The dical tent slled like antiseptic and field air and urgency.
Twelve cots, twelve survivors, twelve sets of injuries being catalogued with the efficiency of people who had been waiting outside a lethal facility and were now doing the thing the waiting had been for. Zeph lay on his cot and let them work.
The bee sat on his shoulder. A dic reached for it once, professionally, the way dics reached for things that needed to be moved.
The Dinsional Anchor engaged—ten ters of locked physics, the dic’s hand stopping against nothing visible. The dic withdrew, made a notation, and worked around it.
The notation read: ’creature bonded to subject, removal inadvisable.’ This was accurate.
Whisper was three cots down, receiving the kind of attention that serious findings produced.
Four broken ribs, a punctured lung, the Translation Plague permanent in the records. The dical team worked with the urgency of people who had identified a priority.
Kael held the new sword through his entire assessnt. The dic docunted the existing amputation, updated the records, moved on without asking about the sword. The conversation about surrendering it to inventory had not been initiated. Kael was not going to be the one to initiate it.
Tank’s hands took the longest. Third-degree burns, nerve damage, extended recovery tiline. The dic presented the findings and Tank looked at them the way he looked at everything—receiving the information and converting it directly into the next operational requirent. The next requirent was recovery. He would approach it accordingly.
Marcus had a broken leg and a flagged inventory. The storage ring’s artifact volu had triggered the intake process imdiately, and the reviewing officer had requested a full declaration.
Marcus provided a partial list that was comprehensive enough to satisfy the docuntation requirent and incomplete enough to leave certain items undisclosed. The officer looked at the list and then at Marcus. Marcus looked back with the professional patience of soone who had been in this specific dynamic before and knew exactly how it resolved.
It resolved with the officer writing ’declared items as listed’ and moving on.
Seris was in a separate section—mana depletion syndro at the threshold of temporary paralysis, her body’s response to reserves emptied beyond minimum viable levels for several hours. The notation said temporary.
Zeph’s assessnt said moderate. Exhaustion, lacerations, bruising consistent with shockwaves and walls. The dic writing moderate understood the word was relative to the rest of the tent and applied the relativity consciously. The bee remained on his shoulder throughout. The dic worked around it without comnt after the first attempt.
A dic from the other side of the tent paused near Zeph’s cot and looked at the bee with the expression of soone whose professional frawork did not have a category for what they were looking at. "What is it?" she asked.
"A bee," Zeph said.
She looked at him. "That’s not a bee."
"It hatched from an egg I carried through the facility. It killed the thing that killed nine hundred and eighty-eight people." He paused. "It’s a bee."
She looked at it for another mont, then returned to her work without further questions. The bee watched her go with its compound eyes and communicated nothing.
-----
The commander arrived six hours after the escape.
Not Voss—Voss was confird deceased, her absence from the twelve survivors its own docuntation. This commander had the bearing of soone who had been implenting ergency protocol outside a lethal facility and was now converting the waiting into assessnt. He stood at the center of the tent and looked at twelve people on twelve cots.
"Tell everything," he said. "What happened in there."
The twelve survivors looked at each other first. The spontaneous version—the look that happened between people who had been inside the sa thing and were now being asked to describe it to soone who hadn’t been. It lasted two seconds and communicated everything that needed communicating before the accounts began.
The account took two hours.
The six from the other paths went first—corridors Zeph’s group hadn’t seen, encounters they hadn’t had, the specific arithtic of how they had survived when the people around them hadn’t. Different details. The sa shape. Sothing very old and very lethal, most people dead, a small number not.
Zeph’s group added the convergence chamber, the Harvester’s first engagent, the side corridor, the trap, the run, the Core chamber. The bee’s ergence. The combat. The Harvester’s dissolution. The self-destruct and the crawl and the sprint.
The commander listened. He asked questions.
"The creature—the Harvester. You’re saying a bee killed it."
