The records annex slled like soup.
Kael stood in the doorway for a mont before entering — just long enough to let that fact settle. Two days underground, two dungeons, one ancient binding unraveled, one Class evolution, ten levels gained, and the first thing that reached him when he pushed open the door was his mother’s soup.
So things the System couldn’t touch.
"You’re late," his mother said from the kitchen, not turning around.
"I was underground."
"That’s not an excuse." She set a bowl on the table. Then a second. Then a third — she’d started setting three places without being asked, which ant she’d already accepted Maren at the table without requiring an explanation, which was either wisdom or pragmatism and with his mother was probably both.
Maren sat.
Kael sat.
Sera ca through the door thirty seconds later, notebook already open, sat down, picked up her spoon, and said: "The northeastern anchor is beneath the old tannery district. Approximately forty ters below street level. Based on Asha’s annotations it was planted in a natural rock chamber that predates the city."
"Eat first," Kael’s mother said.
Sera ate. She also kept writing, which required a level of coordination that Kael had stopped being impressed by sowhere around the second dungeon.
After dinner Kael spread the map on the table.
It was extraordinary — not just in content but in craft. Asha had drawn it over three centuries with the slow patience of soone who had nothing but ti, and the detail was unlike anything the city’s official surveys contained. Every tunnel, every sublevel, every forgotten passage that Valdenmoor had been built over without knowing. The seven Veil anchors were marked in grey ink that matched the color of his death light, which he suspected was not accidental.
Northeastern anchor. Tannery district. Forty ters down.
Southwestern anchor — the primary one, the one the second Grand Inquisitor had planted personally — beneath the Hall of Ascension itself.
Of course it was.
"The sequence matters," Maren said, leaning over the map with the Ancient Codex open beside it, Asha’s annotations dense in the margins. "The anchors form an interlocking network. Destroy them in the wrong order and the remaining anchors compensate — the Veil strengthens around the gaps rather than collapsing." A pause. "Northeast first, then work counterclockwise. The southwestern anchor last."
"Six hours to hit all seven," Sera said.
"Approximately. Asha’s timing was based on a Death’s Chosen at Level 40 minimum." Maren looked at Kael. "You are Level 30."
"I know."
"The Key of Depths will open each anchor chamber. But destroying the anchor itself — " Maren turned a page in the codex. "It requires the sa technique as the catacombs binding. Unraveling rather than destroying. At Level 30 each anchor will cost more Spirit than the binding cost." A pause. "Significantly more."
Kael looked at the map. Seven anchors. Six hours. Spirit costs that would compound with each one.
"How long to reach Level 40?" Sera asked, looking at him.
He pulled up his System.
[CURRENT LEVEL: 30]
[EXP TO LEVEL 31: 180,000]
[MULTIPLIER: x1000]
[NOTE: NEAREST HIGH-YIELD HUNTING GROUND — THE ASHENMOOR, 3 HOURS EAST]
[ESTIMATED TI TO LEVEL 40 AT CURRENT RATE: 4-6 DAYS]
"Four to six days," he said.
Sera wrote it down. "The Watch expanded its search to the guild district this morning. They’ll reach this street within three days." She looked up. "We have a tiline problem."
"We have two tiline problems," Maren said. "The Watch. And Voss." It turned another page. "Asha’s annotations ntion sothing she observed eleven years ago — the Church performing a reinforcent ritual on the Veil anchors. They do it every decade." A pause that carried weight. "The next reinforcent is in nine days."
"If they reinforce before we destroy the anchors?" Kael asked.
"The anchors double in strength. The Spirit cost doubles." Maren’s ancient eyes were steady. "At Level 30 a doubled anchor cost would likely render you unconscious before the third one."
The room was quiet.
Nine days. Three before the Watch found this street. Four to six to reach Level 40. The math was tight enough to cut yourself on.
"The Ashenmoor," Kael said. "What’s there?"
[ASHENMOOR — HUNTING GROUND]
[CLASSIFICATION: OPEN WORLD — NOT A DUNGEON]
[CREATURE TYPES: ASH WRAITHS, HOLLOW KNIGHTS, MOOR STALKERS, ANCIENT REMNANTS]
[CREATURE LEVELS: 25-45]
[NOTE: NO REGISTRATION REQUIRED — NO FEES — NO MONITORING]
[NOTE: ALSO NO RESCUE IF SOTHING GOES WRONG]
[ESTIMATED EXP YIELD — YOUR RATE: UNCHARTED — HIGH]
Open world hunting. No dungeon structure, no floors, no boss rooms. Just the moor and whatever lived on it and a x1000 multiplier with no ceiling.
