The Darkness System: Rise of the Broken Sovereign

Chapter 83: Jabia City

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Chapter 83: Chapter 83: Jabia City

Jabia City was quite noisy but also lively.

Dockworkers shouting in three languages, cargo loaders beeping warnings at pedestrians, the constant grind of repulsor engines fighting gravity to haul crates onto hovering freighters. The air smelled of fuel, sweat, and salt from the distant coastline.

Kael stood at the edge of the Verin Shipping complex and let his gaze wander.

The facility was large but unremarkable. Warehouses arranged in a horseshoe around a central loading yard. Office buildings clustered near the main gate. Security checkpoints at every entrance—standard commercial stuff, not military grade. The kind of place where a thousand legitimate businesses operated across a hundred worlds.

Nothing about it screamed human trafficking front.

Which was the point.

"Casual inspection," Kael said. "Spread out. Don’t cluster. We’re dockworkers checking out a potential employer. Yenna, take the eastern warehouses. Cassian, the office block. I’ll circle the loading yard."

Neither of them responded verbally. Yenna just walked. Cassian vanished into the crowd like he’d never been there at all.

Kael moved.

He kept his pace unhurried, his posture loose, his expression bored—the universal look of a man killing time between shifts. He passed crate stacks and fuel depots and groups of workers on break, none of whom spared him a second glance.

His eyes, however, were doing something else entirely.

Essence Trace.

The purple glow was subtle. A faint luminescence at the edges of his irises, visible only to anyone close enough and knowledgable enough to look for it. In this crowd, surrounded by strangers, he might as well have been invisible. 𝒻𝑟ℯℯ𝑤𝑒𝑏𝑛𝘰𝓋𝑒𝓁.𝒸𝑜𝘮

Mana signatures bloomed around him like heat signatures in thermal vision. Each person carried a unique fingerprint—blue, orange, pale yellow, dull brown. Workers. Guards. A few cultivators scattered among the mundane labor, their signatures brighter and more defined.

Kael filtered through them automatically. Discarded the common patterns. Ignored the weak signatures.

And found it.

That dark green distinct mana signature that he could never mistake.

The same signature he’d tracked in Thornwick City. The same color that had clung to Grellik and his operatives like a stain.

There.

A man standing near the central loading yard, clipboard in hand, barking orders at a group of dockworkers. Middle-aged, stocky, receding hairline, the kind of face designed to be forgotten. His cultivation base was nothing special—Core Formation Rank 4, maybe Rank 5 at best. A foreman.

But the dark green wrapped around him like a second skin.

Kael memorized his position and continued walking. Three more sweeps of the yard confirmed it—no other dark green signatures visible. Either this was the only Crimson operative on the surface, or the others were hiding their signatures through some method he couldn’t detect.

Likely the latter. House of Crimson wasn’t amateur enough to leave its people exposed.

But one visible operative was enough.

He circled back and found Yenna leaning against a warehouse wall, arms crossed, pretending to watch the traffic.

"Eastern warehouses are clean," she said without looking at him.

"Loading yard. Man with a clipboard. Dark hair, stocky, receding hairline. Green signature."

Yenna’s eyes flicked to him. "You can see that?"

"Long story. He’s Crimson. Mid-level, probably. I need intel—where he goes, who he talks to, what he knows."

"Interrogate him?"

"That’s the messy option." Kael glanced around. "Where’s Cassian?"

As if summoned, Cassian appeared beside them. Kael had noticed he did that. Slipped into spaces like they were already his.

"The foreman," Kael said. "I need to know what he knows. Ideally without alerting anyone that we know anything."

Cassian tilted his head.

"Give me five minutes."

He walked away without another word towards a stack of cargo containers thirty meters to the left. He sat down cross-legged on the concrete, right there in the open, like a meditation break in the middle of a work shift.

Kael and Yenna waited.

One minute. Two. The foreman continued his rounds, oblivious. Three minutes. Four.

At four minutes and thirty-three seconds, Cassian opened his eyes.

He stood, brushed off his pants, and walked back to them with the same casual indifference he’d left with.

"He’s meeting someone in a locked office in twenty minutes," Cassian said. "Third floor of the main admin building. Room 312. They’ll discuss a shipment arriving tomorrow night—transport codes, entry vectors, guard rotation for the eastern gate."

Yenna stared at him. "How do you know that?"

Cassian adjusted his sunglasses. "I saw it."

"Saw it? He hasn’t gone to the meeting yet."

"No." Cassian’s voice was flat. "He hasn’t."

Kael was quiet for a moment. He’d suspected since the academy—since those cryptic nods in the library, the way Cassian moved like he already knew where everyone would be before they moved. Time manipulation wasn’t just slowing things down or speeding them up.

It was seeing what hadn’t happened yet.

"How far ahead?" Kael asked.

"Thirty seconds to one minute if I focus. The conversation I saw was forty-seven seconds into a possible future." Cassian paused. "It’s limited. During combat, I can only maintain about five seconds of foresight. The closer someone is to killing me, the harder it is to see past the threat. Instinct takes over. Survival compresses everything."

"And the shipment tomorrow?" Kael pressed.

"Transport codes for a freighter called the Harrow’s Wake. Entry through eastern gate at 0200 hours. Guard rotation changes at midnight—fewer patrols on the eastern perimeter for approximately forty minutes." Cassian’s expression didn’t change. "He also mentioned something interesting. Said the ’collection quota’ for this sector was behind schedule. His superior wasn’t happy. They need another two hundred units before the end of the month."

Two hundred units.

Kael’s expression didn’t change either. But something cold settled in his chest.

"That saves me the stress and fun of having to torture him," he said.

"He’s still a loose end," Yenna said quietly. Her voice had shifted—harder now, focused. The trembling from the transport was gone. Buried. "If he talks to anyone before tomorrow night—"

She didn’t finish the sentence.

She didn’t need to.

Kael glanced at the foreman. The man was wrapping up his clipboard rounds, heading toward the admin building. Unaware that three students from an academy he’d never heard of had just dismantled his entire operational security from thirty meters away.

"Make it casual," Kael said. "No spectacle."

Yenna moved.

It was fast—faster than the crowd could track. One moment she was beside them. The next she was behind the foreman, one hand over his mouth, the other already extended.

Ice crystallized in her palm as a spear materializing from nothing in the time it took to draw a breath.

She drove it into the base of his skull.

The foreman’s eyes went wide. A muffled sound escaped her palm. Then nothing. His body went limp. The ice spear melted almost instantly—Yenna’s control was precise enough to dissolve the weapon before blood could freeze around it and make a mess.

She lowered the body to the ground behind a cargo container.

When she turned back, her expression was perfectly composed. As if she hadn’t just killed a man in broad daylight.

Kael raised an eyebrow. "Rank 1 for a reason."

They left the Verin Shipping complex twelve minutes later. The foreman wouldn’t be missed until his shift ended—six hours, minimum. By then, they’d be in Valian City.

In the transport, Yenna sat in the corner seat, staring at Cassian.

She was quiet for a long time.

"How did you see a conversation that hasn’t happened yet," she finally said. Not a question.

"It’s not difficult." Cassian hadn’t opened his eyes. "It’s like listening for a specific sound in a crowded room. You have to filter out the noise. Like watching a movie."

Yenna’s ice-blue gaze stayed on him.

She’d known Cassian was dangerous. Everyone at the academy knew. Time manipulation was rare enough to be noteworthy.

But knowing someone was dangerous and watching them casually dismantle an intelligence operation with five minutes of meditation were different things entirely.

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