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Part 4 — The Golden Trail

  Vincent had learned

  something important from the Wolf encounter, though perhaps not the

  lesson the forest intended. He'd learned that elite mobs gave massive

  rewards. He'd learned that eating their cores granted incredible

  abilities. And he'd learned that he'd been chosen for something

  special.

  That's the

  difference between me and casual players. They see a hard fight and

  run. I push through and get rewarded for it. That's how you dominate

  a game.

  He conveniently

  ignored the fact that he'd nearly died, that his victory had depended

  entirely on the regen skill he'd bought, and that luck had played as

  much a role as skill.

  The changes were

  undeniable now. His vision had transformed—the grey forest had

  depth and clarity it had never possessed before. He could see in the

  darkness between the trees, could pick out details in shadows that

  should have been impenetrable. Night vision, the system had called

  it, and Vincent called it "broken OP bullshit in the best way."

  But it was the smells

  that truly changed everything.

  The forest had

  exploded into a symphony of scents. Every creature left a trail, a

  chemical signature that hung in the air like colored smoke. He'd

  discovered it by accident when hunting his first creature after the

  Wolf—a shambling thing with too many eyes. As he'd stalked it, thin

  trails of reddish mist had appeared in his vision, emanating from the

  creature's body, marking its path through the undergrowth.

  
[Olfaction:

  Active]

  [Scent

  tracking: Hostile entity detected]

  [Threat

  level: Low]

  The creature had been

  easy prey. His new senses told him everything—where it had been,

  where it was going, how afraid it was, how injured. The kill had been

  trivial.

  He'd killed three more

  creatures over the next few hours, testing his new abilities,

  cataloging the patterns. Each creature produced a different colored

  mist-trail:

  Red trails for

  aggressive creatures—thick, acrid, speaking of violence and

  territory.

  Blue trails for

  passive ones—faint, meandering, barely worth noticing.

  Green trails for

  edible plants and resources—not that he needed them anymore.

  This is insane.

  This is literally wallhacks. Scent-based wallhacks. The devs gave me

  an elite ability and now I'm just farming. This is what happens when

  you play smart.

  Vincent sat on his

  boulder, assumed the Watchdog Man pose—easier now, his body more

  flexible—and surveyed his territory with new senses. The forest

  breathed, and he breathed with it, his olfaction drinking in

  information, his night vision piercing the gloom.

  I own this zone.

  Anything that comes through here, I'll smell it before it sees me.

  I'm the apex predator now.

  The mask's three black

  holes shifted slightly with his attention, tracking scents and

  movement simultaneously. His body had changed further—fingers

  longer, claws sharper, the black veins spreading up his neck toward

  his jaw. The translucent wax of his skin revealed more of his

  internal geography now, the dark heart pulsing steadily, the network

  of black veins mapping his transformation.

  
[Level:

  4]

  [Transformation:

  2/10]

  [Psyche:

  68%]

  [HP

  Stock: 312]

  He'd been farming

  creatures methodically, storing HP, preparing for the next big fight.

  Each heart he consumed added to his reserves, each kill made him

  stronger, faster, more coordinated. The skills from the Wolf—[Beast

  Form],

  [Pure

  Brutality],

  [Targeted

  Fracture]—sat

  unused but ready, waiting for a threat worthy of activation.

  I'm not just

  surviving anymore. I'm thriving. This is what optimization looks

  like.

  The Hunger gnawed at

  him constantly now, a persistent itch that never quite went away even

  after feeding. But Vincent had learned to interpret it as "aggressive

  metabolism" rather than "creeping addiction," because

  one sounded like a feature and the other sounded like a problem.

  Something else had

  changed too, though Vincent didn't consciously notice it. His

  thoughts had started to... skip. Not blanking out entirely, but

  losing threads mid-sentence, jumping to conclusions without the steps

  in between. He'd been thinking about his mother earlier—or had he?

  The memory felt slippery, hard to hold. What did she look like again?

  The details wouldn't come.

  What came easily were

  other things: the exact location of the three creatures he'd killed

  that morning. The taste profile of their hearts. The optimal bite

  angle for severing a spine. The chemical composition of fear-scent

  versus pain-scent.

