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Now reading: Chapter 6: The Market and The Priest from The Ten Thousand Deaths : 1000x Exp System, a Fantasy novel by AryanDhull4622.

The Hunter’s Market opened at dawn and closed when the last seller ran out of things to sell, which in Kael’s experience of markets ant it never really closed at all — just thinned out after dark until only the desperate and the predatory remained, which were often the sa people.

It occupied the southern edge of the guild district — a sprawling covered bazaar that slled of dungeon preservative, alchemical reagent, and the particular sharp odor of freshly extracted monster materials. Stalls ran in long rows under canvas awnings, each one a different specialty. Bone rchants beside hide tanners beside essence extractors beside the apothecaries who bought the raw materials and sold them back as finished product at four tis the price.

Kael had never been here before.

He’d known it existed the way Ashrow children knew a lot of things existed — as a feature of a world that was technically accessible to everyone and practically accessible to almost no one from his district. You needed dungeon drops to sell. You needed Levels to run dungeons safely. You needed a multiplier worth having to level fast enough to matter.

He had all three now.

He also had a Lich walking beside him in the body of a grey-haired man of perhaps sixty, unremarkable in the careful way that truly dangerous things are sotis unremarkable, wearing a coat that Sera had produced from sowhere without explanation.

"How does the disguise work?" he’d asked on the walk over.

"Necrotic energy shaped into a persistent illusion," Maren had said. "The face is a composite of three people I knew. None of them are alive to object."

Kael had decided not to pursue that line of questioning.

Sera led them to Alchemist Brenn’s stall first.

It was larger than its neighbors and better organized — materials sorted by grade and origin, labeled in a small precise hand, prices displayed without the performative ambiguity that most market sellers used to extract higher bids from uncertain custors. The man behind the counter was short and broad and wore the permanent squint of soone who spent most of their ti examining small things under magnification.

He looked up when Sera approached. Sothing complicated moved across his face — recognition, then calculation, then the careful neutrality of a man deciding how to play a situation.

"Assessor Sera," he said.

"Forr," she said, for the second ti. "I have materials."

She placed the Colossus Core Fragnt on the counter.

Brenn looked at it for a long ti without touching it. Then he put on a pair of magnifying lenses and looked at it for longer.

"Greymaw," he said finally. "Floor two."

"Floor three," Sera said.

He looked up sharply. "Floor three doesn’t have a Colossus. Floor three has—"

"A Lich. Yes. The Colossus was floor two." She held his gaze steadily. "We cleared all three."

Another silence. Brenn’s eyes moved to Kael — took in the Level 1 display, the blank multiplier, spent perhaps two seconds on it before moving on with the pragmatism of a market man who understood that the Greymaw’s floor three did not care what your Level display said.

"Fourteen gold," he said.

"Done," Sera said, before Kael could speak.

Brenn counted the coins without theater and swept the core fragnt under the counter with the efficiency of a man who knew exactly which buyer he was going to contact before the market day was out. "Anything else?"

They sold everything else in the next forty minutes.

Bone dust to an apothecary three stalls down — eight silver for the full forty units, which the apothecary tried to negotiate to six and Maren countered to nine with a single quiet sentence about current demand cycles that left the apothecary blinking. Dungeon iron to a blacksmith’s runner who paid fair market without haggling. Troll hide to a leather rchant who wanted to argue about quality until Kael set the full six scraps on the counter simultaneously and the rchant looked at the volu and stopped arguing.

The shadow wolf’s essence — extracted by Maren with unsettling efficiency in the dungeon before they’d left, a small vial of concentrated dungeon shadow — went to a specialty buyer Sera knew three rows in, a quiet woman with Level 28 on her display and the eyes of soone who dealt in things that weren’t always strictly legal. Twelve silver. No questions.

They found an empty stall at the market’s edge and counted.

[INCO — GREYMAW DUNGEON RUN:]

[COLOSSUS CORE FRAGNT: 14 GOLD]

[BONE DUST x40: 9 SILVER]

[DUNGEON IRON x8: 6 SILVER]

[TROLL HIDE x6: 4 SILVER]

[SHADOW WOLF ESSENCE: 12 SILVER]

[TOTAL: 14 GOLD, 31 SILVER]

Kael looked at the money on the table.

