The slums were thick with debris, but Warren moved through them like a shadow. Water dripped from torn awnings and broken drainpipes, pooling in trash-clogged gutters. The sky overhead was smeared in red-gray dusk, pressing low and heavy. The city was holding its breath.
Every step felt rehearsed. He slipped through the broken skeleton of a collapsed overpass, boots finding purchase on the rain-slick concrete like a memory. Cracks split the ground where old tree roots had broken through decades ago, long dead now.
A scavenger picking through a trash pile didn't notice him pass. Warren didn't spare him a glance. He had no reason to.
Leaving the market behind, Warren moved fast through the soaked streets. The fragment he'd stolen weighed heavy on him . Not physically, but in the marrow-deep sense that survival demanded payment.
A sour taste built in his throat as he wove through the alleys, coat flaring behind him. The alleyways smelled of wet rot and burnt oil. Somewhere distant, a generator coughed itself to death, then went silent.
He darted under a sagging balcony, listening to the groaning weight of rusted supports. Every inch of the city fought against its own collapse.
Warren's breath fogged faintly in the cold mist. He adjusted his pace, not rushing but never lingering. Lingering got you killed.
He should not have taken it. The merchant had not deserved that. A good man, by any standards that mattered. Honest traders were rare. Trust was rarer.
Still, Warren tightened his jaw. He needed the fragment more than he did. Need outweighed fairness. Need decided life and death. He'd broken another rule of the Scavenger's Code: rule 3 "Don't steal from the living." And once again, he justified it with the same lie: survival took precedence.
In his mind, he could almost hear Mara's voice, sharp and cutting as the day she first taught him better. "Need's a knife, Rabbit. Cuts both ways. You steal from the living, you make yourself a thing, not a man. Don't lie about it." He shut it out, tucked it down deep where memory couldn't trip him. Survival had rules. Breaking them had a price. He would pay it later. He always did.
The wind shifted, carrying the stink of burnt rubber and stagnant water. Warren ducked into a narrow service lane between two listing apartment blocks, scanning overhead for anything that could fall.
An old fire escape hung by a rusted chain, swaying in slow arcs above him. He moved quick and quiet beneath it, never trusting anything built by other hands.
The city pressed close, buildings leaning over the alleys like broken teeth. Shadows moved where there were no people. Some were rats. Some weren't.
A low sound rumbled from a nearby culvert. Warren paused, listening. Not footsteps. Water, forced through clogged gutters.
He adjusted course.
A woman in rags watched him pass from the hollow of a doorway. Her eyes were hollow too. Warren met her gaze without stopping, then let it go. Pity was a weakness.
He passed under the remnants of a billboard. Whatever it had once shown was long stripped away, the surface scoured blank by centuries of rain and wind. Nothing left but rusted frame and rotting scraps.
He crossed a collapsed pedestrian bridge, little more than cracked stone slabs and rusted steel remnants. Whatever supports had once filled the gaps were long scavenged or rotted away. A fall here wouldn't kill him, but it would break something. Broken things didn't survive.
The rain thickened. Not heavy enough to blind him, but enough to mask sounds. It made everything feel closer, heavier.
He passed the wreckage of an old checkpoint: rusted barricades, burnt-out security drones long stripped for parts. No signs of fresh activity. Good.
A pack of dogs barked far off, somewhere beyond the ruins. Sharp bursts, overlapping, then silence. Warren didn't change his path.
His boots kicked up old ash from a fire that had burned too long ago to remember. He moved through it without breaking stride.
He gripped the brick in his coat pocket, a leftover from a crumbling wall. Not much, but better than bare fists. The weight meant options. Options meant survival.
He felt the pulse of the city around him: broken systems failing, forgotten tech humming in buried vaults, people dying in alleys.
Everything rotted. Everything fell apart. Only the careful, the fast, and the merciless endured.
The fragment pressed against his ribs with each step. A reminder of what he'd risked. A promise of what it might still cost.
He cut left down a crumbling stairwell, bypassing a stretch of exposed street. Too open. Too easy to mark.
The pharmacy lay ahead. Not close, but not far either. Just one more stretch of dying city to cross.
He adjusted the set of his coat. Listened to the wind.
And moved.
He took a back route toward the pharmacy. The ruins tightened around him, each step pulling him deeper into the wet bones of the city. Buildings leaned and whispered in the wind. Water trickled down shattered gutters. Trash clung to the broken corners like mold.
