Morning dawned over Greyvale like a gradual reveal.
From the eastern horizon, pale golden light spilled between distant towers and tiled roofs, washing over spires, bridges, and countless stacked districts.
The city stirred to life as it always did, not with a single sound but with a layered tide of activity: rchants lifting their shutters, carriages rattling over cobblestones, workers calling to one another across balconies, and the aroma of baked bread mingling with iron and damp morning mist to create the familiar perfu of civilization.
Greyvale was bustling. It always was. Yet nowhere was that truth more palpable than in the Gryphon District or as many now referred to it, the Adventurer District.
The na change had crept in quietly at first, talked among rchants who moved their stalls closer together, tavern owners who expanded their seating, and rcenary bands who no longer used "Gryphon" when giving directions.
As ti passed, the term spread until it transford from novelty into accepted fact. Maps were updated; courier routes revised. Even the city guards, typically slow to acknowledge change, began noting "Adventurer District" in their patrol logs.
Long before the sun fully cleared the skyline, the streets teed with life. They brimd with a sea of bodies flowing between tall storefronts and renovated guild buildings.
Smithies echoed with rhythmic tallic clangs. Alchemists’ shops exhaled faintly colored vapors. Restaurants released savory warmth into the cool morning air.
Taverns still carried echoes of last night’s revelry while new banners fluttered from balconies and lampposts adorned with the crest of the Adventurer Guild.
At the heart of it all lood the Guild itself.
But this morning felt different.The massive tallic gates at its entrance stood closed.
In front of them gathered a crowd, a dense assembly swelling from hundreds to thousands within minutes: armored figures, cloaked travelers, mounted adventurers, porters, rcenaries, craftsn, all mingling with curious onlookers.
Conversations overlapped in restless waves; speculation bounced between groups like sparks igniting curiosity.
Near the front stood three adventurers whose gear marked them as veterans from various disciplines: a broad-shouldered warrior leaning on a chipped halberd; a leather-clad woman with twin daggers resting at her hips; and a man whose staff bore polished grooves from years of use.
"The gates have been shut since yesterday evening," said the warrior, his brow furrowed as he gazed up at the towering tal barrier. "Guild staff drove everyone out, operations are suspended."
"Renovation," replied the dagger-wielding woman confidently. "That’s what I heard. A whole convoy of construction crews rolled in after sunset, carriages stacked high with stone blocks, enchanted fras, mana conduits... even prefabricated towers! I watched them pass for nearly an hour."
The man with the staff snorted softly in agreent.
The man with the staff let out a soft snort. "Finally. The old hall was suffocating. Tens of thousands of adventurers cycling through a two-floor structure ant for maybe a few hundred? It was chaos. You couldn’t breathe in there without bumping into a commission runner or a supply porter."
The warrior nodded slowly. "Still... this feels different. When noble houses renovate, they announce it weeks in advance. The Guildmaster just... closed the gates."
"That’s how he operates," the woman replied. "When he makes a move, things happen and quickly."
Around them, similar conversations sprang up. So speculated about expansion; others whispered about new systems, dungeons, regulations, and even rankings.
Bets were already circulating regarding what the Guildmaster was constructing behind those gates. A few impatient adventurers paced back and forth while others sat cross-legged on the stone, waiting. No one left.
Whatever lay beyond those sealed gates now defined their future livelihoods.
Inside those walls stood Sage, utterly alone in the transford heart of the Guild...
He stared in disbelief at the new central plaza, frozen by sheer visual shock. Clad in simple sky-blue clothing that still faintly carried the scent of water and herbs, his black hair clung damply to his temples as if he had just stepped out from washing; moisture trickled from one strand to his collar.
He hadn’t anticipated this level of change. He knew there would be upgrades and expansions, but this? This was not rely renovation; it was rebirth.
Where once stood a compact two-floor Guild Hall now rose an impressive three-story structure of pale stone frad with reinforced black accents, its architectural style both elegant and imposing. It size has also expanded to ten tis its previous size.
The entrance alone was broader than the old building had been wide, a sweeping stairway of polished stone led up to massive doors engraved with the Guild’s crest.
On either side of these steps lood towering statues of armored figures sculpted from dark silver stone, each resting both hands atop massive swords planted firmly into the ground. Their sleek armor lines and shadowed visors made them appear almost alive from just a few ters away.
At the heart of the plaza surged a vast circular fountain.
And at its center...
Sage’s breath caught in his throat as he beheld a statue rising from the water, carved from pale stone streaked faintly with blue mana veins. It depicted him standing upright: one hand resting lightly on a staff while the other extended forward as if presenting sothing unseen.