"I leave at dawn," Kael said.
"We leave at dawn," Sera said.
He looked at her.
"Level 14 Assessor," she said flatly. "Combat trained. You need soone who can observe and report mid-fight. The Greymaw proved that." She closed her notebook. "I’m not staying here writing routes while you’re on a moor being eaten by Hollow Knights."
He looked at Maren.
"I will remain," Maren said. "Your mother should not be alone. And I want to finish cross-referencing Asha’s annotations before you touch the first anchor." A pause. "I will also begin preparing the ritual sequence. When you return at Level 40 I want to be ready to move within the hour."
Kael nodded.
His mother appeared from the kitchen doorway — she’d been listening, which she always did, which he’d stopped pretending not to notice. She looked at the map on the table, at the seven grey marks, at her son’s face.
"Four to six days," she said.
"Yes."
"And then?"
He looked at the southwestern anchor marked beneath the Hall of Ascension. He looked at the na above it in Asha’s handwriting — Primary Anchor — Voss’s personal chamber above.
He looked at his mother.
"And then it’s done," he said.
She held his gaze for a long mont. Then she went back to the kitchen and ca back with a wrapped package — food for the road, already prepared, because she had been listening and she had known before he said it that he was leaving at dawn.
She set it on the table beside the map.
"Co back," she said simply.
Not a request. A requirent.
"Yes," he said.
He lay awake for two hours after the annex went quiet.
The Key of Depths sat on the floor beside his cot, catching the faint grey light he generated now without thinking — the Undying Sovereign’s ambient glow, soft and cold and permanent. He’d tried to suppress it. Couldn’t. It was simply part of what he was now.
He thought about Asha in her chair for three hundred years.
He thought about eight hundred and forty-seven amber eyes going dark and peaceful.
He thought about Level 61 and nine days and the Watch three days from this street.
He thought about his mother’s rule — dinner at the sa ti every evening regardless of what was happening — and how she’d set three places without being asked.
He thought about the boy from the Awakening with the x1 multiplier and the blank face, who was sowhere in Valdenmoor right now living the life the System had decided he deserved.
He thought about what happened when the Veil ca down.
Not just for himself. For everyone above Level 50 who had been told they’d reached their ceiling. Every person the Church had capped. Every x1 multiplier grinding for decades and never getting anywhere.
The System pulsed.
[DAWN IN 3 HOURS]
[ASHENMOOR AWAITS]
[LEVEL 40 TARGET: 4-6 DAYS]
[NINE DAYS UNTIL VEIL REINFORCENT]
[VOSS DOES NOT KNOW WHAT IS COMING]
[SLEEP. YOU’LL NEED IT.]
He almost smiled at the last line.
He closed his eyes.
For the first ti since the Awakening, sleep ca quickly — not the shallow restless kind but sothing deep and dark and genuine, the sleep of soone who knew exactly what they were doing and why and had stopped being afraid of either answer.
Three hours later he was gone before the city woke up.
The Ashenmoor stretched east of Valdenmoor like a held breath — flat and grey and enormous, the ground soft underfoot, patches of ash-colored grass between dark water that had no visible bottom. No trees. No landmarks. Just the moor and the fog that sat on it year-round and the things that moved inside the fog that the city had learned, over generations, to simply not think about.
Kael walked into it at dawn with Sera at his side and seventeen minions at his back and the Death Domain radiating thirty ters of grey light that the fog parted around like water around a stone.
Death Sense swept forward.
[DEATH SENSE — ASHENMOOR]
[DETECTING: 40 ENTITIES — RANGE LIMITED BY FOG]
[ASH WRAITHS: LEVEL 28-32]
[HOLLOW KNIGHTS: LEVEL 35-40]
[MOOR STALKERS: LEVEL 30-36]
[ANCIENT REMNANT: LEVEL ??? — DEEP MOOR — 2KM NORTH]
Forty entities in range. Hundreds more beyond the fog.
[EXP REQUIRED — LEVEL 30 TO 40: APPROXIMATELY 4,200,000]
[ESTIMATED YIELD PER ENTITY — YOUR RATE: 30,000 TO 80,000]
[ESTIMATED ENTITIES REQUIRED: 60-140]
Sixty to a hundred and forty creatures.
On an open moor with no floors, no registration fees, no limits.
Kael looked at the fog. He looked at the forty Death Sense signatures pressing at the edge of his range. He looked at his seventeen minions and his Level 30 stats and the Key of Depths in his coat pocket and nine days on a clock that had already started.
"Ready?" Sera said.
He stepped forward.
The fog swallowed them.
The Ashenmoor had no idea what had just walked into it.
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