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He had no weapons, no Aether worth using, and every bioluminescent patch in the forest was telling him the sa thing in the only color they had left.

He stood completely still.

Not the stillness of soone who had frozen — the deliberate, chosen stillness of soone who had read the information available and concluded that motion was the wrong response to it. The red light pulsed in slow rhythmic waves across every patch he could see, and the forest had gone to that specific quiet that he had learned, over weeks of Vorga, was not the absence of sound but the presence of decision — everything that could make noise having decided that silence was the preferable strategy.

He counted the patches. Eight visible from where he stood. All red. All pulsing at the sa slow frequency, which ant they were responding to the sa source rather than multiple independent ones. One thing. Large enough that the bioluminescent ecology across a wide radius had registered it simultaneously.

He looked at the trees.

The Morag knowledge — absorbed through the ring and now independent of it — told him that Vorga’s larger surface predators hunted by vibration detection rather than primarily by scent or sight. They felt the ground. They read the compression waves that movent produced through the forest floor and oriented toward the pattern. Stillness produced nothing.

He had been walking. He had stopped walking. The question was how long the vibration pattern of his walking remained readable before it dissipated.

He did not move.

He breathed through his nose, slowly, and counted. Forty seconds. Sixty. The red patches pulsed.

Sothing moved to his left. Not toward him — parallel, at a distance he estimated at thirty feet. He saw it not as a shape but as the absence of shape — the specific darkness of sothing very large moving with the fluid ground-covering efficiency of a thing built specifically for this environnt. It was quartering the area, covering ground systematically, the red patches responding to its passage by intensifying and then settling as it moved away from each section.

At the four-minute mark the thing moved definitively away. Not from him specifically, but in a direction that was not toward him.

The red patches began to shift. Slowly, through orange, returning to the blue-gold of a forest that had stopped reporting imminent threat.

He waited another two minutes. Then he started walking, and let out the breath he had been managing for six minutes.

’That was fine,’ he said quietly. ’Everything is fine.’

He was not fine. But he kept walking northeast.

-----

Week one was, in honest internal accounting, terrible in the specific way that things were terrible when they were also necessary.

He found water through the mineral seep indicators at the base of certain root systems — a detail in Grur’s knowledge he had processed without particularly noting at the ti, now the most important piece of information he possessed. He found food through the Morag foraging knowledge, applying the bioluminescent criteria conservatively, eating cautiously and remaining alive, which was the correct priority ordering. He avoided every deep red indicator with the religious commitnt of soone who had stood in the dark while an apex predator quartered the area around him and had found the experience instructive.

He moved slowly. He conserved everything. He read the forest the way you read sothing you depended on entirely and had no margin to misunderstand.

-----

Week two, his body rembered what it knew.

Not strength — efficiency. Muscle mory operated on different channels than raw capability and those channels ca back faster, the accumulated knowledge of physical enhancent asserting itself in the quality of his movent before the quantity of his power returned. He found the Morag navigational markers — the subtle alterations in root system arrangents at junction points that looked like natural variation to an untrained eye and carried directional information to soone with the right reference. Three decades of scattered Morag clan mbers leaving guidance for other scattered Morag clan mbers, built into the forest itself.

He had known them from the ring. He applied them now without it.

They pointed northeast. He followed them.

-----

Week three was when the forest stopped being sothing he was surviving and started being sothing he was reading.

He was following a trail sign on the nineteenth day when the red patches appeared without warning — not the gradual build of sothing approaching from distance but the imdiate full activation of an entire section of forest simultaneously. Which ant whatever had produced it had not approached. It had been there, still, and had moved.

He stopped. He looked.

The thing that stepped out of the undergrowth forty feet ahead of him was not the largest creature Vorga had shown him. It was not thirty ters of golden centipede or ten feet of acid-web spider. It was roughly the height of a large horse and moved on six legs with the low-slung efficiency of sothing built entirely for the specific purpose of being faster than the things it pursued.

