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Shadow Husband:I Have a Hidden SSS-Class System-Chapter 33: THE HUNT
Central Jakarta stretched out below them—a sprawling maze of buildings, streets, and hidden spaces where a pocket dimension could hide.
Rama stood on the rooftop of a commercial building, his [Dungeon Sense] active, scanning the area in a five-kilometer radius. Sekar stood beside him with a tactical map, marking grid sectors as they cleared them.
"Anything?" she asked.
"Commercial district, normal. Residential zones, normal. Three active gates—all registered and monitored." He closed his eyes, focusing harder. "No unusual mana concentrations."
"Mark sector G-7 as clear." Sekar updated the map. "That’s twelve sectors down. Forty-three to go."
This was the fourth hour of their search. Twenty-three Players spread across Central Jakarta in coordinated teams, each with someone who had detection abilities. But Rama’s [Dungeon Sense] was the most reliable—specifically designed to find hidden dimensional spaces.
"Next sector," Rama said.
They moved.
SECTOR G-12 - 10:47 AM
Rama activated his skill from a new vantage point. The familiar sensation of expanded awareness spread outward, touching every gate and mana signature within range.
Normal. Normal. Registered gate. Civilian Hunter training facility. Normal—
Wait.
There. At the very edge of his range. Not a gate. Not a building. Something... wrong. A blank spot where his sense couldn’t penetrate, like a hole in reality itself.
"Found something," Rama said. "Four point eight kilometers northeast. Can’t read it clearly—there’s some kind of concealment, but it’s definitely artificial."
Sekar immediately relayed coordinates to the Network. "All teams, potential target identified. Converge on coordinates but maintain distance. This could be the primary location."
Within minutes, three Player teams repositioned, forming a loose perimeter around the target zone.
It was an old office building scheduled for demolition. Twenty stories, mostly empty, windows boarded up. The perfect place nobody would look twice at.
"I’m going closer," Rama said. "Need to confirm before we commit forces."
"Not alone." Sekar gestured to her guild team. "We go together."
They descended to street level and approached carefully. The building looked exactly like it should—abandoned, forgotten, unremarkable.
But Rama’s [Dungeon Sense] was screaming.
[ANOMALOUS SPACE DETECTED]
[POCKET DIMENSION ENTRANCE: 127 METERS]
[WARNING: CONCEALMENT MAGIC ACTIVE]
[ESTIMATED POWER LEVEL: HIGH]
"It’s here," Rama confirmed. "The entrance is masked, but it’s definitely a pocket dimension. And it’s big."
"How big?"
"Bigger than the warehouse complex we raided. This is a full base, not just a meeting point."
Yanto appeared from around the corner with Budi and Sari. "Confirmed?"
"Confirmed. The Architect’s mobile base is inside this building."
"Then we go in." Yanto pulled up tactical plans on his tablet. "But carefully. We learned from last time—assume triple the expected resistance. Assume traps. Assume he knows we’re coming."
"He definitely knows," a voice said from above.
They looked up.
Hasan stood on a third-floor fire escape, smiling that same predatory smile. "Did you really think we wouldn’t notice twenty-three Players converging on one location? We’ve been tracking you since you started your grid search."
"Then you know this ends today," Yanto replied.
"Oh, it ends. Just not how you think." Hasan gestured to the building. "The Architect extends an invitation. All of you. Come inside. Let’s settle this properly."
"It’s obviously a trap," Dewi said.
"Obviously. But you’re going in anyway. Because if you don’t, the Architect executes Plan B." Hasan held up his phone, showing a video feed. "Recognize this place?"
Rama’s blood went cold.
It was a school. Elementary school. Children playing in the courtyard during recess.
"There are four confirmed Player children at this school," Hasan said casually. "Ages six to nine. All children of Network members who refused Ascended recruitment. The Architect is willing to leave them alone. But only if you come inside and face him."
"You’re threatening children," Budi’s voice was deadly quiet.
"We’re providing motivation. There’s a difference." Hasan’s smile widened. "You have thirty minutes to enter, or we start with the youngest. Your choice."
He vanished into the building.
Rama’s hands clenched into fists. "We can’t—"
"We don’t have a choice," Ratna interrupted, appearing with the rest of the Network. "He’s backed us into a corner. We go in or children die."
"It’s a trap designed to kill us all," Sari pointed out.
"Then we spring it carefully." Yanto’s expression was grim. "Guild Master, I need your team to secure that school. Evacuate it if possible. Do it quietly—we can’t let them know we’re moving on it."
