Chapter 16: GHOM (Part 3)

It had to die. 

The mere idea of retreat—or giving this thing even a momentary opening—was intolerable. Not because I believed I was stronger, but because the alternative meant being overrun, devoured, and reconstituted as a footnote in this… ecosystem of rot. Not to mention all of the pour souls it'd take after it ate me.

My zanpakutō flashed in the jaundiced illumination as I flash-stepped, closing the gap between us in a heartbeat. My mind ran calculations before I could blink: center-of-mass, possible weak points, momentum vectors, the odds of my blade even registering as a threat. 

The monster's bulk was horrifying, but what stood out wasn't the size—it was the density. The concentrated presence. Ghom felt less like an enemy and more like a singularity: a gravitational well that pulled every law of survival inward, crushing reason and fear to paste.

I slashed for its gut, the blade hissing through a membrane of necrotic tissue. The wound opened wide and deep, gushing slime and liquefied organ, the color and viscosity of a septic tank mid-backup. Some of it spattered my cheek, instantly turning skin numb. 

I gritted my teeth, clinging to the adrenaline, and wrenched the blade free as the wound began to close, slower than expected, but enough to keep my pulse spiking.

Ghom didn't scream. He didn't even wince. Instead, there was a sound—subsonic, more felt than heard, vibrating through the fungal-velvet underfoot and into the cartilage scaffold of my bones. A low, rumbling purr, rich and sickly with amusement. 

On its face—if that was the word—a mask of rusted iron, fused directly to blistered flesh by centuries of corrosion and heat. The jaw unhinged, lips peeling back in what might have been a smile if not for the ragged tangle of tongues and rows of glassy gray teeth.

"Mmm," Ghom rumbled. "You cut… delicious. Do it again."

There was no pain, no fear, only glee. He wanted it. He wanted me to carve him up, to taste the fresh air in his wounds. The invitation was so perverse that my hand trembled, just for a moment, but I steeled myself and attacked again, flash-stepping to his left and targeting what might've been a kidney if this thing's biology had ever read a textbook.

The zanpakutō opened a new seam, thick yellow-green fluid spurting with so much force it coated the wall behind us. The stench hit me like a rugby tackle—ammonia, decay, a cloying sweetness that was somehow worse than pure rot. 

I nearly gagged, eyes watering, and that's when I realized: the stink was a weapon. The chamber shook with another purr, louder this time, vibrating through the heaps of corpses like a tuning fork made of meat and despair.

Ghom's left arm—a swollen log of muscle, bristling with bone spurs and leaking pus at every joint—swung at me. I ducked, let it pass overhead, then drove my blade into the armpit, angling for a major artery. The limb barely slowed, and I felt the sword snag on something deep within, maybe a tendon, before a sudden twist threatened to wrench it out of my hands.

I abandoned finesse, planted a boot against his bloated side, and yanked until the blade came free with a hideous sucking sound. The wound should have crippled the arm—should have, but didn't. Instead, it flexed experimentally, as if testing a new range of motion.

"Meals that struggle are seasoned better," Ghom teased, voice sloshing with glee. It spun to face me, leaking from a dozen fresh gashes but otherwise unconcerned.

The iron mask caught the light, eyes burning with a hunger that was almost intimate. I felt, somehow, like prey in a laboratory maze—every zigzag, every frantic leap, observed and relished.

I flash-stepped away, putting distance between us, and took stock of my situation. My blade was slick with whatever passed for Ghom's blood. My arms and face stung everywhere the fluid had touched. The creature had not slowed, had not staggered. If anything, it seemed… invigorated.

My thoughts churned. Every slice, every puncture, was met with deranged pleasure. The wounds weren't closing by regeneration, not exactly—they were cannibalizing themselves, folding in nearby matter to fill the gap. The process was disturbingly efficient, like watching a time-lapse of decay in reverse.

I looked around, and it clicked: the piles of remains, the web of veins and tendrils lining the walls, the way the stench seemed to pulse in time with Ghom's voice. The entire chamber was part of him. An extension of his will. An unholy digestive tract, always hungry, never satisfied.

My hand tightened on the hilt. "So that's it. Not just a body—an ecosystem. The boundary between flesh and environment is gone."

Ghom's mask creaked, jaw opening wider. "Clever food. The first to understand. The first to see the rules for what they are." He gestured with a half-severed arm, chunks of flesh peeling off as he moved. "Slice. Cut. Gnaw. I will take it all."

His words echoed, bouncing off the chamber's slick organic walls and returning, warped and magnified. I felt a shiver, not of fear but of recognition. This was more than a fight. It was a closed system, and I was the only new variable left to be metabolized.

