The field tent had done what field tents were built to do—stabilize, assess, keep people alive long enough to move them sowhere better. When the dical team confird all twelve survivors were stable enough for transport, they packed the equipnt and called for vehicles. Nobody argued about leaving. The Wildlands had earned its na and none of them needed a second invitation to put it behind them.
The drive to Northern Bastion took several hours. Zeph spent most of it awake, watching the city appear on the horizon as the vehicle cleared the Wildlands’ tree line.
It started as a smudge of light and grew into buildings and streets and he watched with the specific satisfaction of soone who had not been certain they were going to see it again and was now seeing it and was not taking that lightly.
The Northern Bastion dical Facility was everything the field tent wasn’t—permanent, clean, equipped with the confidence of a building that had been doing this for a long ti.
Twelve survivors were checked in, assigned a dedicated wing on the third floor, and inford they would be kept for three days minimum.
The Authority called it observation. Everyone in the wing called it what it was: ti to exist without sothing actively trying to end the existing.
The first day was sleep.
Not chosen sleep—the kind the body enforced after running on empty for hours without consultation or negotiation. Zeph woke twice, confird the bee was still on his shoulder, confird the ceiling was a normal ceiling in a normal building, and went back under both tis without resistance.
The second day, Jin left his door open.
He had entered the facility with forty nine other people and lost them all in the first corridor—not to the Harvester, just to the path itself. He’d spent eleven hours navigating alone, Level 41, moving slowly, reading every wall, surviving by never engaging with anything avoidable. His open door was an invitation that cost nothing to accept, and people accepted it.
"How did you get through the facility alone?" Zeph asked him on the second morning.
"I moved like I was already dead," Jin said. "Nothing worth chasing."
"That’s genuinely the most depressing survival strategy I’ve ever heard," Kael said from the doorway.
"It worked," Jin said flatly, and nobody could argue with that, so nobody did.
Lyra had found a sealed chamber in the early hours and stayed in it until the facility’s walls began failing. She erged with several hours of conserved energy, ran the entire evacuation route in one sustained sprint, and arrived at the exit looking considerably fresher than everyone else. The rest of the group found this privately irritating and professionally impressive, and the tension between those two responses produced a specific kind of respect.
"You hid in a room," Vex said at dinner on the second evening.
"I made a tactical decision based on available information," Lyra said pleasantly.
"You hid in a room and it worked perfectly," Vex said, in the tone of soone who had lost two fingers and felt entitled to his opinion on the matter. Lyra accepted the characterization with the serenity of soone whose survival record spoke for itself.
Thorn had a new scar along her jaw from whatever had taken Vex’s fingers and she didn’t describe the encounter. The wing had developed the collective wisdom not to press her on it, which had taken approximately one attempt and one specific quality of silence that had discouraged all subsequent attempts. She contributed to conversations at a consistent rate and her position on follow-up questions remained clear.
Mira and Seris found each other on the second morning and entered a three-hour conversation that excluded everyone else entirely. It was conducted in the technical language of healers comparing depletion recovery rates, reserve threshold violations, and the specific physical consequences of operating a healing system beyond its recomnded paraters.
Corvus survived by thods he kept to himself. His injuries implied a story and his silence protected it. He made the silence comfortable for the people around him, which was its own contribution.
By the second evening, all twelve were eating together in the common area without anyone having formally organized it. Chairs had migrated, food had arrived in the appropriate quantity, and twelve people who had been inside the sa thing occupied the sa space without requiring a reason.
The bee examined the food with its compound eyes. "Does it eat?" Jin asked.
"It hasn’t asked," Zeph said.
"It’s been alive three days and hasn’t eaten anything."
"We have an understanding," Zeph said. "It handles the spatial physics. I handle the food. It seems satisfied with this division of responsibilities."
"What is its na?" Lyra asked.
"I haven’t nad it," Zeph said.
Thorn set her fork down with deliberate patience. "You carried it through a lethal facility. It killed an apex predator. It has lived on your shoulder continuously since the mont it hatched." She looked at him. "You have not nad it."
"I’ve been processing things," Zeph said.
"You have been lying in a bed for two days," Vex said.
"Busy lying in a bed," Zeph said. "There’s a difference."
The table declined to accept this distinction but also declined to press further. The topic was tabled. The bee, apparently indifferent to the naming controversy, continued examining the food.
-----
Marcus appeared on the third morning with a folder, a pen, and the expression of soone who had been productive while everyone else was sleeping.
"Hunter’s Association registration," he said, placing the folder on the common area table. "I took the liberty of drafting the paperwork. I need twelve signatures."
Kael picked it up. "You did this at what ti?"
"Early," Marcus said.
"How early?"
"The kind of early that doesn’t have a polite answer," Marcus said. "Sign the form."
The form went around the table. Party type: Combat. Specializations: listed. Benefits: shared dungeon access, loot distribution, ergency support network, survivor’s bond. The na field at the top read: The Twelve.
"Who decided the na?" Lyra asked.
"Soone said it on the second evening," Marcus said. "It stuck."
"I said it," Jin said.
"I said it first," Vex said.
"Neither of you said it first," Thorn said. "I said it. You were both talking over at the ti."
The question of who had said it first was not resolved and was not going to be resolved. The form went around the table anyway. Zeph signed third, after Tank and Whisper. Whisper had read every line of the docunt with the focused attention they gave everything, signed it, then written one word on the notepad and held it up for the room.
FAMILY.
The word sat in the common area and did what accurate words did—it didn’t require response, it required acknowledgnt.
"Well, here we are," Tank said. "The Twelve. We watch each other’s backs."
"All twelve," Tank said.
"All twelve," Marcus confird.
-----
Marcus found Zeph on the balcony on the third afternoon.
Zeph was looking at the city with the unhurried attention of soone who had not been certain they were going to see it again and had not yet finished being glad they were wrong.
The streets below were full of people who had no idea what had happened in the Wildlands, which made them, in his current estimation, extrely fortunate. The bee sat on his shoulder and tracked the movent below with compound eyes that found everything equally worthy of examination.
"You’ve been on this balcony for an hour," Marcus said.
"I’m aware," Zeph said. "I find it satisfying."
"The city."
"The city," Zeph confird. "The streets. The buildings. The people walking around not being hunted by a twelve-foot crystalline predator." He looked at it for another mont. "It’s the best thing I’ve seen in days."
Marcus stood beside him and looked at the city
Then he got to the reason he had co.
"The prophecy tablets," Marcus said. "The Architect warning. We need to talk about what it ans."
"Later," Zeph said. "I’m still processing being alive."
"Reasonable," Marcus said. "But the System being a harvest chanism is not information that sits quietly." He paused. "The facility built itself around the egg. The egg chose you. Tablet ten showed you standing over ruins with a caption about salvation and extinction."
"I know," Zeph said.
"That’s design," Marcus said. "Not coincidence. Design."
"Later," Zeph said, in the tone that communicated he had heard everything and was not ready and was not going to be persuaded into ready.
Marcus stood on the balcony for thirty more seconds, then went inside. His brace marked each step on the corridor floor—the sound of soone managing sothing without making it anyone else’s problem.
Zeph stayed. The city was below and the credits were 77,461 and the party was registered and the na was The Twelve. Sowhere in the Wildlands, in a crater that used to be a facility, twelve tablets had known he was coming before he existed.
Later, he thought.
The later had teeth.
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