The warehouse door finished opening with the slow confidence of sothing that did not expect to be rushed.
Kai Ren stood in the middle of the lower loading deck with the route shard hidden along the line of his coat and Neral half a step behind him, and for one stretched second the whole room seed to hold itself on that threshold. Pale anomaly-scan lines still burned low across the floor, cold and clinical and far too clean for the district they had been laid over. Crates sat abandoned on transfer dollies. Registry tabs had spilled across the concrete like broken teeth. Beyond the open door, the corridor outside was washed in hard white light instead of the low amber industrial tone the bonded runs usually wore. The city had stopped pretending now. It had finally decided to send people who belonged to systems instead of markets.
The woman who stepped through first did not look like a district killer.
That made her more dangerous.
She wore a charcoal field coat cut long and clean over reinforced underlayers that did not show unless one knew where to look. No obvious weapon in her hands. No visible panic. No wasted movent. Her hair was bound back tightly enough to feel institutional, and the expression on her face carried the sa thing the voice had carried through the door—controlled certainty, the sort that ca from years spent speaking to n and won already classified inside her head before they opened their mouths. Two retrieval troopers followed behind her at disciplined spacing, not crowding her line, not protecting her too obviously, simply existing in the pattern of a professional net that had closed enough tis to trust itself.
Kai looked at her first before asking anything of the system. The coat. The boots. The way she asured him without lingering on the blood. The way her attention moved to the hidden shape of his coat seam where the contract slate rested and then returned to his face. She wasn’t trying to figure out whether he was dangerous. She had already accepted that. She was deciding what category of dangerous he had beco.
Then Kai focused and pushed the system toward her.
Corporate Recovery Director
Combat-adjacent authority profile
Escort support: regulated retrieval troopers
There.
Not a floor enforcer. Not a response captain. A higher hand.
Neral saw enough from posture alone to keep his mouth shut for once, which told Kai how serious the mont actually was. The old broker only went silent when words had started costing more than they were worth.
The woman looked at the route shard that had appeared in Kai’s hand without an obvious draw and, for the first ti, sothing almost like interest touched her face. "That confirms several questions," she said.
Kai didn’t move. "You talk like you own the answers already."
"I own the relevant ones."
Interesting.
Not arrogant. Worse. Functional.
The lower deck remained still around them. No one else rushed in. No hidden teams burst from side doors. The confidence of that choice mattered. Either she believed the two troopers behind her were enough for the imdiate exchange, or she believed the scan field and sealed exits had already done most of the work. Maybe both.
"You asked for my coat to be opened," Kai said. "You can co do it."
That earned him the smallest possible shift in her eyes. Not annoyance. Recalculation.
"I asked," she said, "because there are paths in which this stays efficient."
Neral let out one low breath through his nose that sounded very close to disgust. Kai ignored him.
The Recovery Director took another step into the loading deck and the pale scan lines underfoot reacted, brightening once along her approach path and then settling again. She belonged to the system that had laid them down. That much was obvious. Not route logic, not really. Sothing corporate trying to wear old-road thods like stolen skin.
Kai did not like that.
Useful feeling.
"Na," he said.
She answered without delay. "Director Sel Vey."
Of course she did. People this high only gave nas when they wanted them rembered for effect or authority. He filed it away anyway.
"Your people are buying roads through black-market proxies," Kai said. "That’s a bad habit."
"It was a necessary one," she replied. "The markets were useful until they weren’t."
There.
That honesty again.
She didn’t deny the proxies. She didn’t pretend the corporations had nothing to do with Foundry Twelve or Black Vane or the buyer structures under Helios. She had simply moved past denial because, from her point of view, the useful lie had expired.
The system remained quiet because Kai hadn’t asked for more. Good. He wanted this from her directly.
"You controlled genes," he said. "Now you want the routes."
Sel Vey’s gaze stayed level. "We control instability when possible. We contain it when necessary. We acquire it when it proves valuable."
Neral made a low ugly sound at that. "There’s the corporation."
