The review hall was on the second floor of the registration building, at the end of a corridor that got quieter the further along it you walked.
The room itself was plain. Three chairs on one side of a long table. A raised platform at the centre with the sa carved-line sensor construction as the appraisal room, but larger. A single chair across from the board table. Two rows of bench seating along the wall to the left, for observers.
Soren was already in the front observer bench when Kai arrived. He had a small notebook open in his lap and a pen in his hand. He did not look up.
The three board mbers were at their table. Two n and a woman, all Silver-Rank by their badges. They had folders open in front of them and were reading. None of them acknowledged Kai’s entry.
Director Vael sat in a chair along the right wall, separate from both the board and the observers. Not presiding. Watching. His hands were folded in his lap and the cord-worn badge hung at his chest and his eyes had the quality of soone who had already read everything in those folders and was here only to see what the person inside the record looked like in the sa room as the record.
Kai sat in the single chair across from the board and waited.
***
The review was a procedural thing.
The lead board mber, the older of the two n, read through each mission completion form in sequence without speaking. The other two followed along in their own copies. The woman made occasional small marks in the margin of her folder. No one asked Kai anything yet.
He watched them read.
The first mission form took them three minutes. The second took four. At the third form, all three board mbers stopped at the sa point. The woman looked up briefly—not at Kai, at the lead mber—before returning to the page.
The Marrow Hound.
The lead mber set the third form flat on the table and folded his hands on top of it. He looked at Kai for the first ti since the session started.
"Zone two," he said. "Solo entry. E-Rank permit."
"Yes."
That was the extent of it. He looked back at the form. The woman made another mark. The second board mber had already turned to a different page in his folder—the boundary breach report from the station log, Kai guessed, which would have been attached to the file automatically.
They read for another two minutes in silence.
Then the lead mber stood and gestured toward the platform.
***
The platform sensors ran warr than the appraisal room ones.
Kai stepped onto it and felt the difference imdiately. More coverage. The carved lines extended in a wider pattern, overlapping at the edges in a way that suggested the hall’s platform had been built for a more thorough read than a standard registration check. Not just output asurent. Force distribution. Stability mapping. How the energy moved through the body over ti rather than a single peak reading.
He stood at the centre and let his body settle.
The lead board mber stood at the control desk to the side. He ran the initial calibration. The lines lit in their standard sequence, spreading outward from the platform centre in slow rings.
Then he ran the full test.
The lines did not respond the way they had at registration.
They were not more dramatic about it. They did not flash or spike. They simply held longer before returning to baseline, the pulse sustaining itself through the outer rings at a level that the standard appraisal sequence should not have produced. The woman leaned slightly forward in her chair. The second board mber wrote sothing.
Kai felt the Rift adaptation running underneath the test the way it ran underneath everything now. The platform’s sensors were path-sensitive construction, similar in origin to Rift infrastructure. His body recognised it as a familiar environnt and opened wider than it would have in a blank room with no path resonance.
He did not suppress it.
He had no particular reason to.
The system read the platform’s response without comnt.
Output test: active
Observed resonance: elevated vs initial appraisal
Probable cause: Rift adaptation interaction with path-sensitive sensor array
Classification: non-standard — consistent with prior appraisal note
The lead board mber ran the test twice more. Sa result both tis. He wrote in his folder without looking up.
Kai stepped off the platform.
***
The board examined the two Refined-grade cores next.
The woman handled them. She had a small asuring device that she pressed against each core in turn—a short rod of the sa carved-line material as the platform, which gave a faint pulse when it contacted the core surface. She noted the readings. Compared them to sothing in her folder. Made more marks.
The Hollow Stalker core was unremarkable by itself. A Refined-grade Beast-type kill from zone two was unusual for an E-Rank permit holder, but not impossible. The Hollow Stalker sub-species ran heavier than standard and was technically bordering on D-Rank territory even in an E-Rank zone. The board would have seen this before, occasionally.
The Marrow Hound core was different.