I pivoted. Changed tactics. The next flash-step was a blur—a rapid zigzag, unpredictable, designed to throw off even a predator's predictive model. I targeted the spine, then the secondary mouths, then the assortment of cysts and pulsating organs near his lower back. Each attack landed, and each time Ghom's purr deepened, the tone of pleasure rising to a near-orgasmic buzz.

"Keep cutting," Ghom moaned, stomach distending obscenely with every word. "I like to feel you trying."

I could feel him learning. Each feint, each change in angle, was logged, digested, and countered a moment later. He was growing faster, more deliberate. The wounds started to close before I'd even finished the cuts, and the mass of muscle and tissue beneath the surface began to ripple in anticipation.

I was running out of time—and out of tricks.

That's when Ghom's body convulsed, all at once. The slits along his back snapped open, like grotesque gills, and a thick green vapor erupted with horrifying speed. I didn't even have time to hold my breath; the cloud was everywhere, a burning miasma that clung to skin and lungs, eating at the spirit as much as the flesh. My vision doubled. My legs felt weak. I staggered and nearly lost my grip on the sword.

The cloud had a taste. Bitter and sour, undercut with a chemical tang like fresh paint and bleach. I recognized the evolutionary logic: bait the prey with something alluring, then overwhelm with toxins. I coughed, felt blood in my throat, and reflexively flared my reiatsu, creating a thin shield around my body. The pain receded, but only slightly. It still burned.

Through the haze, I saw Ghom watching me, eyes calculating.

"Most things just die when they breathe it. But you… you're different. More… resistant."

I didn't waste words. My thoughts ran on pure survival calculus now. I forced a surge of reiatsu outward, shoving the air and toxic haze back with an almost physical violence.

For a few heartbeats, I carved a safe zone in the suffocating atmosphere—a bubble of vacuum in a sea of putrid rot. The flesh-laden "ground" beneath us cracked and buckled under the pressure, geysers of green ichor spurting up, only to ooze shut a second later.

The green miasma swirled and churned throughout the cavity. I was irritated to see that the weight of my intense spiritual pressure didn't faze this thing at all. So I let it all out, my reiatsu in full, something I've only done a few times before.

"All that magical energy, oh what a wonderful morsel you'll be. Maybe the tastiest thing I've devoured in a long while." The creature gave a low guttural laugh. "But puny energy like that won't affect me."

If I wasn't worried before, now I was. The full weight of my reiatsu could crush lower level strays into dust. I channeled more reiryoku into my blade, hoping to add spiritual cutting power to its physical edge. My latest rank increase for Reiryoku Body Enhancement let me channel it into my sword, since I treated it as an extension of my body.

The zanpakutō gleamed brighter, but remained silent—no resonance, no connection to my inner spirit. Just cold steel enhanced by raw power. I was really getting irritated with my spirit. But now wasn't the time.

I didn't waste words. My thoughts ran on pure survival calculus now. I forced a surge of reiatsu outward, shoving the air and toxic haze back with an almost physical violence. For a few heartbeats, I carved a safe zone in the suffocating atmosphere—a bubble of vacuum in a sea of putrid rot.

The flesh-laden "ground" beneath us cracked and buckled under the pressure, geysers of green ichor spurting up, only to ooze shut a second later. Even at full blast, my spiritual pressure didn't rattle Ghom. If anything, he seemed to savor it.

I kept moving. No point standing still and trading stares with a monster whose only hobby was biological warfare. I flash-stepped behind him, targeting the base of his skull—if he even had one—and slashed. The edge of my blade, supercharged with reiryoku, sang as it bit deep, carving through dermis, cartilage, and down to the marrow.

The wound hissed, then instantly puckered shut, the severed flesh bubbling as it pulled itself together, greedily slurping down my attack as if it were gravy on mashed potatoes.

Ghom turned, his iron mask twisted into a leer.

"So spicy. So eager." He rolled the syllables around his mouth, savoring them as if he could taste my desperation.

"Not like the others. You want to win."

He reached for me, movements lazy but inexorable, like a planet casually repositioning its moons. I dodged, but the wide arc of his fist generated a backdraft that nearly toppled me.

The air pressure alone was enough to rip the leaves from the trees outside, should any have survived the encroaching tumor of this fleshy underworld.

I pressed the attack, shifting my strategy with every step. Joints, eyes, nerve clusters—any point on the body that might conceivably induce real pain or at least compromise the structure.

My zanpakutō became a blur, an angry white flicker in the darkness. I jabbed, slashed, and twisted, each strike finding new targets: the soft spot behind the knee, the loose skin in the underarm, the cluster of pulsating glands along the neck.

