Monster sees the opening the second Colt glances back. It is instinct more than calculation now—a rare moment where strategy dissolves into something more primal. He moves without hesitation, his body a swift, decisive force as he lunges. Colt barely has time to turn before Monster is upon it. His claws sink deep into the already wounded shoulder, dragging Colt down with a brutal, unrelenting force. Its body jerks, muscles straining in desperate resistance, but Monster's weight crushes against it, pinning it beneath him. The fight is already slipping from Colt's grasp, and they both know it.
The child wails behind them, high and trembling, but Monster doesn't allow the sound to shake his focus. He locks eyes with Colt, green meeting fiery amber, and for a moment, there is something almost like understanding between them. A warrior's acceptance. A parent's final realization. Colt struggles, but the strength is waning, the blood loss stealing its ferocity. Monster does not speak this time. No taunts, no final words to mark this moment. Just action. Just the swift, necessary motion of his fangs sinking into Colt's throat. The resistance is weak at first, then frantic for a few agonizing seconds—muscles tensing, paws scrabbling at his sides, a final, instinctive fight for survival. Then it fades. Colt stills beneath him, the breath rattling in its throat before stopping altogether.
Monster exhales sharply, his grip loosening only once he is certain there is no life left in Colt's body. He steps back, letting the body slump to the dirt, its eyes dulling, its protective stance permanently broken. The battle still rages around him, but in this moment, it feels distant. His gaze flicks toward the child—Filly—who stands frozen, her small frame trembling, her eyes locked on the unmoving corpse of her parent. Monster doesn't move at first, his gaze locked on the kit as she lets out a muffled, broken sob. For a fleeting moment, he feels something unfamiliar twist in his chest, a sensation so sharp and foreign it almost startles him. It isn't regret—no, he doesn't regret killing Colt. The other had posed a threat, to ThunderClan and to him personally. Elimination was a calculated, necessary move. But this—this—he hadn't accounted for.
The kit's cries cut through the cold logic of his thoughts, piercing and unrelenting. Her grief is palpable, a raw wound laid bare before him. He steps closer, the blood still wet on his muzzle glinting in the dim light, and she flinches, shrinking back against the roots of a nearby tree. Her small frame is curled defensively, her body language screaming fear and vulnerability. Monster stops, his paw hovering mid-step. He tilts his head, studying her with a calculating intensity. She's young—too young to be any threat to him or anyone else. Helpless, in fact. And yet, there's something in her eyes, even through the tears—a spark of something unbroken. That spark is what makes him pause, what makes him consider.
He could leave her here. It would be easier. The forest is cruel, and kits don't survive long without protection. Her death would be inevitable, just another casualty in a world that doesn't care. But as he looks at her, another thought creeps into his mind. She could be…useful. Not immediately, of course, but in time. A life shaped by him, molded to his will. Monster nods, as if sealing some unspoken pact. "Get up," he says, his voice devoid of softness but not unkind. "You're coming with me." She doesn't move at first, her small body still trembling. But something in his tone—or perhaps the sheer inevitability of the command—compels her to her paws. As she stumbles toward him, Monster glances back at Colt's corpse one last time. His thoughts are sharp and deliberate. She's mine now. My responsibility. My creation.