My SSS-Rank Grim Reaper System-Chapter 98: THE INQUISITOR
[Elite Squadron Camp — Northeast Route — 6:00 AM]
Cael rose before the sun.
Not because he needed the extra time. Because in twenty years of field work, he had learned that the first ten minutes of the morning, before the camp woke up, were the only ones where he could think without anyone asking him questions.
He exited his tent with his cup.
The squadron slept — eleven people arranged in a formation that covered the camp’s angles even while they rested. A habit formed after enough years of someone trying to kill you while you slept.
Cael walked to the northern edge of the camp and looked at the horizon.
The mountains to the northeast, still dark against the sky that was beginning to lighten.
Somewhere in there were the Void Catacombs.
And between them and him, moving in the same direction, was Alex Carter’s team.
He took a sip from his cup.
Cold. He had forgotten to heat it.
---
[7:15 AM — Camp on the move]
The squadron broke camp in sixteen minutes.
Without specific orders — each member knew their role, their position in the march, what they carried and in what order. That wasn’t achieved with instructions. It was achieved with years of repetition until the process was reflex.
Cael marched at the center, as always.
Davan to his right. Twenty-six years old, level 68, the best recruit the High Inquisitor had sent in the last decade. Which meant he was intelligent, committed, and asked questions instead of just obeying.
That was a virtue in theory.
In practice, it meant Cael had spent three days answering questions he had stopped asking himself twenty years ago.
"How far ahead are they?" asked Davan.
"Yesterday’s tracks put them twelve hours ahead. With the Shadow Forest in between, it depended on whether they went around or through it."
"And if they went through?"
"Then they’re eight hours ahead. They’ll reach Veltharr tomorrow."
Davan processed that.
"And us?"
"We went north of the forest. We arrive today."
"Do we get ahead of them?"
"That’s not the objective."
Davan didn’t ask what the objective was. Yet.
---
[9:30 AM — Reconnaissance stop]
The eastern flank scout returned with a report.
Cael listened without interrupting.
When the scout finished, Cael signaled him to return to position. Then he took out the document he had carried in his inner pocket since Imperial City.
It wasn’t a map.
It was a report.
The complete report of the battle in the Crystal Mountains that the High Inquisitor had given him before he left.
Photos. Damage estimates. Energy readings taken by the investigation team that arrived three days after the battle.
Cael had read it six times.
He read it a seventh.
Valley destroyed. Four-kilometer radius of structural damage. Craters up to three meters deep at the epicenter. Fragment energy reading at a level the investigation team had no instrument calibrated to measure precisely.
Sixteen months.
Alex Carter had carried Fragment 1 for sixteen months.
Cael closed the report.
In his experience — twenty years, fourteen bearers hunted, four of them alive when he found them — the integration speed of a Fragment followed a predictable pattern. The first six months were adjustment, confusion, the bearer not fully understanding what they carried. The next six, the Fragment began to define behavioral patterns. By the second year, if the bearer was still functionally human, the corruption had found its rhythm and the Fragment and bearer were in some kind of precarious equilibrium.
What Carter had demonstrated at the Crystal Mountains should have taken four years minimum.
Two explanations.
First: Fragment 1 was consuming him faster than normal. Accelerated corruption advance. If so, by the time they reached the Catacombs, Carter might be in a state where capture was dangerous not only for the capture team but for everyone within kilometers.
Second: Carter was integrating the Fragment in a way the Temple had no record of. Not being consumed — absorbing. Learning to coexist with something that in all documented cases either killed the bearer or became the bearer.
The second option was more unsettling than the first.
Because if it was true, the assumptions the Temple had built its protocols on for four hundred years were wrong.
Cael put the report away.
He kept walking.
---
[11:00 AM — On the march]
Davan found the moment.
As he always did — he waited until Cael had been silent long enough that a question wouldn’t interrupt anything.
"Why didn’t we attack in Imperial City?"
Cael didn’t answer immediately.
"We had the window," Davan continued. "The team arrived without knowing we were there. The first day, before they did reconnaissance, we had the advantage of surprise and familiar terrain."
"Imperial City has three million inhabitants."
"We attack in urban zones when necessary."
"When necessary," Cael repeated. "Was it necessary?"
Davan considered the question honestly.