"Done." Sekar was already calling her people. "But you need backup inside that dimension."
"You’re not coming," Ratna said firmly. "This is—"
"I’m coming," Sekar interrupted, her tone absolute. "And so is my strike team. Four A-Rank Hunters. We go in, we keep to the perimeter, we provide emergency extraction if needed. Non-negotiable."
The two women stared at each other.
"Fine," Ratna said finally. "But you follow Player tactical commands. This is our operation."
"Agreed."
Yanto assigned teams rapidly. "Full assault formation. Everyone goes in. Budi, Rama, Arif, Ayu—frontline. Sari, Dewi, myself, six others—primary strike force. Remaining Players—support and tactical flexibility. Guild Master Aditya and her team—emergency response only."
"Twenty-seven Players, four guild Hunters, against unknown forces in a hostile dimension," Budi summarized. "Wonderful odds."
"Better than letting children die," Rama said.
"True." Budi hefted his shield. "Then let’s end this."
They entered the building together.
The transition was immediate and disorienting.
One moment, walking through a decrepit lobby. The next, standing in a massive underground complex that shouldn’t exist—hundreds of meters across, multiple levels visible, lit by harsh white light.
And waiting for them in the center was the Architect, flanked by thirty-nine Ascended Players.
Not four remaining in Jakarta. Thirty-nine.
He’d called in reinforcements from across Southeast Asia.
"Welcome," the Architect said, his voice echoing. "Thank you for accepting my invitation."
"Where’s Shadow Killer?" Yanto demanded.
"Recovering. Your wife hits hard, Mr. Kusuma." The Architect smiled at Rama. "But he’ll live. Unlike most of you, I expect."
"You threatened children," Ratna said coldly.
"A bluff. I wouldn’t actually harm them." The Architect’s expression didn’t change. "But I knew you’d believe I would. That’s the difference between us—you follow rules. We do what’s necessary."
"Enough talk," Budi growled. "We’re here. What do you want?"
"Simple. Rama Kusuma." The Architect pointed directly at him. "Surrender to us willingly, and everyone else walks away. Refuse, and we fight until one side is eliminated."
The offer hung in the air.
Rama felt every eye turn toward him.
"Why me?" he asked.
"Because you’re special. Your growth rate is impossible. Level 44 in thirty days. The fastest growth in recorded Player history." The Architect stepped forward. "I’ve been a Player for eight years. Level 52. It took me six years to reach what you achieved in one month. So either you’re using some method we don’t know about, or your System is different. Either way, I want to understand why."
[HIDDEN QUEST PROGRESS: 28/30]
[TIME REMAINING: 36 HOURS]
The notification pulsed. Was this related? Was his rapid growth because of the hidden quest deadline?
"I don’t know why I’m growing faster," Rama said honestly. "The System gave me a quest with a deadline. I’m trying to complete it. That’s all."
"A quest with a deadline. Interesting." The Architect’s eyes gleamed. "What’s the quest?"
"Reach Level 50 in thirty days."
"And you’re at forty-four with thirty-six hours remaining. Cutting it close." The Architect smiled. "Here’s my counter-offer. Surrender. I’ll help you reach Level 50. I have resources, knowledge, optimization techniques. You’ll complete your quest, see what the reward is, and then we discuss your future."
"And if I refuse?"
"Then we fight. And statistically, you die before reaching Level 50. Quest fails. You never learn what the reward was. Such a waste."
It was tempting. Pragmatic. Almost reasonable.
Except it meant abandoning everyone who’d fought beside him. Betraying the Network that had protected him. Giving up his freedom to a man who wanted to start a war.
Rama looked at Sekar. At Yanto. At Budi and Sari and Dewi. At twenty-three Players who’d risked their lives alongside him.
"No," he said clearly. "I don’t surrender. We fight."
The Architect sighed. "Disappointing. But expected." He raised his hand. "Kill the others. Bring me Rama Kusuma alive."
Thirty-nine Ascended Players attacked.
The battle was immediate chaos.
The Ascended had numbers and coordination. The Network had desperation and skill. Sekar’s team provided devastating support from the perimeter, their A-Rank power tipping engagements.
Rama found himself fighting three Ascended simultaneously—Level 38, 40, and 42. All experienced. All trying to disable rather than kill.
