The first night alone did not break him.
That surprised Aron.
He expected panic. Grief. Some delayed collapse that would finally pierce the numb shell the system had
wrapped around his mind. Instead, there was only quiet—vast and hollow, stretching endlessly in every
direction.
He walked until the moon sank low, then kept walking.
Without Ayesha's presence ahead of him, the world felt unbalanced. Every sound stood out too sharply:
branches snapping, distant howls, the scrape of claws against stone far away. His steps slowed, instincts
fighting against exhaustion.
He stopped near a shallow stream just before dawn.
The water was clear. Too clear.
Aron stared at his reflection. Pale face. Sunken eyes. A stranger looking back at him.
"I survived," he murmured.
The reflection did not answer.
Hunger stirred.
Not as pain.
As suggestion.
His gaze drifted to the fish darting beneath the surface, to the small animals drinking at the far bank. Each
living thing felt close—as if a thread connected them to his chest, thin and waiting to be pulled.
He clenched his jaw and turned away.
"No."
The word felt weak.
The system chimed anyway.
SYSTEM STATUS
Mental Stability: Within Acceptable Range
Adaptive Suppression: Active
By midday, he reached the edge of a trade road.
Old wagons lay overturned, their contents long since stripped. Bones littered the ditches—some human,
some not. Signs of repeated conflict, not a single battle.
A trap road.
Aron knew he should avoid it.
He followed it anyway.
Voices reached him first.
Three men stood near a broken cart, arguing loudly. Bandits by their stance—relaxed, careless, confident in
numbers. One of them held a bloodied dagger. Another laughed.
A body lay between them.
Still warm.
Aron stopped behind a crumbled wall, heart steady despite the scene before him. He waited for fear.
It did not come.
The hunger shifted.
Interested.
One of the men turned suddenly, eyes narrowing. "Oi. You there."
Aron stepped into view.
A boy. Alone. No visible weapon.
The bandits smiled.
"Looks like we're not done yet," one said.
Aron's hand twitched.
Green light flickered—then died.
He remembered Ayesha's warning.
If the hunger ever tells you it's the only way—run.
He took a step back.
The bandits advanced.
Something snapped.
Not inside him.
In the air.
The leader swung first. The blade passed through Aron's shoulder—then skidded aside as if striking stone
instead of flesh.
SYSTEM RESPONSE
Abnormal Status Nullification — Passive
Aron did not feel pain.
He grabbed the man's wrist and twisted. Bone cracked. The dagger fell.
The others lunged.
Vines burst from the ground—not wild, not consuming. Controlled. They wrapped legs, pinned arms,
slammed bodies into dirt with brutal efficiency.
Aron breathed hard.
He was careful.
Too careful.
One man screamed as the vines tightened, draining just enough strength to make him collapse.
SYSTEM LOG
Vitality Acquired: Negligible
Aron staggered.
Even that was enough.
He released the vines instantly. The bandits lay broken but alive, gasping in the dirt.
Aron backed away, shaking.
Not from fear.
From how easy it had been.
He looked at his hands.
"They didn't need to die," he said.
The system remained silent.
Aron turned and ran.
He did not stop until night swallowed the road and the screams faded into memory.
Alone, beneath unfamiliar stars, Aron finally understood the truth.
He was not free because Ayesha was gone.
He was free because nothing was stopping him anymore.
And that frightened him more than the hunters ever had.
