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Chapter 45 – The Yetis Cave

  Chapter 45 – The Yeti's Cave

  **[STEVE – FROZEN MOUNTAINS, CAVE ENTRANCE – 169 DAYS REMAINING]**

  The cave entrance was **colossal**.

  Not a natural opening carved by erosion or time — but a deliberate portal, **built** by something ancient that understood geometry and proportion. Twenty meters tall, perfectly symmetrical edges covered in blue-translucent ice that glowed with its own light even in the total absence of sun. Stalactites hung from the top like teeth of a sleeping beast, each the size of a spear, dripping water that froze into crystals before touching the ground.

  The air blowing from inside was **wrong** — not just cold, but a temperature that **burned** the lungs when inhaled, making the throat tear and Steve cough violently, blood staining his lips.

  And then they heard it.

  **ROOOOAAARR.**

  A deep, **bestial** roar, echoing off the walls like bottled thunder, reverberating until it made snow fall from the surrounding rocks in mini-avalanches.

  Not a distant sound.

  **Close**. Perhaps a hundred meters inside.

  **Waiting**.

  ---

  Dagon stopped abruptly — ears moving independently, triangulating the sound's origin, processing frequencies humans couldn't capture:

  — That's what I think it is... — Not a question. **Confirmation** laden with resignation and something that could be ancestral fear.

  Keara, checking her bow for the third time in two minutes, responded without looking:

  — Yes. Probably can only be **Yetis**.

  The word hung in the air like a sentence.

  Dagon clenched his fists until his fingers cracked — looking at the path they had come from, calculating distance, escape time, probability of survival if they ran now.

  The numbers weren't favorable.

  — Damn... — He turned to the group. — From what I can see, it won't be so easy to escape this trap. The old man **knew** exactly what he was sending us to face.

  His eyes focused on Steve — expression serious, voice dropping to a tone that indicated a **vital** conversation:

  — Hey, kid. After we go in... — heavy pause — ...don't let your guard down. Not for a **second**. Yetis aren't like corrupted wolves. They're **intelligent**. They hunt in packs. They plan. And they don't forgive intruders.

  Steve nodded — trying to project confidence despite the cold biting through three layers of clothing:

  — You can count on me.

  But his hands were trembling. Not just from the cold.

  ---

  Before anyone else spoke, **Jelim** started walking.

  Straight toward the entrance.

  Without hesitating. Without consulting. Without **looking back**.

  Her posture clearly saying: *waste of time discussing the inevitable*.

  — **Hey, Jelim! Wait!** — Steve stepped forward, almost slipping.

  She stopped. Turned with a mechanical movement — white mask reflecting the bluish light of the ice, no eyes but somehow **seeing** each of them:

  — We already **knew** there would be a trap here. — Her voice coming out muffled but carrying irritation sharp as broken glass. — Spare me the **drama** and let's go. Die from cold arguing or die fighting. Choose.

  She kept walking — her boots making no sound whatsoever on the snow.

  Dagon let out a long sigh that came out in a dense cloud of vapor, rubbing the bridge of his nose:

  — It's very hard to control that madwoman... — he murmured to himself.

  From inside the cave, Jelim's voice echoed — impossible for her to hear from that far, but she heard:

  — **I can hear you, dragon.**

  Dagon **froze** — literally, body going completely rigid, eyes widening.

  Then he shook his head vigorously, quickening his pace:

  — Let's go, everyone. Standing here we're only wasting time we don't have. We'll figure out how to deal inside.

  Steve replied:

  — Right.

  He started following — cautious steps over compacted snow that creaked threateningly under his weight.

  ---

  **Keara** stood still.

  Alone at the entrance.

  Watching the group move away — Jelim disappearing into the shadows as if she had never existed, Dagon following with shoulders too tense, Steve looking back once, expression worried, before continuing.

  *They don't know.*

  *They can't know.*

  *If they knew...*

  *...they'd judge me.*

  And then it came — **uninvited, it never was**.