Fourteen gold and thirty-one silver. His mother earned three silver a week on a good week. He had just made what she would earn in almost ten years in a single morning.

He kept his face still. He had learned, sowhere between the Ashrow and floor three of the Greymaw, that other people’s reactions to his money were information — and the less they knew about what numbers ant to him, the more useful that information was.

"Base of operations first," Sera said, already refolding her notes. "Then supplies. Then your mother."

"My mother first," Kael said.

She looked up.

"She’s been alone for four days," he said. "The market will still be here in two hours."

A pause. Sothing moved in Sera’s face — brief and honest before the professional mask resettled. "Fine," she said. "Your mother first."

Maren said nothing. In the grey-haired disguise its expression was harder to read than usual, but Kael thought it was doing the thing it did when it approved of sothing and didn’t feel the need to say so.

They left most of the minions in the cooperage.

Walking through Valdenmoor’s streets with nineteen undead creatures was not compatible with maintaining a Level 1 cover. Kael kept Daren — who at a glance passed for a large quiet man with a slight pallor — and dismissed the rest to the cooperage bond-space, where they would wait without moving or thinking or needing anything until he called them back.

Daren walked three paces behind. Maren walked beside Kael. Sera walked slightly ahead, which was her natural position in any moving group.

The Ashrow received them the way it received everything — without ceremony, without welco, without the hostility it reserved for obvious outsiders. Kael was not an obvious outsider. He was a boy who had grown up here returning from sowhere else, which was common enough that nobody looked twice.

His mother was in the building’s lower wash room when they arrived — he could hear the sound of water and the rhythm of work that he had fallen asleep to his entire childhood. He went down the stairs and stood in the doorway and she turned around and looked at him for a long mont.

Then she set down the cloth in her hands and crossed the room and put both arms around him without speaking.

He stood very still. He was not soone who was comfortable with being held — hadn’t been for years, since the age when the Ashrow taught you that comfort was a thing you carried internally because external sources were unreliable. But this was his mother and she slled like soap and hard work and the specific combination that ant ho, and he found that Level 20 and fourteen gold and a Lich ally and a death horse and nineteen minions had not changed that particular fact at all.

"Four days," she said into his shoulder.

"I know."

"The monitoring priest ca yesterday."

He pulled back. "It was supposed to be four more days."

"He ca early." She looked at his face — reading it the way she always had, looking for the thing beneath the thing. "I told him you were sick. Fever. Hadn’t left the room in three days." A pause. "He didn’t believe ."

Kael went still.

"He left a second notice," she said. She crossed to the small shelf by the door and handed him a folded paper — heavier than the first one, sealed with the pale sun symbol in red wax instead of the usual black.

Red wax.

He opened it.

By order of Grand Inquisitor Voss, the individual registered as KAEL ASHFEN is hereby declared NON-COMPLIANT with mandatory re-assessnt protocol. A warrant for detainnt has been issued effective imdiately. City Watch units have been notified. The subject is to be brought to the Hall of Ascension by any ans necessary for System evaluation.

Non-compliance will be treated as confirmation of System Deviation.

By authority of,

Grand Inquisitor Voss. Level 61.

Below that, in smaller text:

NOTE: Subject’s mother, registered as LENA ASHFEN, Level 3, Washerwoman, is hereby placed under observation pending subject’s compliance. Any attempt to leave Valdenmoor will result in imdiate detainnt.

Kael read the last paragraph three tis.

The paper didn’t tear. He was careful about that.

He folded it and put it in his coat and turned to his mother with a face he had spent seventeen years learning to keep level.

"Pack what matters," he said quietly. "Not clothes. Docunts, anything with your na on it, anything you can’t replace." He paused. "You have twenty minutes."

She looked at him. "Where are we going?"

"Sowhere they’re not watching." He t her eyes. "I have money. I have — allies. You’ll be safe. But I need you to move quickly and not ask questions until we’re out of this building."

She studied him for a long mont — the way she’d studied him his whole life, looking for the lie, looking for the reassurance beneath the reassurance.

She found whatever she needed.

"Fifteen minutes," she said. "I need less ti than you think."

She went upstairs.