"The bee used two abilities," Marcus said. "One prevents dinsional phasing. One slows ti in a cone. Together they made the Harvester solid and slow simultaneously. We attacked while it was in that configuration."
"A bee," the commander said.
"A fist-sized crystalline bee of alien origin that hatched from an egg the facility had been built around for several years," Marcus said. "Yes."
The commander looked at the bee on Zeph’s shoulder. The bee looked back with its compound eyes. The commander made a notation and moved on.
The egg," the commander said, turning to Zeph. "Where did you find it?"
Zeph considered the question for a mont. "The facility made its own arrangents," he said. "I ended up with it. The Warden’s Badge confird the designation." He t the commander’s eyes with the expression of soone who had answered the question and was not elaborating further.
The commander held his gaze for a mont, noted sothing, and moved on.
The questions continued. The answers were accurate in everything they contained. So things were not contained in them.
The prophecy tablets were not ntioned—not the images, not the translations, not tablet ten with its depiction of a specific person standing over ruins with a caption about salvation and extinction. The commander’s questions never reached the tablets. The Core chamber description covered the prison pod and the sphere and the storage compartnts and the combat and stopped there.
Marcus’s real function was not ntioned. High-level awakened, standard entry, contributed through combat and knowledge. The knowledge’s sources were not specified.
"You knew a significant amount about the facility’s layout," the commander said to Marcus.
"I do extensive research before entering sanctioned sites," Marcus said. "It’s a professional habit."
The commander noted this and moved on.
Zeph’s System was not ntioned. The Primordial Architect card, the tablet that had depicted it with the caption about awakening being harvest—none of it surfaced. Calamity Strike and the CP counter were described in standard terms and the standard frawork held them without difficulty.
Whisper’s full reading capability was not ntioned. The commander noted the Translation Plague, noted the alien language, drew no connection between the two because the connection had not been offered.
"Can you communicate anything about what the inscriptions said?" the commander asked Whisper directly.
Whisper picked up the notepad. Wrote: PARTIAL IMPRESSIONS ONLY. THE LANGUAGE WAS COMPLEX.
The commander accepted this and moved on. He left to compile a report that was accurate in everything it contained and incomplete in the ways it needed to be.
-----
The compensation notification arrived on Zeph’s interface while the commander was still writing.
[SANCTUARY AUTHORITY: COMPENSATION TRANSFER]
[FACILITY INCIDENT: EXCEPTIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES CLASSIFICATION]
[BASE COMPENSATION: 50,000 CREDITS]
[EXCEPTIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES BONUS: 25,000 CREDITS]
[TOTAL TRANSFER: 75,000 CREDITS]
[CURRENT BALANCE: 77,461 CREDITS]
Zeph looked at it for a long mont.
And muttered ’wow...that was fast’
"What is it?" Kael asked from the next cot, the new sword still in his grip.
"Compensation. Seventy-five thousand credits."
Kael was quiet for a mont. "I entered with four hundred."
"I entered with two thousand four hundred and sixty-one."
"This is crazy" Kael said.
"Yes," Zeph said. He looked at the number again. 77,461. The default state of soone who had been managing the gap between what things cost and what he had for long enough that the gap had felt permanent. The gap was gone. The number was real.
"What are you going to do with it?" Kael asked.
Zeph thought about this. The bee sat on his shoulder, the compound eyes catching the interface light and scattering it in small prismatic patterns across the cot. Outside, the crater reflected the sky. Twelve people in a dical tent, all of them with 75,000 credits they hadn’t had this morning and injuries they were going to be managing for considerably longer than the credits would last.
"I don’t know yet," Zeph said. "Sothing that isn’t a facility."
Kael made a sound that was not quite a laugh but was adjacent to one. "Good plan."
Finally, Zeph thought. Finally not broke again .
The bee had no comnt. It had been alive for less than a day and its concerns were spatial physics, temporal chanics, and its carrier. It sat on his shoulder and the number on the interface was 77,461 and the facility was a crater and they were outside and that was the state of things.
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