  ---

  **[FLASHBACK]**

  *Small village. Twenty houses. Smoke rising from chimneys.*

  *A child running — small boy, four years old, disheveled brown hair, smile that lit up the whole world.*

  *"Mama! Mama! Look what I found!"*

  *Holding a large insect in his hands, proud.*

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  *Keara kneeling, smiling genuinely for the last time:*

  *"It's beautiful, my love. But I have to go now. Important mission. Back tomorrow."*

  *The smile vanishing from his face. Lips trembling:*

  *"Don't go, mama... stay..."*

  *Little hand holding her finger with impossible strength for something so small.*

  *"Mama... please..."*

  *She had let go of his hand.*

  *She had gone anyway.*

  *Because the mission paid well.*

  *Because "it would be just one day."*

  *Because she thought he would understand.*

  *When she returned thirty hours later—*

  *—the village was in **flames**.*

  *Twenty houses. All burning.*

  *Bodies in the streets.*

  *And he...*

  *...he had **disappeared**.*

  *Never found.*

  *Three years searching.*

  *Three years of guilt corroding from within like poison.*

  ---

  **[PRESENT]**

  The flashback **vanished** — as it always vanished, leaving a void that never filled.

  Keara blinked — returning to the present.

  Snow falling. Cold biting. The group moving away.

  A single tear ran — partially freezing on her cheek before falling, breaking as it touched the snow with a tiny sound no one else heard.

  She whispered — so low that only the icy wind witnessed it:

  — Wait for me... my boy. Wherever you are... **wait**.

  She breathed deeply — the air burning, hurting, reminding her she was still **alive** even when she didn't deserve to be.

  She wiped her face with the back of her hand — brusque movement, angry at herself for the weakness.

  She forced a smile that didn't reach her eyes:

  — **Wait up, everyone!** — voice coming out falsely cheerful, performative, **dishonest**.

  She ran to catch up — each step moving away from memories but never **escaping** them.

  ---

  **[INSIDE THE CAVE]**

  They crossed the threshold.

  Temperature **plummeted**.

  Not gradual — **instantaneous**, like diving into a frozen lake, thermal shock making the entire body convulse.

  -40°C. Perhaps -50°C. Impossible to know exactly, only that every breath was **agony** — the air cutting through the throat like ground glass, lungs protesting, the body begging to turn back.

  Steve curled up violently — hugging his own body, teeth chattering so hard he feared breaking them:

  — G-god... it's even **worse** in here... how does anything **live** in this?

  Dagon seemed less affected — dragon blood tolerated extremes — but still rubbed his arms, vapor coming from his nostrils in regular jets.

  Jelim showed **nothing** — not a shiver, not discomfort, as if she existed in a separate reality where temperature was an irrelevant concept.

  Keara walked in silence — bow ready, eyes not focusing on anything specific, lost in a place no one else could see.

  ---

  A corridor of ice.

  Wide enough for ten people to walk side by side. Tall enough to echo every tiny sound and amplify it into a disturbing cacophony.

  Walls **translucent** — not opaque, you could see **through** the ice, vague shapes frozen inside. A tree there. A skeleton of something large over there. And that... was that a **human hand** pressed against the surface from within, fingers frozen in a gesture of eternal despair?

  Steve quickly looked away.

  The ceiling dripped constantly — *drip, drip, drip* — water falling and freezing in the air, creating stalactites that grew **visibly**, millimeter by minute, formation accelerated by magic or some impossible natural phenomenon.

  The floor was **treacherous** — polished like glass in parts, covered in fluffy snow in others, impossible to predict which step would be safe.

  ---

  Fifty meters in.

  Steve slowed his pace — letting Dagon and Jelim advance.

  He looked back.

  Keara followed five meters behind — but **distant**, not just physically, eyes unfocused, breathing irregular.

  *Something is destroying her from the inside.*

  *Since when?*

  *Since the conversation about her brother?*

  *No.*

  *Before that.*

  *Long before.*

  He waited for her to catch up, voice coming out soft:

  — Keara... — not yet a question, just her name, offering an opening.

  She **startled** — like a frightened animal, body tensing, hand moving toward the bow instinctively before recognizing him:

  — S-Steve... — she forced a smile that was more of a grimace. — Yes?

  — Is everything okay with you?

  Long pause. Three seconds that felt like thirty.

  Then the lie came out too easily, too practiced:

  — Yes. Everything's fine, Steve. — Smile widening artificially. — No reason to worry.

  But her eyes **screamed** the opposite.

  Steve didn't insist. Didn't push.

  Simply nodded:

  — If you need to talk... I'm here.

  She blinked — surprised by kindness that demanded no immediate explanation.