It had found his vibration trail. It had followed it to him. And now it had found him, standing in the open, without a weapon or a Ghost or anything that changed the fundantal math of the situation.

It charged.

Not the slow assessnt build-up of a territorial creature deciding whether to escalate — a full imdiate charge, the six legs covering ground with the terrifying fluid speed of sothing that had already made the decision and was executing it with total commitnt.

Max ran.

He ran in the way that a man ran when the alternative was not running, which was with every resource his recovering body had accumulated over nineteen days of slowly improving function, applied all at once, without reserve. His legs found a speed he had not tested since before the injection and the pit and the cell, and the discovery that the speed was there was both useful and slightly surprising.

The creature was faster.

He knew this within the first ten seconds because the sound of it — six legs on Vorga’s forest floor, a rapid rhythmic impact that arrived louder with each stride — was getting louder rather than maintaining distance. He was not pulling away. He was managing the gap at best, and managing a gap against sothing that did not tire the way he tired was a temporary arrangent.

He cut left. Hard. Not randomly — the Morag knowledge providing the terrain map that his experience navigating this forest had filled in, and the intersection of both telling him there was a dense root cluster forty ters to the left where the roots rose above ground level, creating a space between them that the creature’s body width would not fit through.

The creature cut with him. Faster on the turn than he expected, losing less ground on the angle change than a six-legged thing should have been able to lose. The sound got louder.

He could feel the displaced air of its movent now. It was that close.

The root cluster appeared ahead. He hit it at full speed and went over the first root rather than around it — the Grip Enhancent was gone but his legs rembered the motion, the vault carried him over, and he was through the gap between the two largest roots before the creature reached the first one.

The creature hit the root structure at full charge.

It did not go through. The roots were ancient and enormous and the creature was large and fast and the combination of those things produced a collision that he felt through the ground from fifteen feet away on the other side. He turned without stopping, still moving, and watched over his shoulder.

The creature hit the roots twice more — not in confusion, in genuine assessnt, testing the barrier, looking for the gap it could not fit through. Its eyes found him through the space between the roots. They held contact for a long mont — the creature’s eyes and his, the specific exchange of two things that had been in a pursuit and had reached the specific mont where the pursuit’s geotry had changed.

Then it turned away. Not retreat — reorientation. It moved along the root structure’s periter looking for another route, and Max used every second of that movent to create as much distance northeast as his legs could produce.

He ran for six more minutes before he slowed. He slowed because his lungs had submitted a report he could not ignore and because the red patches around him had faded back through orange to blue-gold.

He stopped. He put his hands on his knees. He breathed.

’Still fine,’ he said, between breaths. ’Everything is still fine.’

-----

Week four, his Aether returned.

Not fully. Not at Stage Two, not even reliably at Stage One. But present — the warmth in his chest that he recognized with the specific recognition of sothing returning ho, the circulation pathways reestablishing themselves tentatively, testing whether the disruption was permanent.

It was not permanent.

He ran cultivation sessions for the first ti since the cell — sitting against root systems in the Vorga night, finding the warmth the way the manual had taught him to find it. It ca back slowly and stayed when he found it and each session added a fraction to what the previous session had established. He could not make the Ghost. He had no ring, no crystal storage, insufficient volu. But the engine was turning over. The foundation was there.

He was following a trail sign through the forest on the twenty-sixth day when he saw the figure.

Septur. Moving through the trees ahead with the specific directional purpose of soone who knew where he was going — not cautious navigation but the confident movent of soone following familiar markers. Moving northeast.

He stepped into the figure’s path.

The Morag clan mber stopped. He looked at Max for a long mont with the expression of soone whose understanding of the current situation required complete reconstruction from the foundational level.

Then he said, in Septur, in the flat quality of soone delivering a sentence his mind had not fully accepted:

’We thought you were dead.’

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