The command room had transford into expedition planning center over the final preparation days, maps covering every surface and docuntation stacked in organized chaos that only Misha could navigate effectively.
"Route options are limited," Kane stood before the largest map, tracing paths with his prosthetic finger, "direct northwest through unclaid territories adds two weeks but avoids Association observation posts, eastern approach is shorter but passes through three settlents that report to Administrative Council."
"We're not hiding the expedition," Luthra said, "just controlling information about our destination and purpose."
"Then the eastern route with modified cover story, trade negotiation with independent settlents, nothing dramatic enough to trigger Association interest."
The route crystallized through tactical necessity. Eastern path to the regional border, then northwest through wilderness that connected to Phantom Forest territory. Three weeks of travel each direction under optimal conditions, longer if complications arose.
"Supplies verified?" Misha asked, her docuntation ready for final confirmation.
"Three months provisions, dical kit covering major trauma, repair materials for equipnt, trade goods valued at approximately 500 gold equivalent," Kane recited, "Greta's additions include four long-range communication crystals, three prototype weapons, and sothing she called 'ergency extraction device' that she refused to explain."
"Sounds reassuring," Rebecca comnted from her position by the window.
"Greta's philosophy is that explanations waste ti better spent building more equipnt," Kane said, "the device probably works, she just doesn't want to describe failure modes."
Jako's report arrived via ssenger construct, the small stone figure delivering written summary before dissolving into component mana.
"Scouting update," Luthra read aloud, "Forest edge activity has stabilized, beast-kin scouts maintaining observation pattern but not advancing, no hostile movents detected, recomnd continued monitoring without engagent."
"They know we're coming," Khorvash observed, "or they expect soone's coming, their positioning suggests preparation rather than random patrol."
"Does that change our approach?" Misha asked.
"Makes diplomacy more important," Khorvash said, "they're not hiding, which ans they're willing to be seen, willingness to be seen often precedes willingness to talk."
The dragonkin's perspective on beast-kin psychology exceeded anyone else's expertise. His cultural understanding of non-human societies had proven valuable during the preparation months, providing context that pure tactical analysis missed.
"Team composition finalized?" Luthra directed the question to the room.
"Five primary mbers," Kane confird, "you, , Khorvash, Rebecca, Misha, plus Jako maintaining communication relay from staging position outside forest boundary."
"Vera stays for coalition defense," Misha added, "Gareth takes political coordination, Thalia handles settlent relations, Finn manages economics, Rennik continues infrastructure projects."
"Everyone with explicit authority and clear succession protocols," Luthra noted, "if we don't return, coalition continues without interruption."
The statent landed with weight that nobody wanted to acknowledge directly. Expedition fatality rates into S-rank territories exceeded fifty percent for prepared parties, higher for groups without S-rank mbers of their own.
"We'll return," Rebecca said, her confidence cutting through the somber atmosphere, "you're too stubborn to die, and the rest of us are too stubborn to leave you behind."
'Stubbornness as survival strategy. Not the worst philosophy.'
---
Greta Ironforge arrived for final equipnt delivery, the dwarven artificer carrying cases that seed too heavy for her compact fra but moved in her grip like empty boxes.
"Communication crystals, paired and tested," she set the first case on the table, revealing four crystalline devices nested in protective padding, "range exceeds anything comrcially available, should maintain connection from forest center to coalition territory if atmospheric conditions cooperate."
"And if atmospheric conditions don't cooperate?" Kane asked.
"Then you'll have very pretty paperweights," Greta said, "mana interference in high-density magical environnts remains unpredictable, I've minimized the problem but not eliminated it."
The second case contained weapons that looked more experintal than practical, bladed implents with unusual geotric patterns etched into their surfaces.
"Void-resonant steel," Greta explained, noting Luthra's interest, "your abilities interact with standard materials unpredictably, these blades should channel rather than resist your mana signature."
"Should?"
"Field testing was limited to laboratory conditions," Greta admitted, "you're the first void-aspected hunter I've had opportunity to equip, theory and practice may diverge."
Luthra lifted one of the blades, feeling the weapon's weight and balance. The tal responded to his touch differently than normal steel, almost welcoming his mana rather than passively accepting it.
"It feels... cooperative."
"Technical term is 'sympathetic resonance,' but cooperative works as description," Greta seed pleased by his reaction, "the blade amplifies rather than conducts, whatever abilities you channel through it should erge stronger, or at least more controlled."
The third case remained closed, its exterior marked with warning symbols that suggested dangerous contents.
"Ergency extraction device," Greta said, "single use, activates when you channel maximum mana into the trigger chanism, creates spatial displacent sufficient to move your entire party approximately fifty kiloters in random direction."
"Random direction?" Misha's administrative mind imdiately identified the problem.
"Spatial displacent isn't precise," Greta explained, "I can guarantee distance and guarantee all party mbers travel together, but directional control exceeds current artificer capabilities, you might erge closer to safety or fifty kiloters deeper into hostile territory."
"That's less extraction and more desperate gambling," Kane observed.
"Desperate gambling when the alternative is certain death," Greta corrected, "use it as last resort, not tactical option."
The equipnt briefing continued with additional supplies Greta considered essential, items that ranged from practical to mysterious. Her artificer perspective valued preparation over explanation, leaving the expedition team to discover function through necessity.
---
Night fell with expedition departure scheduled for dawn, the coalition territory settling into quiet that preceded major changes.
Luthra found Rebecca on the training grounds, her fire magic illuminating practice routines that had beco reflexive over months of repetition.
"Nerves?" he asked, approaching the circle of light cast by her flas.
"Excitent mostly," Rebecca admitted, her fire dimming as she turned to face him, "nerves underneath, but I'm not letting them control anything."
"Good approach."
"Vera taught that," Rebecca said, "fear is information, not instruction, it tells you what's dangerous, not what to avoid."
"Vera's philosophy suits you."
The training ground held mories of earlier conversations, monts when Rebecca was frightened child rather than B-rank hunter, when coalition survival seed impossible rather than assured.
"I've been thinking about the expedition purpose," Rebecca said, "not just the power developnt objective, but what it ans for coalition."
"aning?"
"You're the reason coalition exists, not the only reason, but the primary one, your power created space for everything else to develop, if you don't advance beyond B-rank, eventually threats will exceed your capacity to protect."
"That's the strategic assessnt," Luthra confird.
"So the expedition isn't about you growing stronger for personal reasons," Rebecca continued, "it's about coalition survival requiring you to beco capable of facing S-rank threats."
"Both things are true simultaneously."
"I know," Rebecca said, "I just wanted to make sure you knew I understood, I'm not coming because I want adventure or because I'm trying to prove sothing, I'm coming because the expedition matters and I can help."
The maturity of her perspective exceeded expectations, growth that went beyond combat capability into strategic understanding.
'She's becoming leader, not just fighter. Coalition's next generation taking shape.'
"That understanding helps," Luthra said, "expedition success requires everyone knowing why they're there, not just what they're doing."
Rebecca nodded, her fire rekindling as she prepared to resu training. "Dawn departure ans I should sleep soon, but one more hour of practice won't hurt."
"One hour," Luthra agreed, "then rest, tomorrow starts the journey that changes everything."
The night continued with final preparations across coalition territory, every departnt completing handover procedures and docunting authority transfers. Coalition systems would function without Luthra's presence for the first ti since founding.
The expedition would test whether the coalition he'd helped build could survive independently of his personal power.
Level -22 waited sowhere in Phantom Forest, requiring challenges that exceeded anything coalition territory offered.
Dawn approached with promise and danger balanced in equal asure.
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