Ultra Gene Evolution System - Chapter 173 – First Contact
Dorath’s briefing was the shortest one he had ever given.
Zone fifteen interior. Two confirmed Rift Sovereign Warden signatures in the northern section, pack formation, coordinated engagement behaviour. Standard team composition: Dorath and the Steel hunter as anchor, Ress on support, Kai on primary engagement.
He said it plainly: "You’re on primary. We support."
That was the entire role reversal. No explanation, no qualification. The team had been running zone fourteen with Kai on the right flank for months. Zone fourteen was C-zone. Zone fifteen was B-zone, and in B-zone the dynamics changed. Dorath had assessed the team’s capabilities and assigned roles accordingly. Kai had the War Body. Kai took point.
They filed their permits and went in.
The transition corridor for zone fifteen ran longer than zone fourteen’s. Seven seconds of increasing path-pressure before the zone’s interior became accessible—the system calibrating to the team’s collective classification rather than individual permits. Kai adapted in four seconds. He felt the others adjust behind him at their own rates and held his position at the corridor’s exit until the team was ready.
Then he moved into the zone.
B-zone pack creatures were different from solo B-zone creatures in one specific way that Dorath had mentioned in passing during the briefing but had not fully explained: they shared path-energy during combat. Not through a conscious system—through a bond that years of coordinated hunting had built into the pair’s expression architecture. When one creature drew on its Stone Path reserves to reinforce, the other automatically gained a fraction of that draw’s output for its own attack. One creature’s defense fed the other’s offense. Back and forth. A circuit.
Dragon Mode in full integration resolved both creatures simultaneously at forty metres.
He could see the circuit. Not as a physical connection but as a synchronisation in the path-layer—the two signatures pulsing in a rhythm that was not quite identical but close enough that they shared load rather than competing for it.
He identified the circuit’s weak point.
One creature drew. The other struck. There was a half-second window when the drawing creature’s architecture was occupied with the draw and its defensive structure was reduced. That half-second was when the circuit was breakable.
He initiated Sovereign Dominion as the first creature began its draw.
The pressure arrived in the path-layer at the drawing creature’s position and disrupted the draw mid-cycle—the same structural pressure in the path-layer he had used on the Stone Drakes, working from inside the medium rather than against it. The drawing creature’s reserve draw collapsed. The striking creature’s attack, which had been building on the expected draw, found itself under-powered at the moment of commitment.
Kai was already inside its striking range.
Rending Strike through the gap that the under-powered strike exposed. War Body absorbing the impact of contact at close range without the load spike that Predator Body would have produced. The first creature went down at second twenty-two.
The second creature responded with the adaptation that B-zone creatures used—switching from circuit mode to solo mode, redistributing its architecture to function without the shared draw. Dorath’s team applied support pressure from both flanks, keeping the creature from repositioning while it adjusted.
Kai used the adjustment window.
Fifty-five seconds. Both creatures down.
Rift Sovereign Warden pack eliminated — B-zone
Path material: Ancient+ Stone cores x2
Evolution Points +95
Current Total: 1,223
Ress was looking at him when he turned from the second kill.
Not with alarm. With the focused attention of a Life Path hunter processing something she had felt in the path-layer during the engagement. Ress’s Life Path sensitivity read ambient field changes the way Extended Hunter’s Instinct read them—not as visual information but as pressure and flow. She had felt Sovereign Dominion fire during the circuit disruption.
"That pressure in the second exchange," she said. "It wasn’t path output. It was something else." She was not asking whether she had been right to feel it. She was asking what it was.
"Path layer," Kai said.
She held his gaze for a moment. Life Path hunters read people the way they read zone ambient—not by expression but by the quality of what surrounded them. She looked at him and found what she found and filed it in the same internal record she kept for everything significant.
She did not ask again.
Dorath had already moved to collect material. He looked at the mission log timestamp on his way past. Fifty-five seconds for a B-zone pack. He looked at it for one additional second beyond the standard processing pause.
He filed the report without comment.
The timestamp was the comment.
Soren was at the mission board when Kai came through.
He was reading his notebook rather than the board’s listings—a specific page near the back, covered in the tight systematic handwriting he used for zone data. He looked up when Kai arrived.
"I filed a solo contract for zone fifteen’s northern section this morning," he said. His voice was the same register he always used, but something underneath it was different. Not troubled. More honest than usual. "I wanted to see what B-zone looks like without a War Body alongside me drawing creature attention."
He looked at the notebook. 𝚏𝗿𝗲𝐞𝐰𝚎𝕓𝐧𝚘𝘃𝗲𝐥.𝐜𝚘𝕞
"I lasted forty minutes before I had to exit. The ambient density at ninety seconds adaptation lag—which is my current lag—becomes a sustained load problem over time. I can operate in B-zone in short windows. Not extended missions." He closed the notebook. "I need to push my body rank."
He said it the way he said everything significant: as a fact he had arrived at through observation and was now stating because it was true and it bore stating.
It was the first time in the arc that Soren had said something about himself rather than about data.
Kai looked at him.
"B-zone depth first," Kai said. "The body won’t hold the advance without it."
Soren nodded once. He already knew this—it was standard body rank advancement logic, documented in the Guild’s progression records. He had not needed confirmation. But he had said it aloud and Kai had answered in kind, and that was enough.
He turned back to his notebook and began writing a training grid.
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