Chapter 293: The Ridge
Chapter 293: The Ridge
The thirtieth marker’s circuit correction had brought them north through the interior and out onto the ridge at hour thirty-nine, forty minutes. The elevated ground running east above the central terrain, the canopy gone, the island visible in every direction from the elevation.
Vane took the thirty-first marker’s dwell at eight minutes.
The board updated at hour forty. Second place. The margin from third had grown by four points since the southern detour. The western pair’s repositioning had cost them two objective windows, and the cost was visible in the numbers. They were still third. They were further from second than they’d been at hour thirty-six.
The reroute had worked. The convergence window had closed without them in it.
Vane ran the projection forward. Thirty-one hours remaining. At the current accumulation differential the margin was not closeable through objectives alone. The mathematics were clear. The western pair had two options: attempt a direct elimination in the final hours, or hold third and accept the outcome.
Either option was readable. Either option had a response.
He updated the circuit for the final thirty-one hours. Thirteen markers remaining. The route ran north through the ridge terrain, east along the forest’s upper edge, back through the interior’s western section for the final leg. Clean, direct, the terrain he knew best from the preparation walks.
Ashe was at the marker’s edge looking at the board.
"Lyra and Liora moved," she said.
Vane looked at the board. The southeastern pair’s accumulation rate had spiked in the last update window. A point transfer, elimination scoring, the specific jump that came from a pair going down. Not a small jump. A significant one.
Lyra had engaged. And won.
"Second elimination in four hours," he said.
"Both clean. No corresponding drop in their own accumulation rate." Ashe looked at the numbers with those sharp red eyes. "Whatever Liora’s combat capability is, it has not been visible in thirty-nine hours of this evaluation."
"She has been waiting for the right targets."
"Yes." Ashe looked at the tree line where Lyra had disappeared two hours ago. "Lyra told her when."
Vane thought about Lyra at hour thirty-six: that changes in the next window. The look she’d given her partner. The thing that had passed between them that wasn’t quite a look and wasn’t quite an agreement. The quiet understanding of two people who’d spent thirty-nine hours working toward a specific outcome.
Lyra had been building toward this. The patience, the positioning, the careful accumulation. All of it preparation for the final window when Liora would execute.
He filed it.
The ridge terrain was the most exposed section of the circuit. The canopy gone, the sky open above them, the island visible at the upper tier to the north. The late afternoon had gone gold and long, that specific September light that came at this hour and made the sector’s open ground look warmer than it was.
Vane was four minutes into the dwell, reading the terrain ahead, when he ran the Usurper’s passive sweep.
It was habit now. The sweep ran automatically, the way the Iron Root ran, the way the Silver Fang’s natural direction ran. Something practiced until it was simply what happened. He wasn’t looking for anything specific. He swept the ambient field the way he always swept it, that background awareness of the mana environment around him.
What came back was wrong.
His chest tightened immediately. His breathing stopped for half a second.
Not dramatically wrong. Not the alarm quality of an obvious threat. A frequency in the island’s ambient mana field at the low register. Below the standard cultivation taxonomy, below the Authority signatures, below the construct frequencies the Academy’s systems monitored.
A frequency that didn’t correspond to anything in the taxonomy he’d been building for two years. Nothing in the training, nothing in the practicals, nothing in the Academic District’s measured environment.
He’d felt this frequency before.
Twice. The Ashfield breach seven weeks ago. The Hollows three weeks ago.
Vane stopped moving.
He ran the sweep again, his pulse hammering. The frequency was still there. Not closer. Not louder. Simply present in the island’s ambient field at a register the standard monitoring systems weren’t calibrated to read.
Which was why no alarm had sounded. Which was why the island below looked exactly the way it always looked at this hour.
He looked at the frequency’s direction.
Cold settled into his stomach.
It wasn’t coming from one point. It was distributed. Present in the north reading and the south reading and the east reading at the same ambient level. The specific quality of something that wasn’t approaching from a direction but was already surrounding the island at its base.
The Abyss Ocean’s specific frequency. The mana of things that had been in the deep long enough that the deep was their nature.
Vane held very still.
Four seconds. The ridge beneath his feet, solid and real. The September light across the sector’s open ground, golden and warm. The island’s towers visible through the last of the canopy to the north. The Academic District catching the late light, the mana-lamps beginning their transition to evening frequency. The spiral hill above with the villas at the upper tiers.
Villa 4. The kitchen window looking out over the garden. The bird on the wall. Mara at the table with her ledger, recording the day’s transactions.
The frequency ran at its low register, distributed, already there. Present in every direction simultaneously. Surrounding everything.
He ran the sweep a third time, needing to be sure.
Same reading. The frequency wasn’t intensifying. It wasn’t moving. It was simply present at the island’s base the way the Abyss Ocean was present. Surrounding, patient, indifferent to whether it was perceived or not. The deep recognizing itself in the island’s foundation.
The island’s monitoring systems hadn’t responded. No alarm. No warning. The evening cycle running exactly as it should, as though nothing was wrong. As though the frequency at the island’s base didn’t exist.
Vane looked at the board on his band. Second place. Thirteen markers remaining. Thirty-one hours until the evaluation’s natural conclusion.
He looked at the frequency in the ambient field.
He looked at the thirty-first marker’s dwell timer.
Two minutes remaining.
Ashe was beside him. She’d been reading the sector, not watching him, not monitoring his stillness. She was looking at the island’s towers through the canopy the way she looked at things she hadn’t yet decided about.
After a moment she looked at him.
He looked at the dwell timer. His jaw tight, his breathing controlled.
One minute.
She said quietly, "What."
Vane looked at the island. At the ordinary evening running its ordinary cycle. At the towers completing their transition from gold to white, the mana-lamps finding their evening frequency. The hill above them dark with the first of the dusk.
He looked at the frequency surrounding the island’s base.
He filed it under what it had always been filed under. Completely. Without acting on it until he understood what action was correct. The frequency was present. The island was running its evening cycle. No alarm had sounded.
He had thirteen markers and thirty-one hours and a circuit that was two positions from the final leg.
"Nothing," he said.
Ashe looked at him for a moment with those red eyes that didn’t perform anything. She’d read his four seconds of stillness the way she read everything about him. Accurately, without requiring it explained. Arriving at her own assessment of the gap between what he’d said and what was true.
She said nothing.
She looked back at the island. At the towers completing their transition, the mana-lamps burning white at their evening setting. The hill above them settling into that specific quality the island had at dusk. Familiar. Ordinary. The way it had looked every evening of the last two years.
They held this together for the dwell’s last thirty seconds.
Then the timer ran out and the circuit moved and they came off the ridge and the canopy closed overhead. The island’s evening cycle continued below them. The mana-lamps burning at their white frequency.
The frequency in the ambient field running at its low register at the island’s base.
Patient and distributed and present in every direction simultaneously.
The circuit moved into the evening.
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