The trail beca a road about halfway down the slope.
Not suddenly. It happened the way most changes happened in the world outside Helios—slowly, without announcent. The worn stone path grew wider. The edges beca cleaner. Small flat markers appeared at intervals, set into the ground at knee height, carved with lines Kai did not recognise. Not Helios marks. Not anything from the transit system below the city. Sothing else entirely.
The older man crouched beside one of the markers and studied it for a mont without touching it.
"Route signs," he said.
Liora looked both ways along the road. "Who made them?"
"Not Helios." That was all he said. He stood and kept walking.
That was enough.
They followed the road down.
Mira walked more steadily now. The lines under her skin had stopped shifting. Whatever the crossing had asked of her in the night, the body had answered it and moved on. She still tired faster than usual, and she still walked close to Liora without aning to, but the careful breathing from the morning was gone.
She slowed when they reached the first proper section of flat road.
Kai noticed. "What is it?"
"The road is active." She pressed one foot flat against the surface. Not testing it for danger. Feeling it. "Not like the roads under Helios. Those were old and forced. This one is... open."
"Open how?"
She thought about it for a mont. "Helios roads went in one direction. They took you where the city decided. These go... outward." She lifted her foot and kept walking. "I don’t know how to say it better than that."
That was still more than the system had managed.
Kai pushed it toward the road surface.
Road classification: active / maintained
Origin: unknown network
Connected infrastructure: extensive / range unknown
Extensive.
Helios had been a network of two hundred streets and a set of buried transit lines. Extensive had never applied to it.
He kept walking.
The valley opened up properly in the early afternoon.
The road curved around a final outcrop of rock and laid the settlent out in full. It was larger than it had looked from the ridge. The buildings were solid and low, built from dark stone and heavy timber, the kind of construction that expected to be there for a long ti and was not interested in looking temporary. So of them had wide doors facing the road. One long building near the centre had a covered front where several people sat or stood, visible even from this distance.
The Rift fra on the eastern slope was even bigger up close.
It rose above the settlent like a second ridge, dark tal and old stone bound together by brackets the size of a person. The space inside the fra was empty, but not still. The air within it moved differently, the way air moved near a door just before soone opened it. Around the base, small structures were connected by covered paths. A few figures moved between them with the steady pace of people doing familiar work.
A wide road ran from the fra toward the settlent and continued along the valley floor toward the southwest.
Neral looked at all of it for a long mont. "A Rift station," he said quietly. "Built into the hillside. With a proper approach road. This is not a frontier post. This is an established operation." He paused. "Which ans there are people here who know exactly what they are doing, and we are very conspicuously arriving on foot with visible injuries and no identification."
The older man looked at Kai.
Kai looked at the road.
No choice about direction. Only about how they arrived.
They heard the footsteps before they saw the person.
Clear, even steps on the flat road. Coming around the bend ahead, heading toward them, going up the slope in the direction they had co from. One set of footsteps. Unhurried. Not trying to be quiet.
The older man did not slow down or speed up. He kept his pace and moved one step to the side of the road to leave the centre clear. That was the right move. Hiding now would look worse than being seen.
The figure ca around the bend.
A woman. Sowhere in her thirties, Kai guessed, though she held herself in a way that made age hard to judge. dium height. Short dark hair. She wore a coat that was thicker than anything Helios issued, layered and practical, with a badge fixed to the front left panel—a flat tal disc with a clean edge and a simple mark stamped into it. At her side hung a short weapon in a fast-draw rig that was not trying to hide what it was.
She was not alard to see them.
That was the first thing Kai noticed. Five strangers appearing on a back trail with visible injuries and road dust on their coats, and she showed no alarm at all. She slowed her pace slightly, looked them over once from front to back, and then kept walking as if she had simply done a calculation and reached a comfortable result.
She passed the older man first. He gave her a small nod. She returned it.
When she reached Kai she slowed for just a mont.