The path narrowed between two buckled slabs of concrete. Darkness pooled there. Warren slowed, senses stretching. Instinct prickled along his spine.
A door creaked on half-rotted hinges. Not from the wind.
He caught the faint scrape of breath: close, shallow, angry.
His fingers brushed the brick in his coat. Steady. Silent. Something old and sharp flickered awake inside him.
A blur lunged out of the dark.
The scavenger was filthy, ribs pressing sharp against his soaked jacket. His eyes were too wide, too hungry. A rusted machete hacked downward in a sloppy, desperate arc.
Warren twisted aside. The blade missed by inches, chewing into the rusted doorframe behind him with a shriek.
The scavenger screamed, a ragged, broken sound, panic leaking through every motion.
The brick snapped out of Warren's coat and smashed into the scavenger's face. A wet crunch. The man staggered, breath whistling through broken teeth, but he didn't fall.
The machete slashed again, wild and meaningless. Steel scraped across Warren's coat, smearing grime but doing nothing more.
Warren's breath slowed. His heart did not. Something old and clean uncoiled inside him.
He moved, not with speed but with certainty. Closing the distance. Driving his shoulder into the scavenger's chest. Slamming him into the cracked wall.
The scavenger fought back, punching, clawing, biting, but it was instinct, not strategy. Warren twisted his head away from snapping teeth and smashed his forehead into the scavenger's face.
Bone cracked. Blood sprayed hot across the rain.
The scavenger's strength faltered. Warren seized the machete hand, twisted until the wrist gave with a pop. The blade clattered to the ground.
Still the scavenger fought. Scrabbling at Warren's coat. Whimpering.
Warren shifted his weight, trapping the man's legs, driving his elbow into the scavenger's face. Over. And Over. Targeting nothing else.
Every blow crushed more structure. Split skin. Drove teeth through flesh.
The scavenger gurgled, lost, half-blind.
Warren didn't stop. He grabbed the back of the scavenger's skull and slammed it into the concrete wall.
Once.
Twice.
Three times.
The face collapsed in stages. Bone crumpled under skin. One eye socket caved. Blood and rain washed down the wall in slow, sticky sheets.
Warren drove the head into the wall again.
And again.
Every strike was mechanical. Blunt. Purposeful.
The nose shattered flat against the concrete. What teeth they had left broke free in wet splatters.
Another slam crushed the jawline into a drooping mess of skin and bone.
Warren watched the face fold inward with each hit, feeling no urgency, no need to hurry. Slow and deliberate.
The scavenger's hands fell away long before Warren's grip loosened.
He delivered two more strikes anyway, not out of discipline, not rage, but a from deep seated hunger.
When he finally let go, the body slid down the wall, leaving a thick smear where a face had been.
Warren stood over it, breathing slow.
Something cracked open inside him. A release. Joyless joy.
The need he hadn't even admitted to feeling ebbed slightly, soothed by the blunt certainty of the kill.
This was the truth of the world: not words, not rules, only this. Only the moment when something trying to kill you found out to late that you were the predator.
"Be still, my giddy heart" he murmured
No regret.
He crouched and inspected what was left.
The face, if it could still be called that, was pulped. Flattened. The features were an unrecognizable mass of torn skin, shattered bone, and leaking rainwater.
He stared at it for a long, flat moment. Not out of fascination. Just to be sure.
Nothing that looked like that could get back up.
Satisfied, he stripped the body with quick, efficient movements.
A battered rucksack. A bit of dried rations. Scraps of wire and broken tech.
The rusted machete lay nearby.
He activated examine.
Attribute
Value
Material
Corroded industrial steel
Durability
22%
Structural Stability
Compromised
Weight
Moderate
Balance Rating
Poor
Grip/Surface Texture
Slippery (rust pitting and worn handle)
Fatigue Resistance
Low
Sound Signature
High (blade chatter and scrape)
Modification History
Handle wrap degraded, blade untreated
Origin
Borealis Manufacturing
Notes
"Cut through anything, eventually."
It was a weapon only in the loosest sense. Warren spared it a glance, frowning. He didn't like blades. Never had. Blades cut. They made things bleed. But not everything stopped just because it was bleeding. Some things didn't care. Some things didn't even notice. Bleeding didn't mean dead. But you break something, snap a joint, crush a knee, shatter a spine, and it slowed. Even the things that weren't supposed to slow, they hesitated when they couldn't move right. Slower was better. Slower meant time. Time meant control. Blades were for people chasing pain. Warren wasn't chasing pain. He was chasing silence. Blunt force got him there. But a weapon was a weapon, even a shitty one.
