The B-Rank badge ca two days later.
He picked it up at the registration desk without ceremony and pinned it to his coat over the C-Rank badge’s position. The B-Rank mark was denser than the C-Rank—the sa Guild seal, the sa pressed tal, but the path-notation arrangent was more complex, reflecting the wider zone access and the higher output threshold the classification represented.
Soren was at the mission board.
He looked at the new badge when Kai ca through. He did not offer a comnt on it. He had predicted it. Comnting on sothing you had predicted accurately was not Soren’s style.
He was reading the B-zone contract listings. He turned the board’s contract folder so Kai could see.
"The distinction between C and B-Rank contracts is not just zone access," he said. "C-Rank hunters work C-zones. They take what the zone produces and build around it—team compositions, zone mapping, material contracts within the zone’s ceiling. The work is real but it’s bounded by what the zone allows." He turned a page. "B-Rank hunters take contracts no C-Rank team can complete. Not because a C-Rank team lacks numbers—because the target’s path-output exceeds what C-Rank resistance can absorb. You can put six C-Rank hunters against a B-zone apex creature and the creature won’t slow down. It’s not a question of effort. The biology doesn’t respond to C-Rank pressure above a certain threshold."
He set the folder down.
"The rank isn’t a number. It’s a physical threshold. Below it, so things don’t respond to you." He looked at the body rank notation visible on the permit flag at the bottom of Kai’s badge form. "The body rank will limit you until it’s resolved. Two tiers apart is within tolerance—the Guild won’t block most contracts. But so B-Rank team leads won’t take a Predator Body into certain zones. They’re not wrong to hesitate. The body rank is what the body can sustain, not what it can produce in a single engagent. A Predator Body can produce B-Rank output in short windows. It can’t sustain that output for a full extended mission without cost."
He looked at the board.
"Resolve it soon," he said.
He went into zone fifteen alone.
The B-Rank badge on his coat changed the entry corridor’s transition conditioning—the system adjusted to his new classification automatically, the corridor running at a slightly higher path-pressure level than it had on his previous B-zone entries. He adapted in four seconds. The substrate had already been doing this at B-zone ambient for weeks. Four seconds was not adaptation. Four seconds was confirmation.
He found the Rift Sovereign Drake in the zone’s eastern section.
Not zone fourteen’s Drake—that one he and Dorath’s team had killed months ago. This was a true B-zone Drake, shaped by zone fifteen’s ambient energy over a lifespan that had pushed its path-expression to a depth zone fourteen’s ceiling could not produce. Dragon Mode in full integration resolved its architecture imdiately: triple expression, Fla-Stone-Shadow, each expression at B-zone depth, the interface architecture between them as sophisticated as anything he had encountered outside the Rift-ford creature.
He read it for three seconds.
Then he engaged.
The fight started well. Dragon Mode identified the primary interface gap between the Stone and Fla expressions—the sa geotric relationship he had learned to target in zone fourteen, but deeper, the gap subtler, requiring more precision in the Rending Strike’s angle. He landed the first strike cleanly at second eight.
Then the Drake did sothing he had not encountered before.
It used the road.
Not consciously—not the way Kai used Sovereign Dominion through the road network. But the Drake had been living in zone fifteen’s eastern section for long enough that the zone’s path energy, which ran through the deep road substrate beneath the zone floor, had beco part of its ambient environnt. When it drew on its Stone expression for a defensive counter, it drew not just from its own body’s reserves but from the zone’s ambient Stone-type path current running below it.
The defensive counter was thirty percent stronger than it should have been.
Kai’s Sovereign Dominion, which travelled through the road network, collided with the Drake’s own road-adjacent draw. Two sovereign-class interactions using the sa infrastructure. The path-layer between them shuddered.
He released Sovereign Dominion and switched to spatial compression instead.
Four tres of compressed path-layer around the Drake’s position cut it off from the ambient Stone current for two seconds—the compression field interrupting the draw the way a dam interrupted a river. The Drake’s defensive counter collapsed to its standard output level. Rending Strike through the now-accessible gap.
Forty-five seconds total.
The hardest solo kill in the new world.
Rift Sovereign Drake eliminated — B-zone
Path material grade: Ancient
Evolution Points 90
Current Total: 1,548
War Body threshold: condition 3 T — push window open
He sat down on the zone floor.
