He entered zone fifteen alone on the first morning.
Not the boundary section. The full interior. He had the permit. He had the B-zone endorsent from the challenge filing. He had been reading the zone’s ambient field through the boundary for two weeks and understood its surface character well enough to move in it without spending the first hour just adapting.
He adapted in seven seconds.
Zone fifteen felt different from zone fourteen the way zone fourteen had felt different from zone nine. Not just denser—structured differently. The ambient path-energy here had been shaped by generations of B-zone creature populations, each generation refining the zone’s energy profile by living in it, hunting in it, dying in it. The residue of that accumulated refinent was in the air, in the soil, in the path-layer that Extended Hunter’s Instinct read continuously.
C-zone creatures had strategies. They learned what worked in their territory and used it consistently. A Stone Warder in zone fourteen used the sa gravitational load distribution it had used for its entire life because the C-zone ambient energy had never pressured it to change.
B-zone creatures were different. Soren had explained it at the mission board the day before, in the dry register he used for technical distinctions: "B-zone creatures have been shaped by ambient energy strong enough to force path-expression refinent over generations. They don’t just fight differently. They adapt differently. A C-zone creature has a fixed strategy. A B-zone creature updates its strategy mid-fight."
He kept that in mind as Dragon Mode opened into the zone’s full interior density.
Everything resolved at once. Not the steady architectural read of zone fourteen—sothing richer, more layered, the full integration state processing the B-zone’s ambient complexity into a complete picture of every creature in range. He stood thirty tres inside zone fifteen and could read the path-expression architecture of six distinct creatures simultaneously, each one a different tier of complexity than anything zone fourteen had produced.
He chose the largest.
The Rift Sovereign Warden was at the zone’s eastern ridge. Stone-type, pure expression, the sa species as zone fourteen’s version but shaped by years of B-zone ambient energy into sothing that only shared the na. Bigger. Denser. And, as Soren had said, capable of adaptation that C-zone creatures could not manage.
Dragon Mode showed him its architecture completely: load distribution seams, primary and secondary stress points, the specific gravitational interface that gave the Stone expression its weight authority. The sa read he had used to kill zone fourteen’s version. He identified the primary cascade seam and initiated Sovereign Dominion on the approach.
The Warden felt it.
Not as pain. As pressure in the path-layer it inhabited. And instead of holding its architecture and absorbing the pressure the way a C-zone creature would—the only strategy a fixed-strategy creature knew—the Warden redistributed. In real ti, mid-approach, it shifted its load distribution away from the primary cascade seam before Kai’s strike could reach it.
He had not seen a creature do that before.
He adjusted.
The spatial compression field activated at three tres—a conscious initiation, the five-tre radius he had developed pressing inward around the Warden’s redistribution in progress. Compression and redistribution were opposing forces working on the sa architecture. The Warden’s Stone expression could not do two structural things at once. For two seconds it was frozen between the action it had started and the one the compression field was forcing.
Two seconds.
Rending Strike through the gap the redistribution had exposed when it started—the point the seam had passed through on its way to the new position, briefly accessible, briefly exactly where the compression field was holding it.
Thirty-four seconds from first contact.
The Warden went down.
Rift Sovereign Warden eliminated — B-zone
Path material grade: Ancient
Evolution Points 80
Current Total: 1,458
Note: B-zone creature demonstrated mid-fight strategic adaptation — log for assessnt preparation
He stood over the kill and breathed.
Thirty-four seconds was not fast. Zone fourteen’s Warders had been going down in two to three minutes on his first sessions and under sixty seconds once he had the read. This one had taken thirty-four seconds with his full toolkit deployed and an improvised counter to an adaptation he had not anticipated.
B-zone was a different tier. Not insurmountable. Different.
He devoured the Ancient core and filed the zone exit.
The system updated on the walk back.
War Body advance — threshold assessnt:
Condition 1 — Path depth: B-zone material absorbed. Sufficient. ✓
Condition 2 — Structural stability: 6 fusions integrated, sovereign functions stable. ✓
Condition 3 — EP reserve: 1,458 current. Target 1,500–2,000. Approaching.
Status: threshold window will open at approximately 1,500 EP
Recomndation: one to two additional B-zone kills will open the push window
One or two more kills.
He had five days before the assessnt. He had ti.
The director’s note arrived mid-afternoon.
The Archivist General has requested your Division registration file. Not the monitoring logs or the voluntary protocol record — the original registration docunt from your first day in the city.
The original registration file contains three items: the vault pair’s initial scan reading, the Category Two flag from the gate sensors, and the appraisal anomaly note from the registration board. There is nothing in it about your build, your path structure, or anything the monitoring record has captured since.
I cannot determine what she is looking for. The file contains almost nothing about you specifically.
Unless she is not looking at you. She is looking at the vault pair’s first recorded scan. Understanding what the device read on day one.
He read it twice.
The vault pair’s first scan had been taken by the Division’s appraisal equipnt on the day he registered. At that point the device had been calibrated to his output level from crossing—a fraction of what it had calibrated to by the eastern district event. She was reading the beginning of the calibration record to understand the distance it had travelled.
Mira was in the common room when he returned. She was holding the vault pair’s two shells in her cupped hands, not reading them the way she read roads—just holding them, the way she did when sothing in them was active and she wanted to stay close to what they were registering.
She looked up when he ca in.
"They glowed," she said. "About two hours ago. Briefly. The sa low light as before the eastern district event."
He sat across from her.
"The Archivist General accessed the registration file," he said.
Mira looked at the shells.
"They felt it," she said. "The first scan is stored in the Division’s system as path-energy data — an imprint of what the vault pair was reading on that first day. When she accessed the record, the imprint resonated with the device." She turned one shell slowly in her palm. "It’s how the device tracks its own calibration history. It recognises when its past readings are studied."
She looked at him.
"She’s not preparing for an assessnt," Mira said quietly. "She’s been waiting for this assessnt for a very long ti. She’s been preparing since before you arrived."
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