At the back of the scavenger's neck, under the skin at the base of the spine, Warren found the chip. He worked his knife in and freed the fragment, methodical and silent.
Wrapped it in cloth. Pocketed it.
The rain hammered down harder, masking the blood, masking the kill.
He wiped his hands on the scavenger's jacket and rose.
His coat carried a fresh scuff, dark against the yellow, but the rain washed it clean. His ribs ached where the impact had bruised bone.
Then, movement, in the pack.
A small creature with mottled fur and big silent eyes huddled deep in the scavenger's pack, tucked between wires and ration scraps. Its fur caught the rain like smoke, blurring its edges, the dark bands at its limbs and muzzle barely visible. It hadn't stirred during the fight. It hadn't moved at all. A strange looking ferret kit, stretched leaner, built denser, something not quite right about the proportions.
Young. Small. Still.
Warren crouched. Watched it. It watched back, unblinking, unafraid. A ghost shaped like a kit.
He reached toward the pack, slow, measured.
The kit didn't bolt. Instead, it peered up at him, whiskers trembling, eyes bright.
Curious.
He stayed crouched, rain dripping off the brim of his hood, muscles coiled but still.
The kit inched closer, sniffing the air between them. Testing.
Its small paws pressed against the fabric of the scavenger's coat, claws pricking lightly through the soaked cloth.
Warren shifted his hand, offering the back of it, slow enough not to trigger alarm.
The kit nudged it with its nose, a fast, twitchy motion.
Then it batted at his fingers with one tiny paw.
A spark of amusement flickered at the edge of Warren's mind. He didn't move. Let it tap at him, let it decide.
The kit darted forward, scrambled briefly up his sleeve, then perched at his elbow, balancing perfectly.
A ridiculous little thing. Rain-matted and scrawny, too thin to be much use.
Still.
Warren looked at it, weighing the situation. Meat was meat.
It would be easy. Quick. The scavenger's pack had little worth. The kit would be one more thing scavenged from a body cooling in the gutter.
He watched it shake rain from its pelt, watched the slick way it moved, like mist over broken stone.
He considered.
He could eat it.
Would be faster than risking a hunt.
His stomach twisted once, hollow and bitter.
"No," he muttered, voice low and flat. "No."
This one seemed too rare. Too strange. Too much like something the world didn't make anymore.
And he wasn't that hungry.
The kit pawed at his sleeve again, pressing its head briefly against his wrist.
A choice made.
Warren tucked the kit inside his coat without another thought.
It nestled into the breast pocket of his coat, a trembling bundle of wet fur and stubborn life.
The ruins pressed in around them, but for a moment, Warren felt something shift inside his chest. A notch. A click.
Not trust.
Not yet.
But something close enough to carry forward.
The kit twitched once. A flicker of motion, followed by a sharp, urgent chitter, no louder than a breath against the storm.
A moment later, something shifted beyond the debris.
A broken croak tore through the dusk. Not human. Not safe.
Warren froze, instincts locking down. The kit had warned him first. Before the sound. Before the danger fully stepped into the world.
Warren turned in time to see the Broken stumble from the shadows, all jerking limbs and system-static whispers. Its bulk made the shadows seem smaller, muscles bunching under torn, system-etched skin. Not just a Broken. A Brute. One of the strength-variants, all force and no thought.
Warren's hand closed on the scavenger's machete. It felt wrong immediately: too light, edges dulled by rust and time. Hardly a knife. Not heavy enough to club with. Not sharp enough to cleave.
The Brute charged, faster than it should've been.
Warren pivoted, ribs shrieking. Pain flashed behind his eyes. The kit's warning, that twitch and chitter, was the only reason he wasn't dead already.
He brought the machete around in a wide arc. It caught flesh, maybe, but didn't matter. The edge barely bit. Just a shallow line and a flick of rain-wet blood.
The Brute's hand swung toward him. Warren ducked, slow and off-balance. A fist glanced his shoulder and sent him stumbling sideways into broken brick.
He hacked again, desperate. The blade caught on bone and bounced. He nearly dropped it.
His hand was slipping, fingers raw from the earlier run. Everything ached. His ribs felt like glass packed in a wet sack.
