The wind off the cliff had teeth.
It skinned sound down to essentials—rope groaning, a lantern's glass ticking, snow hissing sideways like sand. It forced most people to hunch, to fight for each step.
The man on the ridge below did neither.
Draven watched him through the outpost doorway and felt recognition land in him with a weight that had nothing to do with rumor. It was not the simple certainty of a hunter seeing prey.
It was the cold snap of a designer seeing his own chanism walking loose.
The demon contract in his pocket went quiet. The multiple disappearances, the "thin voice," the frost cliffs—background noise. Work. Predictable. A problem with a shape the guild already understood.
This was different.
This was a tiline fracture.
The figure was too thin in a coat too ordinary, his posture arranged to be forgotten. The hood he wore did not hide his face so much as flatten it into an average that the brain refused to keep. He moved like the wind belonged to him, like he'd negotiated with it.
And Draven knew that gait.
Not from this world.
From the version of the world he had once built.
His heartbeat didn't spike. It dropped.
A small stillness fell over his body, the kind that ca before he drew a blade. His attention narrowed until the outpost doorway beca a fra and the ridge below beca a diagram—distance, elevation, lines of sight, the angle of the path, the nearest cover, the way lantern light threw a shadow band where a knife hand could vanish.
Behind him, Sylara's breath changed. She didn't say anything at first, which was how Draven knew she felt it too. Not the "enemy" sense—she'd never been good at that. Sothing else.
Him.
Vyrik rose without a command.
The guard-type chira lifted his heavy head, feathered mane stirring with static, and aligned himself with Draven's gaze like a vigilant gargoyle that had decided the street finally mattered. His claws scraped the threshold once, quiet as a threat.
Ra??drithar's storm aura tightened overhead. The air in the doorway prickled. A thin seam of silver lightning crawled along the chira's wing ridges and vanished into cloud.
Sylara stepped in close beside him, voice low and sharp despite the lazy mask she wore in public.
"Dravis," she said, using his false na like a hook. "What is that look?"
Draven didn't answer imdiately.
The thin figure below paused.
Not like a traveler catching breath.
Like a person checking whether the world was watching.
The man turned his head.
Not toward Draven.
Toward the wrong place.
Toward the left slope, where anyone with ordinary paranoia would expect a watcher to be.
Draven's eyes narrowed by a fraction.
Trained.
Not just to hide.
To anticipate pursuit as a rule.
Sylara followed his gaze. Her hand drifted toward her bow without touching it, an unconscious readiness she'd developed after too many near-deaths.
"Dravis…?" she pressed.
Draven spoke at last.
"We're not taking the demon yet."
Sylara stared at him.
"What?"
The wind stole the edge of her voice and threw it into the snow.
"That's literally the contract," she said, then sharpened it, like she could cut sense into him by force. "We're here because the guild offered an obscene amount of coin for a demon that skins people.
"You want to… what? Sightsee?"
Draven's gaze never left the ridge.
"Follow first," he said.
Sylara's lips parted.
Then she let out a quiet, disbelieving laugh. "Follow who? The skinny man? Are we hunting fashion choices now?"
Draven's eyes didn't flick to her.
"Contracts are for people who don't see patterns," he said.
Sylara went still.
That line had teeth.
It wasn't a debate invitation.
It was Draven putting a lid on the pot.
Sylara's expression shifted, the frivolous boredom slipping a degree. "You're not hunting a demon," she said more carefully. "You're hunting a person."
Draven watched the Thinman take three steps down the ridge path and felt the old disgust rise.
He didn't show it.
He couldn't.
Not here.
Not with the outpost's ears.
He'd seen the priest inside with his neat ledger and "safety blessings." He'd seen the courier rings on hands that pretended to be simple gloves. He'd seen the way the guard captain's gaze lingered on newcors as if the man was weighing which bodies would be easiest to bla.
Say too much out loud and a secret beca a signal.
Sylara tilted her head, voice dropping further. "Dravis," she said again, now without laughter. "If you know sothing, say it."