His expression conveyed calmness; eyes carved with quiet focus gazed outward while his long coat flowed gracefully around him, catching falling water that scattered into glittering streams.
It was him.
Sage stared at his own likeness for several long seconds without speaking, an unfamiliar sensation stirred within him, not pride or discomfort but rather an odd sense of displacent, as though he were witnessing ti itself observing him.
"A statue...the system really went all out. Do i really look like that...posed?" Sage looked at the statue as he thought inwardly.
The banners hanging from the upper balconies of the Guild Hall fluttered gently in the morning breeze, their massive cloths emblazoned with the Adventurer Guild’s emblem in striking silver and blue.
The entire plaza had undergone a transformation, its roads repaved and branching out like veins from its edges, wide enough to accommodate multiple carriages side by side.
Decorative lampposts stood at regular intervals, their crystal cores softly glowing with stored mana. This space was no longer just a courtyard; it had evolved into a district center, a city square that surpassed expectations.
Sage finally let out a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding. "...System," he murmured quietly.
[Yes?] The familiar voice responded instantly, smooth and subtly pleased.
"I didn’t expect upgrading the Guild to C-rank would lead to all this."
There was a brief pause before the system replied with unmistakable smugness.
[Well, that is how I work. Excellence tends to scale.]
Sage rolled his eyes, but despite himself, a smile tugged at the corner of his mouth. "Can you show an aerial view?"
[Of course.]
The air shimred as dozens of translucent blue holographic panels sprang into existence around him, creating a floating do of information. At the center hovered a slowly rotating three-dinsional projection of the Adventurer Guild grounds.
Sage’s pupils dilated in surprise. The Guild Hall now dominated the center but was far from alone. The stables had expanded into an enormous multi-wing structure, its reinforced rooflines segnted and internal courtyards visible even from above, capable of housing not dozens but thousands of mounts.
What used to be the training ground had transford into a full complex: ten additional arenas arranged in a semi-circle, each equipped with raised spectator stands, supply rooms, and dical bays. Paths radiated outward from the central plaza, seamlessly connecting every structure into an integrated network.
And then he noticed the new facilities.
Behind the Guild Hall rose a sleek structure made of polished stone and mana-infused crystal. Its design spiraled upward in layered tiers adorned with flying banners at each level. At its peak waved a flag bearing the Adventurer Guild’s emblem.
Above the gate hung a sign boldly proclaiming: Mana Cultivation Tower.
To the right of the Guild Hall sprawled an impressive six-floor building surrounded by manicured gardens and serene water features. Its refined architecture resembled that of noble estates more than typical guild infrastructure.
The sign read: Adventurer Inn.
To the left stood a three-floor complex featuring wide windows and vented roofing; smoke channels rose neatly from its rear. Its layout suggested expansive kitchens, dining halls, and storage vaults, this was clearly designated as the Adventurer Restaurant.
Next to the Mana Tower lay an imnse circular facility primarily constructed from dark reinforced tal; segnted roofs revealed internal furnace chambers and forging bays, a true Smithy in every sense.
The Guild had transford from a re building into a thriving settlent, a controlled, functional, and self-sustaining hub.
Sage exhaled slowly as system notifications began to flood his vision.
[ Adventurer Guild upgraded to C-Rank.]
[Guild Hall expanded.]
[ Adventurer Stable has been upgraded to Interdiate.]
[ Training Ground has been expanded to Interdiate.]
[New facilities unlocked:]
[Interdiate Smithy.]
[Interdiate Adventurer Inn.]
[Interdiate Adventurer Restaurant.]
[Mana Cultivation Tower.]
The blue text floated before him, each line clicking into place like pieces of a puzzle he hadn’t realized he was assembling.
He gazed at the notifications, then back at the aerial projection. The Guild wasn’t just expanding; it was evolving into an autonomous entity, a closed-loop system, a city within a city.
A wave of exhilaration surged through Sage, so intense that he had to take several steadying breaths. His heart raced, not out of fear but from the sheer scale of it all.
"This is just C-rank..." he murmured under his breath.
If this was what C looked like, what would B Rank look like? What new possibilities would A Rank unlock? And what about S Rank? He stood amidst floating projections of roads, towers, facilities, logistics, and endless potential, feeling sothing rare and exhilarating bloom inside him.
Finally, he straightened his posture and exhaled slowly.
"System," he said with newfound steadiness in his voice, a tone that now carried authority rather than surprise.
[ Yes.]
"Display the information for the new facilities."
The holographic panels shimred in response as their surfaces began to reorganize, data structures forming seamlessly.
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