The carriage rattled softly as it rolled along the stone road, its mana engine humming with a steady, restrained pulse. It was not an expensive vehicle, nor an elegant one, but it moved with purpose, covering distance far faster than any walk would have allowed. Through the wide side windows, the land slipped past in long stretches of muted color, the city gradually thinning into open terrain.
Then the mountain came into view.
It dominated the horizon in a way that made everything else feel provisional. A colossal mass of stone rising straight from the earth, its height measured not in meters but in scale, the kind that forced the eye upward until it instinctively gave up. The peak itself was hidden behind a thick veil of clouds, as if the sky had chosen to keep that part of it to itself.
Trafalgar watched it in silence, his gaze steady. The size registered immediately, not as awe, but as comparison. âItâs on the same level,â he thought. âJust as tall as the Morgain mountains.â The realization grounded the image, stripping it of exaggeration. This wasnât legend. It was simply big enough to matter.
Beside him, Bartholomew leaned closer to the window, his breath escaping in a low murmur.
"Itâs... enormous," he said, almost to himself. After a second, he glanced forward. "Thatâs really the monster hunting ground?"
The driver let out a quiet chuckle. He was an elderly man with a weathered face and calm hands on the reins, the kind of person who had driven this route too many times to find it remarkable anymore.
"Oh yes," he replied easily. "Thatâs the place. They call it the Mountain of a Thousand Steps."
Trafalgar shifted his attention to him. "A thousand steps?"
The old man nodded, eyes still on the road. "Thatâs right. The mountainâs layered. Natural platforms carved into the slope itself. A thousand of them, they say." He lifted one hand briefly, gesturing toward the massive incline. "Each step is its own ground. Monsters appear on every level."
Bartholomew listened closely.
"The lower steps are the safest," the driver continued. "Weak creatures. Common ones. Thatâs where most people work." His tone changed slightly, becoming more matter-of-fact. "Once you get past the first hundred or so, things start changing. Different monsters. Higher Core Ranks." A pause. "Most folks donât go that far."
The carriage rolled on, the mountain growing larger with every passing moment. The explanation settled into Trafalgarâs thoughts without stirring anxiety. The danger wasnât hidden here. It was structured. Measured. Familiar enough that people had built routines around it.
A hunting ground, not a battlefield.
By the time the driver finished speaking, the road had already begun to curve toward the base of the mountain, the colossal structure looming close enough now that its sheer presence pressed against the senses.
The carriage slowed as the road widened, the stone beneath the wheels giving way to a broad, worn clearing at the base of the mountain. The moment they arrived, the sense of scale shifted again.
There were people everywhere.
People moved through the space with practiced ease, some alone, others in small groups, their gear worn but functional. Merchants had set up along the edges of the clearing, tables and carts laid out with neatly sorted monster materials, cores, and items wrapped in cloth or sealed in simple containers. This wasnât a gathering driven by excitement or danger. It was routine. Work.
Mana-powered carriages idled nearby, engines humming softly as they waited to be loaded. Beside them stood traditional carts hitched to horses, already stacked with crates and sacks meant to carry spoils back to Salca. Others were preparing for longer routes, discussing prices and destinations in low voices. Some would sell here. Others would take a Gate and head for larger cities like Velkaris, where demand and coin were higher.
The hunting ground wasnât isolated.
It was connected.
The carriage came to a stop, and the driver climbed down with a familiar motion. Trafalgar, Bartholomew, and Rhosyn followed, thanking the old man before parting ways with him. He waved them off easily, already turning his attention to his next fare.
Without discussion, they fell into a natural formation as they moved forward. Trafalgar took the lead, eyes scanning the flow of people and paths ahead. Bartholomew walked to his right.
Rhosyn kept pace on his left, blending into the scene as if she had always belonged there.
As they moved toward the lower steps of the mountain, Trafalgar spoke without looking back.
"Youâve been here before," he said to Rhosyn. "Do you know a spot that isnât too crowded?" A brief pause. "Weâre also here because of the Rifts. Academy business."
Bartholomew nodded in confirmation.
