The moment Marco stepped past the invisible boundary of the settlement, his mechanical heart pulsed.
Not in fear but in irritation.
A low, rhythmic vibration echoed faintly beneath his ribs — a reactor responding to surveillance.
Someone was watching.
He didn't need confirmation. He already knew who.
The ruler of this territory had sensed them long before they arrived. Marco had expected it the moment he suggested seeking refuge here. Sanctuaries were not blind zones. They were domains built with the sheer strength of an individual after the control, or owning of an armament.
What kind of strength does an individual needs in other to convince a bunch awakened and terrifying mutants who have already gone through hell and willpower tempering??
And domains always have an owner.
Still, Marco walked forward without slowing.
As long as he wasn't offended, everything was fine.
Assuming the owner was reasonable.
One walked a few steps behind, eyes moving constantly.
The houses were crude but stable — layered metal sheets, reinforced concrete fragments, mutated organic growth hardened into walls. Smoke rose faintly from chimneys, but there were no people outside.
Windows closed.
Doors half-shut.
Curtains barely parted.
He remembered Veronica's explanation.
"Sanctuaries are safe."
Yet this did not feel safe.
It felt… restrained.
Most of the mutants were huddled inside their homes. He could sense subtle movements within structures, shifting heat, quiet breathing. No one lingered outside unnecessarily.
Safety here did not mean comfort.
It meant survival under supervision.
Their path was suddenly blocked.
Two figures stood in the middle of the worn settlement road.
The first was a tall, broad-shouldered man with spiky, uneven hair the color of dried ash. He stood about 1.8 meters tall, but his build made him appear larger. His upper body was bare, revealing thick, exaggerated muscles that looked unnaturally dense — both arms wider than a woman's waist.
Large, larva-like veins pulsed visibly beneath his skin, bulging and shifting as if something alive crawled within them. Each pulse released a faint shimmer of energy that distorted the air around his arms.
He wore only rugged, dirt-stained pants secured by a reinforced belt holding scavenged tools and blades.
Beside him stood a woman in stark contrast.
She was slender — almost delicate in build — with long, flowing dark hair that framed a sharp, beautiful face. Her features were refined, her eyes narrow and observant. She wore thin, clean, semi-transparent layered fabric that wrapped around her body in elegant folds, revealing the smooth outline of her figure without vulgarity.
The material shimmered faintly, almost like woven silk, moving with the slightest breeze. It was minimal, but not careless. Intentional. Controlled.
She looked fragile but clearly was not.
The spiky-haired man smiled.
It twisted his stiff, rough features into something unsettling — a grin that was friendly only on the surface.
"Travelers from the wasteland," he said casually. "That's rare."
His eyes scanned the five of them instantly.
He understood immediately.
These weren't ordinary sanctuary migrants.
He extended a hand slightly.
"Talon," he introduced himself. "Scavenger."
His grin widened faintly.
"Some of us still enjoy the taste of food and yearns for the relics of the past, even if we don't need them."
I'm the guy responsible for supplying em in case you're in need of some.
He continued smoothly.
"You've entered territory governed by His Excellency — the Heat Emperor."
The way he said the title carried something layered.
Worship, Fear and Submission.
Marco didn't react.
Steven's posture didn't change.
Brant's eyes narrowed briefly.
Veronica remained neutral.
One simply watched.
Talon observed everything.
Micro-expressions. Muscle tension. Breathing patterns.
Predators or prey?
His gaze lingered on Marco.
The one who stood at the front.
The air around Marco felt compressed. Heavy. Irritated.
Like a machine running at high pressure.
Talon's grin stiffened slightly.
He could tell.
This one was volatile.
The woman stepped slightly forward.
"This is Vanya," Talon said smoothly. "My assistant during expeditions."
Vanya's lips curved faintly, her voice low and smooth like silk sliding over glass.
"We can guide you," she offered. "First visits can be… overwhelming."
Her eyes flicked carefully over each of them.
Measuring, weighing, assessing value.
Marco walked forward.
He did not respond nor slow.
He did not even acknowledge them, he's already tired of these little mind games played by a bunch of ants. If not for the new territory, belonging to someone else, with their own rules, he would have already pulverised them.
He simply walked passed them as if they were air.
The rest of the group followed without a word.
If Marco did not speak, they had no reason to.
Silence was sometimes the greatest insult.
Talon remained standing where he was.
The grin did not fade.
But something behind his eyes sharpened.
Once the group had moved far enough ahead, Vanya exhaled softly.
"They didn't even look at you properly," she said, voice carrying faint irritation. "You let them pass like that?"
Her tone was smooth — but edged.
Talon's eyes followed the retreating figures.
"Anyone who survives in the wasteland for all these few years," he replied calmly, "is not something you provoke without reason."
He cracked his neck slowly.
"Especially not ones like those."
He had seen it.
The dark storm inside the large one.
The furnace in the blood user.
The shifting instability of the healer.
The mechanical pressure around the leader.
And then…
The last one.
He frowned slightly.
There was something off.
He couldn't pinpoint it.
But something about the fifth felt wrong.
Empty.
"I'll test them," Talon continued, grin returning. "Carefully."
Vanya tilted her head.
"To see if they're predators?"
Talon's eyes narrowed faintly.
"…or prey."
Far above the sanctuary, inside the dark castle that had once been a church—
A man stood still.
Watching.
And smiling.
