The forest around them was dense, alive with sounds, rustling leaves, and alien birds calling. Sunlight filtered through the trees, casting weird, shifting shadows on the ground, lighting up patches of glowing fungi.
Luca's focus was elsewhere. He swiped through his interface, reviewing his latest System updates.
It still felt unreal. The mont they'd activated the first portal, the System had unblocked their progress.
First things first, attributes.
Attribute Points Available: [10]
Charisma: 22 → 25 ( 3)
Intelligence: 66
mory: 45 → 50 ( 5)
Perception: 66
Willpower: 31 → 33 ( 2)
He quickly allocated his attribute points. mory to 50, Charisma to 25, Willpower to 33. Then, he moved to the real prize.
The Scenario Completion Bonus had left him sitting on 157,800 XP, unallocated and begging to be spent. He scrolled to his Skill Queue, smirking as he locked in his first choice.
Recon Analysis Proficiency. Sitting at level 6 since forever, originally picked up from a dusty skill shard at so backwater auction. He'd told himself it would pay off soday.
[Skill Level up! Recon Analysis Proficiency Level 6 -> Level 10]
[Ability Unlocked: For 10 seconds, anticipate a target's next three actions or reveal cascading failure points in a system or structure. Cooldown: 5 minutes.]
Recon Analysis had always flown under the radar, but now it gave him insight. Tactical, predictive, field-level insight. Whether it was a creature, a trap, or an unfamiliar piece of TL9 tech, he'd be able to model its behavior before it acted.
And the best part? That was just the first skill in the queue.
The leftover XP rolled down to the next in line: Tomahawk Throwing Proficiency. Already at Level 8, just shy of the next milestone. It needed about 30,000 XP to hit Level 10. Just a few lucky mobs in the next fight.
Because at Level 10? That ant another Ability Unlock. This is what he'd been missing in Sol: too many low-level skills and no abilities.
But there was sothing else he needed to deal with first. The notification he'd dismissed back in the delve was still waiting for him.
[Mission Completion Reward]
System-Issue Multitool: Pathfinder Prototype
Choose Configuration:
Exploration-Class
Science-Class
Engineering-Class
dical-Class
Luca stared at the options. They'd talked about this briefly on the way back to the Peregrine, but now it was ti to make the actual choice. He glanced around the clearing where his team was setting up their survey equipnt.
"Hey, everyone," he called out. "Ti to make our multitool selections."
The team gathered around him. Chris was going to be in the d pod for a long ti while his body healed.
"So we each get one of these multitools," Luca said. "Four configurations to choose from."
Ryan rubbed his hands together. "Engineering class for , obviously. Whatever it does, it's gotta be better than lugging around a full toolkit."
Joey nodded thoughtfully. "dical makes sense for . Could be useful for field dicine."
"I'm thinking Science," Danny said. "Might help with our survey work."
Emily surprised them all. "dical for , too."
Everyone turned to look at her. Luca raised an eyebrow. "Really? I figured you'd go for Exploration or Science."
She shrugged. "Joey can't be everywhere at once. If we're splitting up for surveys, having two people who can handle dical ergencies makes sense."
"Smart thinking," Joey said approvingly.
Zoe grinned. "Exploration for . Should help with identifying threats and resources from a distance."
Luca nodded. "Sa here. Exploration class. Between the two of us, we should be able to map out the dangerous areas and find the good stuff."
"Alright," Ryan said. "Let's see what these things actually look like."
Luca selected Exploration-Class and confird his choice. A heavy item appeared in his hands. The device was bulkier than he'd expected. It was a pistol-shaped scanner unit connected by a reinforced cable to a display screen. The scanner felt solid, made of so kind of advanced polyr with tal reinforcents.
"Damn," he muttered, hefting the scanner. "This thing's got so weight to it."
The others were examining their own multitools, each configured differently but sharing the sa basic design philosophy.
"Power cell required," Emily noted, checking her dical configuration.
Luca pointed his scanner at a nearby tree and activated it. The device humd to life, drawing power from the TL9 cell. He had to hold it steady, keeping the targeting reticle centered on the trunk as the scanner worked. A progress bar crawled across the display - 15%, 25%, 40%. The power indicator dropped noticeably.
"Co on," he muttered, fighting to keep his aim steady as a breeze made the branches sway slightly. The scan stuttered, restarting at 30%.