She didn’t look at him. "And there is the district habit of pretending dependence is independence."
That one landed.
Interesting.
The room sharpened by another degree. The two retrieval troopers widened slightly, enough that Kai could see the lines they preferred. One was a clean shooter. One was built for containnt and close capture. Both were strong. Probably Level 4. Not weak. Not the point. Sel Vey remained the point because if she had co personally, it ant Kai had already beco more than a retrieval contract. He had beco a strategic problem.
He could use that.
"You’re late," Kai said.
"No," she replied. "You escalated quickly."
Better answer.
He almost smiled.
Then she did sothing more dangerous than threatening him. She gave him information.
"The market channels misclassified you as a survivable anomaly. Foundry Twelve revised that. The exchange house confird it. Your file no longer sits in district circulation." Her gaze moved once to the hidden line of his coat again. "The slate made sure of that."
There it was.
The contract board had pushed him upward. Out of rumor. Out of local bounty ecology. Into the cleaner layers.
"aning?" Kai asked.
"aning lower bids no longer matter," she said. "You are not a market prize now. You are a restricted recovery subject."
Neral muttered, "That’s a nicer way of saying dissect later."
Sel Vey still didn’t bother looking at him. "Only if required."
Kai believed she ant it exactly that way. Not as a comfort. As policy.
The route shard sat loose in his hand. The Split Vault Cases pressed cool and hidden against his body. The compare wafer, the contract slate, and the route-linked evidence from the auction all remained on him. He had too many things they wanted. More importantly, he was now one of the things they wanted.
That simplified matters.
The Recovery Director clearly felt the sa. "You are carrying stolen corporate-sensitive material," she said. "You possess at least one live route-derived concealnt device. You have interacted with an unregistered route witness channel. You have exceeded predicted sa-rank suppression tolerances repeatedly. You will co with us."
Not a question.
Not an offer.
A conclusion.
Kai looked at her for a long second and then, because the mont deserved it, let his own answer settle before giving it.
"No."
The pale scan grid under the floor tightened.
That was new.
Lines that had only been reading before now shifted into a denser pattern, not a full restraint sh yet, but close enough that movent through the wrong segnts would harden the space around his ankles and knees. Corporate adaptation of route architecture again. Ugly. Clever. Not enough.
He didn’t move imdiately. He looked down first, read the pattern with his own senses, and only then turned the system toward the field for cleaner detail.
Anomaly-scan sh transitioning to containnt mode
Movent penalty likely if triggered directly
Lateral disruption possible
There.
Useful.
Sel Vey saw the slight shift in his eyes and knew he had understood the floor. "That was the efficient path," she said.
Kai looked back up. "Then your definition of efficient is weak."
The shooter trooper fired first.
No warning shot. No negotiation waste. A compact, silenced discharge from shoulder height, ant to puncture a leg or shoulder and let the containnt field do the rest. Kai twisted just enough to let the dart skim coat instead of flesh, then moved—not forward, not back, but diagonally across the field where the pale scan lines looked weakest.
The floor reacted imdiately, hardening into restraint geotry a half-step behind him.
Good.
Too slow.
He crossed the lane and put the route shard through the shooter’s throat before the second shot aligned. The body dropped into the active sh and was pinned there by his own weight as the field hardened around a corpse instead of around Kai.
The system flashed.
Level 4 Regulated Retrieval Trooper eliminated
Evolution Points 10
Current Total: 101
The containnt trooper ca in low and fast, a compact compression shield unfolding from his left arm while a capture spike device snapped open in the right. Better. Smarter. He wasn’t trying to kill. He was trying to drive Kai into the field and let the architecture do the rest.
Sel Vey did not retreat during the exchange.
That made her dangerous in a way combat ranks didn’t fully cover. She trusted systems. She trusted sequence. She trusted that enough structure around her made panic unnecessary.
Kai hated and respected that simultaneously.
