Tiline: TC1853.02.15 (Evening)
Location: Blackhawk Guild Fortress, Seventh Ring
Cooper stood in Commander Drake’s office, feeling the weight of her pale gray eyes assessing him with the kind of scrutiny that had built the Blackhawks into what they were—sharp, thorough, missing nothing.
The silence stretched as she circled him slowly, not predatory but clinical. Professional evaluation of evidence that contradicted everything her decades of experience told her should be possible. She’d touched his arm already, verified the muscle tone and skin elasticity. Now she was processing.
"Sit," she said finally, returning to her desk.
Cooper settled into the chair across from her, aware of Thorne standing at parade rest near the window. His commander—his friend—had laid everything out. Now it was Cooper’s turn to convince Drake they weren’t contamination-addled madn seeing visions in poisoned air.
Drake steepled her fingers, that calculating expression never wavering. "In your own words, Cooper. What happened to you?"
"I was dying, Commander." Simple truth, delivered without drama. "Not imdiately. Not today or tomorrow. But seventy-three years of accumulated damage—from crafting, from combat, from just living hard—it was catching up. My cultivation had been blocked for forty years since that accident in the Thornhaven foundry. ridians scarred, pathways closed. I’d made peace with it."
He held up his hands, studying them as if they belonged to soone else. Which, in a way, they did now.
"When that golden light hit during the gateway incident, sothing changed. Not surface healing. Deeper. Cellular level. I felt my body... rewinding. Gray hair darkening. Skin tightening. Joints that had ached for decades suddenly flexible again. And my cultivation pathways—" His voice caught slightly. "They opened, Commander. Damage that every healer told was permanent just... reversed."
"How do you feel now?" Drake’s question carried clinical precision.
"Like I’m sixty again instead of seventy-three. Maybe younger." Cooper flexed his fingers, still marveling at the smooth movent. "I can cultivate. Actually, circulate spiritual energy through ridians that had been dead for forty years. My Plateweaver craft responds differently now—faster, more precise. As if my body rembers being younger and decided to act accordingly."
Drake was quiet for a long mont, pale eyes studying him with an intensity that suggested she was cataloging every detail for later analysis. "This transformation—it’s permanent?"
"So far, yes. It’s been days. No reversion. No fading. This is my new baseline." He t her gaze directly. "I know how it sounds. Believe , I’ve spent those days questioning whether I’m hallucinating. But Mira’s checked thoroughly. Naida’s used her tracking senses. Jace tried to punch to see if I’d suddenly be fragile like before." A slight smile. "I wasn’t. This is real, Commander."
"And the others? The transformations Thorne described?"
"All real. Mira gained the ability to heal spiritual corruption—she demonstrated it on corrupted wildlife we encountered on the return journey. Jace’s cultivation jumped three full stages, confird by standard testing. Naida’s tracking senses expanded to perceive spiritual signatures she couldn’t detect before. Taron’s advancent was equally dramatic."
Cooper leaned forward slightly, voice dropping. "Six people, Commander. Six individuals experiencing impossible transformations simultaneously. That’s not mass hallucination. That’s not contamination poisoning. That’s evidence of forces operating beyond normal cultivation—forces that single us out specifically and granted abilities we’d need for what’s coming."
Drake stood, moving to the window overlooking the fortress grounds. Training yards were visible below, recruits running formations in the fading light. Normal operations. Routine rcenary work. The kind of predictable structure that defined guild life.
All of it about to beco irrelevant if Thorne’s report was accurate.
"The voice," she said quietly, not turning around. "You heard it too? This... planetary consciousness?"
"Yes. Through my soul. Words that resonated in a way normal sound doesn’t. ’Champions of Light. Defenders of the Innocent. Your promise has been kept.’" Cooper’s weathered voice—younger now, but still carrying seventy-three years of accumulated experience—held absolute conviction. "It wasn’t a person speaking, Commander. It was Ascara itself. The world we’re standing on, aware and communicating."
"And the vision? The apocalypse?"