Draven's answer was imdiate.
"Later."
Sylara's jaw tightened.
"Not here," Draven added.
"Not with ears."
It sounded like paranoia.
It was calibration.
The Thinman reached a bend where the ridge path dipped behind a boulder and beca invisible.
Draven moved.
Not a sprint.
A smooth turn away from the doorway, as if he'd simply decided the weather wasn't worth watching.
Vyrik followed, heavy and silent.
Sylara didn't argue again. Not yet. That, more than anything, confird she'd learned sothing in the last months.
Obedience wasn't in her nature.
But she had started to understand that Draven's silence was rarely about control.
It was about survival.
Draven walked back into the outpost with the sa calm he'd used to enter the guild halls in the capital. The room was narrow, warm with soup and wet wool, and filled with small noises—spoons tapping bowls, boots shifting, low murmurs.
He felt those murmurs tighten as he returned.
People saw the mask and filled it with stories.
Sylara made sure the stories stayed about her.
She strode in first, loud enough to be heard.
"Anyone want to tell
why this place sells soup that tastes like boiled regret?"
A few heads turned.
A veteran snorted.
A bartender pretended not to listen.
Draven used the distraction.
He approached the counter and set a coin down.
Not a silver.
A copper.
Cheap. Innocent.
The innkeeper's eyes dropped to it anyway, then flicked up—too quick.
Draven asked casually, "You get many southern travelers?"
The innkeeper shrugged. "Sotis."
Draven's gaze held.
The innkeeper added, too fast, "Not many lately."
"Southern shoes in northern snow?" Draven asked.
The innkeeper's mouth twitched.
A lie wanted to form.
Draven didn't give it ti.
"Anyone refuse soup but buy salt," he said, as if salt mattered more than warmth.
The innkeeper blinked.
Then, because Draven's questions were shaped like the truth, the man answered without realizing he was doing it.
"Had a traveler this morning," he said, voice careful. "Didn't eat. Paid for a bag of demon-salt anyway. Like… like he wanted a receipt."
Sylara, lounging near a table with her boots propped on a stool, lifted her head. Her eyes narrowed, amusent evaporating.
"A receipt?" she echoed. "Who buys demon-salt for a receipt?"
Draven didn't look at her.
He slid another copper. "Which direction?"
The innkeeper hesitated.
A shadow moved behind him.
A priest in pale robes, ledger tucked under his arm, stepped closer as if he'd simply co to bless the counter.
Draven noted the priest's ring.
Not a holy sign.
A courier key.
He kept his tone calm. "Which direction," he repeated.
The innkeeper swallowed. "East ridge. Toward the trader path."
Draven nodded once.
He turned away.
The priest smiled politely.
Draven ignored him.
Sylara pushed off the stool and followed, lowering her voice as she ca alongside.
"You're acting like you already know who he is," she said.
Draven didn't answer.
Sylara's laugh was quieter now. "Are you going to do the 'mysterious' thing again?"
"Later," Draven said.
Sylara's eyes narrowed. "And if I don't like later?"
"Then you can complain while we walk," Draven replied.
It was the closest thing to humor he offered.
Sylara stared at him for a breath.
Then, shockingly, she snorted.
"Fine," she muttered. "I'll complain quietly."
Vyrik padded beside them, feathered mane brushing Sylara's fingers when she reached down out of habit.
"Good boy, fang-face," she whispered.
Vyrik huffed.
They stepped outside again.
The wind hit like a slap.
Snow hissed sideways.
The cliff path beyond the outpost ran along a ridge lined with stacked rock walls and old ward stones. Lanterns hung at intervals, their glass sealed, flas steady despite the gusts.
Draven tracked the ward stones.
So were ancient.
So were new.
One was too clean.
A fresh rune etched into the base—thin, delicate. A courier mark disguised as weathering.
He filed it away.
Noted the angle.
Noted the direction.
Noted the intended traffic.
A guard captain stepped out from a side door as they passed the outpost's outer ring.
