The Thinman was not a random enemy.
He was a faction seed.
If he survived, the faction survived.
If the faction survived, the kidnapping chain found a way.
Aurelia beca a hostage event.
The continent fractured.
The demon contract was dangerous.
Predictable.
The Thinman was the keystone.
Sylara glanced at Draven as they walked. Her eyes were sharp now, not playful.
"You're not hunting him like this is new," she said quietly, so the wind could steal the words.
Draven didn't answer.
Sylara continued anyway, voice lower.
"You're hunting him like you've hunted him before."
Draven's reply was clipped.
"Later."
Sylara's mouth tightened.
"Not here," Draven added.
"Not with ears."
Sylara's gaze flicked up to the sky.
Ra??drithar circled.
Then her gaze flicked back down the ridge where lanterns swayed.
Ears.
She swallowed whatever she wanted to say.
That was new.
Growth.
It didn't make her gentle.
It made her dangerous in a more useful way.
They reached a ridge vantage where the world opened.
Below, the route toward Greysedge cut through white and stone, and the patterns were wrong.
Road segnts empty as if fear had painted them.
Caravans detouring into longer routes that made no economic sense.
A patch of slope where snow didn't settle evenly.
A cluster of black birds circling above nothing.
Sylara leaned forward, eyes narrowed.
"That's not demon behavior," she murmured.
Draven's voice stayed calm.
"No," he agreed.
He watched the caravan detour.
Soone had paid for that.
Paid in coin or threat.
Either way, organized.
The demon story—cold pockets, thin voice—could be real.
Or it could be a cover.
A way to clear roads.
Isolate villages.
Move people unseen.
Move the queen later.
Draven shifted his weight.
He needed two things to hunt an organized faction.
Information.
Funds.
Adventuring was not only killing.
It was logistics.
It was disguise.
It was buying credibility with coin and blood.
They descended to a northern trader post built into the rock like a stubborn tooth. Its roof was slate weighted with chains. Its walls were warded with old runes that had been re-inked too recently.
A rchant inside looked up and flinched when Vyrik entered.
Sylara smiled sweetly.
"Relax," she said. "He only bites idiots."
The rchant swallowed and forced a laugh.
Draven placed a small bundle on the counter.
Scrap.
Warded alloy fragnts.
A demon-binding nail.
Not enough to reveal his true stores.
Enough to fund pursuit.
The rchant's rune lens flickered.
His eyes widened.
"This… this is—"
"Pay," Draven said.
The rchant hesitated.
Sylara leaned in, voice bright and sharp.
"He ans now," she said. "Not after you finish praying."
Coin seals changed hands.
Draven imdiately spent part of it.
Demon-salt sealed in wax.
Cold-iron wedges.
Anti-curse tinctures.
Not because he feared the demon.
Because it made him look like he was following the contract.
Because appearances were a shield.
Sylara purchased storm feed pellets for Ra??drithar and argued loudly about price until the rchant panicked and lowered it.
Draven watched her do it.
He used the noise.
He bought a route map.
Not the polished "demon atlas" the rchant tried to sell.
A crude survey sheet used by couriers.
He traced the paths with a gloved finger and noted which ones were too well maintained for remote ridges.
Smuggling logic.
Faction logic.
Human inconvenience turned into predictable movent.
They returned to the outpost as dusk thickened.
The lanterns burned behind warded glass.
The priest stood near the ledger table, smiling at travelers.
"Na and purpose," he asked, voice warm. "For safety."
Sylara rolled her eyes dramatically.
"For safety," she echoed, loud enough for everyone to hear. "Sure."
Draven stepped forward.
"Dravis Granger," he said.
Sylara smirked. "Sylvanna."
The priest's pen scratched.
Draven watched the ink.
It shimred faintly.
A recording charm.
Of course.
The Thinman stood at the ledger earlier, Draven realized.
Signed a harmless alias.
Let the priest record it.
Because that recording would travel.
A guild relay would carry it.
A courier would repeat it.
A handler would know the Thinman was "passing through legally."
Draven felt the trap take shape.
Outpost has eyes.
Couriers.
Patroln.
A guild relay.
A priest who records nas.
The Thinman used normal systems as cover.
He slipped a token to a courier.
He vanished into legal traffic.
Sylara leaned close, voice a blade.
"You're glaring at that priest like you want to peel him," she murmured.
Draven didn't answer.
He moved to the innkeeper again, speaking softly, as if it was idle curiosity.
"Any unusual paynt coins lately?"
The innkeeper hesitated.
Draven let silence sit.
The innkeeper sighed.
"Had a traveler," he admitted. "Paid with an old bronze token. Not local. Stamped with a circle and a notch."
Draven's gaze sharpened.
A courier node marker.
He rembered it.
Not from this world.
From a file.
From a design docunt.
The world had kept the skeleton.
Sylara watched his face.
"You know that coin," she said.
Draven's reply was clipped.
"Later."
Sylara's teeth clicked.
"Dravis," she said, sharper now. "You're not hunting a demon. You're hunting a person, and you're hunting him like he matters more than the demon."
Draven didn't deny.
He didn't confirm.
He said only, "Not here."
Sylara exhaled hard.
Then, instead of exploding, she swallowed it.
She turned her frustration into performance.
Loudly, she called across the room, "Hey! Anyone here seen a 'demon' that skins people? I'd like to borrow it for research."
A few patrons laughed nervously.
A few looked away.
The priest's smile tightened.
Good.
Let them think she was the problem.
Let Draven be quiet.
They left the outpost under snow-dark sky.
Ra??drithar launched with a crackle of static.
Vyrik anchored to a trailing line again, heavy enough to make the lift runes strain.
Draven didn't like the line.
But it kept Vyrik close.
Close ant control.
They followed the route Draven deduced from the courier map.
