Twelve days.
He ran zone nine every day. Sotis with a contract, sotis without. Sotis in the morning before the Dorath team mission, sotis in the evening when the zone was quieter and the creature signatures had settled back into their resting distributions.
He was not hunting the Mantle Cat. He was learning the zone.
There was a difference, and it mattered. A hunter who went in looking for the kill arrived with a fixed outco in mind, which ant the environnt had to serve the plan. What he was doing was the reverse: letting the zone teach him what it was, and building the plan from what it taught.
The zone taught him several things.
Zone nine’s eastern section, where the Mantle Cat held its expanded territory, had a particular rhythm to it. Storm Path energy ran higher there—not chaotically, but in long slow pulses that followed the zone’s topography, moving through the ridges and dropping into the hollows on a cycle Kai could asure once he had been in the zone long enough. The Shadow component of the territory muted the centre of the range, creating a reading gap that would confuse a hunter who relied on direct path-signature detection. The Beast component anchored the territory to specific features—two rock formations on the north side, a deep hollow on the south, a ridge line to the east that marked the old zone fourteen boundary before the expansion.
He mapped all of it.
And while he mapped it, the Dragon-line pool grew.
***
On the eleventh day the system sent a notification he had been watching for.
Dragon-line pool: 54% capacity
Approaching functional threshold
Dragon Predator Mode: partial control unlocking within 24–48 hours
He read it at the zone nine entry station, waiting for a permit stamp, and said nothing. The guard stamped the card and pushed it back across the counter without looking up.
Partial control in twenty-four to forty-eight hours.
He did not go into zone nine that day.
He ran zone eleven with Dorath’s team instead, handling a standard contract with the settled efficiency that had beco normal for the team—no surprises, no C-adjacent contacts, four clean kills and a full material haul in ninety minutes. He held his output at its ordinary level throughout. No reason to push the Dragon-line substrate on a day when it was already close to a structural change.
When the threshold ca, he wanted to be sowhere quiet when it happened.
***
It ca the following morning before the city was fully awake.
He was sitting at the small table in his room doing nothing in particular—not reading, not checking the system, just letting the body be still for a while—when the warmth moved through the left wrist and up through the spine in a single slow wave. Not the fusion warmth, which ca from the outside in. This ca from below, from the Dragon-line substrate itself, a deep structural settling like a foundation finding its level.
He stayed still and let it complete.
It took four minutes.
When it finished the system confird it.
Dragon-line pool: 57% capacity — functional threshold reached
Dragon Predator Mode: partial control active
Function: mode can now be consciously initiated
Limitations: duration uncontrolled / strength scales with pool capacity / not yet suppressible once active
Current activation ceiling: approximately 8–12 seconds per use
Passive activations: continue alongside conscious use
He stood up.
Then he stood still for a mont, the way he had stood still after Impact Fra and after Predatory Burst Step and after Hunter’s Instinct—giving the change space to settle into the body before he tested it.
Then he reached for it.
Not with a motion. With intent. The sa internal action as reaching for the route shard through the vault pair: a direction of will rather than a physical movent.
The Dragon-line substrate responded imdiately.
The activation felt nothing like he had expected. He had expected the surge-and-compress quality of a power state—the kind of thing Gene Overdrive had been in the early days, violent and consuming. This was not that. Dragon Predator Mode was less like switching on a light and more like opening a door that had always been there. On the other side of the door, the path signatures in the room beca clear and cross-referenced simultaneously, the ambient path energy in the walls and floor and the building below resolved into sources and types, and the body’s own path expression thickened without adding mass or volu—a density change rather than a size change.
He held it for six seconds.
Then it ended. Not because he released it. Because the ceiling arrived. The pool had powered six seconds and the current capacity ran out.
He sat back down.
Six seconds at fifty-seven percent pool. The ceiling would rise as the pool grew. At full pool—whatever full ant for a substrate that was still expanding—the duration would be significantly longer.
But six seconds was enough for what he needed it for.
***
He went into zone nine that afternoon with a contract and a plan.
Not for the Mantle Cat. Not yet. For the creatures near the edge of its territory—the D-Rank and high D-Rank species that had been pushed into the western sections of the zone by the Cat’s expansion. Displaced creatures. Compressed into smaller ranges than they were built for, running higher ambient stress than their optimal, which made them faster to engage but also less predictable in their patterns.
