The complication arrived eighteen hours before scheduled deploynt.
Amaron was reviewing tactical maps with his assigned team—Sareth as team lead, two A-rank combat specialists nad Vren and Kaito, and himself as structural analyst and S-rank combat support—when the ergency summons ca through from Coordinator Draveth. All team leads and S-rank personnel were to report to the coordination center imdiately. No explanation. Just the urgency code that ant sothing significant had changed.
They assembled in the secure briefing room within twenty minutes. Draveth was already there with Mordain, Kael, and Torvald. All of them had the expression of people who’d received information they didn’t like and were now determining how to proceed.
"New intelligence," Draveth said without preamble when everyone was present. "Received three hours ago through Guild central’s investigative network. The Cascading Dawn organization is larger than preliminary assessnt indicated. We’ve identified twelve manifestation sites, not five. Seven additional nodes discovered in adjacent territories through coordinated reconnaissance operations. All showing identical construction patterns. All operational or near-operational status."
He updated the strategic map with seven new locations spreading across a two-hundred-kiloter radius. "This isn’t a regional operation. This is continental-scale infrastructure developnt. The five sites we’ve been investigating are just the western cluster. There are likely clusters in other regions we haven’t identified yet."
The room absorbed this information in silence. Amaron felt his mory Index supply context—in the original tiline, the Cascading Dawn had built fifteen nodes total across the eastern territories. Twelve discovered sites suggested this tiline’s version was operating at approximately the sa scale, just in different locations and two years early.
"Deploynt tiline?" Torvald asked.
"Unchanged," Draveth said. "We proceed with the original five-site assault as planned. But Guild central is mobilizing additional S-rank coordination teams to address the seven new sites simultaneously. This becos a multi-theater operation coordinated across three regional Guild commands."
He looked at each team lead. "Your objectives remain identical: destroy the nodes, docunt the infrastructure, engage opposition if encountered. But understand that we’re now confird to be facing a continental-scale organization with resources that match Guild deploynt capacity. The resistance will be organized. The opposition will be committed. And casualties are expected."
— ◆ —
The briefing continued for two hours. Updated intelligence. Revised tactical paraters. Contingency protocols for scenarios that included coordinated S-rank opposition, infrastructure traps, and the possibility that destroying nodes might trigger defensive responses from the deeper network.
When it concluded, Sareth gathered her team—Amaron, Vren, and Kaito—for their own operational review.
"Site three," she said, pulling up the detailed analysis Amaron had filed after his previous penetration. "We know it has a cathedral chamber. We know it had at least one S-rank guardian. We know the node connects to deeper infrastructure we haven’t fully mapped. Our objective is node destruction and threat elimination. Priority one: accomplish the mission. Priority two: survive doing it."
She looked at each of them. "Volg, you’ve penetrated this site before. You’ve engaged the S-rank guardian and survived. That makes you our tactical expert for this location. I’m team lead, but I want your assessnt on approach and execution."
Amaron thought about the cathedral chamber. The S-rank combatant who’d withdrawn after six minutes. The warning she’d delivered about costs. The fact that his mory Index said the Cascading Dawn had seven S-rank personnel total and only one had been confird so far.
"The guardian will be waiting," he said. "She withdrew last ti because she assessed that victory wasn’t guaranteed and the cost wasn’t worth it. This ti, with twelve sites under assault simultaneously, she knows this is an elimination operation. She won’t withdraw. She’ll defend the infrastructure until it’s destroyed or until she’s incapacitated."
"Can you handle her alone?" Sareth asked directly.
"Yes," Amaron said. "But it’ll take ti. Which ans the rest of you need to reach the node and execute destruction while I’m engaged. The cathedral chamber has multiple passages leading to the node level. We split: I engage the guardian, you three reach the node through alternate routes and destroy it."
"That leaves you fighting S-rank opposition alone with no backup," Vren observed.
"I’m S-rank," Amaron said. "And I’ve fought her before. I know her patterns. You’re all A-rank. In the cathedral chamber, you’d be liabilities rather than assets. Better to split roles: I handle the S-rank threat, you handle the objective."
Sareth considered this. "Acceptable. But we maintain communication. If you’re losing that engagent, you signal and we abort the node destruction to provide support. The mission matters, but not more than team survival."