Every time, the result was the same. The wound would open, then instantly close, occasionally burping a little cloud of spores or a trickle of acidic blood.

Once, I managed to slice clean through one of the secondary mouths, neatly decapitating its cluster of teeth and tongue. The severed head hit the ground, writhing like a snake, then instantly rejoined the central mass, re-melding as if stitched by an invisible surgeon on speed. The brief, gory ballet made me want to vomit.

Ghom only laughed, the sound vibrating through the entire chamber. "You fight like you're afraid of getting dirty. Let loose! Make it a real hunt!" It taunted like getting its blood on me wouldn't evaporate my skin if I let it.

I remained calm and focused, analyzing every movement, every twitch of his muscle, every ripple of vapor that wafted off his back. My mind flicked through possibilities, data points accumulating with each exchange.

He was studying me, too. Every feint and flick of my blade went into his memory, chewed up and digested into a smarter, more predatory approach. Already, Ghom's reactions were faster, his attacks more precise, less random. He was crafting a counter-predator, molecule by molecule, right in front of me.

I tried a new angle: instead of attacking, I redirected my energy into defense, pushing out a reiryoku shield so dense it crackled and sparked against the ambient miasma.

Then, while Ghom was distracted by the sudden shift, I flash-stepped to the very edge of the chamber, drawing his attention away from the maze of organic pipes and fleshy columns that lined the walls.

For a moment, I hung back and studied the domain itself. The entire place was a living extension of Ghom—every inch of it connected by vasculature and nerves, a single biomechanical system.

The idea was grotesque, yet somehow elegant. I wondered if I could turn that dependency into a liability.

He seemed to notice the pause in my assault.

"Is the food tired? You still need more seasoning!" Ghom jeered, voice echoing off the meat-wrapped walls.

"The last one danced much longer before he was devoured."

I scanned for any sign of that "last one," but there was nothing left—just liquified residue and the faint psychic impression of despair. It fueled my determination, even as my own lungs started to burn from the ever-thickening haze.

I fueled another attack, this time angling for a stalactite of bone hanging from the ceiling. I carved a wedge of reiryoku around it, severing the point and sending the massive spike tumbling down toward Ghom. He caught it with a single hand, crushing it to powder with a lazy squeeze.

But the distraction bought me what I needed: a split second to study the way the wounds reacted, how the veins in the walls pulsed in time with his heavy, gluttonous breathing.

I realized that every injury I inflicted was instantly patched over by pulling biomass from the environment—the domain itself was his buffer, his healing pool.

I needed to starve the system.

All the while, the air got thicker, the green fog now dense enough to blur the outlines of Ghom's grotesque body, making him seem less like a creature and more like a primordial force.

I could feel the acid in the mist clinging to my skin, eating into the fabric of my uniform, even starting to bite through my Reiryoku Body Enhancement. The longer I stayed, the more my body felt like it was dissolving into the scenery.

Ghom must have sensed my flagging resolve. He reared back and let loose a fresh wave of the chemical cloud, this one far more potent, more caustic, than before.

I tried to shield myself, but the mist wrapped around my legs and arms, burning through layers of spiritual armor and raising angry welts wherever it touched.

I gritted my teeth and focused. If I couldn't out-fight or outlast this thing, I had to out-think it. The domain was a closed system. If I could set off a chain reaction—anything strong enough to disrupt the entire network—maybe, just maybe, I could force Ghom to play by new rules.

My brain scrambled through options. Fire? Unlikely, in a damp, meat-filled cavern. Electricity? Maybe, if I could find a way to generate enough of a charge and deliver it through the wet, conductive walls. Or maybe—

Ghom lurched forward, his arm transforming mid-motion, the skin splitting and folding back to reveal a cluster of barbed hooks strung together with living sinew.

He whipped it at me, the hooks moving so fast they whistled. I barely dodged, feeling one of them graze my cheek and leave a trail of stinging pain behind.

I moved to counter, but Ghom wasn't done. He opened his maw wide, and vomited forth a stream of black-green mucous, a pressurized acid jet that hissed as it hit the ground. Ghom whipped his head up, slashing the air with the high pressure stream of acid. The stream reached the wall behind me and ceiling above me.

I flashed to the left to dodge the deadly beam. The stream, the size of a small coin, cut through the entire environment, letting in the moonlight from what seemed like another world shine in. The small gap quickly healed itself just as Ghom had done with its body.

The acid attack clipped my right thigh and instantly burned through skin and muscle. I bit back a scream, forced myself to keep my feet, even as blood and acid dripped together to the hungry ground. The ground seemed to ungulate with every drop of my blood that fell onto it.

