The Storm hunter found him the next morning at the entry station.
Kai had arrived early again. The permit check queue was short and the guards were still doing their first rotation. He was standing off to one side reading the zone layout card a second ti when he heard the footsteps stop beside him.
"I watched you co out yesterday," the Storm hunter said.
He was a compact man in his late twenties, with the close-cut hair of soone who had learned early that anything longer got grabbed in a fight. His badge was D-Rank, sa as Kai’s, but his coat had the worn-in quality of soone who had worn it through more than a few dozen missions. He held himself with the particular stillness of a Storm Path hunter—slightly forward, weight on the balls of his feet, always ready to move.
Kai looked at him. "I know."
The Storm hunter nodded as if he had expected that answer. "Thirty-one minutes. Three cores." He paused. "Solo."
"Yes."
"I’ve been running zone two for four months," the man said. He was not angry about it. He said it the way soone stated a fact that had beco relevant. "Best ti with a partner is forty-four minutes."
Kai said nothing.
The Storm hunter studied him for a mont. His eyes went to the vault pair, the sa place everyone’s eyes went, and then back to Kai’s face. "My na is Soren. D-Rank, Storm Path." He did not offer a hand. That was not how hunters introduced themselves here, Kai was learning. You said the na and the rank and you waited to see what the other person did with it.
"Kai. D-Rank. Beast Path."
Soren gave one short nod. "You’re in for your second mission?"
"Yes."
"So am I." He looked at the entry door. "I want to run zone two at the sa ti as you. Not together. Separately." He paused. "I want to see if yesterday was an accident."
Kai looked at him. Then at the zone layout card. Then back.
"Alright," he said.
***
The transition corridor felt the sa as it had yesterday.
Soren walked it beside him with the steady, adjusted posture of a man who had done it many tis. His breathing was controlled. His expression was neutral. He was comfortable.
Kai felt sothing that was harder to describe.
Not comfort exactly. Sothing more physical than that. The way the Rift pressure in the corridor settled into him felt less like pressure and more like a weight he was already carrying being put down. His muscles relaxed slightly. His senses sharpened. The wrong-coloured sky through the zone door ahead looked familiar in a way it had no business looking familiar.
He had been in places like this before.
Not here. Not this zone. But the fundantal quality of the environnt—the dense Rift energy in the air, the particular stillness of a space that existed slightly outside normal rules—sat in his body like recognition.
The system registered it quietly.
Rift zone entry: active
Rift Energy Resistance: passive / operating
Enhanced Rift Adaptation: active
Note: host body reads zone pressure as native environnt
Native environnt.
He held that word for a mont as the zone door opened. Then he walked through.
Soren went left. Kai went right.
His second mission was a collection contract requiring five Common-grade cores from zone two creatures. More than yesterday. A longer route. The pay was slightly better, which ant the Guild expected it to take longer or carry more risk.
It did not take longer.
What it did was teach him sothing.
The E-Rank zone had a particular rhythm to it. The creatures that lived here moved in patterns shaped by the zone’s pressure—they clustered near the higher-energy areas, avoided the zone boundary markers, and established overlapping ranges that any experienced hunter would have mapped after a few visits. The zone layout card showed the rough territory, but it was a rough version. The actual arrangent was sothing you learned in the body, through movent and reading and the way your senses pushed outward into a space.
Kai had been in this zone exactly once.
He moved through it like he had been here for months.
The Rift pressure that made other hunters walk carefully, keep their output controlled, and monitor their body condition did not press on him the sa way. It was present. He could feel it. But it felt like weather rather than threat—a background condition rather than sothing that required managent. His senses ran wider and cleaner inside the zone than they had outside it. The system’s readings ca faster. Path signatures resolved at greater distance.
He found the first creature in four minutes.
A Ridge Stalker, the sa species as yesterday, holding territory near a cluster of zone markers. He read it the sa way he had read the others—still point, burst pattern, shoulder-joint weakness. He moved at the still point. The creature went down in six seconds.
Ridge Stalker eliminated
Path material: Common Beast-type core
Evolution Points 4
Current Total: 278
He moved on before the energy finished dispersing.
***
The fourth creature was different.
It had been feeding when he found it, and feeding creatures in E-Rank zones ca away from the kill with elevated path output. The Ridge Stalker’s burst speed was faster than the others he had encountered, and it changed direction twice in the attack sequence instead of once.
