©NovelBuddy
Ultra Gene Evolution System-Chapter 126 – One Path Only
The mission board showed three active Storm-type contracts in D-Rank zones.
He read all three before choosing. The first required material from zone six, which ran a longer transit from the entry station and had a reputation on the board’s notes section for irregular zone activity—unstable boundary conditions, elevated creature density near the centre. The second was a multi-target contract in zone eleven requiring four Storm-type cores across two different creature species, which meant longer time in the zone and more exposure. The third was a single-target hunt in zone eight: one Rift Gale Wolf, Refined-grade Storm core, standard D-Rank permit required.
Zone eight. Where the Thornback Boar had been.
He knew the terrain there now.
He took the third contract.
***
The zone’s character was the same as it had been two days ago. Heavier than E-Rank, purposeful in a way that managed zones were not, the kind of environment that assumed the things moving through it had earned the right to be there.
He adapted to it in less than thirty seconds this time.
The system noticed but said nothing.
He moved deeper and pushed his senses outward. The Bloodhound gene had been working in this zone for two days now and its read of the environment was sharper for the familiarity. Path signatures came back faster. The Thornback Boar’s territory was visible in the landscape—he read its absence before he found its presence, recognising the zone of undisturbed ground that marked where a Stone Path creature had been holding range.
The Gale Wolf would not be in Stone territory.
Storm Path creatures avoided overlap with Stone types. Different movement rhythms, different spatial needs, different relationships with Rift energy. He swept left along the zone’s western edge, toward the area where the ambient energy ran cleaner and faster between the rock formations.
He found the Wolf in eleven minutes.
***
The Rift Gale Wolf was nothing like the Thornback Boar.
Where the Boar had been low and settled, built around the confidence of a body that expected to absorb whatever came at it, the Wolf was constant motion. Even at rest—crouched behind a flat rock, watching the zone ahead with forward-tilted ears and a body that read as coiled rather than relaxed—it gave off the particular quality of something that could be somewhere else before the decision to be somewhere else had finished forming.
Longer than a standard wolf. Leaner through the chest. Its fur ran in the direction of wind rather than growth, lying flat against the body in a way that Kai had never seen on any creature. Along the spine and the outer legs, faint lines of static energy moved in slow pulses—the Storm Path expression made visible. When it turned its head he saw the eyes: pale yellow, bright and unsettled, the eyes of something that processed the world faster than the world moved.
The system read it fully.
Creature: Rift Gale Wolf
Path type: Storm — pure expression
Power equivalent: mid D-Rank
Path material grade: Refined
Devour compatibility: moderate — cross-path integration required
Threat assessment: high mobility, reaction speed above D-Rank standard
Cross-path integration required.
The system had flagged it specifically. Storm-type material was not compatible with a standard Beast Path host. Direct integration would produce instability. The Rift Predator gene and the adaptations beneath it would have to mediate the absorption, and that mediation cost something.
Good to know before the fight.
He studied the Wolf for four more minutes without moving.
***
The Wolf found him first.
Not through scent or sight—through the path pressure the vault pair produced. The regulator’s elevated sensitivity, which the Guild’s entry station had been logging on every pass, was something the Wolf’s Storm-honed perception caught at range. Its head swung toward him a half second before he stepped out from cover.
Then it was already moving.
The first attack was not a charge. It was a lateral blur—the Wolf crossing forty metres of zone floor in a single burst that left a line of static discharge in the air behind it, ghost-trail of a movement too fast for the eye to track cleanly. Kai felt it rather than saw it: the air pressure shift, the brief spike of path energy that preceded the impact by less than a breath.
He moved before the impact arrived.
The Predator Instinct did not think. It did not calculate. It simply moved him, and the place he had been occupied by the Wolf’s first strike was empty stone. The Gale Wolf landed, reversed on its back legs without pausing, and launched the second attack from a different angle.
He missed the second one.
The Wolf’s shoulder clipped him across the left arm and spun him two steps sideways. Not a cut—the contact was blunt, pure velocity, the kind of impact that carried no edge but all force. His arm went fully numb this time, wrist to shoulder, and he had two seconds to move before the third attack came.
He did not move away from the third attack.
He moved into it.
The Gale Wolf was fastest in a straight line. The burst pattern was linear—explosive acceleration, full speed in one direction, reversal or redirect only at the endpoints of the burst. That was the gap. Not between attacks. At the moment of direction change, when the burst had completed and the reversal had not yet begun, there was a fraction of a second where all the Wolf’s momentum was pointed backward and it had nothing forward.
He had found the same gap in every fast-moving thing he had ever fought.
On the third burst he stepped inside the endpoint, put his weight behind a single strike through the Wolf’s turning shoulder, and drove it into the ground before the reversal could complete.