"Appetizer," Ghom taunted, his words now wet and bubbling with pleasure. "I wonder what the main course will taste like."

I limped backward, trying to keep weight off my injured leg. My mind went into overdrive, searching for any remaining edge. The smell of burning flesh mixed with the cloying sweetness of decay, and I realized I was very nearly out of time.

It was then I noticed a pattern in the walls—a repeating structure, like a lattice of bone and nerve, pulsing with every heartbeat of the beast. The green vapor was densest around these nodes; they were clearly the distribution centers for the miasma. If I could disrupt even one of those, I might create an opening.

I gathered my reiryoku, forced it into my zanpakutō until the blade hummed with barely-contained power, and flash-stepped with everything I had left to the largest of the bone-lattice nodes. Ghom reacted instantly, swinging his barbed arm like a whip, but I was faster—just barely. I brought the sword down in a full-body arc, slicing clean through the core of the node.

The effect was immediate. The green fog recoiled, the lattice spasmed, and for a split second, Ghom's entire body seized up, as if I'd triggered a stroke. The connective tissue that ran between him and his environment went slack. The wounds I'd inflicted earlier—dozens of them—gaped wide, leaking precious matter onto the floor. Ghom roared, this time in real pain, and the sound nearly deafened me.

But the moment passed. The beast fought through the shock and with a titanic contraction, reabsorbed the leaking tissue, sealing the wounds with even more force than before. The green vapor resumed, if anything thicker, darker, more caustic.

But I'd bought myself a tiny window. It could be hurt. The domain could be used against it.

The acid mist was burning me alive, but not efficiently enough. My arms were stippled with cherry-red welts, and my uniform crackled at every seam as the caustic fog chewed through the fibers.

My reiryoku protected me from the worst of the damage, but every minute my energy drained, became slightly less robust. Maybe that was Ghom's real plan: boil me down, like stock, until I was nothing but sweet, vulnerable syrup.

Delightful.

I tried not to dwell on the pain or the exhaustion. I'd trained for this sort of attrition, even if I'd never exactly anticipated being dissolved alive by a primordial devil in a cave made of recycled corpses. You couldn't find that on a syllabus, not even at Kuoh Academy.

I kept my mind on the task and scanned the ceiling again, mapping the topography of death above me. Where the fleshy vault was thinnest, it bulged dangerously, a patchwork of almost-membrane trembling with every vibration.

Inside those pockets, gas writhed and pressed, the colors luminous and sickly under Ghom's bioluminescent glow. It was easy to guess what kind: methane, most likely, with a strong admixture of hydrogen sulfide and ammonia from the necrotic soup below.

The scientist in me wanted to know more, maybe run a sample through a field analyzer. The rest of me—the part that preferred not to get eaten by an interdimensional horror—wanted to set it on fire and improvise the rest.

Ghom was watching me. Even as he advanced, his attention never wavered, those predator's eyes tracking every micro-movement, every quick inhale, every twitch of my sword hand. He was learning, adapting. I couldn't afford to let him finish the lesson before I flipped the table.

"Running out of tricks, meat?" he taunted, his voice a low, rolling thunder that vibrated in my ribs.

"The last one tried to hide, too. He's still in here, you know. I just don't remember where I put him."

Now that was a detail: the implication that the domain kept everything, didn't easily let anything go. I wondered briefly if, somewhere in this hellscape, bits and pieces of Ghom's previous meals were still screaming.

I needed to move. Fast.

I reached into my inventory and palmed the first of the gasoline containers. It was unromantic, maybe, but nothing burned like the classics. The plastic jugs were still cool to the touch; I'd bought them by the dozen from a hardware store several months back, a contingency for stray devil disposal. I'd never expected to use them like this.

Ghom cocked his head(s?).

"What's that? Something to spice up the flavor?"

I didn't answer. Instead, I flash-stepped to the edge of the cavern and started pouring. The gasoline splashed across the undulating floor, beading and pooling in the deep grooves between muscle fibers and down the sides of veiny protrusions.

Ghom reared back, nostrils flaring. "That's new," he said, uncertain. "But it won't help you. I can eat anything."

"Eat this," I muttered, and flash-stepped again, painting a serpentine trail of accelerant through the maze of columns and gibbering flesh-piles. Wherever I went, I left a glistening stripe of gasoline.

Some of it soaked directly into the biological flooring; some of it pooled in hollowed-out eye sockets or the pitted depths of exposed bone. All of it smelled like opportunity.

