The notification arrived on every Pathfinder simultaneously, which meant that somewhere on Vorga, thousands of contestants were reading the same words at the same moment, and the floating islands had just become the most dangerous real estate on the planet.
Max read it once fast. Then again slowly.
SPECIAL EVENT — ACTIVE.
An item of significant power has been detected within the Vorga game zone. The first contestant to retrieve and present the Vorga Sovereign Seal — the ancient administrative seal of Vorga’s unified pre-clan era — will receive the following reward: all outstanding Pathfinder loan debt cleared in full. Contestants with no outstanding loans will receive 8,000 PP directly.
Current known location of the Sovereign Seal: Unknown. Last recorded location before the clan wars: The Grand Archive of the Unified Age, located on the largest floating island — Vorga Prime.
He set the phone down on the bunk and looked at the hold’s timber ceiling and thought for a moment without speaking, which was his version of what most people did with their hands when they were processing something significant.
’8,000 PP,’ he said. ’Exactly what I owe.’
The precision of it was interesting. Not a round number larger or smaller than his debt — not 10,000 PP that would leave him with a surplus, not 5,000 that would leave him short. Exactly the repayment amount on the loan he had taken. Either the organizers had calculated the reward to match the maximum loan amount, which meant the reward was designed to clear the debt for any contestant who had borrowed the maximum, or the universe had a very specific sense of symmetry that he was declining to believe in on principle.
Either way, the math was clean.
Find the Seal. Clear the debt. Arrive at Game Two with a zero balance and 355 days of passive IP generation ahead of him with nothing owed to anyone.
He allowed himself approximately four seconds of satisfaction at the clarity of the objective.
Then he thought about every other contestant on Vorga who had just read the same notification, and the satisfaction acquired a more complicated texture.
-----
The problem was not the Seal. The problem was not the Grand Archive. The problem was not even the Vel-Thak clan who controlled Vorga Prime’s contested airspace. These were obstacles, which were manageable. Obstacles had solutions. What he was looking at was a convergence — thousands of surviving contestants, distributed across a planet’s surface and floating islands, all simultaneously redirecting toward a single location, with the specific urgency of people who either owed money or wanted 8,000 PP, which was every single one of them.
He had been on Vorga for ten days. He had spent most of those ten days underground, which had been involuntary and then deliberate and had produced outcomes he would not trade away. But involuntary underground time was not the same as floating-island positioning, and everyone who had spawned high or reached elevation early now had a ten-day head start on everyone currently at the bottom of a cave system.
He assessed his assets with the methodical efficiency of a man for whom resource accounting was not a discipline but a reflex.
Ghost at Infant Stage, fully tested and operational. Stage One Aether cultivation, solid and responsive. The Superior shotgun with Aether bullet generation rune, the common grade shotgun with Grade I Damage Boost, and its common and enchanted bullets, the backup dagger. The Enchanting System, the ring’s spatial storage with 847,000 Aether crystals minus the significant dent he had made in them during Ghost construction, plus the Morag Clan’s accumulated treasury items he had not yet fully catalogued. The Grip Enhancement boots that made vertical surfaces navigable. The Tether Point on his residence key that gave him a return anchor to the Island once per day.
And the knowledge in his ring — the Morag Clan’s complete history, Grur’s full account of Vorga Prime’s layout, the specific understanding of the Grand Archive that a surviving member of the clan that built it would carry.
He looked at that last item for a moment.
The Grand Archive of the Unified Age was Morag construction. The Sovereign Seal was Morag heritage. The Archive’s enchantments would respond to the Inheritance’s bearer.
Every other contestant approaching that Archive was going to hit the same enchantment locks. He was not.
The head start problem was real. The convergence problem was real. The thirty-meter stone-colored apex predator that had visited the clearing twenty minutes ago was a scheduling constraint. All of these things were real.
What was also real: he had an exclusive access credential to the most significant structure on the target island, and no one else on this planet knew it existed.
He smiled. Not the warm smile. The specific smile that arrived when a contract’s terms resolved into something cleaner than expected.
’Finally,’ he said, to the hold and to Grur’s music still reaching him from down the corridor and to no one in particular. ’A contract with clear terms.’
He stood up and started packing.
-----
He packed with the systematic care he always packed with — everything in its position, everything accessible in the sequence it would be needed, the enchanted rounds separated from the standard rounds by texture in the exterior pocket so his hand would know the difference in the dark. He did this without rushing because rushing produced errors and errors on Vorga produced outcomes he preferred to avoid.