The Brute rushed again.
Warren raised the machete for another hit. This time, it cracked straight down the spine, snapped with a pathetic clatter. Shards fell like broken teeth.
He hurled the hilt at the Brute's face.
It flinched. Not hurt, just startled. Warren moved.
He dove sideways, hitting the street hard. Grabbed for the brick he'd used earlier. Almost missed it.
The Brute came down with a roar, fists crashing into stone where Warren's skull had been.
Warren rose fast. Swung the brick in a wide arc, smashed it across the Brute's cheek. The sound was wet and close.
It staggered but didn't fall.
Warren backed off, slipping again in the blood-washed gutter.
The Brute came on, glitching, drooling static.
Warren struck again. The brick cracked against its collarbone. Then again, temple, jaw, throat. Each hit slower. Each one less effective.
The Brute lifted him by the coat. Slammed him into the wall.
His vision went white. He swung blind. The brick broke. Crumbled.
They went down together, a tangle of limbs and pain.
He stumbled over the scavenger's corpse, hitting the ground hard, gasping.
As he scrambled to his feet, his hand brushed something hard under the dead man's .
Metal. Solid. Real.
A pipe.
Warren ripped it free from the scavenger's waistband.
He barely got it up in time to block another swipe.Cold steel. Heavy. Real.
He gripped it and rolled, just as the Brute stomped.
He jammed the pipe into its knee. Something popped. The Brute dropped a little.
Warren stood, barely.
Swung low. Into the gut. Again. Side of the head.
The Brute grabbed him, threw him into the wall.
Warren fell again. But so did the Brute.
He crawled. The Brute twitched. Warren got behind it. Clubbed the base of its skull.
The pipe didn't bend. It held. Solid. Best thing he'd touched since the truncheon.
He hit again. And again.
The Brute jerked, stuttered, then stilled.
Warren didn't stop. Not until the twitching stopped too.
He stood there, chest heaving. Pipe hanging from his fist like it was part of him.
Alive.
Only because the kit had warned him.
He staggered back, bleeding from his hand, breathing hard.
Not dead. Not yet.
He crouched beside the Brute. He worked his knife in with careful pressure and cut a fragment loose without damaging it. He wrapped it in cloth, tucking it separate from the others.
Two fragments. Two kills. No accidents.
The kit crept forward from the shadows, eyes bright in the half-light.
He hadn't noticed when it must have leapt out of his pocket.
He triggered his examine:
Attribute
Value
Type
Modified mammalian hybrid
Sub-classification
Ferret/Grison hybrid
Weight
Under 2 kg
Structural Density
High for size; low-profile musculature
Fur/Surface Texture
Short, rain-slick fur with refractive patterning
System Integration
Minimal signal; dormant companion chip
"Interesting," he muttered.
It paused just out of reach.
Warren knelt. Extended his good hand.
As the kit stepped closer, something caught his eye.
Near the base of its neck, just under the fur, a glint of matte casing. A chip. Not implanted like his or any he had seen before. This one was set differently, flush with the skin, deliberately exposed.
He shifted his grip slightly. Lifted the fur around it.
It wasn't cracked. Wasn't leaking. It didn't look decayed.
It looked like it was meant to be seen.
Not a standard chip. Not like anything he'd seen. Something else. Compact. simpler and silent.
Warren stared at it for a moment longer. Then tucked the fur back over it.
A dormant companion chip. Whatever that meant.
He didn't know what it did. Didn't know what it would wake up to become.
Still.
It sniffed him once. A slow, cautious breath, eyes never blinking.
Then it moved closer still, brushing against his arm.
He scooped it into his coat, feeling the tiny heartbeat flutter against his chest.
It curled quickly, fitting into the breast pocket like it belonged there.
Warren stayed crouched for a few seconds more, listening. Watching the corpse. Watching the shadows.
No more movement.
He reached into his coat again, adjusting the kit so it wouldn't press against his injuries.
"You're not useless," he murmured.
It didn't respond. Just stayed close, head hidden in the fold of his collar.
He tucked the kit closer. Secured the remaining fragments. Pulled his coat tight.
The cold pressed in again. His body felt heavier than before.
But something in him had steadied.
One more fight survived.
A real weapon in his hand.
And now, not alone.
He looked over at the blinking notification in the corner of his vision. He had ignored it until now.
You have reached Level 3.