Not from exhaustion. From decision. The threshold was open and the zone’s ambient B-zone energy was supporting the substrate—the path channels in his body were fully open from the fight, the Dragon-line pool regenerating passively, the entire build in the post-engagent state where everything was warm and available. This was the right mont.
He directed four hundred and twenty evolution points into the body rank advance.
The War Body push was not like the fusions, which were precise binding processes that completed in minutes. It was a structural reconfiguration—the body’s architecture adjusting to a new tier of baseline capacity across every system simultaneously. Not one skill. Not one channel. Everything.
Eight minutes.
He sat still on the zone floor for eight minutes while zone fifteen’s ambient path-energy fed the substrate and the substrate fed the reconfiguration and the reconfiguration built what four months of path-depth accumulation and B-zone material absorption had been preparing for.
The Predator Body had been built for C-zone work. Stronger than Iron or Steel, faster, more durable under path-output load. But it had ceilings: sustained output duration, maximum impact delivery, the depth of integration the sovereign seed could reach through it.
The War Body was built for B-zone work.
When the eight minutes completed he stood up and felt the difference imdiately. Not dramatically—the body did not feel alien. But the ceilings were gone. The sustained output that had required careful load managent at Predator Body was now baseline. The sovereign seed’s integration, which had been pressing against the Predator Body’s structural limits for weeks, settled into a deeper layer that the War Body made available.
He walked to the zone exit.
Body rank advance: War Body confird
EP invested: 420 — remaining: 1,128
Physical output ceiling: elevated across all functions
Sovereign seed integration depth: increased
Sustained Dragon Mode Sovereign Dominion capacity: significantly extended
The clerk at the station looked at the exit reading on her equipnt. She looked at it twice.
She had never logged a body rank advancent from inside a B-zone before. She checked the equipnt’s calibration. It was correct. She stamped the exit form and added a note in the body rank field without comnting on it directly.
He took the form and went ho.
B-Rank badge. War Body.
For the first ti since the arc began, the Guild’s record and the body’s reality were describing the sa person.
He sat at the common room table and looked at the badge.
D-Rank badge while his body was C-Rank capacity. The rank challenge had resolved it. C-Rank badge while his body was B-Rank adjacent. The assessnt had resolved it. B-Rank badge while his body was at Predator tier. Three days to resolve it.
The pattern had run three tis. Each ti the gap had widened before it closed. Each ti the resolution had co faster once the threshold was reached.
He did not think the pattern was finished. He thought the next gap was already forming.
But for tonight it was closed.
He read the second folder that evening.
The Archivist General had told him to read it. He had carried it for three days without opening it fully—he had seen the first page the night she brought it, the old handwriting, the language that required careful reading. He had decided to wait until the assessnt was done and the body rank was resolved and the next imdiate things were settled.
They were settled.
He opened it.
The docunt was sixty pages. The handwriting was consistent throughout—one author, over a long period, the early pages in one ink and the later pages in another. Pre-Guild. The language was an older form of the common tongue that he had to read slowly in places, letting the aning settle before moving forward.
The destination. Where the roads were pointing.
He read for two hours.
What he found was not a place. It was a function. The deep road structure had not been built to deliver energy to a geographic location. It had been built to create a permanent connection between the sovereign seed’s class of energy and the physical world’s path infrastructure—a stable channel through which that class of energy could operate in the world without causing the structural damage that uncontrolled sovereign output produced.
The carrier was not the destination.
The carrier was the key.
The docunt described what the key unlocked. In careful, asured language, the author had written about a layer of the world’s path structure that existed below the Rift network, below the zone system, below anything the current Guild’s monitoring equipnt could detect. A layer that the sovereign seed’s class of energy could reach and interact with once the road connection was stable. A layer that had not been accessible since before the Rift’s arrival had disrupted the original path structure.
The roads had not been built to direct energy sowhere. They had been built to restore access to sothing.
He read the final pages slowly.
What had been restored was not described in the docunt. The author had written up to the point of restoration and then stopped. Not because they did not know—the final entry was dated, and the date was after the connection should have completed. They had stopped because what ca after was not sothing that could be written. It had to be experienced in the layer itself.
He closed the folder.
He sat in the dark for a long ti.
The road network had built a door. He had opened it. The Archivist General had been waiting for the carrier who would open it. Now it was open.
What was through it was not in any docunt.
It was in what ca next.
B-Rank. War Body. The door open.
He looked at the badge on the table beside the folder.
He had arrived in this city not knowing what he was building toward.
He was beginning to understand.
The next arc would tell him the rest.
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