For a moment, it seemed almost comedic. The big scary monster, and the harried human with a couple plastic jugs. But I knew how exothermic reactions worked, and I had faith in basic chemistry. Good thing this thing didn't

Ghom lunged at me, this time with real intent—his massive right arm uncoiling like a piston, fingers splaying to rake through the air. I backstepped, but the force was enough to send a shockwave through the entire chamber. Gasoline sloshed in my grip, splattering up my sleeve and onto my face.

I blinked the sting away, ducked under his next swipe, and upended the container over a dense cluster of pulsating glands. The liquid hissed as it made contact, the surface tension rippling with each of Ghom's steps.

I felt his attention sharpen, like a knife-edge. "You're stalling," he said, and at that moment I realized he was right. I couldn't afford to drag this out—not when every second let the acid fog eat deeper into my skin, or his brain adapted further to my patterns. Ghom wasn't just a beast; he was a self-updating algorithm in a sack of wet meat.

I finished the first container, tossed it aside, and flash-stepped to a new vantage near the chamber's midpoint. The second container came out just as easily, and I started dousing the periphery—columns, stalactites, even the wall itself, continuing my circuit of the chamber.

Some part of me marveled at how easily the gasoline cut through the ambient miasma, a chemical exclamation point on an already gaudy sentence.

Ghom seemed to realize something was wrong. It lurched forward suddenly, one massive arm swinging toward me with surprising speed. I ducked beneath it, feeling the wind of its passage ruffle my hair, and continued pouring gasoline across a particularly dense clump of bone and tissue.

"Stop that," Ghom growled, no longer amused. "What are you doing?"

I flash-stepped away from another swipe, this one coming closer. Ghom was learning my patterns, anticipating my movements. I needed to work faster.

"Answer me!" it roared, its voice echoing through the chamber. The sound was so forceful that I felt it in my chest, a pressure wave that momentarily disrupted my concentration. Ghom then ripped a hook and chain from his flesh and started to throw it, trying to hook me like a fish. I dodged the best I could.

I didn't stop. Empty container, new container, pour and move. The routine was simple, mechanical. My hands worked on autopilot while my mind calculated angles, spread patterns, flash points. The gasoline was creating an interconnected network across the chamber floor, climbing up the fleshy columns, pooling beneath mounds of tissue.

Probably getting irritated it could hit me with its hook, Ghom launched itself at me with surprising agility, its bloated form moving faster than something that size had any right to.

I barely avoided a crushing blow, the displaced air from its fist sending gasoline spattering across my shoes. I flash-stepped to the other side of the chamber, continuing my work with methodical precision.

"When I catch you," Ghom promised, its voice dropping to an oily whisper, "I'm going to keep you alive for days. Weeks. I'll eat you one piece at a time, starting with your eyes. So you can feel everything but see nothing."

I flash-stepped again, this time to a patch of floor near the largest of the gas blisters in the ceiling. I splashed the gasoline upward, making sure the spray hit the drooping membrane and pooled in the rough bowl at the apex of the cave.

The volume of gas trapped up there had to be immense, and the moment that membrane tore—well, at least it wouldn't be boring.

I capped the container, stuck it back in my inventory, and took a breath. The air was almost unbreathable now, a volatile blend of necrosis and high-octane fuel. My skin itched, and my eyes burned, but adrenaline kept my vision crisp.

"Get over here meat!" Ghom growled.

I drew my zanpakutō, channeling every last iota of reiryoku into the blade. The hum was electric, the edge singing with potential energy.

Ghom's mask split into a rictus. "Finally done scurrying about?"

He came at me, all pretense dropped—a charging wall of muscle, steel, and sinew. His massive hands flexed, ready to pulp me into a meal. The ground shook with each step, and the atmospheric pressure built, a storm front of predatory intent.

I didn't run. I waited until he was nearly on top of me, then flash-stepped straight into his personal space, blade flickering in a dazzling arc. Instead of slashing at his body, I slashed the membrane overhead—a single, surgical cut.

The gas pocket ruptured. A balloon of methane and hydrogen sulfide exploded downward, enveloping us both in a sudden, clammy fog. The pressure difference nearly knocked me off my feet. Ghom roared in surprise, flinching back as the gas rolled over him.

He recovered almost instantly. "Nice trick, but now you've gassed yourself, too. What's your next move, meat?"

Sheathing my sword, I pulled out a matchbook from my inventory. Ghom's eyes (or what passed for them) widened as he seemed to realize what I was doing.

I flash-stepped to the highest point in the chamber, a jagged outcropping of bone and tissue near the ceiling. Below me, Ghom watched with those unblinking eyes, its massive head craned upward, iron mask gleaming dully in the sickly light.