Kai read the first change. He missed the second.
The claw caught his forearm across the outside edge. A clean strike, angled correctly, the kind that would open a deep cut on most D-Rank hunters and require imdiate care.
It didn’t open a deep cut.
The claw scraped across his arm and left a bright red line in the skin that burned sharply for two seconds. Not a scratch. Real contact. But the tissue beneath held without parting. No blood. No wound that needed treatnt. Just a mark that would fade in an hour.
The Ridge Stalker seed confused by the result. Its pattern stuttered.
Kai used the stutter and finished the fight.
He looked at his arm while the system ran its update. The line was already fading at the edges. He had not consciously done anything to block or reduce the impact. His body had simply held.
Ridge Stalker eliminated
Path material: Common Beast-type core
Evolution Points 4
Current Total: 282
Note: physical impact resistance above D-Rank baseline
Above D-Rank baseline.
The system had noticed what he had felt. The body he was carrying was not a D-Rank body. The guild had asured his output, and his output sat where it sat. But output was only one asurent. What the body could take was a different number, and that number had nothing to do with his badge.
He had known this in a theoretical sense since Maret had explained the gap between official rank and actual capacity.
Now he understood it in his skin.
He collected the fourth core and moved toward the fifth.
***
He found Soren near the zone boundary on the way back.
The Storm hunter had three cores in his collection pouch and was working toward a fourth, moving through his fight with the clean, precise economy of a man who had refined the sa technique many tis. His Spark Step was controlled—short directional bursts that made him difficult to track but never wasted output. Good form. Efficient. The product of months of repetition in the sa zone, against the sa creatures, building the sa skill deeper and cleaner with every run.
He finished the fourth kill without acknowledging Kai nearby.
They walked back toward the transition corridor together without discussing it.
At the exit Soren looked at Kai’s pouch. Five cores. Then at the tir. Twenty-six minutes.
He was quiet for a mont.
"You’ve been in Rifts before," he said. Not a question.
"Not Guild Rifts," Kai said. That was true.
Soren nodded slowly. "Your body doesn’t read the zone as hostile. Most D-Ranks spend the first twenty runs just getting used to the pressure. You walked in like it was a road." He looked at the vault pair. "That, and your physical resistance is wrong."
"Wrong how?"
"The fourth creature caught you on the forearm. I was forty tres away and I saw the arc. That should have opened the skin." He paused. "It didn’t."
Kai said nothing.
Soren did not push it. He looked at his own badge, then at Kai’s. Sa mark. Sa rank. Then he said sothing Kai had not heard stated this plainly before.
"Guild rank asures path output. That’s it. That’s the only thing the appraisal stone asures." He looked at the entry station wall. "It doesn’t asure how much force your body can hold before it breaks. It doesn’t asure what your body does with the path energy it absorbs over years. It doesn’t asure anything built through actual fighting." He paused. "That second number is called body rank. And your body rank is not D."
That was the clearest anyone had said it.
Kai looked at him. "What is it?"
"I don’t know the precise term for what you are," Soren said honestly. "But I’ve seen higher." He said it simply. "I grew up near a lineage house. My older brother holds a Steel Path bloodline three generations deep. His body rank was confird Predator Body before he took his first mission." He paused. "You don’t have a lineage. I can tell. But your body rank is not entry level."
***
They sat outside the station on the low bench along the building’s side wall while the next group of hunters queued for entry. Kai ate from the ration he had brought. Soren drank from a tal flask and talked about the things that hunters who grew up in this world understood without needing to learn.
"Lineage houses are families with established path histories," he said. "If your parent was a Steel Path hunter who reached B-Rank, and their parent was Steel Path too, your body inherits so of that groundwork before you ever take a step inside a Rift. The path energy leaves marks in the bloodline. You co in already partway along the body rank ladder." He looked at the city around them. "Half the Gold-Rank hunters in Kael’s Seat co from lineage families. They didn’t build that advantage—they were born with it."
"And hunters who aren’t from lineage families?" Kai asked.
"We build it," Soren said. "Slower. But it can be done." He shrugged one shoulder. "Lineage gives you a head start. It doesn’t give you the end point. There are lineage-born hunters at Iron Rank who haven’t done anything with what they were given, and there are first-generation hunters at Platinum who built everything themselves." He looked at Kai. "You are obviously the second kind, except I don’t understand where you built it."