Kael walked back to the doorway where Maren was standing — the grey-haired disguise perfectly still, watching the street with the patient attention of sothing that had spent seventeen years watching nothing.

"They moved faster than expected," Maren said.

"Voss is thorough."

"Voss is afraid," Maren corrected quietly. "Thorough people follow procedure. Afraid people accelerate it." A pause. "He felt sothing. Perhaps not you specifically — perhaps only a disturbance in the System around the blank multiplier. But he knows sothing is wrong."

"He put a hold on my mother."

"Yes." Maren’s disguised face was very still. "That is what n like Voss do when they cannot reach the thing they’re afraid of. They reach for the thing beside it."

Kael looked at the street. The Ashrow moved around him in its usual rhythms — carts, voices, the distant bells of the slaughter district. Sowhere in the city there were City Watch units with his na on a warrant and Level 30 badges and orders to bring him in by any ans necessary.

He thought about the Ring of Veiled Passage on his finger.

[RING OF VEILED PASSAGE — ACTIVE]

[CURRENT DISPLAY: LEVEL 1 — CLASS: NECROMANCER — MULTIPLIER: —]

[AVAILABLE DISPLAY OPTIONS: ANY]

Any.

He could walk past every City Watch unit in Valdenmoor wearing any face the System could construct. A rchant. A soldier. A guild runner. A Level 45 Paladin if he wanted — though that would draw attention of a different kind.

He thought about what Sera had said in the dungeon.

We make you unstoppable. And then we make Voss afraid.

He was not yet unstoppable. He was Level 20 with a warrant and a mother who needed to be moved in the next fifteen minutes and a Lich in a disguise and an Assessor with a notebook and nineteen minions in a cooperage.

But he was considerably more than a Level 1 Necromancer with a broken awakening.

He pulled up the Ring’s display options and made one change.

[DISPLAY UPDATED:]

[NA: KAEL ASHFEN → KAL VREN]

[CLASS: NECROMANCER → RANGER]

[LEVEL: 1 → 22]

[MULTIPLIER: — → x1.5]

Level 22 Ranger. Unremarkable. Not high enough to attract noble attention. Not low enough to attract Watch suspicion. The kind of number that said guild contractor or independent runner — soone who had a right to be in the city and a reason to be moving through it with companions and a large coat.

Sera appeared from the stairwell entrance. She looked at his display and read it in one pass.

"Good choice," she said. "The Watch units Voss deploys are Level 25 to 30. They won’t challenge a Level 22 without specific reason." She paused. "Your mother’s display will still show Lena Ashfen."

"Can your guild credentials do anything about that?"

"Forr guild credentials." She thought for a mont. "I can write a contractor’s transit form. It’s not forgery — I still have my blank forms from before I resigned. It lists her as support staff on a dungeon survey contract. It won’t survive deep scrutiny but it will pass a street check."

"Do it."

She already had the form out. Of course she did.

His mother ca downstairs in thirteen minutes with a canvas bag that clinked faintly — docunts, he assud, and whatever small valuables seventeen years of careful saving had produced. She looked at Maren’s disguise without expression.

"Who is this?" she asked.

"An ally," Kael said.

Maren inclined its grey-haired head with the dignity of soone who had been a physician for fourteen years and knew how to et people in difficult monts. "My na is Maren," it said. "Your son pulled out of a dungeon. I owe him considerably."

His mother looked at Maren for a long mont. Then she looked at Kael.

"The ally who is not human," she said. Not a question.

He looked at her.

"I have washed clothes for this city for thirty years," she said evenly. "I know what human hands look like." She glanced at Maren’s disguised hands — which were slightly too still, slightly too precise in their positioning, the hands of sothing that had to rember to hold them naturally. "I don’t need an explanation right now. I need to know if I can trust them."

"Yes," Kael said.

She nodded once. "Then let’s go."

The base of operations was Sera’s find — a building in the lower guild district that had been a records annex before the Assessor’s Guild consolidated three years ago and quietly forgotten in the bureaucratic reshuffling. Two floors, stone walls, a basent with no windows that would serve for the minions, and enough distance from the Church’s monitoring routes to matter.

Sera had the key.

He didn’t ask how long she’d had it.

