©Novel Buddy
Ultra Gene Evolution System-Chapter 116 – The Gate Read First
The Ardhen bridge checkpoint was exactly as the Stone Path hunter had described.
Three guards, a log table, a gate arm across the road. The guard who took the transit letter read it, looked at the vault pair, read it again, and wrote something in the log. Ten minutes. No questions beyond the standard ones. He handed the letter back with a stamp on the lower corner and lifted the gate arm without ceremony.
That was the last easy thing that happened that day.
Kael’s Seat became visible from the top of the long rise two hours past the bridge.
Kai stopped walking.
The others stopped with him, and for a full minute no one said anything at all.
The city sat in the wide base of the valley where three rivers came together, and it was large in a way that was difficult to make sense of from a distance because the mind kept trying to compare it to things it already knew and kept failing. The walls alone were higher than any structure Helios had built above ground. They ran in a wide curve around the city’s southern and western faces, pale stone weathered to grey, with towers at intervals that were not decorative. Inside the walls the city rose in layers—buildings of different heights arranged in no pattern Kai could identify from here, with roads between them that he could only follow for a few turns before the scale swallowed them.
At the eastern side, exactly where Maret had said and exactly where the road network had been pointing since they left Varden Post, the Rift stood open.
Open.
Not a frame around a closed space. Not the controlled shimmer of Varden Post’s access structure. The Rift at Kael’s Seat was active. A wide vertical split in the air above the eastern district, held stable by the largest frame structure Kai had ever seen—dark metal and old stone rising six storeys, with the Rift itself contained inside it like something that had been found already moving and carefully built around. The light from inside it was not bright. It was deep, the way colour was deep in very old stone, and it moved the way light moved at the bottom of water.
Mira made a sound that was not quite a word.
Kai looked at her. Her lines were moving. All of them. Not uncontrolled—she had her hands pressed flat against her coat and her breathing was steady—but they were moving with more energy than he had seen since the memory chambers under Helios.
"I’m fine," she said, before he asked. "It’s just... loud."
Neral looked at the city for another long moment. When he finally spoke his voice had none of its usual performance. "Helios was a cage with good architecture," he said quietly. "This is something else entirely."
No one disagreed.
They kept walking.
The main approach road fed into a wide plaza in front of the south gate. There were already thirty or forty people in various stages of entering or waiting—hunters in groups, traders with loaded carts, individuals moving with the focused pace of people who had been here before and knew where they were going. Above the gate arch, two large flags moved in a steady wind: one with the Guild seal, a mark Kai was beginning to recognise, and one he did not know at all.
The gate had sensors.
He had been warned about this. He was not prepared for the scale of them.
They were not devices exactly. They were built into the arch itself—carved lines in the stone, layered over each other in a dense pattern that went from the ground to the arch’s peak. Path-sensitive construction. Old and well-maintained and very thorough. As each person passed through, the lines gave a faint, brief response—different in quality for different people, too subtle for most to notice.
When Kai reached the arch the lines lit.
Not faintly.
Not briefly.
The pattern across the entire arch face activated at once with a sharp gold pulse that was visible from twenty paces in every direction. Several people near the gate turned. The guard who stepped forward was not the standard checkpoint officer. He was older, heavier-built, with three marks on his badge and a hand already raised to signal the group to stop.
"Transit papers," he said. His voice was level but his eyes were on the coat.
Kai had the letter out. The guard took it, read it, and his expression shifted in a way that was hard to interpret—not alarm, not relief, something more like a man receiving confirmation of something he had hoped was not true.
He passed the letter to a second guard who appeared at his shoulder. "Log this. Flag the Artifact Division." Then he looked at Kai. "You can enter. Keep the letter in your outer pocket where it’s visible. Do not approach the eastern district until after your Division appointment."
"Understood," Kai said.
The guard looked at the group one more time, his eyes stopping briefly on Mira with the same expression the patrol mounted hunter had used—not hostile, just noting. Then he stepped aside.
They walked through the gate.
The city hit differently from inside.
The scale that had been abstract from the rise became immediate. The roads were wide enough for heavy equipment but they were full, and the buildings on either side rose high enough that the sky above was reduced to a long pale strip. The sound was different from anything Kai had heard before—not the compressed noise of Helios’ managed districts, but a broader, more varied noise, full of languages he did not have and equipment he did not recognise and the particular kind of energy that came from a place where many different kinds of power arrived and departed regularly.
Guild flags hung from every main building. Not decorative—functional, marking type and affiliation the way signs marked roads. Different marks. Different colours on the lower section. A system he did not yet know how to read.
