The blood didn't stain for long.
That was the first thing Kiro noticed.
It soaked into the forest floor quickly—too quickly, as if the earth of Gaeth-9 was thirsty for it. The moss hissed softly beneath the hunter's corpse, swallowing the red like water in a desert. The wind shifted. It no longer carried the scent of prey. It carried him.
Kiro Varn.
No longer just a slave. No longer just a man.
He felt it humming in his chest, in his limbs, in the marrow of his bones—the System. Alive, pulsing with quiet hunger. Not like a parasite. More like a companion. A god that shared his breath and whispered from behind his thoughts. It had taken his pain, his wound, and turned it into strength. He had killed. Not for rage, not even for freedom.
For survival. For purpose.
He crouched beside the corpse and pressed his hand to the visor. The hunter's eyes, wide and dim, stared at nothing. Kiro didn't flinch. He wasn't the boy who'd been chained beneath the ore mines anymore.
He was learning.
The neuro-lance wasn't compatible with his collarless system—it short-circuited the moment he picked it up. But the arcblade, forged from Kargali steel and shaped like a crescent fang, responded. He gripped it. Let its weight settle into his hand. It didn't feel foreign.
It felt like something he'd always been meant to wield.
He stood and looked toward the twisted trees ahead. The System had fed, but it wasn't full. The taste of blood only sharpened its edge. And in truth, it sharpened his.
He should have hidden. Should have sought shelter again, kept to the shadows. But something inside him shifted—an old instinct finally breathing air. He had run long enough.
Now the forest would learn his name.
He moved like shadow and ember, slipping through the trees, no longer avoiding the hunters but searching for them. Not all were alone. The nobles hunted in twos, sometimes in small packs, calling out their coordinates and laughing into their comms.
They didn't expect resistance.
They didn't expect a slave to hunt back.
Kiro took another by ambush—silently, blade to throat before a signal could be sent. The third was messier. She managed to wound him, a lucky shot with a pulse dart to the ribs. He fell, choked on blood, saw stars.
Then the System burned.
It seized control, rewrote his nerves, forced his lungs to work. The dart was expelled from his body with a sick pop, and the hole closed in seconds.
When he rose again, the woman screamed something in Kargali before she fell beneath his blade.
Two kills. Three. Then five.
Each time, the System fed. He felt it reshaping him between breaths, drawing knowledge from their minds, strength from their blood.
He didn't just gain power.
He remembered it.
Not from this life. From something older. Something deeper than memory.
The forest began to change around him. It grew quieter—not with the silence of death, but reverence. The creatures that once skittered and watched from branches disappeared. The air thickened. Even the wind stilled.
He wasn't sure how long he'd walked before the whispers began.
Not voices. Whispers.
They curled between the branches, through the mist, low and rhythmic—an ancient chant in a tongue no living race should remember. But he understood it. Not the words, but the intent.
They were calling him deeper.
Toward the ruins.
The trees gave way to stone, jagged and half-swallowed by vines. Black pillars stood like teeth, forming the remains of a forgotten temple. At its center, a broken obelisk still pulsed faintly with crimson light, barely visible beneath centuries of moss.
The Blood God stirred.
Not in words. Not even in presence.
Just a shift. A ripple. Like the surface of still water breaking.
Kiro stepped inside the ruin. The ground beneath his feet darkened, soaked with faded stains older than the Empire. In his vision, faint glyphs began to glow, and a new window unfolded before him—larger than any before.
BLOOD GOD SYSTEM — CORE INTEGRATION PROGRESS: 7%
Trait Mutation Available: [Blood Sense → Blood Echo]
Threshold Unlocked: [Apostle Awakening: Phase I]
System Message: "Begin the Rite."
A presence rose from beneath the temple floor.
Cold. Towering. Boundless.
And Kiro smiled for the first time in years.
Because in that moment, he understood something no slave was ever meant to learn.
He was never meant to be prey.
Not in this life.
Not in the next.
And now… the hunt belonged to him.