He worked through four of them in two hours.
On the fourth—a Stone-Fla Drake that had been pushed into a narrow corridor between two ridge formations—he used Dragon Predator Mode consciously for the first ti in a real fight.
The Drake was cornered by its own compressed territory and ca at him fast, the way cornered creatures ca at things, with the specific urgency of an animal that had decided retreat was not an option. Its dual expressions were running high from the stress. The Stone reinforcent was distributed unevenly—thicker on the leading side, thinner at the rear where the territory pressure was weakest.
He initiated Dragon Predator Mode as the Drake committed to the charge line.
The door opened.
And everything in the zone within thirty tres resolved.
Not just the Drake. The zone itself. The rock formation behind it, the exact texture of the ground between them, the path energy distribution in the ambient field and how the Drake’s own output was interacting with it. He could read the Drake’s unified dual expression—Stone and Fla running together under stress—and see the gap where they t, the seam of incompatibility between the two expressions where the body had never fully resolved the interface between them. The sa gap that every dual-expression creature had. He had been finding these gaps by feel and by experience. In Dragon Predator Mode, they were visible.
He put Predatory Burst Step through the gap on the Drake’s second step.
The fight ended in three seconds.
Rift Hollow Drake (Stone-Fla) eliminated
Path material: Refined-Elite borderline dual core
Evolution Points 17
Current Total: 410
Dragon Predator Mode: 5.4 seconds used — ceiling: 6 seconds remaining (pool adjusting)
410 points.
He looked at the dead Drake and then at the dual core on the ground.
Three seconds. A creature that would have taken him fourteen minutes a month ago. The gap between that version of the fight and this one was not strength. It was information. Dragon Predator Mode gave him information that his other skills could then act on with precision.
The gap was not closed. It was revealed.
Every future fight that had seed hard because of the unknown would beco easier because of the reveal. He needed to understand that and not mistake it for becoming invincible. The information could be wrong. The mode had limits. The pool would run out.
But three seconds.
He collected the core and kept moving.
***
He reached thirty tres from the gradient edge before he stopped.
Two tres closer than the last mapping session.
He did not initiate Dragon Predator Mode. He let the passive read run, the way it had been running through every zone nine session, and observed what the system showed him about the territory from this distance.
The Mantle Cat was present.
Not visible. The Shadow component of its territory made direct visual detection from this range nearly impossible for anyone without his particular combination of perceptual reads. But the Beast component of the territory had a living-source quality that the ambient residue from dead creatures did not. The creature was in the territory, active, aware of the zone.
Aware of him.
Not in an aggressive way. In the sa way it had sat and assessed him in zone fourteen three weeks ago—with the flat, intelligent attention of sothing that had already run the calculation and was waiting to see what he decided.
The Path Compatibility Analysis ran automatically.
Mantle Cat: active signature confird at 28 tres
Path Compatibility Analysis — live target:
Storm component: moderate Dragon-line match
Shadow component: high Dragon-line match
Beast component: primary channel match — high
Dragon Predator Mode interaction: strong — all three expressions readable under mode activation
Estimated yield: Elite grade across three channels
Dragon-line pool requirent for stable engagent: 65–70% capacity
Sixty-five to seventy percent.
He was at fifty-seven.
Eight to thirteen percentage points away from having enough Dragon-line pool to engage the Mantle Cat with stable mode activation throughout the fight.
He looked at the gradient in the zone’s ambient field.
Twenty-eight tres.
The creature was twenty-eight tres from where he was standing and it knew he was there and it had not moved.
He held that for a long mont.
Then he turned and walked back toward the exit.
He had been in the zone for two hours. Four kills, one Dragon Predator Mode activation, two tres closer to the Mantle Cat’s territory edge than the previous session.
Seven to ten days at the current accumulation rate.
He did not know if the Mantle Cat would wait that long.
But he thought it might.
It had been expanding its territory westward for three weeks. It had not continued west past zone nine’s centre. It was holding at the expansion boundary, not pushing further.
It was not hunting.
It was waiting.
The only thing in zone nine that was worth a B-Rank adjacent triple-expression creature’s patient attention was the D-Rank hunter who kept coming back two tres closer every session.
He filed the mission form at the station desk and walked out into the city.
Fourteen days, he had thought ten days ago.
Seven days now.
Maybe less.
User Comments
0 comments from readers