  — ...Thank you.

  Such a small word carrying the weight of years.

  ---

  Dagon's voice echoed ahead — cutting through the moment:

  — **Enough romance back there!** We're almost at the lair. I can **feel** them now. Many.

  Steve quickened his pace:

  — These Yetis... are they really like the ones in the movies? Big, furry, savage?

  Dagon looked over his shoulder:

  — Bigger. Stronger. And **much** more intelligent than any movie showed. — Pause. — Don't underestimate them, kid. Fatal mistake many adventurers made. Once.

  The "once" hung in the air like a warning.

  Steve touched the sword on his belt:

  — Understood.

  ---

  Another hundred meters.

  The corridor widening gradually — ten meters wide, then fifteen, then twenty.

  Then they saw a **glow** ahead — not natural light, but blue-cold phosphorescence emanating from something organic, mushrooms perhaps, or crystals, impossible to say.

  Dagon made a signal — hand raised, fist closed.

  **Absolute silence. Zero movement.**

  They approached the walls — pressing against ice that burned even through clothing, moving centimeter by centimeter.

  They reached the edge of the chamber.

  Dagon peered — only his right eye going past the corner, body ready to snap back instantly if necessary.

  What he saw made his expression change completely.

  ---

  **A colossal chamber.**

  Easily a hundred and fifty meters in diameter — larger than a combat arena, larger than a city square. The ceiling arching forty meters above, disappearing into darkness even with the bioluminescence. Walls covered in ice formations that **pulsed** gently with pale-blue light, the rhythm almost like a heartbeat.

  And **Yetis**.

  Not a disorganized horde.

  **A community**.

  Steve peered too — breath catching.

  *Twenty? Thirty? Forty?*

  But not attacking. Not in a frenzy. Not prepared for war.

  **Living**.

  Two young ones **wrestling** — but playfully, rolling over the snow, laughing with deep sounds that were surprisingly... **joyful**.

  A female **weaving** something with plant fibers that couldn't possibly exist here — a blanket perhaps, or clothing for the cub playing nearby.

  A male sculpting ice with his claws — not destroying, **creating**, a shape emerging that looked like... a statue? Art?

  An elder sitting in an elevated position, three youngsters around him, gesturing while **teaching** something — language? History? Wisdom passed between generations?

  *They're not monsters.*

  *They're...*

  *...**people**.*

  ---

  Dagon returned, voice coming out in a whisper so low it almost got lost:

  — These Yetis are... different. Very different from the ones I've known. They have... **society**.

  Jelim responded — flat voice, no emotion:

  — A monster is a monster. Social structure doesn't change nature.

  Keara turned — eyes finally **focusing**, something awakening in her:

  — **No**. — The word coming out firm, first time since they'd entered. — Not all monsters are just destruction. Some **protect**. Some only want to live in peace. Some are parents trying to feed their children.

  She looked directly at Jelim — through the mask, as if she could see a nonexistent face:

  — If everything we don't understand is an enemy... then we're the true monsters.

  Jelim tilted her head — slow, calculated movement:

  — Kindness toward enemies **kills**, Keara. I learned that when I hesitated and my partner had his throat ripped out in front of me. Hesitation costs lives. Always.

  Steve stepped between them — voice low but **firm**:

  — Not everything needs to be solved with violence. Keara's right. If they have a society, maybe we could—

  — Decided to find **courage** to challenge me, Steve? — Jelim turned her mask toward him. — Interesting. First time since we met.

  Steve opened his mouth to respond.

  **Dagon** cut in — voice low but authoritative as distant thunder:

  — **Enough**. Both of you. **Now**.

  Everyone looked.

  — This is not the place for moral philosophy or existential discussions. — He pointed toward the chamber. — We have creatures in there. A mission to complete. Villagers waiting for our return. Focus. **Now**.

  Steve lowered his head:

  — Sorry. You're right.

  He turned to Keara — wanting to apologize for stirring up unnecessary tension.

  But as his body turned—

  **Fragment 001 PULSED.**

  Not gently.

  **Violently** — like being punched from the inside, energy exploding in his chest.

  **[SYSTEM FLASHES - RED]**

  **[ALERT: ANCIENT ENTITY DETECTED]**

  **[FRAGMENT REACTING: UNSTABLE]**

  **[RECOMMENDATION: RETREAT IMMEDIATELY]**

  Steve **screamed** — not from physical pain, but energy passing through every nerve simultaneously:

  — **AAAAHHH!**

  His body convulsed.