They moved his mother through four streets of Ashrow and two streets of the market district without incident — the Ring’s display drawing no second glances, Sera’s transit form checked once by a Level 27 Watch officer who scanned it, scanned Kael’s Level 22 display, and waved them through with the bored efficiency of soone working a warrant that didn’t match the people in front of him.

Kael watched the officer’s eyes as they passed.

Nothing. No recognition. No suspicion.

The Ring was everything the System had said it was.

The records annex was cold and dusty and completely adequate.

Kael’s mother walked through the ground floor slowly, taking inventory the way she took inventory of everything — practically, without sentint, assessing what was there and what was needed. She found the kitchen, tested the water supply, located the secondary exit. Then she sat down at the table and folded her hands and looked at her son.

"Now," she said. "Tell everything."

He told her.

Not everything — not the Lich’s true nature, not the full depth of what the System had made him, not the specific numbers that would have required an hour of context to an anything. But the shape of it. The x1000 that the world couldn’t see. The dungeon. The money. The warrant and what it ant and what he intended to do about it.

She listened without interrupting. Her face did the layered thing — too many reactions compressed into stillness, processing at a speed he’d always respected.

When he finished she was quiet for a mont.

"Level 20," she said.

"Yes."

"In three weeks."

"Twenty-two days."

Another silence. "And Voss."

"Eventually."

"How eventually?"

He thought about the Veil at Level 50. He thought about the distance between 20 and 50 and what a x1000 multiplier ant for that distance. He thought about the next dungeon mission sitting in his System queue.

"Weeks," he said. "Not months."

She looked at him for a long ti. Then she looked at her hands — the cracked red hands, the Level 3 Washerwoman’s hands — and then back at him.

"The boy at your Awakening," she said. "The one who got x1."

He hadn’t told her about that. He’d been watching her face and she’d been watching the crowd and he hadn’t known she’d noticed.

"Yes," he said.

"You’re doing this for him too," she said. Not a question.

He thought about the Veil. About what Maren had said — remove it entirely, not for yourself, for everyone. He thought about what he’d felt when Maren described the clinic in the lower districts and the Church shutting it down and the seventeen years of waiting.

He thought about what he actually wanted, beneath the cold and the rage and the careful planning.

"Yes," he said.

His mother nodded slowly. Then she stood up, moved to the kitchen, and began making tea with the efficiency of soone who processed difficult things best when her hands were occupied.

"Then eat sothing first," she said. "You look like you haven’t slept in two days."

"Four," Maren said helpfully from the doorway.

His mother looked at the Lich’s disguise. "Four days without sleep," she said to Kael. "Sit down."

He sat down.

Outside, sowhere in the city, Voss’s Watch units were moving through the Ashrow looking for a Level 1 Necromancer with a blank multiplier and a mother who hadn’t been ho when they checked.

Inside, Kael’s mother made tea, and Maren stood in the doorway with seventeen years of waiting finally behind it, and Sera sat at the table copying the Lich’s research docunt in her small precise hand, three copies, one for each hiding place she’d already selected.

The System pulsed quietly.

[CURRENT LEVEL: 20]

[NEW DUNGEON MISSION AVAILABLE:]

[THE IRON CATACOMBS — VALDENMOOR UNDERGROUND]

[FLOORS: 5]

[BOSS: UNKNOWN]

[RECOMNDED LEVEL: 30 ]

[NOTE: THIS DUNGEON IS BENEATH THE CITY.]

[NOTE: VOSS DOES NOT KNOW IT EXISTS.]

[NOTE: YOU HAVE 48 HOURS BEFORE THE WATCH EXPANDS ITS SEARCH TO THE GUILD DISTRICT.]

[USE THEM.]

Kael read the notification over his tea.

Five floors. Beneath the city. Unknown boss.

Forty-eight hours.

He looked at the mission details. He looked at his Level 20 stats. He looked at Sera’s three copies of the Veil research and Maren in the doorway and his mother pouring tea with her cracked careful hands.

He thought about Level 30. About the Undying Sovereign evolution path that required it. About the gap between 20 and 50 and Voss at 61 and the Veil between them all.

He drank his tea.

Then he said: "Sera. Tell about the Iron Catacombs."

She looked up from her copying. A pause that was almost a smile.

"I thought you’d never ask," she said, and turned to a page she’d already prepared.

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