"Shared experience. All six of us saw identical images—Thorne confird when we compared notes afterward. Ascara in ruins. That entity swallowing planetary consciousness. Gateways opening by the thousands. Nightmare armies consuming worlds." His hands clenched unconsciously. "It wasn’t a taphor or a symbolic warning. It was a prophecy. Showing us exactly what happens if we fail."
Drake turned back, her scarred face showing rare uncertainty. "You’re asking to believe the planet is alive. That interdinsional invasion is scheduled in three years. That cosmic war is coming to our doorstep, and six rcenaries have been chosen to prepare humanity."
"I’m asking you to believe the evidence in front of you, Commander." Cooper stood slowly, eting her gaze with the directness of soone who’d worked tal for fifty years and knew the difference between solid craft and flawed work. "My transformation alone proves sothing extraordinary happened. What Thorne described explains why and puts it in context. You can dismiss the cosmic elents as contamination-induced delusion if you want—but you can’t dismiss standing here looking twenty years younger than I did two weeks ago."
The office fell silent except for the distant sounds of fortress life filtering through the window. Sowhere, steel rang against steel. Voices called out training cadences. The normal rhythm of rcenary operations continuing oblivious to cosmic revelations.
Drake’s fingers drumd once on her desk—that tell again, suggesting her tactical mind was racing through scenarios and contingencies at a speed that had kept her alive through three decades of high-risk operations.
"Wait outside," she said finally. "Send Ascara to . I need to hear her version."
Cooper nodded, unsurprised. Drake was thorough. She’d question everyone individually, check for consistency, and probe for contradictions. Standard interrogation protocol when verifying impossible claims.
He moved toward the door, then paused at the threshold. "Commander? Whatever you decide—whether you believe us or think we’re delusional—that child needs protection. He’s six years old. What the Federation did to him..." His jaw tightened. "That can’t happen again. Not while any of us are breathing."
"Noted," Drake replied, her expression unreadable. "Send Ascara in."
Raven entered Drake’s office five minutes later, finding the Commander standing at her window with the kind of stillness that suggested deep calculation in progress. The pale gray eyes that turned toward her held weight—soone who’d just been presented with world-shifting information and was deciding how much to believe.
"Ascara." Drake gestured to the chair Cooper had vacated. "Sit. I’ve heard Thorne’s account and Cooper’s verification. Now I want yours."
Raven settled into the seat, violet eyes eting pale gray without flinching. This was an evaluation. Testing. Drake needed to determine if she was dealing with a genuine cosmic threat or an elaborate delusion shared by contamination-exposed team mbers.
"Where would you like to start, Commander?"
"The child. Elian." Drake’s voice carried professional neutrality that didn’t quite mask underlying intensity. "Thorne says he’s a dinsional anchor. That his death would have destabilized reality across hundreds of kiloters. That he matters to thousands of connected worlds. Explain how you know this."
Raven considered her answer carefully. Too much truth would raise questions about her own knowledge sources. Too little would fail to convince Drake of the stakes.
"The gateway that opened during his rescue—it wasn’t random dinsional instability, Commander. It was a response. A reaction to a dinsional anchor approaching death. When Elian’s life force began failing, reality itself started unraveling around him because he’s one of the foundational pillars keeping this region stable."
"How do you know that?"
"Because I felt it." Truth, just not complete truth. "When I touched him, when I was trying to stabilize his failing systems, I could sense the connections. Not like normal spiritual pathways—deeper. As if his essence was woven into the fabric of space itself. When he was dying, those connections were fraying. And where they frayed, reality tore. The gateway opening wasn’t an attack. It was a consequence. Structural failure as the anchor maintaining dinsional integrity collapsed."
Drake’s expression remained neutral, but Raven caught the slight narrowing of eyes that suggested skepticism fighting against evidence. "And you sohow reversed this? Brought him back from death while holding off interdinsional breach?"