"The bearer is level forty-three. The companion level sixty. Twelve elite hunters plus me. The numbers favor—"
"Did you see the photos from the Crystal Mountains?"
"Yes."
"How many people died in the Crystal Mountains?"
"The report says zero civilians. The area was uninhabited."
"Exactly." Cael looked ahead. "Uninhabited area. And even so, the valley became unrecognizable. A four-kilometer radius of damage." Pause. "Imperial City has three million inhabitants. The Old Market where they stayed has a density of approximately eight hundred people per block."
Davan processed that.
He said nothing for a moment.
"The numbers favor the squadron in combat capability," Cael continued. "They don’t favor anyone if the bearer activates the Fragment at full capacity in a dense zone." A pause. "In open terrain, a Fragment overflow damages the environment. In a city, it damages people. And the Temple cannot justify a capture operation that causes massive civilian casualties."
"And in open terrain?"
"In open terrain, the problem is containable."
Davan walked in silence.
"And the Fragment itself? Isn’t that what the Temple wants?"
Cael looked at him.
"What the Temple wants," he said with the cadence of someone who has had this internal conversation many times, "is for what happened last time a Fragment reached full activity not to happen."
"When was that?"
"Forty years ago."
Silence.
"You weren’t there," said Cael.
"No."
"I was."
Davan asked no more questions for the moment.
---
[12:40 PM — Noon halt]
The squadron ate in rest formation — dispersed but covering angles.
Cael ate alone, as always.
Not by preference. By habit. In twenty years he had learned that leaders who ate with their teams ended up developing affections that complicated difficult decisions.
Cael had affections. He kept them cataloged and separate from his work.
He thought about the four people he had captured alive.
The first — had carried Fragment 6 for three years when Cael found him. Level 44. Seemed functional, coherent, capable of normal conversation. At the moment of capture, the Fragment took control for twenty-two seconds. Twenty-two seconds in which the bearer — who until that moment had cooperated — eliminated three squadron members before Cael could contain him.
The second — Fragment 3. Four years of exposure. Level 51. Harder to contain because Fragment 3 granted control over the undead and the undead of the area responded without being summoned.
The third and fourth he had contained with methods the High Inquisitor approved but that Cael preferred not to detail in his reports.
Carter carried Fragment 1. The Core.
There was no precedent for that.
No one in the Temple had precedent for that.
Which meant all his capture protocols were estimates based on insufficient data.
That was what he didn’t tell Davan.
---
[2:00 PM — On the march]
Davan returned.
Cael had expected him.
"Forty years ago," said Davan.
"Yes."
"What happened?"
Cael looked at the road ahead.
"A bearer of Fragment 7. He’d had it for six years." A pause. "Fragment 7 grants access to something the records call ’the substratum’ — the layer of reality beneath what we perceive. The bearer learned to manipulate it."
"What does that mean in practical terms?"
"In practical terms, it means that within a five-kilometer radius around him, reality stopped functioning correctly." Cael measured his words. "Inconsistent gravity. Non-linear time in specific zones. Matter yielding where it shouldn’t yield."
Davan didn’t respond.
"Four cities within that radius," Cael continued. "Forty-seven thousand people."
"How many died?"
"The Temple will seal those records for another hundred years."
Silence.
"The bearer didn’t mean to cause that," Cael said finally. "He wasn’t malicious. He was a thirty-two-year-old man who had spent six years trying to maintain control over something that wasn’t designed to be controlled by a human." Pause. "When the Fragment took full control, he was no longer there to want or not want anything. It was the most neutral thing I’ve seen in my entire life."
Davan walked.
"Is that why the Temple hunts bearers?"
"That’s why the Temple exists," said Cael. "To prevent that from happening again."
"And Carter?"
Cael looked at the horizon.
"Carter has had the most powerful of the seven Fragments for sixteen months and is still functionally human." Pause. "That doesn’t make him less dangerous. It makes him harder to predict."
---
[3:30 PM — Reconnaissance stop]
The southern flank scout returned.
Cael listened.
He closed his eyes for a moment.
He opened them.
"Seraph Nox is on the same route. At a distance from Carter’s team. Not integrated with them." The scout waited for instructions. Cael signaled him to return to position. He turned to Davan. "So everyone is going to the same place."
Davan: "What do we do?"
Cael looked north. The mountains. The Catacombs. Everything converging on the same point.
