He channeled mana — not half his capacity this ti, not the carefully throttled output he’d shown the Guild assessors. Enough to do the job properly. Enough that anyone watching would understand he’d been hiding significantly more than a few ranks’ worth of capability.
He focused the energy into a precise, controlled strike against the passage’s primary structural supports. The technique was the sa as the Marrin Survey but executed with more precision, more control, more confidence that ca from doing this kind of work in his first life and knowing exactly how stone behaved under directed mana stress.
The passage ca down. Clean. Controlled. Complete seal.
Behind the newly ford barrier, the rift core continued its developnt cycle, isolated from the main rift network and the civilian zone beyond.
Amaron released the channeling and turned back to the team.
They were all staring at him. Jace’s barrier technique was still active but unnecessary — the collapse had been so clean there hadn’t been any propagation to contain. Kess’s equipnt showed the expected readings: contained energy spike, isolated manifestation, main rift stable.
Livia’s expression was unreadable.
— ◆ —
"We’re leaving," she said. "Now. File the ergency report from outside. Guild team can handle the contained manifestation."
They moved. Fast, efficient, maintaining formation despite the obvious questions everyone had. They cleared the rift in under an hour, erged into fourth district daylight, and filed the ergency report from the staging area while Guild officials scrambled to mobilize the containnt response.
The specialized team arrived within ninety minutes. The contained core was stabilized six hours later. Zero civilian casualties. Zero structural damage beyond the intentional collapse Amaron had executed.
By every asurable standard, the operation had been a success.
Amaron stood in the staging area filling out incident docuntation and trying not to think about the fact that he’d just revealed himself to three more people, this ti without the excuse of imdiate life-or-death pressure to justify it.
He’d made a choice. Stay safe and hidden, or be present and useful.
He’d chosen present.
He was beginning to understand that this choice was going to define his second life more than any amount of careful planning ever would.
— ◆ —
Livia found him an hour later, after the official debriefing, after the paperwork, after the Guild officials had finished taking statents and had moved on to coordinating the containnt team’s work.
She sat down on the staging area bench next to him without asking permission and said, "You’re not C-rank."
"I’m registered C-rank," Amaron said.
"That’s not what I said." She looked at him directly. "What you did in there was B-rank structural manipulation. Possibly A-rank depending on how much you were holding back. Which ans you’ve been hiding approximately two full ranks since your reassessnt. Maybe more."
Amaron said nothing. There was nothing to say that wouldn’t be either a lie or an explanation he couldn’t give.
"I’m not going to report you," Livia continued. "And I’m not going to ask why you’re hiding it. That’s your business. But I need to know sothing."
"What?"
"If we’re in a situation where lives are at stake and you have to choose between maintaining your cover and saving people — which one do you choose?"
The question was direct. The answer was simple.
"People," Amaron said.
Livia nodded as if this was exactly the answer she’d expected. "Then we’re still good. I don’t care what rank you actually are. I care whether I can trust you to have my back. And you just proved I can."
She stood, stretched, and looked back at the rift entrance where the containnt team was working. "Elian was right about you. You’re more than you show. But you show up when it matters. That’s what I needed to know."
She walked off, leaving Amaron alone with the docuntation and the late afternoon sun and the distinct awareness that he’d just been accepted by the original story’s female lead not because of what he was pretending to be, but because of what he’d chosen to do when it mattered.
The plan was barely recognizable anymore. But the people in it were real. And that, he was beginning to think, might actually be better than any plan he could have designed alone.
[ VOID SYSTEM — DAY 85 STATUS ]
[ MANA RESERVE: 1,701 units ]
[ COVER STATUS: FURTHER COMPROMISED ]
[ WITNESSES TO ACTUAL CAPABILITY: 8 (CUMULATIVE) ]
[ NOTABLE: HOST CHOSE INTERVENTION OVER SAFETY (SECOND TI) ]
[ OBSERVATION: PATTERN DETECTED ]
[ HOST PRIORITY: PEOPLE > PLAN ]
[ ASSESSNT: THIS IS SUSTAINABLE IF HOST ACCEPTS VISIBILITY ]
[ QUERY: HAVE YOU ACCEPTED IT? ]
He read the last line while sitting alone in the staging area, the sun setting over the fourth district.
Yes. I think I have.
The system did not respond. But sowhere in the quiet, Amaron understood that the question had been rhetorical. The system already knew his answer. It had been watching him make it, choice by choice, for eighty-five days.
He was building sothing different than what he’d planned. Sothing that required him to be seen, to be known, to trust people with pieces of truth even when he couldn’t give them the whole thing.
It was harder than hiding had been. It was also, he was discovering, significantly less lonely.
He filed the last piece of docuntation and walked ho — not to the boarding house, but to a house with a dark green door where soone would ask if he’d eaten and where the answer, increasingly, was yes.
Reviews
All reviews (0)