One of the dog-things darted towards Dominic’s front legs and he lifted a paw to swipe at it. Even if the blow had connected, he doubted it would have done much damage because his claws were still sheathed, but that was irrelevant since he missed by a mile.
A sharp pain from one of his back legs revealed that the attack to his front had never been intended to connect anyway.
The message flashed up briefly before his eyes, but strangely it didn’t distract him. Much. The knowledge seemed to enter his brain even before he’d read the message. There was no time to process it, though – not with these ankle-biters ripping at him.
Another dog-thing snapped at one of his forepaws; this time, he ignored it and turned awkwardly towards the one about to bite his back leg again. Snapping at the attacker, his teeth clicked together fruitlessly as he failed to corner the wily creature. In the meantime, the one he’d ignored before when it feinted took advantage of his lack of attention and landed a nasty bite on his front leg.
Growling in irritation – literally – he started trying to bite and swipe at the little buggers. They might be only a fraction of his size, but right now they were winning. At the same time, he had to be careful – losing his balance and falling over would be a bad thing here.
His tail hurt.
A lucky bite to his front paw made blood start to trickle down.
One of the dog-things actually jumped and managed to grip onto the loose skin at his throat.
The damage wasn’t actually any worse than the previous injuries – less than one of the bites to his back legs, in fact. However, having something gripping onto his throat and not letting go was a panic point for both Dominic and the lion passenger in his mind. Dominic because of his recent experience of being choked out by the very jaws he now controlled; the lion because of a natural instinct which drove it to protect its throat.
Panic wiped out thought from his human mind, the influence of both consciousnesses serving to amplify the fear. Dominic truly felt like a cornered animal, and that is when any creature is at its most dangerous.
As he stopped thinking and started just reacting, the awkwardness and precariousness left his steps. In their wake, they left sinuous feline fluidity. The dog-things were quick and agile, but in the face of a more powerful creature with just as much speed and agility, they could only fail.
Where before Dominic’s teeth had been clicking shut on empty air, now they found hot flesh and blood. As a dog-thing darted forwards, it found his jaws snapping down on its back. Dominic’s leonine canines pierced straight through its weak flesh and his bite pressure crushed its body.
Hot blood filled Dominic’s mouth. It should have made his stomach revolt, send nausea through his system; it didn’t. Instead, it made him feel hungry. With renewed vigor, Dominic whirled on the other dog-things, his claws out and teeth bared.
It didn’t all go his way – numbers were a power of their own. It turned out that there were in fact seven attackers in total, two more hopping out of the bush when he left that first one bleeding and broken on the ground. Still, the fact was that when they hit him, they left small wounds that trickled blood into his coat; when he got one of them, he either left them severely wounded or dead.
By the time he’d bitten three of them almost in half, and swiped another two severely enough with his claws that they were left limping and crying piteously, the two remaining seemed to have had enough. With a strange chirping sound, they turned tail and ran off. The two he’d hit with his claws tried to follow, but they could only limp slowly after their companions.
Strolling fluidly over, Dominic gave them the coup de grâce in terms of a crushing bite to their necks. Still on high alert, he surveyed the dead or dying dog-things around him, and then looked around his environment, all senses working together to inform him of any further danger.
It was when his lips lifted and nose scrunched as he breathed in through his mouth to get a better ‘taste’ of the air that he realised what he was doing. Coming back fully to ‘himself’ felt a bit like surfacing from a warm pool into cold air.
What happened there? He asked himself with concern. I...merged with the lion somehow? Or maybe ‘merge’ was too strong a word to use. Perhaps it was more that he’d leaned into the the leonine instincts buried within the mind cohabiting with his own and the body itself.
Suddenly, he realised what the issue had been before when he’d been moving: I was overthinking it. This body already knows how to move, how to fight. He’d been unconsciously trying to apply human movements to a distinctly non-humanoid body. When he’d stopped thinking, all that had fallen by the wayside and the leonine instincts had taken over.