  That's just game

  knowledge. That's just me getting better at the mechanics.

  He moved through the

  forest with confidence that wasn't entirely unjustified anymore. His

  new senses made ambushes nearly impossible, his improved physical

  stats made most fights manageable, and his HP Stock meant he could

  tank damage and regenerate during combat.

  A thought occurred to

  him, unbidden: When

  did I last think about logging out?

  The question hung

  there, unanswered, because he couldn't remember. Hours ago? Minutes?

  Had he thought about it at all since the Wolf?

  Doesn't matter.

  Still got four hours left in the session. Plenty of time to level.

  Plenty of time to—

  The thought derailed.

  Lost its momentum. What had he been thinking about? Something about

  time. Something about... something.

  He shook his head,

  felt the mask shift slightly with the motion, and refocused on what

  mattered: hunting, feeding, storing HP.

  I'm fine. Just

  focused. Just in the zone. That's what happens when you're

  optimizing.

  But the Hunger

  returned. Always. And this time, it brought something new.

  Vincent found himself

  back at the clearing with the [Agent],

  though he didn't remember consciously deciding to return. His feet

  had simply carried him there, drawn by some instinct he couldn't

  name.

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  The grey figure stood

  exactly as before, motionless, the split mask reflecting nothing.

  — Your echo is still

  tolerated, — the [Agent]

  declared without preamble. — You are progressing. Slowly. But

  functionally. Your integration into the ecosystem is proceeding

  within acceptable parameters.

  Vincent exhaled,

  crossing his arms—a defensive gesture. The muscles pulled under his

  skin, denser now, more compact.

  — And the hunger? —

  he asked, trying to maintain a detached tone. — This constant...

  sensation in the throat. Is it a bug?

  — No.

  Pause.

  — It is a price.

  Vincent frowned behind

  his mask.

  — That wasn't in the

  contract. I read the conditions. Well... I scrolled. There was

  nothing about permanent hunger. Nothing about side effects.

  — Survival is not

  free, — the [Agent]

  replied, imperturbable. — Your adaptation was achieved through

  organic absorption. Through the integration of living matter. The

  system has modified your basal metabolism. You no longer eat to live.

  You live to eat. That is the very definition of the Wìdjigò-Phase

  class.

  Vincent wanted to

  protest, to argue, to demand a patch. But a low growl rose from his

  belly, cutting off any speech. A hollow, hungry sound that didn't

  come from the stomach but from deeper—from the gut, the marrow,

  from something installed at a cellular level.

  The [Agent]

  finished, as if none of this really mattered:

  — You are still

  resisting. Your psyche maintains minimal coherence. Statistically,

  this will not last. The psychic survival rate after the [2/10

  Threshold]

  is 11%. Good luck.

  Vincent turned and

  left without another word. The [Agent]

  watched him go with its expressionless split mask, already

  calculating the probability of his survival past the next threshold.

  Eleven percent.

  Whatever. I'm in the 0.3% who survived spawn. I'm in the 0.02% who

  got this class. I'll be in the 11% who make it past 2/10. Statistics

  don't apply to people like me.

  The forest had other

  opinions about Vincent's exceptionalism, but it kept them to itself.

  Vincent moved through

  his territory, hunting, feeding, storing HP. The new senses made

  everything easier—he could track prey from hundreds of meters away,

  could ambush creatures before they knew he existed, could optimize

  his farming routes with precision.

  He'd just killed two

  creatures without even really needing to focus. An automatic leap, a

  precise bite, a satisfying crack. The red mist-trails had led him

  straight to them, and [Targeted

  Fracture]

  had made the kills almost trivial.

  He bragged about it

  internally, constructing entire speeches for an invisible audience.

  — Level 4, and I'm

  already farming like a pro. Most players are probably stuck at level

  1, crying about the difficulty. But I figured out the meta. Elite

  cores, skill absorption, scent tracking. I'm basically speedrunning

  optimal build paths.

  The forest breathed

  around him, patient, waiting.

