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Now reading: Chapter 143 – What the Assessor Read from Ultra Gene Evolution System, a Fantasy novel by DennisRFajardo.

The assessnt hall was the sa room as the combat review.

Sa table. Sa raised platform with the carved-line sensors. Sa observer benches along the left wall. But the arrangent was different. The board table had only two chairs behind it instead of three, and both chairs were occupied by the sa administrative staff who logged the session rather than evaluated it. The actual assessnt did not co from the board.

It ca from the woman sitting alone at a small table to the right.

She was around sixty, with the compact, economical build of soone who had kept themselves useful through decades of work that required consistency rather than intensity. Her coat was the plain travelling cut of a hunter who had been in and out of zones for a long ti. Her badge was on a chain—the sa way Voss wore his, Kai noted—and the Gold-Rank mark had the deep patina of sothing that had been earned and then mostly ignored in favour of the work the rank enabled.

She looked at Kai when he ca in with the particular attention of her path type: present in a way that went slightly past the eyes. Reading from the mont of first contact.

Soren was in the front observer bench with his notebook. The director was in his chair along the right wall.

Kai sat in the assessnt chair across from her and waited.

She did not use the platform.

She looked at the platform briefly when Kai entered, then did not look at it again. The carved-line sensors were calibrated for output asurent—volu, classification, peak reading across a fixed window. That was not what she was here for.

She sat across from him at the small table and set her hands flat on the surface, the way soone settled in before a long read.

"I’m going to ask you to do nothing," she said. "No output. No suppression. Just sit." She looked at him steadily. "Mind Path assessnt at this depth is not about what you produce. It’s about what you’ve built."

"Understood," Kai said.

She was quiet for a mont after that. Then she began.

He could not feel the assessnt as it happened. That was characteristic of Mind Path reading at advanced depth—it operated below the level of conscious sensation. He was aware of her attention in the way a person was aware of being looked at from a close distance: a quality in the air rather than a direct physical sensation. Her eyes remained on his face throughout, but they were not reading his face.

The first two minutes passed without her speaking.

At three minutes she made a small mark in the notebook to her left. She did not look at the notebook to make it.

At five minutes she made another.

At seven minutes her expression did sothing he had not seen from an assessor before—it did not change. That was the tell. Most people, when they encountered sothing unexpected, showed it. A slight widening, a small recalibration. She had encountered sothing unexpected and her face had locked rather than shifted, which ant she had decided not to show what she was processing.

She continued reading.

At eleven minutes she set her pen down.

"Thank you," she said. Her voice was the sa register it had been at the start—professional, unhurried. "You can relax."

He had not been tense. But he let the attention he had been holding ease.

She looked at her notebook. Then she looked at him.

"I have so questions," she said. "You don’t have to answer them. They’re not part of the formal assessnt. The formal assessnt is complete."

"Ask," he said.

She asked three things.

First: how long had he been running the integrated sub-expressions. He said since before the crossing. She wrote sothing.

Second: the deeper structural layer—the one she described as "the elent that does not originate from standard path cultivation"—was it sothing he had acquired deliberately or sothing he had been born with. He said neither. She looked at him for a mont, accepted the answer without pressing, and wrote sothing else.

Third: had he had contact with an active Class 3 Rift or above since the structural layer ford. He said no. Not directly.

She made a final note and closed the notebook.

"The formal recomndation will go to the board today," she said. "The supplentary notes will go separately." She said it the way she said everything: stating a fact, not explaining it.

He did not ask what the supplentary notes contained.

She stood, which ended the formal portion of the session.

The board staff began collecting their logs. Soren made a final entry in his own notebook and closed it. The director remained in his chair.

She crossed the room to him on her way to the door.

Not stopping, exactly. Slowing. The particular pace of soone who had sothing to say in passing that they had decided not to say during the session.

She looked at him once more with the sa reading attention, though the formal assessnt was done.

"In thirty years I have assessed eleven thousand hunters," she said. Her voice was quiet. Not lowered for secrecy—the director could certainly hear. Lowered because this was not for the record. "I have never read a structure like yours."

She continued to the door.

She did not explain what she ant by that.

She did not need to.

The formal recomndation ca down before midday.

One page. The board’s seal. Dense procedural language followed by a single clear line: rank challenge approved, recomnded new classification C-Rank, effective upon administrative processing.

C-Rank.

He had known it was coming. He had been operating at C-Rank output for weeks. But the badge and the paper had been saying D-Rank, and the distance between what the paper said and what the zones knew had been the running tension of the past month. Now the paper would catch up.

He read the recomndation a second ti and then folded it with the others.

The administrative processing would take two working days. He would receive the new badge at the registration hall on day three.

Two more days at D-Rank on paper.

He had survived worse gaps.

Soren was waiting in the corridor.

He had the look he wore when he had processed sothing and arrived at a conclusion he found satisfying in a purely analytical sense.

"C-Rank," he said.

"Yes."

A pause. "She was in there for eleven minutes," Soren said. "Most assessnts at that depth take four or five." He looked at the assessnt hall door. "She needed more ti."

He walked toward the stairs.

"Congratulations," he said, already on the first step. The word ca out flat and factual, the way Soren delivered things he ant but saw no reason to perform.

He found the director in the corridor below, reading.

Not the formal recomndation—that had gone to the board directly. A separate docunt, thinner, the Division seal on the outside rather than the assessnt board’s. The assessor’s supplentary notes, which had clearly reached him faster than Kai had expected.

The director looked up from the docunt when Kai reached him.

He did not change expression. The director’s face under professional conditions was one of the stiller surfaces Kai had encountered. But his eyes had the particular quality of soone who had just read sothing significant and was deciding how to describe it.

"She filed these under Division classification," he said. "Not Council routing."

Kai waited.

"All supplentary assessor notes on flagged subjects route automatically to both the Division and the Council representative assigned to the file." The director folded the docunt. "She chose not to use the standard routing. She filed these directly to the Division only."

He looked at Kai steadily.

"She knows the difference," he said.

The corridor was quiet. Sowhere above them the board staff were finishing their logs. Soren’s footsteps had faded toward the street.

Kai looked at the folded docunt in the director’s hands.

"What does it say?"

The director was quiet for a mont. Then: "That you are carrying three distinct structural layers that do not share a common Guild classification origin. That the deepest layer shows characteristics consistent with pre-Guild-era sovereign-class material. And that in her professional assessnt, your path structure represents a developntal trajectory that has no established ceiling in the current classification system."

He held Kai’s gaze.

"No established ceiling," he said again, as if the phrase was worth the repetition. "She is a precise woman. She does not write things she does not an."

He put the docunt in his coat.

"Voss will not see this," he said. "Not from . Not automatically." He turned toward the stairs. "But the assessor knows what she read. And she will rember it."

He went up.

Kai stood in the corridor for a mont.

No established ceiling.

He had been thinking about the next threshold, the next pool percentage, the next fusion, the next zone tier. He had been thinking in steps.

The assessor had looked at what the steps were building toward and had not found a wall at the end of them.

He walked out into the city.

The C-Rank badge would co in two days.

The zones that opened with it would co after.

He already knew what he was going to do with them.

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