Kai looked at the entry station door. "Sowhere that didn’t have a guild."
Soren accepted that without pressing further.
After a mont he said: "The body rank tiers the Guild uses informally are Iron Body, Steel Body, Predator Body, War Body, King Body, Sovereign Body. Iron and Steel are normal for D and C-Rank. Predator is where the gap between guild rank and actual threat starts to matter seriously. Most hunters hit Predator Body sowhere in B-Rank." He looked at Kai’s forearm where the fading mark from the Stalker was now barely visible. "You’re at Predator Body or above it. At D-Rank official."
The system had been quiet through the conversation. Now it ran one line.
Body rank assessnt updated
Current body rank: high Steel Body / early Predator Body threshold
Guild official rank: D-Rank
Gap classification: significant
Significant.
That was the word. Kai was a D-Rank hunter whose body was built like sothing that should be holding a C-Rank badge at minimum. The gap between what his badge said and what his body could do was not a small inconsistency. It was a separate identity.
That gap was going to matter.
***
He was walking back toward the lodging house when his left wrist went warm.
Not hot. Not painful. A low, sustained warmth that started at the wrist and spread up the inside of his forearm. He stopped on the street and looked at it.
Nothing visible. No marks. No change in the skin.
But the system flickered once.
Integrated device: active
Skill fusion function: available
Frawork loading: 68%
Recomndation: hold pending full frawork
He stood on the street for a mont. The warmth faded as quickly as it had co, leaving only the mory of it.
Sothing inside his left wrist had been there since before Helios. Since before the roads and the vault pair and the shell and all of it. Sothing older than any of the current arc’s complications. The system had never flagged it clearly before because it had no frawork to describe it in. Now that the new world’s path system was loading into the frawork, the function was beginning to surface.
Not yet ready.
But there.
He looked at the mission completion form in his other hand.
Two done. One more needed.
***
Mira was at the window of their lodging room when he ca back.
She had her weekly eting with the director scheduled for tomorrow, and she was doing what she always did the evening before—listening. Not to the room, not to the street outside, but to the road network beneath the city. The lines under her skin were moving in that slow, directed way that ant sothing was speaking and she was deciding how much of it to take in.
She looked up when he ca in. "How was it?"
"Faster than yesterday."
She looked at his forearm. The mark from the Stalker’s claw had faded to almost nothing, but her eyes found it anyway. She had always had that quality—noticing small things that people usually missed. "You took a hit."
"Yes."
"It didn’t open."
"No."
She looked at him for a mont with the particular attention she used when she was deciding whether to say sothing. Then she said it.
"In the mory chambers, under Helios, the road recognised what you were before the system did." She turned back to the window. "I think that’s still happening."
Kai looked at her. "What do you an?"
"The roads here read you differently from the other hunters," she said quietly. "Not your path. Not your rank. Sothing deeper. Like they know what you’ve passed through." She pressed one hand against the window fra. "I thought it was just the shell at first. But it’s not only the shell."
She did not explain further.
He did not ask her to.
So things needed more ti before they had words.
Kai sat down, set the mission form beside the bed, and let the body have the rest it had earned. Tomorrow: the third mission. After that, the combat record review. After that, D-Rank zone access and the first real prey.
Twenty-six minutes today.
He was already thinking about how to run the third one faster.
***
He was nearly asleep when the system sent a notification he had not asked for.
Ambient scan: passive
Path signature detected in building: 1 target
Rank: Gold
Path: Mind Path
Status: stationary / monitoring
He opened his eyes.
Gold rank. Mind Path. In this building.
Not moving. Stationary. Monitoring.
He lay still and did not reach for the route shard or change his breathing. Whoever it was had been there long enough for the system to read them clearly, which ant they had chosen to be readable. You could not be Gold-Rank Mind Path without knowing how to mask your presence if you wanted to.
They wanted him to know they were there.
He stared at the ceiling.
A Gold-Rank Mind Path hunter sitting still in the sa building as a D-Rank vault carrier with a Category Two flag and an unresolved four-second appraisal anomaly.
That was not a coincidence.
That was soone waiting for him to wake up and notice them.
Which ant they had been expecting him to have exactly the kind of passive scan that would find them.
Which ant they already knew more about him than his badge said.
Kai closed his eyes again and did not move.
In the morning he would find out who sent them.
He already suspected it was the sa man who had read Maret’s forty-page report twice.
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