The trooper hit the shield line exactly where the floor sh wanted Kai to go. Kai answered by pulling the heavy pistol from the Split Vault Case and shooting the nearest floor node instead of the man. The shot cracked the containnt seam and turned one section of the grid unstable. The trooper’s first step landed in it a heartbeat later. Pale force surged around his lower leg, locking him in the sa trap ant for Kai.
There.
Now the shield was too slow.
Kai stepped inside it and drove a compact body shot into the seam under the arm. The armor held. Better build. Then he drove the route shard through the collar line and into the throat beneath.
Level 4 Regulated Retrieval Trooper eliminated
Evolution Points 10
Current Total: 111
Now it was only Sel Vey and the room.
Interesting thing about rooms like this: once the people built to preserve order failed, the truth showed through very quickly. The district workers pressed against the far walls. Two freight hands were already halfway through a side hatch. A registrar clutched a data pad to her chest like scripture. Everyone in the loading deck understood, suddenly and clearly, that the corporate line sent to retrieve Kai Ren had entered in clean formation and died in seconds.
That kind of witness mattered.
Sel Vey remained still for exactly one breath longer than most people could have managed.
Then she reached into the inside seam of her charcoal coat and withdrew the object she had actually trusted most.
A black case.
Small. Matte. Cleanly edged. Not identical to the Split Vault Cases on Kai, but close enough in design language that the recovered third inside him sharpened imdiately. Route-adapted. Concealnt-capable. Maybe even related.
Very interesting.
Now this mattered a lot.
She touched one thumb to the edge seam and the case unfolded into a narrow lattice of hard-light control lines around her hand, half weapon, half interface. Not a gun. Not a shield. Sothing designed to override, jam, or forcibly open controlled relic functions.
Of course.
A corporate answer to tools like his.
Kai’s pulse slowed.
The next Chapter beat had arrived.
Sel Vey looked at the route shard in his hand and then at the hidden lines of his coat where the other case rode concealed. "Now we can stop pretending," she said.
Kai looked at the black lattice around her hand. "I wasn’t pretending."
For the first ti since entering the room, sothing close to personal focus entered her face. Not emotion exactly. Investnt.
"That relic pair should not be in civilian circulation," she said.
There.
The black cases.
Not just useful items then. Important items.
Not common salvage. Not random prize. Sothing corporate systems already knew enough to classify.
He could use that.
"What are they?" Kai asked.
Sel Vey’s answer ca without hesitation. "Prototype route-space utility architecture. Incomplete. Restricted. Not yours."
That was almost enough to laugh at.
Prototype. Restricted. Not his. Every useful thing in Helios eventually passed through those three words before becoming sobody else’s possession.
Kai looked down at the Split Vault Case hidden under his coat and, for one sharp second, understood the shape of the next decision.
He had been carrying the relics.
Testing them.
Using them.
But not truly opening them.
Not the way they wanted to be opened.
The system didn’t volunteer anything because he hadn’t asked. Good. He didn’t want it volunteering now. This needed to be chosen.
Sel Vey raised the black lattice half a degree and the broken floor sh around them reoriented at once, all the pale lines turning toward Kai like iron filings around a magnet.
"Put them down," she said, "or I open them myself."
There it was.
A threat.
A promise.
And an answer hiding inside both.
Kai smiled slowly despite the blood on his face and the bodies cooling around him.
Then he reached inside his coat, touched the Split Vault Cases with both hands, and willed the system not to analyze them this ti—but to go deeper.
Not classify.
Not compare.
Open.
The relics answered.
At once.
The pressure inside both cases surged so hard it made the air around his coat twist. The seams split wider than before. Space folded wrong for one impossible second. The route shard in his hand pulsed. The hidden pistol disappeared from every normal sense of weight. Sothing larger than concealnt pushed back against the inside of the world, trying to unfold.
The system exploded into warnings.
Split Vault Cases destabilizing
Deeper architecture responding
Unknown route-space function awakening
Sel Vey’s expression finally changed.
Not much.
More than enough.
And when the warehouse lights blew out all at once, the last thing the room saw was the black shape around Kai beginning to open from the inside.
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