Location: Dark Forest Boundary, Northern Wilderness | Lower Realm, Doha
Time: Midday, Hunt Day
(They're right behind us. Can hear the hounds. Can hear—)
Two hundred meters. Closing fast. Demon-scaled horses, by the hoof pattern. Five riders plus pursuit leader. Recommend immediate evasive action.
Jade's lungs burned like she'd inhaled fire. Her legs—already weak from years of inadequate food and too much work—screamed at her to stop, to rest, to give up because this was pointless anyway, and she was going to die out here alone.
She ignored them.
Trees whipped past in blurs of jade-green and shadow-black. Branches slapped her face, leaving stinging welts across her cheeks. Roots tried to trip her, but she kept her balance through sheer stubbornness and the Federation reflexes that'd started bleeding through more and more since the library explosion.
The forest blurred past in streaks of green and brown.
Behind her—too close, way too close—the hounds bayed. Not the confused howling from the creek. This was different. This was the sound of predators who'd found their prey and knew the chase was almost over.
(How much farther?)
One point three kilometers to the forest boundary. Pursuit approximately ninety seconds behind based on vocalization patterns and hoof vibrations through the ground. Current pace unsustainable. Your body is approaching physiological limits.
Great. Just. Great.
The ground rose sharply, forcing her to scramble over rocks that bit into her bare feet. Blood left tacky prints on the stone—perfect trail markers for the hounds to follow. But she couldn't stop, couldn't slow down, couldn't do anything except keep running toward the dark line on the horizon that might be salvation or might just be a different way to die.
The Dark Forest.
Old Man Zhek's notes had been clear about one thing: the forest was dangerous. Spirit beasts, deadly plants, and wards that could trap the unwary. But he'd also written something else, something she'd read three times to make sure she understood:
The forest chooses who enters. Ancient law. Older than the clans. Those it protects cannot be hunted.
Maybe it was desperation. Maybe it was the Federation tactical mind calculating odds and finding every other option worse. Or maybe it was just that she had nowhere else to run.
The trees started to change. Jade pines giving way to something older, darker. Ancient trunks as thick around as houses, bark scored with patterns that looked almost like writing. The air grew heavier, charged with something that made the hairs on her arms stand up.
(Almost there. Please. Please let me reach it.)
Five hundred meters. Pursuit closing to sixty seconds. Warning: exhaustion-induced cardiac stress detected. Recommend—
"I know!" she gasped aloud, then cursed herself for wasting breath on talking.
The hounds' baying rose to a fever pitch. She risked a glance back—
Bad idea.
They were there. Right there. Six ugly brutes with mottled gray hides and milky eyes, tongues lolling from yellowed fangs. Behind them, horses that looked like they'd been carved from midnight and murder. Riders in hunting leathers, weapons drawn.
And at the front, a man with gray-streaked hair and a face like weathered stone, eyes locked on her with professional focus.
Then another rider—
Kato. Uncle Kato on his fire-tailed stallion, amber eyes blazing with fury and determination and something that looked almost like satisfaction.
(He's enjoying this. He's actually enjoying hunting me down like—)
Focus. Forest boundary is three hundred meters. Sprint recommended despite cardiac risk. Alternative options: zero.
She put on a final burst of speed—borrowed from Federation muscle memory, from desperation, from the pure animal instinct to survive that lived in every cornered creature.
Her vision tunneled. The world became just the ground ahead, the trees, the dark line getting closer with each pounding footfall.
Two hundred meters.
The hounds were so close she could hear individual paws hitting earth, could smell the rank musk of their excitement. Someone shouted behind her—Kato, probably, ordering them to—
One hundred meters.
The trees ahead seemed to lean in, branches shifting position with soft creaking sounds that shouldn't be possible because trees didn't move, trees didn't—
Fifty meters.
She could see it now, the exact moment where the normal forest stopped and the Dark Forest began. Like a wall made of shadow and ancient power, canopy so thick barely any light penetrated to the forest floor. The air near the boundary felt different—heavier, charged, aware.
Twenty meters.
A hound snapped at her heels. She felt teeth graze her ankle, drawing blood.
Ten meters.
Someone shouted: "Grab her!"
Five meters.
(Not. Going. Back.)
She crashed into the tree line.
The Dark Forest swallowed her whole.
Everything changed.
Immediately, like stepping through a door from one world into another. The sounds from outside—the hounds, the huntsmen, even the wind—muted to distant whispers like someone had thrown a blanket over the entire world.
The trees around her seemed to lean in closer, branches shifting position with creaking sounds that were definitely not natural. Leaves rustled with words she almost understood.
Welcome, the forest might've been saying. Or maybe, Finally.
Jade stumbled forward, legs threatening to give out, but she forced herself to keep moving. No path visible, just pressing forward between massive trunks that'd been standing since before the current age of the world began.
Behind her—
Behind her, the forest closed.
That's the only way to describe it. The trees physically moved, branches weaving together like fingers interlacing. Roots rose from the earth, thick as her body, forming barriers. Creating a living wall between her and her pursuit.
Protecting her.
She collapsed against a trunk, lungs heaving, body trembling with exhaustion and relief and terror all mixed together. Her hands left bloody prints on ancient bark that felt warm despite the cool air. Moss under her feet was impossibly soft, like walking on clouds.