"Understood," Amaron said.
— ◆ —
The final eighteen hours before deploynt passed in a strange state of controlled tension. Equipnt preparation. Physical conditioning. ntal preparation for the reality that tomorrow they’d be executing an assault against organized opposition that had S-rank personnel and resources.
Amaron spent part of that ti writing in his notebook—sothing he hadn’t done since being cleared for combat operations two weeks ago.
Day 270. Operation deploys tomorrow. Twelve sites, not five. Continental scale. This is the Cascading Dawn, two years early, wrong location, but sa organizational structure. Seven S-rank opposition confird possible.
I’m about to participate in a Guild campaign against an organization I encountered in my first life. But everything’s different. Tiline broken. mory Index unreliable. I don’t know if this operation succeeds or fails. Don’t know if I survive it.
But I’m S-rank. I have a team. I have people in Valdenre who care whether I co back. That’s more than I had in the first life. More than I had even three months ago.
Whatever happens tomorrow, I’m ready for it. Not because I know the outco. Because I’ve built the capacity to handle outcos I don’t know.
That’s what these two hundred and seventy days have been about. Not following a script. Building the strength to write a new one.
He closed the notebook and tried to sleep, knowing that tomorrow would test whether all the training, all the sacrifice, all the brutal progression had been worth it.
— ◆ —
Dawn on day two hundred and seventy-one arrived with clear skies and the kind of quiet that ca before major operations.
The five teams assembled at their respective staging areas. Amaron’s team—Sareth, Vren, Kaito, and himself—gathered at site three’s periter with equipnt checked, communication systems verified, and the shared understanding that they were about to penetrate a hostile rift controlled by opposition that had killed Guild Hunters before and would do so again if given the opportunity.
"Synchronized deploynt," Sareth said, reviewing the final tiline. "All five teams enter their respective sites at the ninth hour. Coordination signal goes active at hour one. Node destruction attempts begin at hour two if pathways are clear. Ergency extraction protocols activate if any team signals critical status."
She looked at each of them. "Standard field protocols. Watch each other’s backs. Communicate clearly. Don’t take unnecessary risks. And rember that we’re not trying to clear this rift—we’re trying to destroy one specific target and withdraw. Speed and precision matter more than complete threat elimination."
The ninth hour arrived. The coordination signal activated across all five teams.
They entered the rift.
— ◆ —
Site three’s internal structure was unchanged from Amaron’s previous penetrations. Sa passages. Sa ambient mana density. Sa progression through levels one through four with predictable threat patterns that the team cleared efficiently.
But when they reached level five—the level where Amaron had previously encountered the cathedral chamber—the structure had changed.
The entrance to the cathedral chamber was sealed. Not collapsed. Deliberately blocked with constructed barriers that showed the sa sophisticated engineering as the rift nodes. And standing in front of those barriers was the S-rank guardian Amaron had fought two weeks ago.
She looked exactly as he rembered. Mid-twenties. Guild combat gear with modifications. S-rank mana signature at full deploynt. And an expression that suggested she’d been waiting specifically for his return.
"Hunter Volg," she said. "Back for the node destruction attempt. Brought friends this ti. Smart. Not smart enough, but better than attempting solo penetration."
She manifested combat technique with the casual efficiency of soone who’d been preparing for this exact engagent. "Your team can try the alternate passages if they want. They’re all sealed. Every route to the node goes through . So here’s your choice: fight while they waste ti on blocked passages, or accept that this node isn’t getting destroyed today and withdraw while you still can."
Sareth assessed the situation with the speed that ca from decades of field command. Sealed chamber. S-rank guardian deployed at the chokepoint. Alternate routes likely blocked as claid. The tactical calculus was clear.
"Vren, Kaito," she said. "Confirm alternate passage status. Volg and I will engage the guardian. Move fast—we won’t be able to hold S-rank opposition indefinitely."
Vren and Kaito split off to check the other routes. The guardian watched them go with mild amusent.
"They won’t find an opening," she said. "I’ve had two weeks to prepare for this assault. Every passage is blocked. Every approach is controlled. You’re not reaching the node. Not today. Not through ."
"Then we go through you," Amaron said, and engaged.
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