"YOU WON'T GET AWAY FROM ME!" Ghom roared. It took out it's hook again, then another with its other hand, ripping it free from its flesh. Using both chained hooks, Ghom began assaulting the ledge I was on. I flashed to different ledges, dodging the strikes, but the monster didn't relent.

I pulled one out while dodging, and I struck the match.

The blue-orange flare was almost blinding in the darkness, a pure point of hope in an endless night.

Ghom instantly recognized the danger, even as the gas haloed around us both. "NO!" he thundered, and lashed at me with a speed that defied physics, or at least common decency.

I dropped the match.

Time seemed to slow as it fell, tumbling end over end through the thick, fetid air. Ghom lunged upward, massive arms outstretched to intercept it, but too late. The match hit a puddle of gasoline and ignited.

The effect was immediate and catastrophic. The flame ignited the methane in the air, causing a brief thermal expansion of fire, a chemical explosion.

Fire then raced along the trails of accelerant, spreading across the chamber floor in branching rivers of flame. The heat built rapidly, the gasoline burning hot and fast, igniting everything it touched. Fleshy columns became torches.

Mounds of tissue blackened and curled. The organic floor itself began to bubble and boil.

But that was just the beginning.

As the temperature rose, the methane pockets in the ceiling expanded, stretching their fleshy containers to the breaking point. One burst with a wet pop, releasing a gout of flammable gas that the spreading fire immediately ignited. Then another. And another.

The chain reaction was exponential. Each methane explosion triggered more ruptures, releasing more gas, feeding the growing inferno. The chamber, once dim and fetid, now blazed with orange light and searing heat.

I wrapped myself in a cocoon of reiryoku, forming a thin barrier of spiritual energy to shield against the worst of the heat and pressure. Even so, I felt my skin tighten as the temperature soared, sweat evaporating instantly from my forehead.

Below me, Ghom was screaming—a sound unlike anything I'd heard from it before. Not the smug purr of satisfaction or the oily tones of threat, but genuine, agonized rage.

"MY MEAT!" it howled, thrashing wildly as flames engulfed its bloated form. "YOU BURNED MY MEAT!"

Its flesh blackened and split, revealing glimpses of something darker underneath—a core structure that the fire couldn't as easily consume. The hooks and chains embedded in its body glowed red with heat, metal expanding and warping with loud pings that cut through even the roar of the flames.

Around us, the domain itself was dying. The carefully constructed ecosystem of rot that Ghom had built was collapsing, unable to withstand the purifying fury of the fire and chemical explosions.

Layers of corrupted tissue peeled away like burning paper, revealing glimpses of natural stone and earth beneath—the true structure of the forest clearing that Ghom had perverted into its lair.

The smell changed too. The stench of rot was still there, but now it was being cooked out, replaced by the acrid bite of smoke and the sharp tang of burning chemicals. It wasn't pleasant, but it was different—and right now, different meant progress.

I flash-stepped to another outcropping as my previous perch collapsed in a shower of burning debris. From my new vantage point, I watched Ghom thrash and howl, its massive form silhouetted against the flames like some demon from ancient mythology. For the first time since our encounter began, it seemed truly wounded, truly vulnerable.

But as the initial wave of explosions subsided and the fire settled into a steadier burn, I noticed something concerning. Ghom was still moving. Still intact.

Damaged, yes—severely—but not destroyed. And as I watched, it turned those unblinking eyes toward me, the iron mask now glowing dull red from the heat.

The look it gave me wasn't amusement anymore. It wasn't hunger or curiosity or even anger.

It was hatred. Pure, focused, and absolute.

The smoke parted like a curtain, and Ghom emerged. No longer the bloated sack of putrid flesh, but something blackened and furious—partially cooked meat fused with molten metal and charred bone. Steam hissed from cracks in its hide, and the iron mask that had once seemed decorative now appeared fused to its skull, glowing orange at the edges from the intense heat.

Its movements were jerky, pained, but there was nothing weak about the rage that radiated from every scorched inch of its massive frame.

"Clever rat," it growled, voice deeper and rawer than before. "Burning my collection. My domain. MY OBJECTS OF DEVOUR."

I kept my distance, zanpakutō at the ready, gauging Ghom's condition. The fire had done significant damage—that much was clear. Portions of its bloated flesh had been burned away entirely, revealing glimpses of a more solid frame beneath.

The hooks and chains embedded in its body glowed with residual heat, metal expanding and contracting with soft pings in the superheated air.

But it wasn't defeated. Not even close.

Ghom's massive hand reached up to its own side, fingers closing around one of the larger hooks protruding from its ribs. With a wet, tearing sound, it ripped the barbed metal free from its own flesh. A gout of black-green fluid spurted from the wound, hissing where it hit the smoldering ground.