"I don’t fully understand what happened during those monts, Commander." Also true. "Ti felt strange. Distorted. I was wrapped in that golden light with Elian, focused entirely on keeping him alive. Everything else—the gateway stabilizing, the creatures being pushed back—I only know what the team told afterward. From their perspective, only minutes passed. From mine..." She paused. "It felt longer. But I can’t say how much longer."
"Thorne ntioned your body blazed with multiple elents simultaneously. Fire, water, earth, air, lightning—all at once. That’s not normal cultivation capability."
"No, Commander. It’s not." Raven held her gaze steadily. "I can’t explain why I can channel multiple elents. I’ve always been able to, though I usually only show one or two to avoid drawing attention. But in that mont, when Elian was dying, and the gateway was opening, I used everything I had. Whatever it took to keep him alive."
Drake moved to her desk, pulling out a file. "You’re seventeen years old. Joined the guild three weeks ago. Before that, your records show years of abuse and isolation in the Imperial Court. No formal cultivation training. No docunted combat experience." She looked up. "Yet you destroyed a Federation research facility, held off an interdinsional breach, perford resurrection-level healing, and commanded respect from veterans who’ve operated for decades."
She set the file down precisely. "Who are you really, Ascara?"
The question hung in the air between them—direct, unavoidable, cutting through any pretense or deflection.
Raven had known this mont would co eventually. Drake was too sharp, too experienced to accept surface explanations when evidence suggested depths beneath. The challenge was answering honestly without revealing truths that would raise even more dangerous questions.
"I’m soone who understands what’s happening because I’ve seen it before." Partial truth. The best lies always were. "Not on Ascara specifically. But I’ve studied historical records of worlds undergoing magical awakening. I’ve seen docuntation of what happens when spiritual energy returns after prolonged suppression. I know the patterns. The signs. The consequences of being unprepared."
"Where did you access these records?" Drake’s voice carried the precision of soone trained to catch inconsistencies. "Your official history shows no education beyond basic literacy. No access to restricted archives. No opportunity to study interdinsional chanics or planetary awakening cycles."
"I had... teachers. When I was isolated in the Brenners’ household, suffering through years of abuse, I wasn’t entirely alone." Raven chose her words carefully, walking the line between revelation and concealnt. "There were people who saw potential in despite my circumstances. Who provided access to knowledge that official channels wouldn’t have permitted. Books that should have been burned. Docunts that contradicted accepted history. Teachings that prepared for exactly this kind of scenario."
Not entirely false. Her education across ninety-nine lifetis counted as teaching, even if Drake would never learn the actual source.
"These mysterious teachers," Drake said slowly. "They prepared you specifically for planetary invasion and cosmic war."
"They prepared to recognize when reality itself was shifting. To understand what happens when magic and technology collide. To identify threats that most people would dismiss as impossible until those threats were already consuming them." Raven t Drake’s skeptical gaze without flinching. "Whether that constitutes preparation for cosmic war specifically—I didn’t know for certain until we reached North Shrine. But I knew sothing was coming. I’d seen enough signs."
Drake was quiet for a long mont, pale eyes studying Raven with uncomfortable intensity. "You’re evading. Answering questions I didn’t ask while avoiding the ones I did. Standard technique for concealing information while maintaining plausible cooperation."
"I’m protecting sources that can’t be revealed, Commander." Raven’s voice carried steady conviction. "Not from you specifically. From everyone. There are truths I know that would put lives at risk if they beca common knowledge. Secrets that serve no purpose except endangering the people who shared them with ."
"Even when those secrets might help us prepare for invasion?"
"Especially then. Because the wrong people learning certain information would accelerate threats rather than prevent them." Raven leaned forward slightly. "Commander, ask yourself—does it actually matter where I learned what I know? Or does it matter whether that knowledge proves accurate? Whether the preparations I’m advocating actually increase our survival chances?"
"Both matter," Drake replied flatly. "I can’t commit guild resources based on intelligence from unverifiable sources. I need to know if you’re genuinely inford or well-aning but catastrophically wrong."
