Chapter 119: Demon Wolf
Ian woke with a start.
Not the panicked, flailing kind of wake-up. No, this was worse. A slow rise. Breath steady. Muscles locked. Like his body knew something was wrong before his mind could catch up.
And then he felt it.
A presence.
Far off. Somewhere deep in the east. Past the merchant wards. Beyond the Outer Rings. Near the black cliffs.
A gaze.
Cold. Starving. Curious.
It wasn't looking at him exactly, it was looking through him. Like a wolf sniffing at the wind, unsure if it's prey or predator it's sensing, but wanting to find out either way.
He didn't move. Not right away. He just sat there, cross-legged on the floor of his rented meditation room, staring into the shadow-drenched corners like they might answer for the weight pressing on his spine.
Was this what the others felt before they vanished?Because this... wasn't spiritual pressure. It wasn't intent. It was something older. Rawer.
Predation.
He stood, slowly, flexing his fingers. Chaos energy pulsed in his veins like sparks caught in blood. Not enough to flare. Just enough to remind the world that he wasn't prey. Not easily, anyway.
Still. He needed answers.
And unfortunately, that meant heading to the one place he really didn't want to go.
The Inner Library of Ember Archives wasn't technically off-limits to outer sect disciples… but it might as well have been. The stone halls here were brighter. Cleaner. Even the air tasted more cultivated. Less ash, more sandalwood. And everyone looked like they were two breakthroughs away from stabbing you for walking too loud.
Ian didn't care.
He walked like someone with permission. Not because he had it, but because looking hesitant here was like painting a target on your back.
He took a side corridor, one not watched by glyph scribes or array recorders, and slipped into an unused reading alcove. Once there, he reached into his sleeve and pulled out a small jade square, barely the size of his palm.
It shimmered faintly.
A contact token. Dead, until activated by a name.
Ian pressed two fingers to the surface and whispered, "Third Bell, First Bloom, under Blackwater Vine."
The token pulsed once. Then again.
And then, with a flicker of chaos energy, a face appeared.
Old. Grumpy. Covered in ink smudges.
"Gods-dammit, Ian," the archivist muttered. "You know how much this costs me to encrypt?"
"I know," Ian said, voice low. "But I need to know something."
"Does it involve your usual obsession with forbidden beast lore and forgotten demon lineages?"
"Yes," Ian said bluntly. "And this time it's not theory. It's staring at me from the hills."
The archivist sighed. "You think the Demon Alpha Wolf's watching you?"
"No," Ian said. "I know it is. Last night, during my evening focus cycle, something brushed against my inner sea. Not a soul probe. Not a curse. Something... alive. Cold. Older than anything I've felt before. It's like it tagged me."
The archivist stared at him. For a moment, just dead silent. Then:
"...Holy shit."
Ian nodded grimly. "Yeah. That's about how I feel."
"You're screwed."
"Thanks."
"No, I mean legend-level screwed. The Demon Wolf only targets threats. High-value ones. Inner Elders, legacy line holders, flame-bearers. People whose souls scream 'this one can burn me.' If it marked you..."
"It means it thinks I can kill it," Ian finished. He looked at the token. "Why would it think that?"
The archivist leaned forward until his face filled the jade. "What did you do?"
"I may have vaporized a rogue assassin with chaos lightning."
A pause.
"...Okay, yeah, that'd do it."
Another pause.
"Wait, inside city limits?"
"Don't ask," Ian growled.
That night, the gazes got worse.
He didn't sleep. He didn't meditate. He sat in the center of a formation he personally etched into the stone with a borrowed star-forged blade. A chaos-stabilization matrix, combined with a low-grade mind veil and soul anchor loop.
It should've blocked any spiritual sensing.
And still…
He felt the breathing.
Not loud. Not huffing. Breathing. Like something massive was lurking just outside the edge of his perception, mouth slightly open, tasting his fear.
Why him?
Why not the inner disciples?
Why not the Sect Master?
Then he remembered something Elder Sa Lin had said. "They're targeting knowledge holders."
And something Lei Xu had said. "They remind us what we could become."
Ian wasn't just a threat because of power.
He was a threat because of potential.
Because Chaos didn't follow the rules. Chaos wasn't bound by sect doctrine or tradition.
And that made him unpredictable.
Unpredictable enough to kill a Demon Wolf, maybe.
Or to become one.
The thing about the Demon Alpha Wolf?
It wasn't just a beast.
It wasn't some spirit-bound hound or mutation gone wild. It was legend. Cautionary tale. The kind of thing whispered in cultivation manuals with vague phrases like "origin unknown" or "ancient terror that walks like a shadow."
It wasn't just strong, it was precise. It didn't slaughter villages or fight wars. It hunted people. One by one. People who might've become problems. Who might've broken rules too hard. Who might've… risen too fast.
Because that's what the Wolf did best.
It culled.
And in a world where power came from climbing, bleeding, killing, something that culls the ambitious? Yeah. That's terrifying.
It had a coat blacker than moonless void, and eyes that didn't glow, they devoured. It moved without sound. Without pressure. Like a living piece of absence. Not stealth. Subtraction.
They said if you saw it and felt fear… it was already too late.
And tonight?
It walked straight into the heart of the sect.
Just heavy silence as it passed through the outer rings. No disciples stopped it. No glyphs flared. Not a single barrier slowed its pace. Because deep down, the city recognized it.
Not as enemy.
But as something… necessary.
A force that kills before a threat grows into a catastrophe.
But what happens when it gets it wrong?
What happens when the thing it hunts…
Is already beyond it?