The final check-in lasted nine minutes.
Sael ran it the sa way she had run every previous session: output reading, questions about sovereign pressure events in the past five days, any trigger changes. Kai answered accurately. Zero events in five days. No new triggers. The eastern district restriction had kept him away from the main Rift fra and the path-density conditions that the previous events had required, and the pattern had held.
Sael stamped the form and filed it in the correct folder.
"Voluntary protocol: closed," she said. "The eastern district restriction lifts at noon today." She handed him a copy. "Representative Voss filed his final report three days ago. The Council’s position is that monitoring will continue through the Division’s standard observation channels. No further Council-level intervention scheduled."
He took the copy.
"And the assessor’s notes?" he said.
Sael’s expression did not change. "Those were filed under Division classification."
"Voss has read them," Kai said.
A pause. Small. "The director will want to speak with you about that."
He went to see the director.
The director was at his desk with the window behind him. The eastern glow of the Rift fra was visible at the edge of the glass, the sa deep pulse Kai had been able to read through Extended Hunter’s Instinct since the fusion.
"Voss’s report said decreasing frequency and no grounds for classification continuation," the director said. No preamble. He had been waiting to have this conversation. "Which is accurate. The protocol produced clean data and the data supported his recomndation."
Kai waited.
"The assessor filed her supplentary notes to the Division record, not Council routing," the director continued. "As I told you. What I did not know at the ti is that she also sent Voss a separate communication." He looked at the desk. "Not through the standard routing. A personal professional correspondence. Assessor to Council representative."
"What did she tell him?"
"I don’t have the correspondence. Voss did not share it." The director paused. "But Voss’s report, which arrived the sa day as the correspondence, contains one line that was not in his preliminary assessnt. He describes the carrier’s path structure as—" he looked at a docunt on his right stack— "’exhibiting characteristics consistent with pre-Guild developntal fraworks.’"
He looked at Kai.
"Pre-Guild developntal fraworks is not standard Council language. It is assessor language. She gave him the phrase."
Kai looked at the window. The Rift’s glow. The eastern district now open to him again.
"What does it an for the report?" he asked.
"It ans Voss’s final report is accurate and also contains a flag that any Council archivist who reads it in the next ten years will find significant." The director folded his hands. "Voss closed the protocol cleanly. He did not escalate. But he wrote sothing into the record that will not be missed by the next person who reads the file carefully."
He said it without alarm. As a fact about a situation he had assessed.
"Continue your work," he said. "The flag is in the archive. What you build between now and when soone reads it is what determines what the flag ans."
He went to zone fourteen in the afternoon.
Northeast section. The creature he had filed an observation note for four days ago. The catalogue team had responded that morning with a brief acknowledgent: signature confird, identification pending, investigation scheduled for the following week.
A week was a long ti for an A-Rank adjacent creature that had already moved sixty tres west across a zone boundary it should not have crossed.
He went in on a reconnaissance permit and took nothing with him that suggested he was planning to engage.
He was not planning to engage.
He was planning to understand.
The northeast section of zone fourteen looked different from the rest of the zone at the path-layer level. Extended Hunter’s Instinct showed him a quality of ambient field that was not the settled, organised density of an established territory. It was active. The path energy here was still arranging itself, still finding a stable configuration around sothing that had only recently established its presence.
Recent. Not seven days. Maybe twelve or fourteen. The creature had arrived before he had filed the original observation note.
He moved to sixty tres from the signature and stopped.
The Extended Hunter’s Instinct pushed its path-layer read outward.
What ca back was unlike anything the system had matched to a catalogue entry.
Unknown creature — path-layer read at 60 tres:
Path type: multi-expression, structure unstable
Expressions detected: 4 simultaneous
Power equivalent: A-Rank adjacent — upgrading
Body structure: still forming — active evolutionary process ongoing
Note: no Guild catalogue match
Note: evolutionary rate is anomalous — consistent with accelerated mutation under elevated ambient Rift energy
Upgrading.
The creature was still evolving. Not as a fixed organism that had reached a stable state—as sothing in the process of becoming. Four expressions, unstable, active. The structure was not finished.
