तांश्व तौ चाप्यदृश्य: स शरैरविव्याथ राक्षस:
tān śva tau cāpy adṛśyaḥ sa śarair avivyātha rākṣasaḥ
Then that rākṣasa, himself unseen, struck those two again with a shower of arrows—an act of stealth and aggression that heightens the moral contrast between concealed violence and open, righteous combat.
मार्कण्डेय उवाच
The verse underscores an ethical tension central to the epic: violence carried out through concealment and deceit is portrayed as morally suspect when contrasted with straightforward, accountable combat aligned with dharma.
Markaṇḍeya describes a rākṣasa who remains unseen and nevertheless wounds the opposing pair by shooting arrows at them, escalating the danger through stealth.