Finally, after nearly thirty seconds, the display lit up with comprehensive survey data:
[Flora Scan Complete]
Species: Unknown (Centauri Native)
Classification: Deciduous Hardwood
Cell Structure: Complex cellulose matrix with unique crystalline deposits
Photosynthetic Analysis: 23% efficiency, adapted for filtered light conditions
Genetic Sequencing: Logged
Edibility: Bark - Mildly Toxic / Leaves
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Mineral Content: High iron, trace titanium in root system
Coordinates: Logged
"Holy shit," he breathed, checking the power level - down to 95% from one scan. "This is incredible detail, but it's not exactly quick. And it's draining the power cell fast."
Danny was scanning the air with his own gadget. "Atmospheric composition, trace gases, pollen count, microbial analysis... this thing is doing the work of our entire portable lab."
Ryan had his own Engineering multitool scanner over the Peregrine. "Structural integrity analysis, power flow diagnostics, material stress points. I can see exactly where we need maintenance. Plus, it's cataloging mineral deposits and geological formations for our core sampling objectives."
"These things are sure to be upgradeable," Ryan added, examining the device more closely. "Most System gear has modular components. We'll probably be able to add new functions as we find upgrade modules."
Danny nodded enthusiastically. "This is going to increase our survey efficiency substantially. We won't need to haul around half our equipnt anymore. No more cumberso water testing kits, no more separate atmospheric analyzers."
"The fauna scanner is already picking up movent patterns," Zoe said, sweeping her device across the treeline. "It can detect heat signatures and behavioral indicators. Watch this." She pointed her scanner at a small bird-like creature perched nearby, trying to hold the targeting reticle steady as the scan began.
The progress bar crawled to 20%, then 35%. The bird fluttered, and the scan stuttered. "Co on, hold still," she muttered, readjusting her aim. Just as the scan hit 60%, the creature took flight, disappearing into the canopy.
[Scan Failed]
"Damn it," Zoe groaned, checking her power level - down to 94% for a failed scan. "Looks like we'll need to shoot them down if we want a proper fauna analysis."
Ryan chuckled from where he was examining his engineering scanner. "Or maybe you just need better aim, Zo."
"Shut up, Ryan," she shot back. "Let's see you try to scan sothing that won't sit still."
Emily turned her scanner toward Luca, the targeting reticle settling on his chest. After a few seconds, she raised an eyebrow. "Your heart rate's elevated."
Luca grinned back at her. "Wonder why that could be."
She rolled her eyes but couldn't hide her smile.
They moved through the clearing, packing up gear, securing crates, and loading samples into the cargo hold. The air had that particular post rain sll, of damp earth and alien plants.
Luca hefted a sample of dirt into the Peregrine, wiping a streak of gri from his visor. They'd been at this site for hours, cataloging plants, taking readings, running scans. Tedious, repetitive shit, but necessary if they were going to map out the viable zones of New Dawn.
This place was teeming with life, rich and bio-compatible. But every day out here felt like a goddamn marathon, a constant fight to stay ahead of whatever the hell they'd unleashed after that first dungeon run.
"Careful with that one," Ryan called out, glancing over from where he was strapping down a crate of weird-looking roots. "We've got enough samples to last us a month. Last thing we need is to spill half of it on the way back." As if Luca didn't know how to handle a fucking crate.
"Don't worry, I got it," Luca replied, securing the crate. "Make sure the scanners are packed."
Nearby, Emily was folding up a portable antenna. She glanced over and smirked, that teasing glint in her eyes. "You know, I'm starting to think I was right about that whole portal thing. Maybe we shouldn't have gone in after all."
Luca rolled his eyes. "Oh, here we go again."
"I'm serious!" she said, walking over, helt tucked under her arm. She looked good. Too good. "Since we stepped through that first portal, we've had creatures popping out of nowhere, harassing us every ti we try to work. Not exactly the peaceful survey mission we signed up for, huh?"
"You call this harassnt?" Danny piped up from the other side of the clearing, dismantling a sensor array. "I call it target practice. Besides, it keeps things interesting."
"Right, because getting ambushed by six-legged lizards is your idea of a good ti," Joey said, shaking his head as he packed up his d kit. "I don't care what you say, Danny, I'm keeping my shield on next ti."
Zoe hopped down from the roof of the Peregrine, where she'd been securing solar panels. "You love it, Joey. Admit it. A little danger never hurt anyone."
Joey shot her a deadpan look. "Tell that to Chris's arm."
There was a montary pause, a flicker of tension, but then Ryan broke it with a laugh. "Hey, he's healing up fine. The d pod's working wonders, right? Besides, we're learning. Every ti sothing attacks, we figure out how to handle it better."
The easy banter cut off as the Peregrine's workstation let out a sharp ping. He walked over as a fresh stream of data scrolled across the screen. The casual vibe around camp snapped like a wire under tension. His stomach tightened.