It was a Stone-type Refined core. Clean. Undamaged. Full-grade extraction. The woman set it on the asuring pad and the device gave a longer pulse than it had for the Hollow Stalker core. She looked at it for a mont, then at the mission form, then at Kai.
Then at the director.
The director was still in his chair along the right wall. He had not moved since the session started. He looked at the core. His expression did not change. He looked at Kai. Sa.
Kai looked back at him and said nothing.
***
The three board mbers conferred at their table.
They did it quietly, passing a single sheet of paper between them, each writing and handing it to the next. Kai watched from his chair. Soren had stopped writing in his notebook and was watching the board’s body language instead. The second board mber’s pen moved for a long ti before he passed the sheet on.
The deliberation took nine minutes.
The woman collected the sheet at the end. She looked at it, nodded once, and set it down.
The lead board mber looked at Kai.
"Combat record review: passed." He said it in the flat, procedural tone of soone reading from a pre-written conclusion. "D-Rank zone access waiver granted. Solo permit for D-Rank zone entry, effective imdiately." He picked up a stamp from the desk and pressed it to the review sheet. "Body rank assessnt noted in record: above D-Rank baseline. Formal body rank asurent recomnded within sixty days."
He passed the stamped sheet to the woman, who added her own mark. Then to the second mber.
He slid the completed copy across the table.
Kai picked it up.
The text on the sheet was dense and formal, but the key lines were readable: Combat performance consistent with body rank significantly above official guild rank. Anomalous path output density confird on re-test. D-Rank zone solo waiver approved on the basis of demonstrated capacity exceeding permit level. Further monitoring recomnded.
Further monitoring.
He set the sheet flat in his coat.
***
The board mbers gathered their folders and left without ceremony.
Soren closed his notebook and remained seated, watching the room empty the sa way he watched everything: with the specific, patient attention of a man who had learned that what happened after the obvious event was often more useful than the event itself.
The director stood.
He crossed the room and stopped in front of Kai without rushing. Up close he was the sa as he had been in the Artifact Division office—the unhurried stillness of soone who had been at his work long enough that urgency was a choice rather than a default.
He held out one hand.
Not to shake. To look at Kai’s left wrist.
Kai let him.
The director looked at the wrist for five seconds. There was nothing visible there—no mark, no scar, no device. But the warmth that had pulsed there two days ago had not entirely faded. Sothing sat just beneath the surface of the skin, not visible, not quite absent either.
The director let go.
He reached into his coat and placed a second card on the table. Different from the first. Heavier paper. The Division’s seal on the front, and beneath it a secondary mark Kai had not seen before—a smaller symbol inside the seal that looked like two concentric lines with a gap between them.
"Artifact Division extended file," the director said. "Yours, when you want to read it."
He picked up his chair and set it back against the right wall, precisely where it had been when Kai entered, and walked out.
The door closed.
***
Soren stood and ca to the table. He looked at the card the director had left.
He did not touch it.
After a mont he said: "Extended files are internal Division records. Not public. Not shared with the review board." He looked at Kai. "He brought it here to give it to you personally, in this room, after your wrist."
Kai picked up the card and put it in his coat with the review sheet.
Soren looked at where it had been on the table. "What’s on your wrist?"
"Sothing old," Kai said.
Soren accepted that the sa way he had accepted the previous incomplete answer—with a short nod and the patience of a man who knew when a question would get a better answer if he waited for it.
They left the review hall together and went out into the city, which was already mid-morning and fully alive around them, flags moving above the buildings, hunters on the roads, the Rift fra’s deep glow visible above the eastern rooftops.
D-Rank zone access, effective imdiately.
An extended file from the director, contents unknown.
A body rank assessnt due within sixty days that would put a formal number on the gap between his badge and his body for the first ti.
The system ran one quiet update.
D-Rank zone permit: active
Frawork loading: 73%
Evolution Points: 302
Skill fusion: available — hold advisory remains
Extended file logged: contents pending review
He had read enough records in his life to know that the ones described as extended were the ones people had spent real ti building.
The director had been paying attention since a forty-page report.
The question Kai needed to answer before he opened that file was simple.
How much did it contain that he did not yet know about himself.
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