Rhosyn answered without hesitation. "I know exactly where they appeared." Her tone was calm, certain. "I can take you there."
Trafalgar glanced at her then. Just for a moment. They exchanged a look that needed no explanation.
Bartholomew noticed nothing. He simply followed as they changed direction, trusting the path that had already been chosen.
Around them, the work continued uninterrupted.
Monsters would be hunted. Materials would be sold. Coins would change hands.
They climbed.
One step at a time, the mountain revealed its structure exactly as it had been described. Each platform was broad enough to stand as its own small territory, carved naturally into the slope and connected to the next by narrow stone bridges worn smooth by countless crossings. From above, the steps formed a staggered path spiraling upward; from below, they looked like layers of a colossal staircase pressed into the mountainâs side.
The lower levels were busy, though not chaotic. Monsters roamed openly, unhidden and unsurprised by the presence of hunters.
Creatures of earth dominated these steps. Thick-bodied beasts that blended with the stone, giant crabs scuttling sideways across the rock with shells scarred by old battles. Some had massive pincers attached to almost comically small bodies, moving in awkward bursts of speed before stopping again. Others were slower, like land-bound turtles with layered shells, trudging across the platforms as if time itself bent around them.
As they ascended, the composition changed.
The monsters became fewer, the space between encounters widening. Shapes grew stranger. Movements less predictable. The air itself felt quieter, less cluttered by voices and steel.
Eventually, they reached a step where no other hunters were present.
Trafalgar slowed, taking in the empty platform. The stone beneath his boots was unmarked, untouched by recent combat. Instinctively, the three of them prepared.
Maledicta formed in Trafalgarâs right hand, its presence immediate and familiar. Bartholomew stepped back half a pace, already fitting an arrow to his bow, posture steady and focused. Rhosyn stood beside them as she was, calm and unarmed, her gaze fixed on the monsters ahead.
They were unpleasant to look at.
Deformed, frog-like creatures clustered across the far end of the platform. Their bodies were squat and heavy, lacking hind legs entirely. Two thick forelimbs supported their weight, dragging bloated torsos forward, while long tails scraped against the stone behind them. Their mouths were far too large for their faces, stretching open to reveal slick interiors and thick tongues that coiled and uncoiled with slow anticipation.
Trafalgar leaned slightly toward Rhosyn, keeping his voice low enough that Bartholomew wouldnât hear.
"You donât use weapons?" he murmured.
"I donât intend to fight," she replied just as quietly. "You said you wanted to clear your head." Her eyes flicked briefly toward the creatures. "These are Pulse Rank. They arenât a real threat to you."
Trafalgar straightened, then spoke more openly.
"This was the exact spot, right?" he asked. "Where the Rifts appeared."
"Yes," Rhosyn said. "Here."
Bartholomew heard it anyway.
The tension in his shoulders sagged almost immediately. He had known it was unlikely. The notebooks they carried, the records they studied, all suggested the same thing. Whatever traces had existed were long gone. Decades. Centuries. Perhaps longer.
Still, a part of him had hoped.
"So... nothing," Bartholomew said quietly, looking around the empty platform.
Trafalgar glanced back at him. "We donât know how old those notebooks are, Barth," he said evenly. A brief pause followed. "But if you think about it..." He let the words settle. "All things considered, itâs been a good experience."
Bartholomew nodded once.
Trafalgar shifted his grip on Maledicta, eyes returning to the monsters ahead. "Since weâre already here," he said, tone even, "we might as well make use of it."
Bartholomew hesitated, then shook his head. "I think Iâll stay back," he said. "Iâll observe. With Lady Rhosyn."
Rhosyn did not object.
Trafalgar stepped forward alone.
He let the noise of the world fall away. No bloodlines. No destinies. No unanswered questions pressing at the back of his skull. Just distance, weight, timing.
âI donât want to think,â he told himself. âI just want to move.â
The monsters noticed him then. Mouths widening. Bodies shifting.
Trafalgar didnât wait for them to act.
He launched himself forward, blade low, body already committed, diving straight into the cluster with a clarity he hadnât felt since before the night began.
For the first time since everything had been said, his mind went quiet.