I'd like to make a quick note here. If you want to sleep soundly and have normal dreams, don't get involved in the supernatural. Seriously those fuckers take a sleeping mind to be a sign that you are open and willingly asking for business. They don't make you tired physically, but it can leave you frustrated and mentally strung out if you had a bad day and want some alone time or, gods forbid, sleep.
I woke up after the fight with the lycans as drained as I had been before sleep. My soul was drained far beyond what I had done in my two training sessions and had sort of thinned out to compensate. It fell to about half its normal size during the fight and for the time I was tapping into it with my extrasight, but as soon as I had relaxed my soul swelled out to its normal boundaries with what energy it had. This incurred a feeling similar to if you get up to fast, only ten time's worse. For a better analogy, imagine a jet pilot in a nose dive. So you can imagine I was quite content merely laying there on the dirt. That biting cold dirt. I tried shifting to a more comfortable position before I froze, in more ways than one. Dirt was not this cold.
I had gained the motivation to get up and look around. I was no longer in the forest I had slept in. A white blanket of snow covered everything as far as I could see. Some flakes were drifting out of the sky in a slow march. The horizon did a familiar curve upwards into the ceiling. There were mountains several miles away, although it took me a while to gauge their full size as they seemed to crawl up the walls. I knew this type of place. I was in someone's soul. I REALLY wanted to sleep.
Getting to my feet, I noticed I had torn up my shoes and pants. I would have some trouble explaining that, but figured that war for another time. I didn't see anyone around for miles, so I decided to head for the mountains. I got about twenty feet before the whole "no shoes in the snow" thing registered. I turned my feet into wood and grew an inch of bark to make do. The cold still seeped through, but it was workable.
After about an hour of walking, I started to get a little upset. I was tired, cold, and in dire need of some homemade dinner. Whatever was planned needed to happen sooner rather than later. Triggering my extrasight, I re-swept the horizon, picking up a few signatures. I immediately noticed there were several lycan souls around. They seemed to enjoy running around in packs in this terrain, as they didn't seem to have the stern seriousness about them that they usually have. It was the first time I really paid attention to what the soul of a lycan looks like. A standard human soul is a colored ball the size of the torso. It is big enough to have all the organs in it, but nothing else.
The lycan soul is shrouded in a mist. The mist covers an area large enough for the entirety of their transformed body to be covered, but it doesn't have the density of souls. The mist itself makes it hard to pin where they are with the extrasight, yet I could still make out the vague shape of their soul in there. When I looked closely, I saw a human and a wolf. They both seemed like nothing more than a shadow in the fog, both phasing In and out of sight, but it was clear that they both existed there at the same time even if one was more dominant than the other at any given time. Sometimes it would be a wolf head, and then would change to a human head. One moment it was a paw, the next it was a hand. I was entranced by this shifting existing. It seemed like it should be confusing, but there was a natural flow to it. I couldn't put my finger on what it was, but there was something primal that was guiding this change.
The cold began to penetrate my core as I walked up to the mountain. I had made a pretty steady pace in this cold because the snow didn't seem to pile up here. As I approached the base of the mountain, I was reminded of Everest. It wasn't that tall for a mountain, but it was completely covered in snow and was capped by a large ridge that looked like a giant knife edge. Something about it just seemed to beckon anyone nearby to climb. I started the ascent, determined to do it without my abilities. It felt wrong to do it any other way. The feeling is hard to describe. It was a subtle, yet overpowering compulsion.
Another hour of climbing saw me a quarter ways up the mountain. It only seemed like 1000 feet up, but it was all sheer cliffs straight up. The very stone seemed to be trying to discourage me, as it cut deeper than it should and burned with the cold. If I was more equipped or sturdier, I might have made it the whole way. As I was at the time, I saw a ledge on my right and climbed to it. It seemed to lead to a ledge with a frozen pool about fifty feet across. I climbed up and rolled onto the stone edge of the pool. Completely exhausted and out of breath, I did not see the lycans walk onto the lake.
There were six of them, a full pack, complete with an alpha to lead them in. The pack noticed me and started moving towards me. I almost deactivated my extrasight to conserve energy, and then I remembered the whiplash it caused last time. The alpha looked very different than the other lycans. He stood easily eight feet tall and had three inch claws on each paw. His eyes were completely yellow with a large black pupil and his teeth seemed longer than usual. The part that stood out was his fur. It was such a brilliant white and was riddled with scars. He wore rudimentary satchels around himself that were organized to show every battle scar. He looked ferocious, deadly, and very pissed to see me.
