Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 67: The Gate 7 assembly (1)
The morning of January 11th arrived with a cold that bit through even reinforced combat clothing, the kind of bitter chill that made exposed skin sting within seconds and turned breath into clouds of crystalline vapor. Zeph approached Northern Bastion’s Gate 7 at exactly 0550 hours, giving himself a ten-minute buffer before the official assembly time. What greeted him was organized chaos on a scale he’d never witnessed before, a spectacle that made even the busiest market days in the city seem tranquil by comparison.
One thousand awakened had gathered in the massive staging area outside Gate 7, and the sheer density of power concentrated in one location made the air itself feel heavy and charged with an electric tension that raised the hairs on the back of his neck. The crowd ranged from desperate-looking Level 30s—people like him who were gambling everything on one dangerous expedition—to confident Level 60+ veterans who moved through the masses with the casual assurance of those who had survived worse and expected to survive this too. These veterans carried themselves differently, their movements economical and purposeful, their eyes constantly scanning for threats even in this supposedly safe staging area.
Sanctuary Authority officials in their distinctive gray and blue uniforms were processing participants with bureaucratic efficiency that bordered on the mechanical, their tables arranged in neat rows beneath portable canopies that provided minimal shelter from the biting wind. Each station handled a different aspect of preparation: credential verification, equipment inspection, medical screening, and the distribution of tracking devices that were supposed to help with emergency extraction, though everyone knew how unreliable those could be inside spatial anomalies. The officials worked with the weary efficiency of people who had done this too many times before, processing the awakened like products on an assembly line.
Zeph joined the queue for credential verification, his forged identity documents tucked securely in his jacket pocket. The documents Marcus had assured him would pass inspection without raising suspicion. Still, his heart rate elevated slightly as he approached the verification station, a reminder that despite all his stat increases, some physiological responses to stress remained fundamentally human. No amount of power could completely eliminate the anxiety of deception, the vulnerability of relying on falsified papers when discovery could mean immediate disqualification or worse.
The official at the desk was a middle-aged woman with Level 42 displayed above her head and an expression of profound boredom that suggested she’d processed hundreds of awakened already this morning and found them all equally unremarkable. She barely glanced at him as he approached, her attention focused primarily on her tablet and the endless stream of data she was required to input. Her fingers moved across the screen with practiced speed, a rhythm born of repetition.
"Name and identification," she said in a monotone that implied she’d repeated this phrase so many times it had lost all meaning, becoming nothing more than sounds her mouth produced automatically.
"Kai Mercer," Zeph replied, handing over his documents with a confidence he didn’t entirely feel. The name felt foreign in his mouth—not his name, not his identity, just a convenient mask to wear while walking into danger. He wondered briefly how many others in this crowd were also hiding behind false names and fabricated histories.
The official scanned his documents with a device that hummed softly as it verified the embedded authentication codes, the sound barely audible over the general noise of the staging area. Zeph kept his expression neutral, his breathing steady, giving no indication of the tension coiling in his chest as the device processed his fake credentials. He watched the official’s face for any sign of recognition, any flicker of suspicion, but her expression remained unchanged.
After what felt like an eternity but was probably only fifteen seconds, the device beeped with a pleasant tone that signaled successful verification.
"Verified," the official said, making a notation on her tablet without looking up. "Level 35, C-rank classification. Proceed to Station 3 for equipment inspection and tracking device distribution. Next!"
Zeph’s fake identity had passed verification smoothly, without raising even a flicker of suspicion. He allowed himself a small internal sigh of relief as he moved toward Station 3, navigating through the crowd of awakened who were all engaged in their own pre-expedition rituals—checking gear with obsessive attention to detail, reviewing maps that might be outdated or inaccurate, making final calls to loved ones they might never see again. The emotional weight of those conversations hung in the air around him, a reminder that despite the power these people wielded, they were all still vulnerable to the ultimate equalizer of death.
He was halfway to Station 3 when he felt it—that peculiar sensation of being watched by someone whose observation carried weight, whose attention was sharp and focused rather than casual. Zeph’s heightened perception, honed by stat optimization and weeks of careful training, picked out the source immediately.
Marcus stood perhaps fifty meters away in the crowd, standing out among the assembled awakened like a lighthouse in a sea of candles. His presence seemed to radiate authority and competence in a way that he couldn’t fully capture.
Their eyes met across the crowded staging area. Marcus’s expression revealed nothing—no acknowledgment, no concern, no encouragement—but after a moment, he nodded once. A single, deliberate motion that conveyed approval and perhaps something else. Confirmation that Zeph was where he needed to be, doing what needed to be done. It was a gesture that communicated volumes without words.
Then Marcus turned away, disappearing into the crowd with the practiced ease of someone who knew how to avoid attention when necessary, his form swallowed by the masses as if he’d never been there at all.
