…Step by step," she said, voice steady—but sharper now. "…Together. But never the same way twice."