"Your turn to bleed," it snarled.

Ghom hurled the hook at me with shocking speed and precision. I flash-stepped to the right, but there was hesitation from the wound on my leg I hadn't noticed growing worse. The barbed metal caught me in mid-movement, tearing through my left shoulder with a sickening crunch. The impact knocked me backward, and for a moment, all I registered was white-hot pain that eclipsed thought itself.

The hook wasn't just embedded in my flesh—it had punched clean through muscle and shattered bone, its barbed tip protruding from my back in a grotesque parody of a piercing.

Blood poured from the wound, hot and thick, soaking my shihakushō in seconds. I tried to lift my left arm and found it wouldn't respond at all, the damage too severe for even my enhanced physiology to compensate.

I had just enough presence of mind to see the chain attached to the hook go taut.

Ghom yanked with terrible strength, and I was airborne—dragged through the smoky air like a hooked fish, my body a helpless projectile pulled toward those waiting jaws.

The chain rattled as it retracted, each link bringing me closer to Ghom's massive form. The pain in my shoulder intensified as the hook twisted with the motion, tearing muscle and scraping bone.

"You die now, MEAT," Ghom growled, its vertical mouth splitting wider in anticipation.

Time slowed in that moment of flight. I saw the gaping maw waiting to receive me, teeth gleaming in the firelight, strings of saliva stretching between jagged points like webbing. I saw the satisfaction in those unblinking eyes, the certainty of victory.

And I made a choice.

Instead of fighting the pull, I used it—twisting my body in mid-air to add momentum, my good arm bringing my zanpakutō around in a flashing arc. As Ghom yanked me into range, I drove the blade directly into one of its secondary mouths with every ounce of strength I could muster.

The sword plunged to the hilt, and for the first time, Ghom's reaction wasn't pleasure—it was pain. A howl erupted from both its mouths, the sound so primal it seemed to vibrate through the very air. Its grip on the chain faltered, and I dropped to the ground, the hook still embedded in my shoulder.

I didn't waste the opening. Ignoring the agony that lanced through my left side with every movement, I began flash-stepping in a rapid cyclone around Ghom's massive form.

Each pause in my movement lasted only a fraction of a second—just long enough to drive my blade into what looked vital. Eyes. Throat. The joints where limbs met the torso. The base of its spine.

My attacks were desperate, fueled by pain and the knowledge that I might not get another chance. Each thrust was precise, each target calculated to cause maximum damage.

Ghom roared and thrashed, trying to track my movements, but I was moving too quickly, attacking from too many angles. Its domain ablaze and collapsing, there was no more regeneration.

For a moment, it seemed to be working. Dark fluid gushed from dozens of puncture wounds, and Ghom's movements became more erratic, less coordinated. I pressed the advantage, driving my blade into its neck, twisting, then flash-stepping away before it could retaliate.

Then something changed.

The wounds I'd inflicted—dozens of precise, surgical strikes—suddenly... expanded. Each puncture hole bulged outward, swelling like a balloon being overinflated. Ghom's entire body tensed, muscles visibly straining beneath its charred hide.

And then they exploded.

Every wound erupted in a pressurized blast of green bile, spraying in all directions with fire-hose force. The toxic fluid filled the air, creating a mist so dense and caustic that it obscured vision entirely.

I caught the full brunt of one such eruption directly in my face, the acid-like substance instantly burning skin and eating through clothing. I staggered back, momentarily blinded, coughing as the fumes invaded my lungs.

Through the pain and disorientation, I sensed rather than saw Ghom's massive form lumbering toward me. Pure instinct drove me forward in one final, desperate attack. I flash-stepped directly at the source of the heaviest footfalls to a burning meat column. My feet barely whispered on that surface before I launched myself like a torpedo, zanpakutō extended before me like a lance.

The blade met resistance, then punched through. I felt it sink deep into what had to be Ghom's head, the metal grinding against bone before sliding home. A triumphant surge of adrenaline cut through the pain—a kill strike, surely. Nothing could survive a blade through the brain.

But Ghom didn't fall.

Instead, it went utterly still.

For a moment, I honestly believed it was finished. No, I wanted to believe it. The kill strike, the blade through the skull, the satisfying pop of resistance giving way—every instinct screamed that the monster should crumple, or at least collapse to its knees in a heap of cauterized gristle. Instead, it just… stopped.

Entirely.

Even the firestorm that raged around us seemed to pause, as if the universe itself was too disgusted to process what would come next.

