Ultra Gene Evolution System - Chapter 176 – The North Section
Zone fifteen’s north section ran hotter than the rest of the zone.
The northern boundary pressed against zone sixteen’s perimeter, and zone sixteen was A-classified. The ambient bleed from an A-zone boundary created a pressure gradient—the path-layer in the north ran denser, the creatures it shaped were more developed, and Dragon Mode returned richer information here than anywhere in zone fourteen or zone fifteen’s interior. That was why he kept coming back.
He entered at the seventh hour, Dragon Mode already in continuous state, and found what he was looking for on the northern ridge inside six minutes.
The Stone-Flame hybrid was at rest in the ridge’s shadow, conserving heat the way Flame-type creatures did in cooler ambient conditions. Dragon Mode resolved it at forty metres: triple-load architecture running deep, the Stone expression carrying seventy percent of the body’s structural weight while the Flame reserved at the core, compressed and hot, waiting for the trigger that would bring it forward.
He read the body geometry carefully before moving.
The Stone expression built density into the creature’s forward mass—the chest and shoulders reinforced to the point where head-on impact would distribute force the wrong way. The flanks were lighter. The hindquarters, where the Flame reserve sat deepest, ran thin on Stone reinforcement because the two expressions competed for structural space there. That was the gap: the right rear flank, where the Stone-Flame interface ran most compressed.
He circled left before initiating, keeping the ridge at his back.
The Drake felt him at twenty metres and came off rest fast—faster than zone fourteen’s version, the A-zone bleed having pushed its reaction architecture above C-zone baseline. It turned its reinforced chest toward him and drove forward with the specific gravity of a creature whose Stone expression let it treat its own weight as a weapon.
He didn’t meet it straight.
Predatory Burst Step fired at the last moment—the acceleration carrying him left and inside the Drake’s charge line, close enough that the Stone-dense chest passed within arm’s reach. He felt the path-pressure of the Stone field as he moved through it, a wall of compressed force that brushed his right shoulder and registered as significant load even through Impact Frame’s reinforcement.
Impact Frame held. The shoulder stayed functional.
He completed the sidestep behind the Drake’s momentum line and immediately had to move again—the Drake recovered its forward drive faster than he expected, pivoting on its rear legs with the Flame reserve beginning to draw. Dragon Mode flagged it: the Flame reserve was pulling forward, building toward the threshold where the expression would fire as directed output.
Three seconds until that threshold.
He closed the distance to the right rear flank.
The Drake’s pivot brought it halfway around before the Flame reserve reached critical draw. The heat registered across his face at two metres—the creature’s skin temperature spiking as the Flame expression pressurised toward output. He dropped his shoulder, driving under the Drake’s turning angle, and felt the Flame output fire a half-second after he moved: a concentrated burst that passed over his back and left a line of scorched air where his head had been.
He was inside the flank now. Right rear. The gap Dragon Mode had mapped.
He activated the spatial compression field—three metres, tight, pressing inward at the Drake’s right rear architecture. The Stone-Flame interface in this section was already compressed from the Flame reserve’s draw. Compression on top of compression produced structural incoherence for exactly two seconds.
Rending Strike in the first second, angled up along the interface fault line Dragon Mode had been tracking since the first moment of the fight.
The Drake lurched forward, the fault line failing.
He stepped back and let it go down.
Forty-one seconds from first movement to the creature’s dissolution.
Stone-Flame Drake eliminated — B-zone
Path material: Ancient+ dual-expression core
Evolution Points +88
Current Total: 1,311
He was collecting the core when he heard someone stop behind him.
The man was B-Rank. Storm Path—the ambient field was obvious at ten metres: a crackling, electric quality that ran just below the threshold of audible, the specific register of concentrated Storm expression in a body that had been running it for a long time. Silver classification. Built the way experienced zone hunters built: economical, nothing wasted.
His path output was climbing. Not at combat level yet. The display register—the territorial language B-Rank hunters used when they wanted another hunter to feel the weight of their presence. The air between them had a different quality than the zone’s ambient. The hairs on Kai’s forearms registered the shift before his path-layer read confirmed it.