While he packed, he planned.
The route to the surface: through the passage network toward the section where the ceiling had given way and deposited him in the underground — reversed, that route led back up toward the forest floor. The Ghost would go ahead. He would follow through the spaces the Ghost confirmed were clear. The creature in the northern passage was his primary variable — if it had returned to its patrol pattern or was simply waiting somewhere in the network, the Ghost would detect the energy disturbance of something that large before he encountered it physically.
From the forest floor: the vertical ascent. The floating islands’ anchor roots descended into the upper canopy from below, the lowest of them accessible by someone with sufficient climbing capability. His Grip Enhancement would make the bark navigable. The Ghost would scout ahead on the vertical sections where his own visibility would be limited.
From the first island’s edge: that part of the plan had blanks he would fill as he went, because he had not been to the floating islands and could not plan for what he hadn’t seen. He had Grur’s knowledge of the political landscape — three surviving clans, territorial conflicts, the neutral island that hosted non-aligned parties — and he had the ring. He would adapt.
He finished packing.
He walked down the corridor for the last time.
He stood in the doorway of Grur’s room.
The flute was playing. Grur sat exactly as he had sat since before Max arrived — frozen mid-breath, fingers precise, the teacup full, the second teacup also full, the ring that had been on the table now on Max’s right index finger and warm against his skin. The room was exactly what it had always been: a man who had made a decision and committed to it completely, for as long as it took.
’I know where your Seal is,’ Max said. ’I’m going to go get it back.’
He paused.
’Sorry for not drinking the tea. I’ll make up for it when I return.’
The music played. It played the same phrase it always played, resolving and repeating, the specific melody of someone who had found the thing they intended to do and was doing it until the condition it was waiting for finally arrived.
Max walked out of the room and down the passage to the hold and climbed through the porthole into the clearing’s green light.
-----
The clearing was empty. The Ghost’s feed confirmed it from two angles — the passage entrances clear, the lake hissing its steady chemistry, the stalactites cycling their emerald pulse overhead. No movement in the northern passage. No movement anywhere.
He connected the sensory link fully and spent three minutes doing a complete visual sweep of every passage entrance visible from the hull. The Ghost moved to each one in sequence, looking in far enough to confirm the immediate interior was clear before moving to the next.
Nothing. The creature had returned to its wall-colored patience somewhere deeper in the network.
He crossed the clearing along the rock path above the hissing water and entered the southern passage — the one that led back toward the surface, toward the forest, toward the nesting grounds and the canopy and the base of the floating islands and everything that stood between here and the Sovereign Seal.
The Ghost moved ahead. He followed.
The passage was familiar from the chase — he had run through here with the centipede behind him, too fast to read the details, operating entirely on momentum and the immediate choices that momentum required. Walking through it now with the Ghost forty meters ahead and no pursuit behind him, he could read what he had missed in the run.
The passage was not just a passage.
The walls carried markings. Not recent — ancient, carved into the stone with the deliberate precision of something that had taken considerable time and had been intended to last. Morag script.
He recognized it from Grur’s journal, from the crew manifest in the hold.
He stopped and held his phone’s light close to the nearest section of wall.
He could read it.
The ring translated it the same way it translated everything — not as a foreign language processed into familiar words, but as meaning that arrived directly, as though he had always known this script and had simply not looked at it closely enough until now.
He read three lines.
Then he stood very still for a moment with the quality of stillness that arrived when new information landed on top of existing information and the collision produced something he hadn’t anticipated.
The markings were not decorative. They were navigational — a route map, carved into the underground passage walls by the Morag Clan before the clan wars, before the assault, before everything that Grur had described in the journal. A route from the underground to the surface, to the floating islands, marked for exactly the kind of traveler who would need to make this journey in exactly this direction.
A route carved for the person carrying the ring.
For him.
’You really did think of everything,’ he said quietly, to the memory of Grur and the First Great Scythe and whoever else had layered preparation into the fabric of this world centuries before his arrival.
He followed the markings.
The passage rose. The Ghost moved ahead. And somewhere above him, on the largest floating island on a hostile alien planet, the Sovereign Seal waited in an Archive that had been built to open for exactly his hand.
He had a debt to clear.
He started moving faster.