Font Size
15px

The outer gates of Last Hope groaned as they opened, hydraulics sighing beneath layers of reinforced plating. For a mont, Fade stood in the threshold—one foot in the safety of the city, the other poised to enter a world that no longer belonged to anyone.

He didn’t look back.

Behind him, the do shimred faintly under the morning cycle’s artificial sun. Inside: familiarity, safety, voices. Outside: the wild hush of unclaid land.

He stepped forward.

The mont his boots hit the cracked earth, sothing shifted—not outside, but within. The world out here didn’t hum with system protocols. No mission trackers. No threat indicators. No boundaries telling him what not to be.

The silence was purer.

A dry wind blew past the shallow hills, carrying dust and the scent of rusted tal. He moved in steady strides, eyes alert, senses half-awake, his mind playing over the ssage from Aeron.

"Area beyond periter: classified under Category Black. Lost pre-system zones. You’ll be the first to enter officially. Don’t expect anything to make sense."

That suited him just fine.

He didn’t want sense.

He wanted distance.

Each step away from Last Hope felt like peeling away a layer of sothing too tight. Expectation. Structure. Eyes.

For the first ti in days, he didn’t feel observed.

And yet—he wasn’t alone.

The earth whispered under his boots, old roots twitching beneath hardened soil. Birds didn’t sing here. The trees didn’t sway. Everything watched in stillness.

Fade walked for hours. Occasionally, the wind shifted, revealing half-buried signs—remnants of before: a broken bike fra, a dented child’s toy, bones stripped clean and scorched by old radiation. Ti didn’t just pass here—it devoured.

He paused atop a ridge and looked down at the valley below. A dried-out riverbed, vines curling through crumbled cent. Faint glints of tal structures poked through the overgrowth, long since swallowed by earth and abandonnt.

His breath fogged slightly in the air. Not from cold, but pressure. Sothing about this place pressed inward, as if it rembered being alive—and resented forgetting.

He reached for his canteen, drank once, then continued without a word.

There was no destination visible yet.

But sothing—sothing—waited beyond the silence.

The terrain shifted subtly as Fade descended into the fractured valley. Trees here were less like trees and more like brittle sculptures—pale, flaking trunks twisted by old radiation and ti. The wind carried a stillness so sharp it felt like a warning: nothing natural thrived here, and the unnatural didn’t hide.

He crouched near a rust-coated pipeline jutting from a stone wall. Faint traces of ancient symbols were etched into its length—too faded to read, too deliberate to ignore. His fingers hovered just above the tal.

Then it stirred.

Not the pipe.

Sothing within him.

A flicker. A pulse. A shift in perception.

[Passive Ability Triggered – Chemosense: Adaptive Olfactory Mapping]

The world sharpened, not with light or sound—but with scent. Not sll, exactly. Not as a human might perceive it.

This was chemical mory.

Dust and tal turned into signals. Rust wasn’t just decay—it was fear, corrosion left behind by sothing alive and fleeing. The breeze carried micro-traces of ash, sweat, rotted leather, and—

—blood.

Old blood. Not from his battle. Not even recent. But present. Saturated into the roots beneath the earth like forgotten guilt.

Fade’s pupils narrowed.

The scent was... layered. One trail ran shallow—small scavengers, perhaps. The other, deeper, older. Human, but not quite. A hybrid of sothing once-human, laced with pheromonal markers unfamiliar to him. Sharp. Predatory. Confident.

He followed.

There were no visible tracks—no footprints or broken branches—but Chemosense whispered intent. Where sothing had walked, the earth still recoiled. Not just presence, but mory of dominance.

As he passed a tangle of collapsed pylons, the sense intensified. Sowhere in this land, sothing had claid territory. Not with sound or markers, but with quiet assertion. A predator that didn’t need to roar.

He adjusted the straps of his coat, now moving with deliberate silence. This wasn’t tracking prey.

This was walking into another hunter’s story.

And yet—no fear rose in him.

Only focus.

Because even as the chemical signals deepened, the unease in his body... aligned. As if a part of him understood this language better than his own.

Chemosense pulsed again—this ti not as a warning, but a pull.

Toward the heart of the valley.

The path narrowed into a forgotten gash between broken ridges—like the earth itself had been forced open and never sealed. Rocks were jagged, blackened at the edges, so fused as if seared by plasma fire. Fade moved with the silence of soone expecting echoes, but finding none.

Then he saw it.

A collapsed structure—half-sunken, the rest swallowed by wind-blown ash. tal pylons bent inward, like fingers curling into a fist before death. Charred banners hung loose from poles, colors indistinguishable, but the insignia was there.

Enforcer sigil.

Faded. Burned.

Forgotten.

He stepped closer, boots sinking slightly into dust and debris. There were no fresh tracks. No bodies.

But signs of force were everywhere.

Twisted rebar where armor had failed. Blaster marks scorched into walls. Deep gouges clawed across bulkhead doors. A crumpled helt lay against a shattered console, visor cracked from the inside.

Sothing had broken containnt.

And sothing had survived.

[Passive Ability – Chemosense: Deep mory Activation]

The air shifted. Chemical strands snapped into his awareness.

Fear—old and sharp. The kind not from prey, but from trained warriors realizing they were outmatched.

Ozone. Blood. Synthetic nerve agents. Burnt wiring and... flesh.

Fade moved to the ruined central post—a control station now half-swallowed by collapse. A flicker of light danced weakly across a data-shard still lodged in a console port. He didn’t touch it.