Not directly toward Greysedge.
Toward the path that fed it.
Toward the route that was too well maintained.
Toward the kind of "shortcut" normal people avoided.
It didn't take long.
A figure appeared ahead on the ridge trail—bundled, lantern held high.
A "helpful guide."
The kind of person the outpost always produced when money wanted a traveler in a specific place.
The guide waved.
"Adventurers!" he called, voice cheerful against the wind. "You're headed to Greysedge, yeah? I know a faster route. Safe. No demon tracks."
Sylara laughed, loud and theatrical.
"Safe," she repeated. "He says safe, Dravis. I'm convinced."
The guide smiled.
Too practiced.
Draven watched the man's boots.
Snow clung to the left sole.
Not the right.
Wind direction would have coated both.
Unless the man had walked through a sheltered channel and then stepped out here to perform.
Draven's eyes flicked to the guide's belt.
A charm.
Too clean.
No weathering.
A new rune, etched crisp.
A silence pocket anchor.
A visibility bend.
A field trap.
Perfect for isolating Draven from Sylara.
Perfect for making the mask disappear in a place where witnesses would later swear nothing happened.
Draven didn't draw his blades.
He stepped closer.
The guide's smile brightened as if he'd won.
Then Draven's hand moved.
Fast.
Not flashy.
Two fingers on the man's wrist.
Pressure.
Anatomy.
The guide's lantern dropped.
His knees buckled.
He made a small choking sound and tried to breathe.
The silence pocket flickered.
Never fully ford.
Because the anchor's owner was already collapsing.
Sylara's eyes widened.
Then her smile turned sharp.
"Oh," she said, delighted. "We're doing this again."
She stepped forward, hand drifting to her bow.
"Let —" she began.
Draven's voice cut, calm as a blade.
"No."
Sylara blinked.
Draven didn't look at her.
"Ti matters more than satisfaction," he said.
Sylara's jaw worked.
She looked down at the guide, who was sweating and trying not to scream.
She wanted answers.
She wanted blood.
And then—another small growth beat—she exhaled and stepped back.
"Fine," she muttered. "But I'm going to complain about it."
"Later," Draven said.
Sylara rolled her eyes so hard it was almost comforting.
Vyrik circled the guide once and then settled, staring down like a stone gargoyle that had decided this human was garbage.
Draven crouched, plucked the belt charm free, and crushed it between his fingers.
The rune snapped.
A small, ugly shimr died.
Then Draven stood.
He didn't kill the guide.
Not because he was rciful.
Because a living ssenger ran faster than a corpse.
He leaned close, voice quiet enough to feel like a private threat.
"Go back," he said.
The guide's eyes were wide.
"Tell whoever sent you that their trap was amateur," Draven continued. "And tell them I noticed."
The guide nodded so fast his neck looked like it might break.
Draven released him.
The man stumbled away into the snow, terrified and alive.
Sylara watched him go.
"You're letting him run," she said.
"Useful," Draven replied.
Sylara sighed. "Sa thing for you."
They moved again.
And now the pursuit was no longer theoretical.
The Thinman wasn't alone.
The faction was active.
They spotted him at last not through drama, but through a gap in normality.
A ridge bend opened onto a trader group hauling sleds—five n, one woman, all bundled, faces raw from wind.
Among them, one figure walked without hunching.
Without swearing.
Without the micro-stumbles cold always forced.
He was too calm.
Too thin.
Draven's eyes narrowed.
There.
Sylara inhaled sharply beside him.
"Dravis," she whispered, voice almost serious now.
Draven raised one hand.
Not to signal attack.
To asure.
Vyrik moved ahead—quiet, heavy—positioning to block the path beyond the trader group.
Ra??drithar banked overhead, wings flexing, storm aura tightening as Sylara angled her body into a dive-ready posture.
Draven held his blades still.
He waited.
The Thinman reached the trader group.
Walked into the cluster.
And then—he was not there.
Not a flash.
Not a burst.
No teleportation fireworks.
Just… absence.
Like a sentence interrupted.
Draven's gaze snapped to the rock face beside the path.
A seam.
A ward threshold disguised as stone weathering.
A courier gate.
Keyed to a symbol Draven did not carry.
The trader group kept walking.
Oblivious.
Or trained to be.
Sylara's voice ca out like a hiss.
"He disappeared."
Draven's expression did not change.
But his mind sharpened.
He detected us.
Not guessed.
Detected.
aning a watcher.
Or a thod that reacted to pursuit intent.
Or both.
Draven stood still for one beat.
Snow hissed.
Lantern light flickered.
Ra??drithar circled above, static popping softly like a warning.
Vyrik halted, confused for half a breath, then returned to Draven's side, feathered mane bristling.
Sylara stepped closer, anger and excitent tangled in her expression.
"Explain," she said, voice low and sharp. "Now."
Draven didn't look at her.
He looked at the rock seam.
He looked at the trader group.
He looked at the direction the path still pointed.
And then cold certainty replaced frustration.
The Thinman's disappearance wasn't escape.
It was route correction.
He still had objectives.
Rendezvous point.
Faction relay.
Tiline trigger.
He still had to go where the kidnapping chain began.
He still had to touch the queen's route, directly or indirectly.
There were only three viable nodes.
Draven's inner voice surfaced—quiet, lethal, intimate.
So he detected our plan.
Good.
That ans he's afraid enough to move early.
And early movent reveals structure.
He still has to go where I already know.
I will kill him at one of the nodes.
And then I will find the rest of his faction.
He turned to Sylara.
His voice, when it ca, was the one he used when ending a debate.
"Change of plan," he said, using his disguise na as if it was nothing. "We hunt the demon after."
Sylara's mouth opened.
"Dravis—"
The wind stole the rest.
Reviews
All reviews (0)