The orb pulsed again.
Not brightly. Not violently. Just one soft beat, like a second breath.
Raif was already standing, eyes fixed on the Core. The others had begun to move—Lira pacing near the edge of the clearing, Thomund squinting into the treeline, Goss carving lines in the dirt with a stick. Naera hadn't moved at all.
Then it came.
A soundless flicker in Raif's vision. Not light, not colour—just the sudden impression that something had opened in his mind. A second thought. A presence. A system.
Words formed midair. They weren't floating or glowing. They just... were.
[KINGDOM CORE – LEVEL 0]
[Territory Radius: 30m]
[Summoning Pool: [Normal, Common]]
[Loyalty Tracking: Active]
[Current KE: 0]
[Primary Directive: SURVIVE]
[First Challenge Unlocked:
Shelter the Chosen
Objective: Construct viable protection for 6 individuals before nightfall.
Reward: +25 KE, unlock Basic Construction Blueprint
Penalty: Exposure to environmental threat (High Risk)]
Raif's stomach dropped. The words blinked once, then faded. Not gone—just dismissed. But the knowledge remained, burned behind his eyes.
He looked up. The sky was dimmer than it should've been.
No sun, but the green-tinted light had dulled.
"Raif?" Eloin's voice.
He turned. The builder was watching him, expression neutral but firm.
"Something just happened. You felt it, didn't you?"
Raif hesitated. "Yes. I think… the orb gave me instructions."
Lira stepped closer, still wary. "Instructions for what?"
He exhaled. "It called this a 'Kingdom Core.' Said I was a ruler. There's something called Kingdom Energy—KE. I don't know how it works yet, but apparently… if we don't build shelter before nightfall, we're in danger."
Thomund grunted. "That's already obvious. But now we have a clock."
"Any details?" Eloin asked. "Blueprints? Diagrams?"
Raif shook his head. "Not yet. Just said a reward would unlock one."
Lira crossed her arms. "So we're working off faith, then."
Raif looked at her. "No. We're working because we don't have another choice."
That hung in the air.
Then Thomund turned. "I'll scout materials. Sticks, vines, bark—anything with flex. Ground's too wet for digging. We'll need to build up, not in."
"I'll help," Eloin said, already rolling his sleeves.
Lira didn't speak. But she followed Thomund.
Goss made a noise halfway between a laugh and a cough. "Right then. Let the kingdom-building begin. Can't wait to crown our muddy king."
Naera rose.
Raif blinked. It was the first time she'd moved voluntarily since appearing.
She didn't speak, didn't look at him—but she walked toward the clearing edge, knelt beside a fallen log, and began peeling strips of fibrous bark with her fingernails.
Raif let out a breath he hadn't realised he'd been holding.
Then he moved.
He joined Eloin and Thomund, took stock of what they gathered. Long branches. Root bundles. Fungal padding. They worked without coordination at first, but necessity did what introductions hadn't—forced them to cooperate.
He noticed things.
Thomund's quiet efficiency—like a man used to surviving the wild. Eloin's eye for balance, placing branches in triangles rather than squares. Goss complaining, but lifting heavy logs anyway. Lira testing each tie-down knot herself. And Naera, returning again and again with perfect handfuls of moss, rainleaf, and bark. She never spoke. But she worked.
By the time the sky dimmed further, they had the frame of a hut—crudely A-framed, open on one side, but it stood. The jungle's breath had changed. Cooler. Sharp.
Raif stood back, chest tight. The shelter wasn't much. His arms ached from dragging branches, his knees were scraped raw from kneeling on stone and slick root. Sweat had dried into a gritty film over his skin, mixing with dirt and streaks of blood from thorn snags. He tasted metal in his mouth—iron and fatigue. And it wasn't just physical. Each moment had been a mental tug-of-war: trying not to lead too hard, trying not to look like he was guessing. The others had followed because the alternative was worse, not because they trusted him. Not yet.
Still, they'd moved like people desperate not to die. That was something. Thomund had said nothing about leadership, but Raif saw how the man glanced toward him before decisions. Eloin, too. Even Lira had stopped contradicting him outright. Naera had moved beside him twice during the building, silent, handing him the next piece before he could even ask. They'd built something—rough, sloped, ugly—but together.
A part of him wanted to call it a victory. Another part whispered: survival isn't winning. Not yet.
But it existed.
The orb pulsed.
[Quest Complete. +25 KE awarded.]
[Blueprint: Basic Construction – Unlocked]
The system's voice was absent. The message was felt, not heard. A subtle warmth tickled his skin, like sunlight through a leaf.