Instead I looked down to check the size of my soul. It had shrunk to a foot shorter than me. It was brighter than I had ever seen it before, about the level of a black light, and the soultree had a smaller balcony cut out for it. I wagered it was about 60% smaller. I would normally just o what I did last fight, but I didn't want to push it as this was my life essence. Instead I took in my situation and tried to think it through.
The ledge was three feet behind me, leading to a seven hundred foot drop. They might be able to climb, so that was out. They entered from a pathway that was 60 feet away. I would have to give them a diversion to pull that off. The cliff continued straight up everywhere else. Maybe they weren't hostile? No, they were moving into a half circle and closing in. My back was to the ledge so there was no retreat. It seems like I invaded their territory, so I wouldn't be able to scare them off either. I then thought back to my fight with the lycans. A cold lump settled in my stomach as I realized the only plan that could work here. I wasn't sure I could pull it off, but I wasn't about to just roll over dead.
"Hey, listen I didn't mean to come here, so I'll just be on my --" The two on the corners started moving to my sides. Well, I tried. I formed wooden spikes from behind my thighs to use as support and took a stance like I was about to wrestle. The other four wolves put the alpha in the back with a football line of the other three. 'Fuck territorial instincts.'
I had enough time for that one final thought before the two to my sides charged. I released the energy I had stored in my feet to make two long stilts shoot out. The lycans collided and snapped the wood with their bodies as I reformed the stilts into spikes. The two outside linebackers saw my plan and lunged at me. I smile das my plan worked perfectly. While the first part of their plan was thought out, the second part was pure instinct. Wolves try to bite and lunge. It was a powerful, lethal, and predictable.
I shot the energy through my spikes to plant them into the spikes I had placed from my thighs. The connection gave the leverage necessary to create two large elastic wooden whips and redirect the lunging lycans at the two on the ground. It took every ounce of coordination and focus to pull this off. I was rewarded with the sight of the four lycans careening off the cliff to their deaths. The last two stood shocked at the sudden change in the tides as I landed on my feet. I checked my soul again and saw I was at 30% capacity. I needed to end this quickly.
Taking the initiative, I charged the lycan in front of me and grew three spike arms from my wrist. I moved them around to make sure they would bend properly to my will. Putting my right hand on point, I extended them like four lances. The lycan ducked to my right and lunged. I was not expecting the speed and got tackled for my weakness. I didn't touch the ground for way too long before I hit the rock. The mark on my back took the brunt of the blow, but my eyes still flashed red with little black spots everywhere. My extrasight didn't fail thankfully, so I could still track their souls. It wasn't reliable for pinpoint, but I could tell he was over me with the mist everywhere. A wolf materialized in front of me in the soul. It looked right at me and snarled.
I should have been scared. Should have regretted the way I was about to die. Your life was supposed to flash before your eyes. The only thing I could see was the spots going away and my vision coming back. The lycans massive maw was coming towards my face. The ledge was right there, if I rolled off I could've made it with my abilities. I could run away and hope it didn't chase me. It sounded smart, but didn't really register as an option. I had to do something else until the end. I had to fight. And so I reached my arm back to punch that lycan son of a bitch in his smug giant head.
I poured every single bit of the energy I had into my entire arm. My arm reeled back before shaking with tension. It was like a tree branch bent back hard. It slammed into the side of his head knocking him out cold as I sat limply against the wall. The alpha stood close behind and looked at me. He growled in rage as he walked over to me. He dropped to all fours in front of me, turning the growl into a full snarl with his teeth showing. I looked him in his yellow wolf eyes and took a deep breath. Then I roared right back with the residual energy in my arm pouring into my voice. My immature little twelve year old voice mixed with the wind and fury of a forest. A typhoon's roar entered my lungs as I yelled and screamed my defiance to this wolf.
He leapt back a few feet and took a defensive stance. I laughed with the last breath in my lungs before I passed out. Everything rushed to black as my head fell limp. I heard one last thing, from a voice I had never heard before. It had a deep rumble to it, but showed a surprising degree of emotion for a lycan.