He didn’t need to.

Chemosense flared—overlaying mory in scent.

A mont preserved in chemicals.Screams, short and sudden. Gunfire—wild, not tactical. Sothing large moved—too fast. Not a system glitch. A purge.

The sensors had been torn from their mounts, not deactivated. Panels were crushed inward, as if sothing had entered the reinforced walls, not tried to escape them.

Fade stood still.

His body understood more than his mind did.

This wasn’t a base that had failed.This was a site cleansed.

Not by enemies.

By sothing deeper. Sothing internal. Or perhaps... test-driven.

He turned to leave—and saw one last detail.

A ssage scrawled into a piece of scorched alloy, the writing crude, scratched by sothing that bled:

"We weren’t what they are."

He didn’t take a picture. Didn’t speak.

But he’d rember.

Because sothing was being rewritten in places like this.

Not by heroes.

Not by survivors.

By those who walked alone.

The canyon grew narrow. Stone turned pale—almost bone-white. Wind no longer howled but whispered, curling through hollow crevices like breath through broken teeth.

Fade moved slower now.

Sothing had shifted.

It wasn’t the light—still dim and dust-heavy.It wasn’t the terrain—still cracked, unstable, sloping downward.It was presence.

Not his.

Not the system’s.

Sothing else.

[Passive Ability – Chemosense: Instinctive Alert Triggered]

There was no sound.No form.No heat signature.

But it was there.

Watching.

Not with eyes.Not the way humans, drones, or even beasts watched.But sothing primal. Detached. Like a concept wearing a cloak.

Fade stopped in place. Every instinct scread at him not to look over his shoulder—not because sothing was there, but because sothing might be.

And that might was worse.

Chemosense pulsed again. The air was laced with a residue he hadn’t encountered before. It wasn’t chemical in the conventional sense. It was... suggestion. The scent of sothing that shouldn’t have a scent. Wrongness made breathable.

He slowly crouched, fingertips brushing the cracked ground.

Claw marks.

Not from a beast. Not random.

These were asured—curved and deliberate, almost like symbols. Not communication. Not language. A map of intent.

He didn’t try to read them.

Didn’t need to.

[Instinct Alert – Foreign Entity Detected][Classification: Outside Paraters – System Unregistered][Recomnded Action: Avoidance]

Fade didn’t move for a long ti.

Then—he exhaled slowly, letting the tension fold back into his core.He didn’t reach for a weapon. Didn’t call on the darker powers pulsing beneath his skin.

Not yet.

Because sothing had just seen him... and decided to let him go.

And in a world ruled by instinct and death, rcy wasn’t a kindness.

It was a ssage.

He moved again—quieter, now. Not because he feared the unknown.

But because he feared what wasn’t unknown anymore.

By the ti he reached the canyon’s edge, the terrain opened into a wide, shallow valley. At the far end—half-swallowed by stone and root—stood a structure that didn’t belong.

Old.

Angular.

Built by hands that had forgotten how to feel.

The ancient site.

He stood there for a while.

Not breathing.

Not blinking.

Just... listening.

But the wind had stopped whispering.

And the watcher, whoever—or whatever—it was, had stopped watching.

Only silence remained.

And a threshold waiting to be crossed.

The valley dipped into silence. No birds. No wind. Even the insects seed to fade into the stillness, swallowed by sothing older.

Fade’s boots cracked over brittle earth and creeping moss, each step absorbing not just sound—but aning.

Nature had shifted.

What once was wild had beco still.

And what once was still... now waited.

The terrain changed subtly as he advanced. Rocks turned smoother, unnaturally so, weathered not by ti but by sothing controlled—shaped. Twisting vines crept along shattered stones, weaving over collapsed archways and half-sunken glyphs he didn’t recognize.

Then... the heat changed.

It wasn’t external—not from the sun or geothermal vents.

It was internal.A warmth bleeding from beneath the surface. Faint, but deliberate.

[Passive Ability – Chemosense: Deep-Layer Resonance Detected][Source: Subterranean Core / Unknown Origin][Instinctive Response: Caution Triggered]

Fade crouched again, brushing his hand over a stone slab half-buried in soil. It humd faintly. Not power in the conventional sense—but a pulse, like a heartbeat half-asleep.

A low structure stretched out ahead—nearly buried by the land around it. It didn’t belong here, but it had beco part of here. Swallowed, but not forgotten.

The entrance was barely visible: a fractured stairway of obsidian and iron-veined marble, sunken beneath roots, sealed behind a half-collapsed arch. The air leaking from the gap was warm... and wrong. Not foul. Just different.

Old.

[Chemosense Active: Pre-System Energy Detected][Classification: Pre-Integration Artifact Zone][Warning: Biological Synchronization Inconclusive]

Fade didn’t flinch.

He stepped closer. Let the heat brush his skin. Felt the pulse match his own.

A whisper curled through the windless air—no sound, just an acknowledgnt.

He stared into the dark hollow beyond the broken arch.

A place forgotten by ti.

Or maybe a place that had chosen to be forgotten.

His breath steadied.

He didn’t step in yet.

But the air had already recognized him.

You are reading Path of Death: Awakening Chapter 45: Place That Waited on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Big Data Cultivation cover
Similar genre

Big Data Cultivation

Chen Fengxiao ·Fantasy

Asagraduatewithadoubledegreefromaprestigiousuniversity,FengJunsomehowremainsunemployedaftergraduation.Hestrugglesinthecity,buthecan’tletgoofhisprid...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.