"Then test ." Challenge issued without hesitation. "Ask questions about magical awakening patterns. About technology-spirit energy interaction. About dinsional stability chanics. If my knowledge is fabricated or delusional, I’ll fail. If it’s genuine—even if you can’t verify the source—the consistency and accuracy will speak for itself."
Drake’s scarred face showed sothing that might have been approval. Testing was a language she understood. Concrete evaluation of claid expertise through practical demonstration.
"Fine. Question one: Technology is already failing in certain regions. You claim this will accelerate planet-wide. Explain the chanism. Why does returning spiritual energy specifically disrupt technological systems?"
Raven answered imdiately, drawing on knowledge refined across multiple lifetis studying magic-technology conflicts. "Spiritual energy operates on different fundantal principles than physics-based technology. Tech relies on predictable, consistent physical laws—electrons flow through circuits in calculable patterns, combustion generates force according to thermodynamic principles, materials maintain properties within defined paraters."
"But spiritual energy introduces variability. When cultivation energy passes through a circuit, it doesn’t just flow—it resonates. Changes the material at the quantum level. A copper wire isn’t just copper anymore when spiritual energy saturates it. It becos sothing hybrid, responding to both physical laws and taphysical principles simultaneously."
She continued without pause, voice carrying conviction born from experience rather than speculation. "The problem compounds as spiritual density increases. Initial failures look random—circuits shorting, engines seizing, communications disrupting. But it’s not random. It’s a systematic conversion as materials beco spiritually active. Technology designed for purely physical operation can’t function when fundantal properties shift beneath it."
Drake’s expression remained neutral, but Raven caught the slight lean forward that suggested genuine interest. "Solution?"
"Hybrid technology. Systems designed to operate using both physical principles and spiritual energy. The Eastern Empire is already developing early versions—spiritual forges that combine fire elent cultivation with traditional talwork. Communication arrays that channel qi alongside electromagnetic waves. Transportation that uses both combustion and spiritual propulsion."
"The Federation will resist this adaptation," Raven continued grimly. "Their entire civilization is built on technological superiority. Admitting that superior tech requires spiritual enhancent ans acknowledging their fundantal paradigm is flawed. They’ll fight the change until systems fail so catastrophically they have no choice but to adapt or collapse."
Drake nodded slowly. "Question two: The child—Elian. You claim he’s a dinsional anchor. Define that term precisely and explain how it differs from normal cultivation significance."
"Normal cultivators channel spiritual energy through personal ridian systems. They draw power from the environnt, refine it internally, and project it outward for techniques and combat. Even powerful cultivators are essentially closed systems—taking in energy, processing it, expressing it, but not fundantally altering the ambient reality around them beyond temporary effects."
Raven’s voice took on the lecturing quality of soone who’d taught this concept across multiple worlds. "Dinsional anchors are different. They’re not closed systems. They’re nodes. Connection points where spiritual energy from multiple dinsional layers converges and stabilizes. Their ridian networks don’t just channel power—they anchor reality itself. Maintain dinsional barriers. Prevent chaotic bleeding between parallel existence states."
"When a dinsional anchor is healthy and properly developed, reality within their influence radius remains stable. Physics work consistently. Dinsional barriers stay solid. Spiritual energy flows along proper channels rather than bleeding chaotically across boundaries." She paused, ensuring Drake was following the complex explanation. "When an anchor is damaged, corrupted, or dying, that stability fails. Reality becos unstable. Dinsions begin bleeding together. Barriers thin and eventually tear completely."
"The gateway that opened at North Shrine wasn’t an attack from external forces. It was a structural failure. Elian dying ant the dinsional anchor maintaining stability in that region was collapsing. Reality tore because nothing was holding it together anymore."
Drake absorbed this, her tactical mind clearly working through implications. "How many of these anchors exist on Ascara?"
"Unknown exactly. But based on planetary size and typical anchor distribution patterns across spiritually active worlds—probably between eight and twelve. Maybe fewer if Ascara’s awakening was suppressed long enough to prevent natural anchor developnt."
"And if all of them fail or beco corrupted?"