(What—what just—)
Unknown phenomenon. Appears to be directed magical interference with physical plant matter at the macro scale. Insufficient data for analysis. However, tactical assessment: current survival probability significantly improved from the previous situation.
The hounds hit the boundary and stopped dead.
Jade could hear them on the other side of the living wall—could hear their howling rise to panicked yelps that spoke of primal terror. Not the excited baying of the hunt. This was different. This was fear.
Pure, instinctive, absolute fear.
"It won't let us pass!" a voice shouted. Genuinely afraid. "The forest is protecting her!"
"Then find another way in!" Kato's voice, enraged and desperate. "There has to be another entrance—"
"Master Kato, we can't." Another voice, firm despite obvious fear. The gray-haired leader, probably. "The Dark Forest chooses who enters. You know this. Ancient law, older than the clans. We—we don't hunt what the forest protects. The consequences—"
Silence. Tense and terrible and stretching out for what felt like forever.
Jade pressed her back against the tree trunk, trying to slow her breathing. Her ankle throbbed where the hound had bitten her. Her feet were raw and bleeding. Her lungs felt like they'd been scraped raw with sandpaper.
But she was alive. She was safe.
For now.
"Fine." Kato's voice, finally, bitter as poison. "Return to the estate. If she survives in there, we'll deal with her when she emerges. If not—"
A short, humorless laugh that made Jade's skin crawl.
"Then the problem's solved itself and good riddance."
Footsteps retreating. Hooves clattering on stone. Hounds whimpering as they were dragged away from their prey, probably confused about why their masters were giving up.
The sounds faded. Grew distant. Disappeared entirely.
Jade waited. Counted to one hundred. Then two hundred. Then three.
Nothing.
(They're really gone.)
Confirmed. Audio signatures suggest full withdrawal. Recommend maintaining position for a minimum of thirty minutes to ensure no tactical deception. Then assess injuries and locate a secure shelter.
She slid down the trunk until she was sitting, back pressed against bark that hummed faintly with something that felt almost alive. The forest around her was quiet but not silent—she could hear leaves rustling, branches creaking, small creatures moving through undergrowth. Natural sounds. Normal sounds.
Except nothing about this was normal.
The forest had moved to protect her. Trees had literally shifted position, roots had risen from the ground, and—
A marker stone caught her eye. Twenty meters ahead, half-hidden by ferns—a standing stone maybe twice her height, covered in runes that glowed faint jade-green in the filtered light.
Guardstone.
She knew about these from Zhek's notes. Boundary markers between the Dark Forest's rings. This one would mark the edge between the outer ring—relatively safe, rank one and two spirit beasts—and the mid ring, where things got significantly more dangerous.
But danger from spirit beasts felt almost manageable compared to danger from her own clan.
(Need to go deeper. Need to put more distance between us and them. Just in case.)
Recommend a medical assessment first. Ankle injury requires evaluation. Feet require treatment. Exhaustion level critical. Water and food are necessary within the next two hours.
"I know," she whispered to the empty forest. "I know."
But she was so tired. So impossibly tired. The adrenaline that'd kept her moving was draining away, leaving behind exhaustion so profound it felt like gravity had doubled.
Just a few more steps. Just across the guardstone, into the mid ring where even brave hunters hesitated to enter.
Where she'd be truly safe.
Or truly trapped.
Jade pushed herself upright. Her legs shook. Her vision blurred at the edges. But she made herself move forward, one step at a time, bare feet leaving bloody prints on moss that seemed to cushion each footfall.
The guardstone loomed ahead. Up close, the runes were clearer—not any language she recognized, but their meaning felt obvious anyway. Boundary. Warning. Choose carefully.
She touched the stone. It was warm under her palm, humming with power that made her Crucible Core resonate in response. The Divine Tome—still merged with her soul, still mostly a mystery—pulsed once, like a heartbeat.
Then she stepped past the marker.
Into the mid ring.
The forest... shifted. Imperceptibly, but definitely. The air grew thicker, heavier, charged with more essence. The trees were older here, larger, their canopy blocking out even more light. The undergrowth was lusher, ferns the size of small trees, vines thick as her arm that pulsed with faint Verdant essence.
And the silence was deeper. More complete. Like the forest was holding its breath, waiting.
(This was a mistake. This was definitely a mistake.)
Survival probability in mid ring versus survival probability if captured by clan: mid ring statistically superior despite increased spirit beast threat.
That didn't make her feel better.
She took three more steps deeper into the forest, pushing herself on legs that felt like they might give out any second. The moss under her feet was impossibly soft, like walking on clouds that smelled of earth and growing things and something else—something old and patient and aware.
Her vision blurred at the edges, darkness creeping in. Blood loss from her cut feet, maybe. Or just the crash after running on pure adrenaline for the last hour. Or—
Her knees hit the ground. Then her hands, blood from her palms smearing on the moss. Then she was lying down, and the forest around her hummed with ancient, patient power that felt almost... welcoming?
(I'm so tired.)
Rest recommended. Current location appears tactically secure. Threat assessment: low. Proceed with recovery protocol.
Just before consciousness fled completely, she heard it:
BINDING SUCCESSFUL. HOST SEVERELY INJURED. INITIATING HEALING PROTOCOL.
The voice came from everywhere and nowhere at once, mechanical yet somehow warm, familiar yet completely alien. Like nothing she'd ever heard before, but also like coming home after a very long time away.
Then darkness claimed her, and she knew nothing at all.