Looking around at the scene surrounding him now was a different experience from a moment ago. His human mind felt sick at the sight of blood, nauseous at the entrails gleaming wetly in the sun. The stink of blood and other, worse, bodily fluids was clogging his nostrils, his sense of smell significantly better now than it had before.
Yet...Dominic found he didn’t care as much as he thought he should. It’s a different world, he justified to himself. I’m different. He’d already accepted the need to kill when he’d planned to hunt down a gazelle. Almost dying once had been more than enough for him; he wasn’t going to allow human morals to interfere with what needed to be done. I’m a lion now, he concluded. Lions kill and eat things so that’s what I need to do.
Of course, it helped that these things had been the aggressors – he felt no guilt over their deaths when he knew all too well that they would quite happily have taken him to pieces one small bite at a time. As for the smell of blood...he couldn’t forget how good it had tasted. An inveterate carnivore’s sense of taste was significantly different from an omnivore’s, it appeared.
I need to lean into the instincts of the lion, he concluded. But right now, he had other concerns. Status.
Status of Dominic Martin Cole / Leo
Species: Lion (body) / human (mind), Two-Souled
Progress to Evolution: 108/100PP Level up
Hunger level: 5%
Thirst level: 48%
Defensive abilities:
- Fur level 1 (1-2 slicing/piercing damage reduction, 2-3 crushing damage reduction)
Offensive abilities:
- Claws level 1 (5-10 slicing damage, 4-7 tearing damage, 1-2 piercing damage)
- Bite level 1 (32-50 crushing damage, 27-50 tearing damage, 25-35 piercing damage)
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General abilities:
- Muscular Body level 1 (max sprint speed 20mps; max sprint duration 10s) (21/45 SP)
- Carnivore Constitution level 1 (265/300 HP)
A thrill of elation went through him. Apparently each of those things must have been worth between 21 and 22 PP each. Whatever PP are. As soon as he thought it, he realised that he ‘knew’ the answer: prey points. The name seemed pretty self-explanatory, just like SP (stamina points) and HP (health points).
On that note, clearly he’d used a fair bit of stamina in the fight. In fact, based on the fact that he’d gone through more than half of his stamina and less than a sixth of his health, he’d have been more likely to collapse from lack of stamina than die from his health points hitting zero. At least, that’s what Dominic assumed happened with health points otherwise what was the point – pun intended.
Actually, was there a way of accessing the notifications that had flashed up during combat? Due to his state of mind, all he’d noted was that he’d caused damage and made kills. But it would be useful information to access the text later.
As he thought about it, a series of lines flashed up into his vision with exactly the information he needed. OK, this interface is more intuitive than I’m giving it credit for, he admitted. Although there were only six lines in front of him at any time, scrolling up or down to access the most recent or oldest messages was easy. He did notice, however, that it only seemed to be a damage log – damage taken and damage given. The messages that had come up in the black in-between space weren’t there, nor were any of the System ones since he’d arrived. Still, the damage log was exactly what he needed.
He skipped past the litany of damage taken, noting that they were all between 2 and 5, with 3 being the most common injury. Then came a more interesting set of three.
Skipping quickly through the rest of the damage log, he saw that he’d caused a varying amount of damage each time, but the total was never below 57 or above 65. The most interesting takeaway was that his damage types were additive. Dominic theorised that the damage potential of his bite was possibly as much as 135 if he maximised piercing, crushing, and tearing. And that was pretty awesome, though he wondered what impact the location of the bite made.
If he bit the back leg of something, would he be able to apply as much damage as the maximum? Could biting the back leg kill the creature if it had fewer than 135HP? Or would he only achieve maximum damage if he bit it in a vulnerable spot such as tearing out its throat?
All interesting questions to be answered later. However, the most exciting thing was that he could level up! It wasn’t only in his status screen, but also in his notification log.
Well, don’t mind if I do, thought Dominic with some excitement.