Hunters were everywhere. Alone, in pairs, in full teams. Some in transit, moving with purpose between buildings. Some clearly waiting—groups gathered outside certain doors with the patient, contained energy of people who had done everything they could do and were now in someone else’s hands. A team of six passed them moving fast in full equipment, badge marks Kai had never seen, path pressure radiating off the group in waves that made the air around them feel slightly different from the air a metre away.
He pushed the system toward them without slowing.
Group scan: 6 targets
Average Power Rank: A-Rank
Paths detected: Flame / Void / Steel / Stone / Blood / Life
Guild Rank average: Platinum
Platinum.
He watched them go and said nothing.
Neral was very close behind him and also said nothing. That was new.
They had made it perhaps three hundred metres into the city when the shell-core lost its patience.
There was no warning. No building pressure that Kai could have caught in time. One moment the vault pair was holding the regulator in its careful, organised way, and the next the regulator pulsed with a force that drove the air out of Kai’s lungs and sent a shockwave of path pressure outward from his coat in a ring that he could feel and everyone within thirty metres could certainly feel too.
He stopped.
So did a large number of people around him.
The vault pair clenched back around the shell with the Adaptive Load Evolution’s full strength, and the pain that came with it was sharp enough to put one hand against the nearest wall. His vision stayed clear. His legs stayed under him. But the regulator was pushing back against the vault’s control with more force than he had ever felt from it—not trying to escape, trying to move. Trying to go somewhere.
East.
Toward the Rift.
The system came in fast.
Shell-core: proximity response to Class 3 Rift
Vault architecture: maximum containment active
Warning: shell resonance detectable at 80–100 metres
Path pressure event: logged by gate sensors
Eighty to one hundred metres.
The whole block had felt it.
He straightened and got his breathing back. The regulator was still pushing, but the vault pair was holding. It would hold. It was built for this kind of load now. But ’holding’ was not the same as ’invisible’, and the twenty or so people who had stopped to look at him were not going to un-stop just because he had his face under control.
Liora was at his shoulder in one step. "Can you walk?"
"Yes."
"Then walk. Now."
He pushed off the wall.
The crowd around them was doing the thing crowds did when something path-related happened in a public space—spreading slightly, watching without looking directly, the specific body language of people who were experienced enough to know when to make room and not experienced enough to know whether to intervene.
They did not intervene.
But someone else did.
She stepped out of a doorway twelve metres ahead.
Not running. Not alarmed. Moving with the deliberate, unhurried calm of someone who had been standing in that doorway for a specific reason and had just received confirmation that the reason had arrived.
She was young—mid-twenties at most—with close-cut dark hair and a coat that was not the standard Guild field issue. The badge on her panel was smaller than average but the mark on it was different from anything he had seen. More lines. Layered in a way that suggested not rank exactly but function. A specialisation mark.
She looked at the vault pair on Kai’s coat and then looked at his face with the expression of someone checking a detail against a description they had been given.
Then she said, with complete calm: "The Artifact Division has been expecting you since this morning."
Kai looked at her.
"Maret Vin filed her full report four days ago," she continued. "Not the transit letter. Her actual report. Forty pages." She paused to let that settle. "Our director read it twice."
Behind Kai, Neral made a very quiet sound.
The young woman looked past Kai to Mira. Her expression did not change, but something in her stillness changed—a quality of careful attention that was different from the way she had looked at the coat or at Kai’s face.
"We need to move you off the main road," she said. "Another pulse like that one and the district patrol will log a containment query and you will spend the next six hours answering questions in an office instead of speaking with the director." She turned and gestured toward the doorway she had come from.
Not a request.
Not quite an order either.
Something in between that left very little room for a different decision.
Kai looked at the doorway. Then at the woman. The system had read her badge the moment she stepped out.
Guild badge: Artifact Division — Senior Analyst
Path: Void Path
Path Depth: Advanced
Status: active / assigned
Void Path. Advanced depth.
She had spatial sensitivity. She had probably felt the shell through the wall of the building she was standing in before it pulsed. She had been waiting not because she was lucky but because she had known, precisely, when they would pass this point on the road.
Forty pages. The director had read it twice.
They had been expected.
Not as arrivals. As a specific event that had been studied and prepared for before Kai had taken a single step inside the city walls.
He looked at the older man. The older man gave him nothing. That meant: your call.
He looked at Mira. She was watching the young woman with the careful attention she used on things that mattered. After a moment she gave one small nod.
Kai looked at the doorway.
"Lead the way," he said.
The young woman moved without hesitation, and the door closed behind them all, and outside on the main road of Kael’s Seat the crowd slowly went back to its business as if nothing had interrupted it at all.
Which was, in its own way, the most unsettling part.