"Planetary dinsional collapse. Reality unraveling completely as too many anchor points destabilize simultaneously. The vision Ascara showed us—that entity consuming planetary consciousness and opening thousands of gateways—that becos possible when enough anchors fail that dinsional barriers lose all structural integrity."
Raven’s voice hardened. "Finding and protecting the other anchors isn’t optional preparation, Commander. It’s a survival requirent. Every anchor that dies or is corrupted makes Ascara more vulnerable. Every anchor that lives and develops properly makes invasion harder. The difference between successful defense and extinction might co down to whether we locate more anchors before our enemies do."
The office fell silent as Drake processed accumulated information. Not just Raven’s answers, but the confidence with which they were delivered. The consistent internal logic. The practical implications that suggested a genuine understanding rather than fabricated delusion.
Finally, Drake spoke. "You know things a seventeen-year-old shouldn’t know. Understand chanics that require decades of study to grasp. Demonstrate capabilities that don’t match your docunted history." Her pale eyes held Raven’s violet gaze with uncomfortable intensity. "I don’t believe your mysterious teacher’s story. It’s too convenient. Too vague. But—"
She stood, moving back to the window. "—I also can’t dismiss the evidence. Cooper’s transformation is real. The child’s abilities are docunted. Your knowledge, however acquired, demonstrates accuracy that random delusion wouldn’t produce. And the risks of ignoring a genuine cosmic threat outweigh the risks of preparing for one that might not materialize."
Drake turned back, decision made. "So here’s what happens. I approve the child’s adoption. He’s recognized as your family. Guild protection extends to him as a dependent of an active mber. You’ll work off the three hundred thousand gold dragons you cost us in lost cargo through high-risk contracts."
"Official story: North Shrine destroyed by dinsional instability before delivery. Cargo lost during ergency evacuation. Zero casualties despite extre conditions. Child rescued and brought to safety. Truth stays restricted to guild leadership and this team."
She moved to her desk, pulling out forms. "You and your team beco a special operations unit under my direct authority. Officially: elite contracts requiring unusual capabilities. Unofficially: preparation for potential cosmic threats. I provide resources, cover, and support. You provide full intelligence sharing and mission success."
Raven felt sothing unclench in her chest. "Agreed, Commander."
"Don’t thank yet." Drake’s expression held grim honesty. "I’m gambling guild resources on information from unverifiable sources. If you’re wrong—if this cosmic war doesn’t materialize—I’ll have wasted years of preparation on paranoid fantasy. If you’re right but we fail anyway, everyone dies regardless."
"I understand the stakes, Commander."
"Do you?" Drake’s voice dropped. "Because I’m also gambling on you personally. A seventeen-year-old with mysterious knowledge, impossible capabilities, and a child dependent who draws cosmic attention. You’re either humanity’s best chance or a catastrophe waiting to happen. And I won’t know which until it’s far too late to change course."
The words hung heavy between them—acknowledgnt of risk, commitnt despite uncertainty, the kind of calculated gamble that defined successful command.
"I won’t let you down," Raven said quietly. Simple promise. Absolute conviction.
"See that you don’t." Drake signed the adoption forms with decisive strokes. "Now go. I need to question the rest of your team. If their stories match yours and Thorne’s—if everyone shows the sa consistency despite individual questioning—then we move forward. If I catch contradictions suggesting contamination-induced shared delusion..." She left the threat unspoken.
Raven stood, recognizing dismissal. She reached the door before Drake spoke again.
"Ascara. One more thing."
She turned back.
"That child. Elian." Drake’s scarred face showed rare vulnerability. "What the Federation did to him—weeks of torture, essence extraction, treating a six-year-old as an experintal resource—that violated every principle this guild stands for. Regardless of cosmic significance or dinsional anchor status, no child deserves that."
Her pale eyes hardened. "Anyone who tries to hurt him again goes through the entire Blackhawk Guild. Make sure he knows that."
Warmth flooded Raven’s chest—gratitude mixing with determination. "I will, Commander. Thank you."
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