  Vincent stopped

  walking. Not because he'd found prey, not because he'd sensed danger.

  He stopped because, for the first time since spawning, he had a

  moment of genuine quiet.

  No Hunger screaming at

  him. No creatures attacking. No Agent dispensing cryptic warnings.

  Just him, the forest, and the weight of what he'd become.

  He looked at his hands

  in the grey light. The black claws, the translucent wax skin, the

  dark veins pulsing beneath. He flexed his fingers and watched the

  veins shift, watched the claws extend and retract with a thought.

  When did that

  happen? When did I stop needing to think about moving them?

  He raised his hand to

  his face—to where his face used to be—and felt only the smooth,

  cold wax of the mask. No cheeks. No nose. No lips. Just three holes

  and a void where his mouth should have been.

  He tried to remember

  what he'd looked like before. Brown hair, maybe? Or was it dark

  blond? He couldn't recall. The memory felt distant, like something

  that had happened to someone else.

  Six hours. I've

  been in this game for six hours and I can't remember my own face.

  A thought occurred to

  him, unbidden and unwelcome: What

  if I log out right now? What if I go back to the real world? Will I

  still be... me?

  The question hung in

  the air, unanswered. He didn't want to find out. Because if the

  answer was no, if the changes were permanent, then everything he'd

  been telling himself—it's

  just a game, it's just mechanics, it's just temporary—would

  collapse.

  And if the answer was

  yes, if he could go back to normal, then he'd have to confront what

  he'd done. What he'd eaten. What he'd become. And he'd have to admit

  that he'd made choices, that the system hadn't forced him, that

  somewhere along the way he'd stopped resisting and started enjoying

  it.

  So he didn't think

  about it. He pushed the thought down, buried it beneath layers of

  rationalization and denial, and kept moving.

  I'm almost at

  level 5. Just need a bit more exp. Then level 10. Then 15. Then 100.

  Then a million dollars. Then everything goes back to normal. That's

  the plan. That's the only thing that matters.

  He repeated it like a

  mantra, like a prayer, like a drowning man clutching at driftwood.

  But deep down, in a

  place he refused to acknowledge, a small voice whispered: You

  know that's not true. You know you're lying to yourself. You know—

  He growled, a low,

  involuntary sound that rattled through his mask, and the voice went

  silent.

  Shut up. Just shut

  up. I'm fine. I'm adapting. I'm winning.

  The forest said

  nothing. It had heard these lies before, from others like him, and it

  knew how they all ended.

  Vincent stood there

  for a moment longer, alone with thoughts he refused to finish, then

  started walking again. Hunting. Feeding. Storing HP. Because that's

  what winners did. That's what survivors did.

  That's what he had to

  keep telling himself, or the alternative—the truth—would break

  him.

  And then, he saw

  someone.

  A real player.

  
[Username:

  Mirv]

  [Class:

  Archer]

  [Level:

  3]

  A scrawny guy, almost

  skeletal, in light gear—a rudimentary bow on his back, a half-empty

  quiver, and torn cloth clothes that had probably been white but were

  now grey with filth and dried blood.

  He was crouched near a

  creature's corpse, looting methodically, rummaging through the

  entrails with his bare hands. He was humming softly—some stupid pop

  song, completely jarring against the surrounding horror. He seemed

  peaceful, relaxed even.

  Vincent stopped dead,

  hidden behind a skin-tree. He didn't know why he had stopped—not

  right away. Not consciously.

  Then he understood.

  The smell.

  Not that of the corpse

  Mirv was scavenging. Not that of the rotting forest. But the smell of

  living blood. Blood still circulating, warm, oxygenated, pulsing.

  And the trail it

  produced.

  Not red like the

  aggressive creatures. Not blue like the passive ones. Not green like

  resources.

  Golden.

  A luminous,

  honey-thick mist that radiated from Mirv's body like an aura, like a

  beacon, like a siren call written in chemical language. It filled the

  air, saturated Vincent's senses, erased everything else. It had

  nothing to do with the beasts, nothing to do with the monsters,

  nothing to do with anything he had eaten so far.

  It was better.

  Incomparably better.

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