"What the hell is this?" he muttered, tapping the notification to expand it.
Emily leaned over his shoulder, her brow furrowing as she read along with him. The text was blunt, almost mocking in its simplicity.
[Signal detected. Source located. 439 kiloters north-northeast. Artificial patterns detected. Signal is stationary.]
Zoe's head snapped up from where she was securing equipnt. "Wait, what?" She dropped what she was doing and rushed over. "Let see that."
One look at the readout and her eyes went wide. "It's that fucking signal!" she exclaid. "The one we detected in hyperspace and picked up when we first landed. But now..."
Ryan stepped closer, his expression shifting from curiosity to excitent. "Holy shit, it's finally triangulated!" He leaned over Luca's shoulder, studying the coordinates. "Four hundred thirty-nine kiloters north-northeast. We actually have a location."
Luca shook his head, scrolling for more details. "It's Artificial, not portal-related."
His gut twisted. Portals were bad enough, at least they understood what they did, even if they tried to kill them. This? This was sothing new. Sothing different. And he wasn't sure he liked it.
Then the next update hit, and it was worse.
[New data logged: 54,300 active portals detected across New Dawn. Energy signatures consistent with System-generated activity. Activation tis correlate to the first portal interaction.]
"Fifty-four thousand?" Emily's voice spiked, sharp and breathless. "Since we activated the first one? That's… that's exponential."
Ryan let out a low whistle, rocking back on his heels. "Looks like we kicked the damn hornet's nest."
"What the actual fuck?" Luca muttered, his thumb mindlessly scrolling through the flood of coordinates. They were everywhere, scattered across the planet like landmines. This was just like Sol.
Danny was staring at the signal data, his expression thoughtful. "You know what? I bet that's why we can finally triangulate the signal. It was barely detectable before, but now..." He gestured at the portal count. "Probably the System. Now that it's active, sothing must have triggered the strengthening of that signal."
"Makes sense," Zoe said, nodding. "The System integration changed everything else on this planet. Why not whatever's been broadcasting that signal?"
Ryan crossed his arms, shooting Luca a sideways glance. "So, what's the plan, fearless leader? Besides dying horribly when this whole planet blows up."
"Fifty-four thousand portals..." she said, studying the layout. "And now a mystery signal. That's a lot of variables."
"Tell about it," Luca muttered, still scrolling through coordinates.
She crossed her arms, glancing at Luca. "I get it, this is what we're here for. But we need to be smart. The planet just got exponentially more dangerous, and we know nothing about this signal." She shook her head. "We're not dying horribly. We take this one step at a ti. If there's an artifact, we have to investigate it."
"Agreed," Luca said. "Our mission charter dictates the survey work, but that doesn't an we go in blind."
Joey looked up from his equipnt. "Why don't we just take the dropship? Four hundred kiloters isn't that far."
Ryan shook his head. "Fuel constraints. We've only got enough for a few more hops, and we still need to finish the survey work here. Plus, look at the terrain data." He pulled up a topographical map on his tablet. "The signal's coming from heavily wooded, mountainous terrain. Even if we could land nearby, we'd still have to hike in with all our gear."
"Better to drive up," Luca said, studying the route. "The Peregrine can handle rough terrain, and we can haul out whatever we find. If this thing turns out to be significant, we'll need the cargo space."
Her shoulders relaxed slightly. "Good. Because whatever that signal is, it's been sitting there for who knows how long. A few more days of preparation won't hurt."
They'd already kicked the hornet's nest; might as well see what the sting felt like.
Emily was already moving toward the Peregrine, all business. "Alright, let's get this gear secured and plan our approach."
Luca caught up with her and, on impulse, leaned over and pressed a quick kiss to her cheek. "We've got this, Em."
She smiled, bumping his shoulder with hers. "I know we do. Now co on, let's go figure out what the hell this thing is."
Luca finally saw it, the long-awaited mont, on the edge of the clearing.
Danny and Zoe.
Heads against each other, whispering like they were plotting sothing. Finally, Luca's eyebrows shot up as Zoe grabbed Danny's wrist, her fingers curling around it. Was she…?
Oh.
Oh!
She was!
She was leading him toward the treeline. Victory.
It'd taken her weeks, weeks of teasing, flirting, nudging, throwing herself at him on a silver platter, for this mont. Danny, bless his dense, lovable heart, was finally going along with it. Maybe he'd finally figured it out. Maybe she'd finally get what she wanted.
Luca could already hear Emily's told-you-so voice in his head. See, Luca? Patience pays off. She's got this. And honestly? He was rooting for them. Zoe deserved this win.
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