Chapter 67 — The Weight You Choose to Carry
Morning ca quietly.
Not with alarms or urgency, but with the soft sounds of a place waking up because it was still alive. Rai opened his eyes to the faint crackle of dying embers and the murmur of low voices nearby. Soone was already up, stirring a pot over the fire. Another person coughed, then laughed at themselves for it. The kind of sounds that ant people had survived the night and expected to survive the day too.
He stayed still for a mont, letting that sink in.
There was a ti when mornings ant danger. When waking up was a calculation—checking injuries, checking surroundings, checking whether the world had decided to end while he slept. That tension wasn’t gone completely, but it had softened. Out here, far from the city and its expectations, life felt fragile in a simpler way.
Rai sat up slowly, stretching his shoulders. Muscles protested mildly, nothing serious. The kind of soreness that ca from walking long distances and carrying weight—not just gear, but responsibility. He rolled his neck once and stood, careful not to draw attention.
But attention found him anyway.
A woman near the fire glanced up and nodded. No suspicion. No reverence. Just acknowledgnt. She handed him a tal cup without a word. The liquid inside was warm and bitter, so kind of improvised tea. Rai accepted it with a quiet thanks.
He drank slowly.
This—this—was what he had nearly forgotten. The normal parts of being human. Sharing warmth. Sitting close to strangers because distance cost more energy than trust. No systems. No levels. No watchers pressing against the edge of his thoughts.
For a few minutes, Rai allowed himself to just be Rai.
Then the world nudged him again.
Not sharply. Not urgently. Just enough to remind him that stillness was temporary.
He felt it in the ground first—a low vibration, irregular, like sothing moving beneath the surface and stopping just short of breaking through. Rift residue again. Not active enough to explode into disaster, but restless. Unresolved.
Rai closed his eyes briefly, centering himself.
“I’ll check the periter,” he said casually, as if he were just another person pulling morning watch.
No one argued. No one asked him to stay. That trust—given without knowing who he really was—sat heavier in his chest than any title ever had.
He walked beyond the settlent, boots pressing into damp earth, following the vibration until it faded into a shallow ravine. The ground here bore old scars, lines etched into stone by forces that had passed through years ago and never fully left. He crouched, placing his palm against the surface.
The lattice stirred, slow and careful.
This wasn’t a problem to be solved with force. It was a reminder.
So wounds never healed completely. You learned to live around them.
Rai adjusted a few stones, redirected runoff from the night’s dew, eased the pressure just enough that the vibration settled into dormancy. No containnt field. No dramatic intervention. Just maintenance.
When he stood again, he felt the system acknowledge it—not loudly, not insistently.
[Garbage Warrior System]
Host: Rai Ichiro
Level: 67
Existence State: Vanguard
Core Stability: Absolute
ntal Load: Balanced
Operational Readiness: High
Progression Note :-
Host resolved environntal instability without escalation
Efficiency increased through minimal intervention
Rai exhaled softly.
Minimal intervention.
Once, that phrase would have sounded like weakness to him. Now it felt like skill.
He returned to the settlent as the sun climbed higher. People were already moving—repairing, cooking, planning their day. Soone waved him over, asking if he could help lift a section of collapsed frawork near the water tower.
Rai helped.
No speeches. No guidance unless asked. Just effort shared among others.
As the structure was secured, the man beside him wiped sweat from his brow and said, “You travel a lot, don’t you?”
Rai nodded. “Yeah.”
“You don’t have to,” the man added. “You could stay. We could use strong hands.”
Rai paused, considering the offer.
There was a ti when he would have accepted without hesitation. When staying ant safety, ant belonging, ant not being alone with his thoughts. But he understood himself better now.
“I can’t,” he said gently. “But I’m glad you asked.”
The man nodded, accepting the answer without resentnt. Out here, people understood that everyone carried sothing different.
As the day wore on, Rai prepared to leave. He didn’t make an announcent. He didn’t gather the group. He simply packed his gear and started walking.
A child ran up to him at the edge of the settlent, holding out a small, roughly carved token made from scrap wood. “For luck,” she said.
Rai knelt and accepted it, his throat tightening unexpectedly. “Thank you.”
He tucked it carefully into his pocket and stood, offering a small wave before turning away.
As the settlent faded behind him, Rai felt the familiar pull of the road return. Not urgency. Direction.
He thought about the routes he had begun mapping in his head. The settlents too far apart to support each other. The old scars that still pulsed quietly beneath the land. The city, holding—for now. The third zone, watching, adapting, waiting.
The world wasn’t balanced.
But it was trying.
Rai smiled faintly as he walked.
“I guess that’s all any of us are doing,” he murmured.
He adjusted his pack and continued forward, steps steady, pace unhurried. He wasn’t chasing the future anymore. He was walking alongside it, close enough to feel when it stumbled, far enough not to trip it himself.
The warrior inside him remained calm, coiled but patient. The anchor within him stayed light, no longer stretched thin by the need to be everywhere at once.
For the first ti since his awakening, Rai felt sothing close to peace—not because the world was safe, but because he trusted himself to face it when it wasn’t.
Level sixty-seven.
Not a milestone marked by power or fear.
Just another step forward, taken willingly, carrying only the weight he chose to carry—and leaving the rest behind.
----
[To Be Continued...]
Reviews
All reviews (0)