Her eyes moved to his coat. Not his face. His coat. Specifically the left side, where the regulator sat inside the vault pair.
Sothing shifted in her expression. Not fear. Not aggression. Sothing more like professional recognition, the way a person looks when they see a tool they know the purpose of.
Then she was past him.
Her footsteps continued up the slope without changing pace.
Kai did not turn to watch her go. He kept moving. Beside him, the older man’s eyes stayed on the road ahead, and Liora’s hand had moved fractionally closer to her sidearm before she pulled it back.
Neral waited until the footsteps had faded before speaking. "She looked at your coat," he said, very quietly.
"Yes."
"With recognition."
"Yes."
Mira said nothing. But she had seen it too.
Kai pushed the system outward toward the retreating figure.
He expected a partial read. The system was still updating, still finding its footing in the new world’s terms. He expected fragnts.
What he got was more than that.
The system had found enough to work with.
Target: Storm Path hunter
Power Rank: B-Rank
Path Depth: Refined
Guild badge detected — Official Rank: Silver
Kai read it twice.
Then he did the calculation quietly, while the road continued under his feet and the valley opened up ahead.
Silver rank. B-Rank actual output.
That was a routine traveller. Alone. On a back trail. Going sowhere on her own business with no escort, no hurry, and no sign that this land asked anything difficult of her.
And she was B-Rank.
Kai thought about the Level 5 in the corridor. The best fighter Helios had sent into that crossing. The man who had nearly taken Mira and broken Kai’s structure in a narrow space. The man it had taken everything he had, Devour included, to bring down.
And he pushed the system to compare.
Helios Level 5 equivalent: low Bronze rank
Current host actual combat output: C-Rank
Silver-rank average output: B-Rank
Low Bronze.
The best fighter Helios had ever sent after them had been low Bronze in this world’s terms. The woman on the road—not a guild leader, not an elite, just a working Silver-rank hunter on a routine trip—was three full tiers above that.
And Kai himself.
C-Rank actual output. Officially, he would enter this world sowhere around D-Rank. The guild would look at him and see a rough, unstable body-type hunter with no lineage and no registered path history.
They would not be wrong.
They would just be asuring the wrong things.
He held all of this in his head and kept walking. The settlent was close now. The road was wide and well-maintained and full of the quiet implication of a world that had been functioning at this scale long before he arrived.
He had not expected to feel small.
He had expected new. He had expected dangerous. He had expected a world that would force him to grow.
He had not expected the first random person on the first road outside Helios to be sothing he could not currently match.
The older man spoke without turning his head. "You read her."
"Yes."
"And?"
Kai looked at the settlent ahead. At the Rift fra standing against the hillside. At the flag on the high pole that he still could not read.
"Helios was small," he said.
No one answered. They did not need to.
Mira was the one who spoke next, and she spoke in the careful, even tone she used when she had already accepted sothing difficult.
"She will report us."
Kai looked at her.
"Not to a guard," Mira said. "Not to a city authority. She will tell whoever she reports to that there is a carrier on the back trail with a vault-pair holding sothing she did not recognise." She paused. "And that person will want to know what it is."
The settlent was less than ten minutes away now.
The road was open and well-lit and offered nowhere to turn around without being seen doing it.
Kai checked the vault pair with one hand. The regulator sat still and heavy inside it. Unclassified, the system had said. Unknown status.
In a world where a routine Silver hunter could read his coat at ten paces and know sothing was wrong, unknown status was not protection.
It was an invitation.
He kept walking.
Sowhere behind them, footsteps continued up the trail toward the ridge they had co from.
Sowhere ahead, the settlent waited with its Rift fra and its flag and its people who had been managing this land long before Kai had arrived with empty hands, a broken body, and a shell built from a stolen piece of soone else’s path.
The sky above was still clear.
Still wide.
Still without smoke.
He did not find that comforting anymore.
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