  His foot slipped — not coincidence, **consequence** of lost motor control.

  He tried to grab onto something.

  Only smooth ice.

  **He slid**.

  Not slowly.

  **Fast** — the floor slightly inclined, enough to accelerate, body sliding uncontrolled like a puppet without strings.

  — **STEVE!** — Dagon shouted, trying to grab him, fingers passing centimeters away.

  He crossed the entrance.

  Slid straight into the **Yeti chamber**.

  **THUD.**

  He stopped in the center — gasping, Fragment still **pulsing** painfully, world spinning.

  He raised his head with effort.

  **Absolute silence**.

  Every Yeti was watching.

  Forty-two pairs of eyes focused on him.

  The young ones stopped playing.

  The female protected her cub instinctively.

  The male dropped his sculpture.

  The elder rose slowly.

  And the **largest** — easily five meters even crouching, shoulders wide as a barn door, pure white fur except for black scars crossing his chest — stepped forward.

  Not with anger.

  With **fear**.

  He looked at Steve.

  Then back — at the female with her cub.

  At the **vulnerable** community.

  *Intruder.*

  *Threat.*

  *Protect my own.*

  *At any cost.*

  He straightened fully — reaching an impressive six meters.

  Chest expanding.

  Mouth opening.

  And he **roared**.

  **ROOOOOAAAAAARRR.**

  The sound **tore through reality** — vibrating at a frequency that made the ice on the walls **crack**, stalactites **fall**, snow descend from the ceiling in an avalanche.

  Steve covered his ears — useless, the sound passing through flesh and bone:

  — **DAMN!**

  ---

  **Keara** saw.

  Her Fragment also **pulsed** — responding to Steve's even without her understanding why.

  But she understood one thing:

  *He's going to die.*

  And her body **moved** before the thought finished.

  — **STEVE!**

  She crossed the entrance — not sliding, **running**, controlled, precise.

  Reached him in four seconds.

  Knelt beside him — hands checking for injuries:

  — Are you okay?! **Answer me!**

  Steve nodded — dazed, Fragment finally calming, but **intact**.

  Dagon shouted from the entrance:

  — **KEARA! STEVE! GET OUT OF THERE!**

  Both looked back — seeing Dagon and Jelim framed in the entrance, expressions tense.

  Then looked forward again.

  Where the Yeti leader stood.

  Not attacking yet.

  **Deciding**.

  *Kill the intruders?*

  *Or just drive them away?*

  He made his decision.

  He raised both arms — each one thick as a tree trunk, ending in hands the size of shields.

  And **slammed** them into the ground.

  **BOOM.**

  ---

  The impact was **seismic**.

  A shockwave spread — throwing snow in all directions, making the entire chamber **tremble**.

  The floor **cracked**.

  Not a small fissure.

  **Massive** — a black line spreading in a lightning pattern, branching, multiplying, crossing exactly where Steve and Keara stood.

  — **NO!** — Dagon **ran**, his form beginning to change, golden scales emerging.

  Too late.

  **CRACK.**

  The sound of the world **breaking**.

  The floor **gave way**.

  Steve felt it — not through hearing, but **touch** — the sensation of support disappearing, void surging from below.

  He looked at Keara — eyes wide, hands trying to grab onto something that didn't exist.

  She looked back — expression not of fear.

  Of **acceptance**.

  *Perhaps this is it.*

  *Perhaps I'll finally find him.*

  *On the other side.*

  And they **fell**.

  Together.

  Through the ice.

  Into **absolute** darkness below.

  The last sound was Dagon's scream — **"NOOOOOO!"** — echoing, distorting, fading as ice walls blurred past.

  Then only wind whistling.

  And cold.

  And falling.

  And **nothing**.

  ---

  **[DAYS REMAINING: 169]**

  **[STEVE & KEARA: FALLING - DESTINATION UNKNOWN]**

  **[DEPTH: 200+ METERS AND ACCELERATING]**

  **[FRAGMENT 001: REACTING VIOLENTLY]**

  **[DAGON: POWERLESS]**

  **[YETIS: WATCHING IN SILENCE]**

  **[WHAT EXISTS AT THE BOTTOM?: ???]**

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