He used everything Sekar had taught him. Pattern recognition. Defensive rotations. Efficient skill usage. [Adaptive Combat] made him more effective with each passing second.
[HP: 168 → 142 → 127]
Taking damage but managing it. His [Titan’s Endurance] passive kept his regeneration high.
Around him, the battle raged. Yanto and Budi held the center, their tank abilities creating a defensive core. Sari and Dewi carved through enemy ranks with precision strikes. The twins moved in perfect synchronization, their combined attacks devastating.
But the numbers were overwhelming.
The Architect watched from the rear, not engaging personally. Just observing. Analyzing.
"Rama!" Sekar’s voice over comms. "Your six!"
He spun just as an Ascended teleported behind him. Used [Void Step] to create distance, then countered with [Phantom Strike].
[LEVEL UP!]
[LEVEL 44 → 45]
The notification came mid-combat. The sudden stat boost gave him a burst of energy.
Five more levels. Thirty-six hours.
He could do this.
An explosion rocked the complex—Fajar’s summoned creatures detonating against a cluster of Ascended. Three went down. But two more Network Players fell seconds later, overwhelmed by coordinated strikes.
They were losing.
Slowly but steadily, the Ascended were winning through attrition.
"We need to fall back!" Ratna called. "Fighting position delta!"
The Network retreated toward a more defensible position—a chokepoint where numbers mattered less.
The Ascended pressed hard, not giving them space to reorganize.
Then Sekar moved.
She’d been holding back, providing support, staying in her assigned role. But watching Rama nearly die twice in thirty seconds broke her restraint.
She entered the battle properly.
An S-Rank unleashed was terrifying. She moved through Ascended Players like they were standing still, every strike precise and devastating. Five Ascended went down in fifteen seconds.
The tide shifted instantly.
The Architect finally moved. "Interesting. An S-Rank with no System, fighting on par with Level 40 Players." He engaged Sekar directly.
They clashed in the center of the battlefield, both so fast Rama could barely track them. Level 52 System optimization versus pure S-Rank skill and power.
They were matched. Perfectly matched.
Which meant they’d fight for hours while everyone else died around them.
"Rama!" Yanto’s voice. "We need to break their formation! Target their support casters in the back!"
"They’re protected by their frontline!"
"Then we break through! Alpha team—with me!"
Budi, Rama, Arif, and Ayu formed up and charged.
It was suicide. Absolutely suicidal.
But it worked.
They smashed through the Ascended frontline through pure aggression and coordination. Reached the support casters. Rama’s [Molten Strike] combined with the twins’ synchronized attacks dropped three casters in seconds.
Without support buffs, the Ascended frontline weakened. The Network pushed forward.
Rama took massive damage doing it.
[HP: 127 → 71 → 43]
[WARNING: HP CRITICAL]
But they’d turned the battle.
The Ascended, for the first time, were losing.
The Architect disengaged from Sekar, reassessing. "Clever. Sacrificing your tanks to eliminate support. Effective but costly."
Rama was barely standing, sustained by healing potions and regeneration.
Around him, the battle had reached a stalemate. Both sides bloodied, exhausted, at their limits. 𝒇𝙧𝙚𝓮𝙬𝙚𝓫𝒏𝓸𝓿𝓮𝒍.𝓬𝙤𝓶
"This is pointless," the Architect said. "We’re evenly matched. This fight could last hours. People will die on both sides for no gain."
"Then surrender," Yanto said.
"Or we end this properly." The Architect looked directly at Rama. "Single combat. You and me. Winner takes all. Your side wins, we disband the Ascended and cease operations. I win, you come with me willingly."
"Don’t," Sekar said immediately. "He’s Level 52. You’re 45. He’ll kill you."
"Not kill," the Architect corrected. "Defeat. I gave my word—I want him alive."
Rama considered. Keep fighting and people die. Or face the Architect one-on-one and maybe, possibly, somehow win.
The math was terrible. The odds were worse.
But it was the only way to end this without more casualties.
"I accept," Rama said.
"Rama—" multiple voices protested.
"I accept," he repeated firmly. "Single combat. Let’s finish this."
The Architect smiled. "Excellent. Everyone else—stand down. Witness."
A circle formed—Network on one side, Ascended on the other, Sekar’s team at the edges.
In the center, Rama and the Architect faced each other.
Level 45 versus Level 52.
Four weeks of experience versus eight years.
Every skill Rama had learned versus the mastery the Architect possessed.
"Begin," someone said.