Broad shoulders. Fur-lined mantle. A face that looked like it had been carved by cold.
His n stood behind him with spears.
Not pointed.
But ready.
"Adventurers," the captain said, voice like stone. "You're leaving."
Sylara opened her mouth.
Draven spoke first.
"Yes."
The captain's gaze slid over Draven's mask and lingered too long, as if deciding what kind of threat had the audacity to wear anonymity in his town.
"You're headed toward Greysedge," the captain said.
Draven didn't confirm.
The captain continued anyway, confident in his own suspicion.
"People disappear out there. And we don't need outsiders making it worse."
Sylara's smile flashed—sharp and lazy.
"Oh, my apologies," she said loudly. "We'll just stay here and let your people keep vanishing. That's working so well."
A soldier behind the captain stiffened.
The captain's eyes hardened.
He stepped closer.
Then he looked at Vyrik.
The chira's fangs showed slightly.
The captain forced his gaze back to Draven.
"You think you're special," he said.
Draven's voice was quiet.
"No," he replied. "I think you're careless."
The captain blinked.
Not because it was insulting.
Because it was accurate.
Draven didn't raise his voice. He didn't threaten. He didn't posture.
He added, calm as a ledger entry, "You're standing where the wind hits your left ear. Your n are behind you. You can't hear them whisper. That's why you don't know which of them talks to couriers."
Silence.
A soldier's eyes flicked.
The captain went very still.
Sylara's mouth curved, delighted.
Draven stepped past him without another word.
The captain didn't stop them.
Not because he was kind.
Because he had just been asured and found lacking in front of his own n.
And he didn't know how to respond without proving it.
They moved along the ridge.
Ra??drithar circled above, gliding under storm-shadowed sky. His wings caught cold updrafts, and his ozone-flickering breath pulsed once, low.
Draven watched the plu.
In the cold air it left a faint, temporary pattern—a condensation seam that revealed where the wind was disturbed.
A range finder.
Not for distance.
For presence.
A narrow band near the eastern slope wavered.
Soone had passed there recently.
Sylara kept her posture loose, reckless-looking, as if she was bored and rely following Draven for entertainnt. She made sure to speak loudly once, making it believable.
"Hey, Dravis," she said, voice carrying. "If this demon eats my boots, I'm making you carry ."
A laugh from the ridge behind them.
Soone listening.
Good.
Let them think this was about the demon.
Draven did not look back.
He shadowed like a surgeon.
He didn't chase.
He didn't compress distance too quickly.
He moved at a pace that looked natural in bad weather.
Vyrik took ground routes below, not scent-tracking but route-tracking—circling, moving ahead, then returning, forcing the path into predictable funnels.
When Vyrik paused and stared at a snow drift, Draven noted it.
Not because the drift slled.
Because it was wrong.
Wind had carved the ridge in one direction.
This drift was carved in another.
Soone had stepped there and then tried to erase the step by dragging a cloak.
A habit.
A trained habit.
Draven's mind flashed—brief, sharp—back to a different life.
A lecture hall that slled like whiteboard marker.
A computer lab.
A company eting room where people talked about "player retention" and "quest gating" and "early failure states" like they were discussing weather.
He rembered the Thinman's design docunt.
Not as lore.
As an engine.
Undercover orc faction embedded early.
If ignored, they escalate.
First organized kidnappers.
They take the queen.
Not because the queen is special.
Because kidnapping the queen collapses the kingdom's stability graph.
It turns politics into panic.
It forces early war.
It punishes players who think strength alone solves everything.
Draven rembered writing that chain with a colleague who laughed at how "evil" it was.
Draven hadn't written evil.
He had written systems.
Now the system was walking in front of him wearing a human coat.
And the disgust that rose in him wasn't moral.
It was personal.
This world was diverging.
He could feel it—new dialogue, new motives, new consequences.
And yet it still obeyed its first skeleton.
The Thinman was not a random enemy.
He was a faction seed.
If he survived, the faction survived.
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