The creature recovered faster than anything he had stopped this way before. It was up and turning before the impact had fully settled, static discharge crackling across its back where the strike had connected. But the endpoint gap had cost it a beat, and one beat was enough.
The fight ended on the seventh exchange, when the Wolf’s third consecutive burst sent it into a rock formation he had spent the last two minutes positioning it toward. The impact cracked two of the static-energy lines along its spine. It landed badly. He used the bad landing.
Fourteen minutes. Longer than the Thornback.
Harder in a different way.
Rift Gale Wolf eliminated
Path material: Refined Storm-type core
Evolution Points +13
Current Total: 329
***
He crouched beside the Wolf and looked at the core before activating the devour.
It was different from the Beast and Stone cores he had taken before. The material was less dense, more active—the path energy inside it did not sit still the way Beast or Stone expression cores did. It moved in slow patterns, the same slow patterns that had run along the Wolf’s spine while it lived. Storm-type path energy was alive in a different way. Not more alive, just differently organised.
He activated the devour.
The integration was harder than anything since Helios.
Not painful in the way the old devours had been painful—the searing, violent mutations of the early days before the system had built proper channels for the process. This was controlled pain. The system knew what it was doing. But knowing what it was doing and making it comfortable were different things, and the Storm-type energy’s natural rejection of Beast Path hosting meant the first thirty seconds of integration felt like holding two live wires against each other and waiting for the current to decide which direction to settle.
The system ran the mediation in real time.
Storm-type energy: integrating
Cross-path conflict: active
Rift Predator adaptation: mediating
Integration progress: 14%... 31%... 58%... 79%...
The conflict eased on the eighty-third second. Not resolved—settled. The Storm energy had not been absorbed into the Beast Path structure. It had been given a separate channel, held adjacent rather than merged, stable enough to exist but not yet usable directly.
Integration complete: partial
Storm-type path trait acquired: Spark Step fragment
Status: contained / pre-fusion state
Note: full expression requires fusion activation
A fragment. Not a full skill. The system was being precise about the distinction.
The Spark Step was there, contained in its own channel, waiting for the fusion to bind it to Feral Acceleration and turn it into something the body could actually use. Pre-fusion state. He could feel it when he reached toward it—a tight coiled potential, like a compressed spring that had not yet been released into motion.
His wrist was warm all the way to the elbow.
He stood, collected the stamped mission form from his coat, and walked toward the exit corridor.
***
Soren was finishing his own exit paperwork at the station desk when Kai came through. He looked at the mission form and at the Storm-type core in Kai’s collection pouch and said nothing, which was its own kind of observation.
They walked back through the city together, not by arrangement, simply both heading the same direction.
Soren’s next words came after three blocks of silence, which was how he prefaced things he had thought carefully about.
"Dorath moved the Friday run."
Kai looked at him.
"Zone eleven. Tomorrow morning. A team from a lineage house filed on the same contract and he’s running concurrent to see if the zone supports two teams." Soren paused. "Lineage teams don’t typically run with independents. If they see you in the zone they will read your badge and decide you’re not relevant." He said it factually, the way he said everything factual. "Dorath wants you in the zone anyway. He thinks the contrast will tell him something."
Kai thought about that for a moment. "Tomorrow."
"First entry slot."
The rest of the walk was quiet.
***
Mira was at the entrance of the lodging house.
Not coming out. Waiting. She had the stillness she used when she had made a decision and was holding it while she waited for the moment to give it.
Kai came up the three steps and stopped.
She looked at him the way she looked at things she was about to tell the truth about. Her hands were at her sides. The lines under her skin were in their settled arrangement.
"I’m ready," she said. "The Kael’s Seat Incident." She held his gaze. "What it actually was."
Kai nodded.
She opened her mouth to speak.
And the system fired.
Not a warning. Not a scan notification. The sovereign-adjacent trait activated without trigger, without build-up, without any of the controlled conditions of the appraisal stone or the review platform. One moment the system was quiet. The next, something that had been dormant in the deepest layer of his body woke fully for the first time since the Deep Rift, and the air around Kai on the lodging house steps compressed outward in a ring of invisible force.
The stone step under his left foot cracked.
Mira stopped speaking.
Not because the force had touched her. Because the lines under her skin answered it.
All of them. All at once. Moving in a single unified direction, toward him, the way compass needles moved toward north. The road network beneath the city, which she had been listening to at background level for days, suddenly pointed every available thread of attention at the same location.
At Kai.
The moment lasted four seconds. The same duration as the appraisal anomaly. Then it closed, the system pulled the trait back into dormancy, and the street around them returned to its ordinary noise and movement.
Mira looked at the cracked step.
Then at Kai.
Her expression was not fear. It was the particular look of someone who had just watched a thing confirm exactly what a document had told them it would do.
"That," she said quietly. "Is what started the Incident."