He smiled, a thin, tired thing. The world had shifted again. Three fragments total, a real weapon in his hand, and her, the kit, something more valuable than he had any right to.
He wiped the blood from his fingers on the scavenger's coat, feeling the fabric drag against torn skin. The bandage he had wrapped earlier was gone, unraveling somewhere during the fight. He couldn't remember when it started to slip, only that it had.
He triggered Examine on the pipe in his good hand.
Attribute
Value
Material
Reinforced Industrial Stainless steel
Durability
88%
Structural Stability
High
Weight
2.7 kg
Balance Rating
High
Grip/Surface Texture
Rough (Primitive Wrapping)
Fatigue Resistance
Moderate
Sound Signature
Low
Modification History
Manual grip wrap applied
Origin
Varga Industrial Manufacturing
Notes
"Trusted industrial grade. Built for resilience under repeated stress."
Good enough.
He closed his fingers around the pipe's shaft, feeling the weight settle naturally into his hand. It wasn't perfect. It was better. It was real.
The brick had done well. Saved his life twice. He would remember it, like a name scrawled in the back of his mind.
The rain poured steady now. A wall of grey noise. No new threats. Just cold.
His hand ached, bones bruised from the beating he'd traded for his life.
He glanced down at the kit, still tucked in his coat. It hadn't moved. Trust or exhaustion, he didn't know. Maybe both.
Three fragments. A pipe. A heartbeat against his ribs.
The future was uncertain. It always had been. But this, this was something new.
He pushed upright, one knee at a time. The pain lanced through his ribs, sharpened breath catching against his teeth.
Alive.
Armed.
And something else. Not just survival. Something harder to name.
He moved slowly, checking the weight of the pipe in his hand. Good balance. No slip.
The broken machete lay forgotten in the mud. The scavenger's corpse already half-swallowed by the rain.
The fragments were wrapped and secured. Small, dense pockets of stolen future pressed against his coat.
He slipped the pipe through a makeshift loop in his belt, freeing his hand for the climb ahead.
The ruins loomed around him, gutted and wet. Shapes shifted in the mist. The world watched with empty windows and broken teeth.
He stepped into the open street, scanning every crumbling facade. No immediate movement. No new dangers waking.
Still he moved careful. Every step a choice.
The city was a throat. Wide open. Waiting.
He turned down a side path, letting instinct guide his steps. Small, narrow routes. Lines of retreat.
The kit stirred once under his coat. A faint shudder against his chest.
He settled his hand over the pocket without thinking. Not to trap. To steady.
Thunder rolled somewhere far off. Deep. Gut-deep.
The pipe bumped against his hip with each careful stride. A second spine. A promise he could keep swinging.
He cut through the back of a ruined market, ducking under fallen beams and rust-stained tarps.
Signs hung twisted from shattered poles. Language worn down to slashes and scars.
He moved like smoke. Breathing rain. Counting exits.
Another turn. Another empty hallway drowned in runoff.
Every so often he glanced upward. No watchers leaning from windows. No broken figures dragging through the mist. Just the ruin breathing in slow collapse.
He angled toward higher ground. Toward the pharmacy.
Home for the night. Maybe longer depending on how long he needed to recover.
The kit shifted again. A soft, questioning sound.
He didn't answer. Didn't need to.
The pipe slid free from his belt with a practiced motion as he neared the pharmacy steps.
Cautious.
Always cautious.
He circled the entrance twice. At first glance: no fresh blood, no dragged bodies. But closer, near the crumbled lip of the stairs, he caught it.
Footprints. Half-washed by rain. Shallow. Wrong.
He crouched, studying them. Too small for a Broken. Too light for a scavenger in full gear. Someone else.
Fresh. Maybe a few hours at most.
And leading inside.
He rose, pipe in hand, heart steady. Not fear. Not anger. Just calculation.
The kit stirred faintly against his ribs. A pulse of awareness.
He moved slow. Edging around the doorframe. Careful not to silhouette himself against the pale sky.
The footprints crossed the threshold. Light. Hesitant. But in.
He lowered himself into a crouch again. Listened. Waited.
Nothing but the breathing ruin and the steady rain.
Still he waited. Counted to sixty. Then another sixty.
Nothing moved. No cough. No scrape.
Only when the weight of the ruin pressed silent and heavy did he move.
One hand on the pipe. The other checking the kit tucked safe.
Step by step.
Into the dark mouth of broken stone.
Following the tracks.
Into whatever came next.