The man looked at Kai’s badge. Then at the Drake’s dissolution site. Then at the faint distortion in the path-layer that lingered after spatial compression released.
"New badge," he said.
"Yes."
"This section is chartered. I run the north."
Kai said nothing.
"What path?"
"Beast."
The man’s eyes went back to the compression residue. Twenty-four months in zone fifteen. He knew what Beast Path kills looked like—the physical tearing, the devour-site, the Beast energy residue that ran warm and organic. What the air around the dissolution site carried was different. Structured. The compression residue had a geometry to it that Beast Path didn’t produce.
"Beast Path doesn’t leave that residue," he said.
"Move," Kai said.
He walked toward the next signature.
The man’s output climbed from display to demonstration.
It happened fast—Storm Path escalation was fast by nature, the expression building on its own momentum once it started. The air crackled audibly now. Static electricity moved across the exposed stone of the ridge face, small visible arcs jumping between mineral surfaces. The wind changed—not a real wind, the path-layer pressure expressing as physical force, pushing Kai’s coat against his back like a hand pressing.
Silver B-Rank Storm at full demonstration was enough to make the zone’s ambient energy feel secondary. It pressed against the path-layer the way a body pressed against a wall—physical insistence, delivered through the medium most B-zone hunters lived in.
Kai stopped.
He turned.
The man stood ten metres back, Storm output fully committed, the crackling around his hands visible now as a pale blue-white field that had stopped being ambient and become directional. It was pointed at Kai’s position.
Kai’s Dragon-line substrate was already reading it. The Storm output resolved in Dragon Mode with complete architectural clarity—the man’s expression type, his output level, the specific frequency of his Storm field. The substrate took that read and the sovereign seed did what it did now when aggressive path-layer force was directed at the road-connected position Kai occupied.
It answered through the floor.
There was no visible signal. No light, no sound, no warning the man could have reacted to. One moment his Storm output was driving forward through the path-layer, committed, building toward impact. The next, the zone floor beneath his feet shifted—a single deep vibration that ran up through the stone and soil, the road network’s substrate conducting the sovereign output outward through channels that had existed in this ground since before the Guild had mapped the zone above them.
Loose stones at the ridge base moved two centimetres to the left.
The man felt the ground change under his feet.
His Storm output hit something that wasn’t there and wasn’t not there—a compression in the path-layer distributed along the zone’s substrate, spreading his directed force across a surface that had no centre point, no target. It wasn’t blocked. It wasn’t deflected. It dispersed the way sound dispersed into water, absorbed into the medium rather than reaching its destination.
The crackling around his hands faded.
The wind pressure dropped.
The zone went back to its ambient quality.
He looked at Kai.
He looked at the ground where the stones had moved.
He looked at Kai again. Eight seconds passed.
Then he stepped aside. Not retreat. The deliberate movement of a professional hunter who had just encountered something that his two years of B-zone work had given him no framework for, and who had decided, clearly and immediately, that pressing further without information was the wrong call.
Kai walked past him into the north section.
He ran three more kills across the next two hours.
When he came back through, the man was gone.
At the mission board that afternoon, the path anomaly report was already filed under his registration number: Daven, B-Rank Storm, Silver. Zone fifteen north, 14:22. Unclassified event. The reporting hunter’s Storm output had dissipated through the zone substrate via unknown mechanism, attributed to proximity with an identified B-Rank holder.
Unknown mechanism. 𝑓𝑟𝑒𝘦𝓌𝑒𝑏𝑛𝑜𝘷𝑒𝘭.𝒸𝘰𝑚
Daven was not a person who filed reports with unknown in them.
The evening board was different.
Three B-Rank hunters he had not seen before were there. They looked at him when he came through—the specific look that meant someone had been talked about and had now walked into the room. Assessment without aggression. The look of hunters trying to match a description to a face.
Daven was there too. He did not look at Kai.
Daven was not a person who had trouble explaining zone events. He had been in zone fifteen for two years and had never once filed a report with unknown in it.
That was what the three hunters had heard.
That was what they were looking at.
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