Zeph continued toward Station 3, but his awareness had expanded now, his senses tuned to the currents of attention and intention flowing through the assembled awakened. That’s when he noticed them, standing out to his trained perception like discordant notes in an otherwise harmonious melody.
Three individuals positioned at different points in the crowd, engaged in what appeared to be casual conversation with other expedition members. They weren’t watching him—weren’t even looking in his direction—but something about them triggered recognition. Their body language was too controlled, their casual demeanor too carefully constructed.
Rust Kings members. Had to be. He recognized the distinctive markings from descriptions he’d heard before arriving at Northern Bastion.
One was a tall woman with Level 48 displayed above her head, her hand resting casually on a curved blade at her hip in a gesture that suggested she could draw and strike in a fraction of a second. The second was a shorter man, Level 51, whose multiple visible scars suggested someone who had survived encounters that should have been fatal and had learned valuable lessons from each near-death experience. The third was hardest to read—Level 46, nondescript features, the kind of person who could fade into any crowd and be forgotten within moments, which made him potentially the most dangerous of the three.
’The Rust Kings are sending people into the ruins too,’ Zeph thought as he reached Station 3. ’Makes sense. An expedition this size, with this much potential loot—every major faction would want representation. Just have to make sure our paths don’t cross in problematic ways.’ He filed the observation away for later consideration, adding it to the growing list of complications he’d need to navigate.
The equipment inspection was perfunctory—a Level 39 official who barely glanced at his crude goblin axe before waving him through to receive his tracking device. The official’s lack of attention to detail was either a sign of complacency or an indication that they’d seen so many awakened with inferior equipment that one more hardly registered. The device itself was a small metallic disc that the official pressed against his left forearm, where it bonded to his skin with a brief sensation of heat that faded quickly to a dull warmth.
"Tracking beacon activated," the official explained in a practiced recitation that had been delivered so many times it sounded almost robotic. "Provides emergency location data to extraction teams. Note that spatial anomalies may interfere with signal transmission. Do not rely on beacon as guaranteed rescue mechanism. Authority assumes no liability for extraction failures due to environmental interference." The disclaimer was delivered with the casual indifference of someone who knew that half the people receiving these devices wouldn’t survive to need extraction anyway.
"Understood," Zeph confirmed, flexing his arm experimentally. The beacon felt like a slightly warm spot on his skin, barely noticeable but constant, a reminder of the Authority’s surveillance that would track his movements throughout the expedition.
As he moved away from Station 3, joining the growing mass of fully processed participants, he became aware of another sensation—one far more concerning than any tracking device.
The egg in his storage ring was pulsing faster.
Zeph had been monitoring the egg’s strange heartbeat-like rhythm for weeks now, and he’d grown accustomed to its steady 45 beats per minute. But now, standing here in the staging area with one thousand awakened and the ruins somewhere in the distance, the pulse had accelerated noticeably.
He focused his perception on the egg, counting the intervals between pulses with the precision that his enhanced stats afforded him.
48 beats per minute. Up from 45. A subtle increase, but definitely measurable and concerning.
’Reacting to proximity to the ruins?’ Zeph wondered. ’Or responding to the concentration of awakened? Either way, it’s doing something different. Marcus is going to want to know about this.’ The implications were troubling—if the egg was responding to their location, what else might it do once they actually entered the ruins?
He scanned the crowd again, looking for the information broker, but Marcus had vanished as thoroughly as if he’d never been there, leaving no trace of his presence.
"All participants, attention!" A voice amplified by some skill or device cut through the ambient noise of one thousand awakened, commanding immediate silence with an authority that couldn’t be ignored. "Proceed to the main assembly area for expedition briefing. Attendance is mandatory. Anyone not present for the briefing will be removed from the expedition roster."
The crowd began moving as a mass toward a raised platform that had been constructed at the far end of the staging area. Zeph let himself be carried along by the flow of bodies, using the movement to observe his fellow participants more carefully, studying the dynamics that were already forming within the group.
Some were forming quick alliances, clustering into small groups of three or four, exchanging contact information and discussing skill synergies with the earnestness of people who understood that preparation could mean the difference between life and death. These were the smart ones, Zeph recognized—people who understood that survival in unknown territory often depended on having someone watch your back, someone to cover your weaknesses while you covered theirs.
Others, like Zeph himself, stayed isolated. Some out of preference for working alone, some because their reputations preceded them and made others unwilling to associate, some because they simply didn’t trust easily after being betrayed too many times. The loners, the outcasts, the ones who fought alone because that was all they knew how to do or because solitude was safer than vulnerability.
As Zeph approached the assembly area, he felt something else—a deep vibration that seemed to come from the direction of the ruins themselves. It was subtle, barely noticeable beneath the noise of one thousand awakened moving and talking, but it was there. A rhythmic pulse that resonated through the ground, through the air, through his bones.