He turned to share the news—and saw the storm rising.
Dark clouds. Fast. Too fast.
The jungle screamed again.
And the first raindrops struck like thrown pebbles...
Rain came sideways.
The first gust hit like a shove, snapping thin branches and sending Naera's gathered moss scattering across the clearing. Goss swore loudly and ducked under the half-finished shelter, which creaked ominously under the sudden onslaught.
"Hold the frame!" Eloin shouted.
Raif scrambled to the front, grabbing a forked branch to prop the sagging edge. The wind howled again—no ordinary gust, but a funnel of jungle breath, thick with spores and something sharper, almost metallic.
Lira pressed her back against one of the support posts, arms braced wide. "We built too shallow!"
"We didn't build," Goss snapped, teeth clenched. "We slapped together a wet tent and prayed!"
Naera was already crawling inside, hair plastered to her face, water streaming from her shoulders. She clutched a twisted roll of bark like it was gold.
Raif jammed the branch deeper into the muck, wedging it against a root mass. "It's holding. Barely."
Lightning forked overhead—but the light was violet, not white. It flashed across the clearing in jagged silence, revealing for one instant a dozen sets of eyes watching from the trees.
Thomund saw them too.
"Predators," he muttered. "Staying just outside the line."
"Boundary's still working?" Raif called over the rain.
"Feels like it," Lira replied. "They're not crossing it. Yet."
Another flash.
This time, something stepped forward.
Low-slung. Muscular. Covered in a matte hide like wet leather. No eyes, just nostril slits and a rippling jaw lined with vertical rows of teeth. It paced along the invisible edge of the boundary, its claws scraping softly on root-wrapped stone.
Raif's breath hitched.
The creature turned—then vanished into the dark.
But it didn't just leave. It moved with something close to intent, like it recognised the line it couldn't cross. Its claw scratched twice in the same spot—a testing motion. A memory, perhaps. Or a warning. Its nostrils flared. The rippling jaw twitched, almost like it was tasting the fear wafting from the clearing.
Raif could still feel its presence in his bones, like the ghost of a scream echoing in the marrow. It hadn't come close for a fight. It had come to watch. To judge. It knew the rules, whatever they were. And it was waiting for someone to break them.
The orb pulsed again. Another message flickered just behind Raif's eyes:
Hostile Entity Detected
Territory Breach Imminent
Defensive Measures Unavailable – Construction Level: 0
Recommendation: Survive.
Raif looked around. The others had seen nothing, heard nothing. Just him.
He didn't speak. Couldn't. His chest thudded like a trapped drum.
"Give them a reason to cross the line… and they will." Thomund's voice was low, tight.
Everyone went quiet. The storm roared around them, but no one spoke again. Not even Goss.
Hours passed in that squat, rain-beaten hovel. The jungle hissed. The wind screamed and fell and screamed again. The orb did not pulse again.
Eventually, Naera fell asleep, curled under a tangle of roots she'd dragged inside. Eloin followed, slumped in a corner, arms crossed. Goss leaned against a wall, half-dozing with his chin tucked. Lira stayed closest to the opening, her makeshift blade still in hand.
Thomund watched the treeline.
Raif didn't sleep.
Even when the wind dropped and the rain thinned to a misting hiss, his eyes stayed open. Every creak of the structure felt like a breath on his neck. Every shifting shadow at the boundary twisted into the shape of that eyeless predator. He pulled his knees to his chest and stared at the orb through the slats of their makeshift wall.
He hated it.
Not for what it had done. But for what it represented. Choice. Power. The illusion of control. He'd pressed that stone thinking it might give him answers. All it had done was raise the stakes.
A memory surfaced—just a flash. A rainy street. Headlights. Someone shouting his name. Then nothing.
Who had he been before this?
He couldn't remember. But here, he was the ruler of a ruin. The voice in his head said Kingdom, but all he saw were six strangers crammed into wet bark, staring into a jungle that wanted to eat them.
He breathed through his teeth and looked at Naera, curled in sleep. At Thomund, unmoving. At Lira, blade in hand, still alert. He wouldn't let them down. Not because the system told him to. But because no one else was going to do it.
And if this was a kingdom…
Then someone had to act like a king.
Not because he couldn't, but because he wouldn't. This was his fault. His kingdom. His choices. Whatever tomorrow brought, it would be because he pressed that stone.
He looked out at the edge of the trees.
The creatures were gone.
But the eyes weren't.