"If you encounter Seraph Nox... contact me quickly. She’s not someone you can face. She’s the most dangerous currently, fifteen with her fragment."
"What the Temple doesn’t know," said Cael quietly.
"You said something, Commander?"
"Nothing. Just that the Void Catacombs and the Reaper’s seals are structurally linked. If the Catacombs are destroyed incorrectly, three of the seven seals weaken simultaneously."
Davan looked at him.
"Doesn’t the Temple know that?"
"The Temple knows it. That’s why they didn’t destroy them when they found them two years ago. They left them standing because destroying them incorrectly would be worse than leaving them."
"And if the Heralds’ ritual works?"
"If the ritual works inside the Catacombs, the containment structure collapses anyway. The result is the same." Cael looked at Davan directly. "Which means someone has to interrupt the ritual from the inside, at the right moment, in the right way."
Davan’s silence as he processed.
"And Carter...?"
"Carter is going to interrupt the ritual." Cael resumed the march. "Because he has reasons to do it that the Temple can’t offer. Because his team is inside. Because Fragment 1 and the Heralds’ ritual are incompatible by nature."
"So we let him in."
"We let him in." Cael looked north. "And when he comes out — exhausted, with MP and HP at minimum, his team damaged — then we contain him."
"And if he doesn’t come out?"
Cael didn’t answer immediately.
"If the ritual works and Carter doesn’t come out, the problem is no longer the bearer. It’s all of us."
They continued marching.
Davan, after a moment: "And Seraph Nox?"
"Seraph Nox has Fragment 2 and her own reasons to be there." Cael looked at the report in his pocket. "When she comes out — if she comes out — we’ll assess her then."
"We let her in too?"
"We can’t prevent it without a confrontation I can’t tactically justify." Pause. "And honestly, if Seraph Nox can help interrupt the ritual, the Temple can be grateful afterward while we capture her."
Davan absorbed all this in silence.
Then: "Cael?"
"What?"
"Have you ever doubted that the Temple was right?"
Cael walked three steps before answering, thinking about...
"Every day."
Davan looked at him.
"And yet you’re still here."
"Because the alternative is that no one watches." Cael looked at the northern horizon. "And someone has to."
---
[Same day — Eastern Route — Afternoon]
Marcus Steele had been riding alone for four days.
Aurum in reduced form on his shoulder — small dog size, as discreet as the dragon could be without losing the ability to react in seconds.
The eastern road was quiet. Too quiet for his liking. Marcus preferred having things to think about that weren’t the things he had to think about.
Unfortunately, it was all he had.
Director Magnus. The two from the Temple. The meeting. The photos from the Crystal Mountains.
But what kept coming back wasn’t the meeting.
It was the rookie tournament.
Specifically: the final.
Marcus had won two hundred fights in his life. In the guild, in the academy, in private dungeons where Guild Masters measured their heirs. Two hundred fights, counting exactly. He kept the record because his father taught him that a Steele counted his victories the way others counted their money.
The rookie tournament final should have been number two hundred and one.
Alex Carter. Level twenty-three at the time. Iron rank. Companion officially E-rank.
Magnus had told him to let him win. That it was politically convenient for the Academy to have a redemption story to sell — the expelled student who returned as champion.
Marcus hadn’t let him win.
Marcus had fought for real.
And he had lost.
Not from lack of technique. Not from bad tactical decisions. Aurum and Grim had fought at a comparable level considering the rank difference. Marcus had executed correctly everything he knew how to execute.
He had lost because Carter had done something Marcus couldn’t categorize.
At the decisive moment — when Aurum had Grim contained and Marcus had Carter cornered — Carter had found a third option that didn’t exist in any combat manual Marcus had read.
Not creativity exactly. Something harder to name.
As if Carter wasn’t thinking about winning the fight. He was thinking about solving a problem. And the problem had more solutions than the ones Marcus was evaluating.
Aurum murmured something.
Marcus looked down at the dragon.
"I know," he said.
Aurum murmured again.
"I know that too."
What Aurum didn’t need to say in words because he had already demonstrated it by backing off in the Imperial City market: that Grim in his current form was something different from what Aurum had faced in the tournament. Different on a level that Aurum’s instinct processed before Marcus’s reason.
Which meant Carter was different too.
That was the problem.
And the problem required a solution.
Marcus picked up the pace.
The mountains to the northeast waited.
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