It was the silence that unnerved me most. There were no more howls, no more mocking jeers or clinking of chains. The air, previously rife with a symphony of rot and combustion, stilled.

In the absence of sound, the acidic stench and the bitter flavor of burned protein on my tongue became somehow more acute—reminders that I was breathing the death of a world, and that it might include me.

Then, building from the base of its fused, charred torso, Ghom laughed.

It began as a low, metallic rattle. At first I thought it was the heated chains cooling, contracting with a chorus of pinging metal. But the sound warped, deepened, took on a rhythm that was unmistakably deliberate—a bubble of mirth filtered through a meat grinder and a megaphone.

It echoed through the chamber, vibrating the floor and the scorched air alike, a subsonic growl that made the marrow in my bones want to shrivel.

I blinked away the caustic fluid that had glued my eyelashes together and felt my vision swim, the edges of my consciousness fuzzing with pain and the residual effects of the neurotoxin that still coursed through my veins.

Through the haze, I saw movement—a twitch, a ripple, a flex of tendon and sinew as Ghom's body began to… change.

Using its shifting body as a springboard, I jumped back.

I barely kept my balance as I landed, sword up and ready, and watched in fascinated revulsion as Ghom's whole body seemed to collapse in on itself.

The process was not like a wounded animal collapsing; it was purposeful, controlled, methodical. First, the bloated stomach that had hung from its torso like a sack of spoiled meat began to deflate, the flesh shriveling and toughening as if all the fluid within had been flash-boiled away. Huge canyons of scar tissue opened and snapped shut, the wounds sealing themselves in violent spasms.

Muscles bulged, then pulled tight against the bone, the gelatinous quality of its flesh evaporating as it compressed into slabs of pure, corded strength.

There was something almost elegant about it—if elegance could be defined by the way a rabid pit bull's jaw can shatter a femur. The reek of burning hair and skin was replaced by the sharper note of ozone and superheated metal, as the chains and hooks that had decorated Ghom's frame were sucked inward, absorbed into the body itself.

Its height diminished from a monstrous twelve feet to a still-terrifying but more compact and efficient eight. The loose, sagging skin that had lent it a grotesque, comedic quality was gone. In its place: taut, mummified muscle, covered in a grime of ash and necrotic tissue, each movement now rippling with a terrifying economy of force.

The fusion of hooks and chains formed a kind of subdermal armor, the metal winding through flesh in elaborate filigrees, protruding from knuckles and elbows as barbs and spikes.

The iron mask, which had once seemed fused to its skull by accident, now split and peeled away in segments like the petals of a carnivorous plant, revealing a raw, predatory face beneath.

It was almost human, in the way a nightmare is almost memory. The eyes were smaller, set deeper into the sockets, but they burned and glowed red with a focus that hadn't been there before. 

The mouth—now free of vertical constraints—gaped open, opening into a ragged cleft lined with jagged teeth that looked more like broken machinery than animal incisors. Every part of Ghom was now optimized for violence.

This wasn't the same creature. This was something else—something worse. I'd tried to burn away its excess, to strip it down to something manageable, and in doing so I had revealed the core of the monster: a being not of gluttony, but of pure, unfiltered rage.

"I'm angry now," it said, its voice no longer oily and deliberate, but sharp and staccato. "I've forgotten my hunger."

Before it could completely finish its transformation, I used observe on the now evolved creature.

{GHOM, The Enraged Devouring Titan

Level: ??

Condition: "The rage is older than the name. It remembers all wrath from all adversaries — especially ones that got away."

Threat Level: S 

WARNING: Extremely powerful. Avoid confrontation at all costs.

Descriptive Insight: No longer— }

Before I could even process the entire system display, Ghom vanished—not flash-stepped, simply disappeared from my field of vision. No blur of movement, no displacement of air. One moment there, the next—

—directly in front of me, its transformed fist connecting with my already-wounded shoulder.

The impact was catastrophic. I felt bone shatter, ligaments tear, and my entire body launched backward with such force that I crashed through the chamber wall itself. Stone and corrupted flesh gave way like tissue paper, and suddenly I was airborne, flying through the open night air of Kuoh forest.

My back slammed into a tree with enough force to splinter the trunk. Wood cracked and gave way, and I continued through, my momentum barely slowed. I hit the ground shoulder-first. I bounced, tumbled down a moss-covered incline, and finally came to rest in a broken heap against a rock.

I glanced at my HUD.

Health: 24/100

"That's not good. Good thing my Physique is A+ or I'd be long dead by now."

In the distance, nearby where I was launched from I heard its new, terrifying voice.

"Crushcrushcrushcrush—HAHAHA—STRIP THE FLESH! SALT THE WOUND!"