He stood at sixty tres and let the system analyse what it was reading.
After thirty seconds it produced a single classification note:
Origin hypothesis: accelerated evolution product
Driver: elevated Rift oscillation over extended period (est. 5–7 years)
chanism: ambient Rift energy at elevated amplitude accelerates path-type integration in species near oscillation source
Result: creature exhibiting evolutionary state not possible under standard ambient conditions
Classification: Rift-ford — no prior docunted examples in Guild record
Rift-ford.
The Rift had been oscillating at elevated amplitude for six years. The director had been monitoring it. The road network had been responding to it. The zones around it had been reclassifying upward as the ambient energy shifted their creature populations.
And sowhere in that six years of elevated energy, a creature in zone fourteen’s northeast section had been exposed to enough concentrated Rift force that it had begun incorporating path types at a rate no natural process would allow.
The Rift had been building sothing.
Not intentionally. Not the way a person built a thing. But the elevated oscillation had been a condition, and this creature was what that condition had produced.
He was still processing that when the creature’s path signature shifted.
Not the physical signal of a creature becoming aware. The path-layer signal.
The creature’s four-expression field, which had been oriented inward—arranged around its own ongoing evolution, focused on the internal process—rotated outward in the direction of his position.
It had felt the Extended Hunter’s Instinct reading it through the path layer.
Not the physical presence of a hunter sixty tres away. The act of observation through path-space. Sothing in the creature’s own path-awareness was sensitive enough to detect when it was being read at that level.
That was not sothing standard creatures could do.
The creature turned.
He could not see it through the zone’s terrain. But he could read its path signature’s orientation, and the orientation had shifted from inward to directly toward him. The four unstable expressions had organised themselves around the direction of his position with the specific quality of a thing that had decided sothing required attention.
It began moving.
Not fast. Not like the Mantle Cat’s deliberate approach. Slower. The way sothing moved when it was still forming and movent was not yet a refined capability.
He walked back toward the transition corridor.
Not running. Walking. The sa deliberate pace he had used when leaving the Sovereign Drake’s territory. The pace that said: decision made, not retreating, choosing the terrain.
The creature’s signature followed him to the forty-tre mark and then stopped. The edge of whatever it was treating as its own range.
He filed the updated observation note at the station desk.
"Update to zone fourteen northeast observation," he said. "The creature is aware of path-layer observation. It is actively evolving—four simultaneous expressions, structure still forming. It tracked my position through path-space rather than physical detection." He looked at the guard. "The catalogue team should accelerate their tiline."
The guard wrote it down.
He checked the state of things on the walk back.
Dragon-line pool: 87%
Evolution Points: 656
Frawork loading: 97%
Dragon Predator Mode ceiling: 14–16 seconds
Extended Hunter’s Instinct: fully integrated
Voluntary protocol: CLOSED
Eastern district: unrestricted
Eighty-seven percent pool. Dragon Mode ceiling pushing upward as the pool grew. The C-zone dual-channel absorptions were feeding the Dragon-line reservoir consistently, and the rate was higher than the D-zone work had produced because the C-zone Beast and mixed-expression creatures gave richer yield per kill.
At ninety percent the ceiling would extend further. The system had been clear about that.
He thought about what the director had said.
The flag was in the archive. What he built between now and when soone read it was what determined what the flag ant.
He had thirty days of voluntary protocol behind him and a C-Rank badge and a six-fusion frawork half-built and a pool approaching the point where Dragon Predator Mode would start producing effects that other people could feel even when he was not using it in combat.
The director’s note had arrived that evening, slipped under his door while he was filing the observation update.
A single line, in the sa spare hand as always:
The assessor’s na is Maret Lindh. She has assessed more than eleven thousand hunters. The last ti she used the phrase ’pre-Guild developntal frawork’ in a professional docunt was twenty-three years ago. I looked it up. She used it then in a theoretical paper, not in an assessnt. This is the first ti she has written it about a living subject.
He sat with that for a while.
Then he set the note on the shelf beside the extended file and the protocol copy and the House Thornwood card and the growing stack of things the city kept handing him.
In the morning there was zone work to do.
User Comments
0 comments from readers