The harbor was quiet the way only deep night produces, that kind of silence where even the water seed to be holding its breath.
Noah stood at the release fra with the Category 4 beast core in his palm, its pulse visible as a faint amber glow between his fingers. He'd drawn it from storage without ceremony, no flash, no announcent, just reached into that internal space and pulled it forward until it sat warm and steady in his hand. No one had even noticed this.
The energy coming off it was subtle to anything without the sensitivity to read it, but to sothing built around bioelectric perception, sothing that hunted by reading the electrical signatures of living things, it would register like a fire in a dark room.
He closed his fingers loosely around it and waited.
An hour passed.
The village behind him had mostly gone dark in the first thirty minutes, the last few windows going out one by one as the people of Harrowfield decided that watching the harbor from their doorways was less interesting than sleeping in their beds. Gladys had positioned herself on a rooftop at the harbor's edge for the first part of the evening, visible as a silhouette against the sky, but sowhere around the second hour she'd pulled back inside. She trusted the setup. Or she trusted him. Either way, she'd gone.
The recruits held their positions for longer than he'd expected. That was the gate, he thought. You could complain about a lot of things the gate did to people but you couldn't say it failed to teach them about staying alert when it mattered. They held their positions with their backs to walls and their eyes on their sectors and they were serious about it for the first three hours.
Then the night started doing what night does to stationary people.
It didn't happen all at once. Finn went first, which was surprising because Finn had seed like soone with solid discipline until you realized solid discipline and four hours of standing still in the cold with nothing happening were two different problems. He leaned against the dock post and his chin dropped and then he was gone, his breathing evening out with a slowness that was almost dignified. One of the yellow recruits on the road approach sat down against a building to rest his feet and didn't get back up. Cael lasted another forty minutes before the wall he was leaning against apparently beca a bed by incrental degrees.
Werner was the last of the periter group to go down, and even then he did it sitting upright against a dock post with his gauntleted hand resting on his knee, which was at least a posture that suggested he'd fought the losing battle consciously.
Nami walked over to Noah around the third hour and stopped a few feet away.
"I don't want to talk about last night," she said.
"Alright."
"I just want to ask you sothing."
He looked at her.
"Have you encountered one before? A Hollow Blizzard Monarch." She kept her voice level. "You were too familiar with it earlier. The approach corridor, the electrical field, the bioelectric drain. Pip looked like he was hearing it for the first ti. You sounded like you were reciting sothing you already knew."
Noah held the core steady in his palm, feeling its pulse against his skin.
"Pip isn't the only one who studied," he said.
She held his gaze for a mont, reading him. He gave her nothing and she knew it and accepted it in the way she accepted most things she couldn't imdiately resolve, by filing it and moving on.
"Fair enough," she said.
She ca and stood beside him at the fra, looking out at the harbor web. The rope and copper wire caught what little light existed, thin lines crossing the darkness above the water.
He thought about telling her. Not the whole of it, not the tiline and the system and the nineteen-year-old from 2077 standing in a dieval harbor holding a crystallized fragnt of void energy, but enough. Sothing. The shape of it if not the specifics.
He thought about Nami sitting across from him in a camp room on the first night of training, laying down rules about distance with the efficiency of soone who'd needed those rules before and hadn't found them honored. About eight weeks of working alongside each other in the particular intimacy that cos from shared danger and the absence of anyone else to trust. About last night, the snow in her hair, the gap closing between them.
He thought about the quest. About extinguishing the flas and whatever completing that ant for his ability to go ho. About Sophie and Lila and Sera and Angel.. and everyone who was currently living through whatever was happening in 2077 without him there.
He thought about what it would an to let Nami in, and what it would an to leave after.
He kept his mouth shut.
"My brothers used to do this," Nami said, after a while.
He glanced at her.
"Night watches. We grew up on the coast, not far from water. There were things that ca out of the dark sotis, not dragons, smaller things, but still. My brothers would take turns on watch when my father was away fishing." She paused. "I was never included. Too young first, then too small, then just too female. There was always a reason."
"But you stayed up anyway."
"I'd sit behind the door and listen. Pretended to sleep whenever one of them checked." She almost smiled. "I knew everything that was happening on those watches. Every sound they heard, every discussion they had about what might be out there. They thought they were keeping safe by keeping ignorant."
Noah was quiet.
"Is that why you joined?" he said eventually.
"That's the simple version." She turned the question over like she was deciding how much of the longer version she wanted. "My father died when I was twelve. Storm took his boat, him and two crew, three days before the fishing season ended. My brothers took over the fishing. My mother expected to take over the house. And for a while I did because that was what you did." She looked at the harbor water. "But I was the one who kept the accounts. I was the one who negotiated with the buyers when my brothers tried to get into argunts about the price of catch. I was the one who went to the village council when the dock fees went up and argued them back down. My brothers would have just complained to each other about it." A pause. "None of them noticed that I was the one doing that. Or if they noticed they didn't say so. I was just the sister. The one who handled things when they forgot to."
Noah thought about the first night at camp. The way she'd walked into that room with rules already prepared, boundaries already drawn, the complete absence of any hope that the situation would be managed fairly without her managing it herself.
"You weren't harsh," he said. "First day."
She looked at him.
"You were prepared," he said. "There's a difference."
She was quiet for a mont. Sothing moved through her expression that she didn't na and he didn't try to na for her.
"You should loosen up a bit," he said. "I an it as sothing good. Not everything is a siege that needs defending. So things are just things."
"Easy to say when you're not the one who has to fight for every inch of space you're allowed to occupy."
"I know." He did know, in ways she couldn't imagine and that he couldn't explain. "But you've got the space now. You're here. You made it here on your own terms. You can stop defending sothing you've already won."
She looked at him for a long ti. The harbor was very still around them.
"You're annoying," she said finally.
"I've been told."
She sat down on the dock edge, her legs hanging over the water. He stayed standing at the fra. They didn't talk for a while after that, just occupied the sa silence, and it was comfortable in the way that silence gets between people who've been through enough together to not need to fill it.
Eventually, in the fourth hour, her breathing changed. He heard it before he saw it, the slight deepening, the evenness arriving. She'd pulled her knees up to her chest at so point and tucked herself against the dock post, and she was asleep.
He looked at the harbor.
The core pulsed in his hand.
He stood there alone with it.
The cold was what nearly got him.
It arrived gradually, the way genuine cold does rather than the sudden drop of wyvern-weather, just the natural progression of deep night bleeding the warmth out of everything. His breath had been fogging for the last hour. The dock planking under his feet was cold enough to feel through his boots. His hands were steady but the chill was in them, working at his concentration in that patient way that cold has of eroding things.
Around him, scattered across the harbor and the approach roads, twenty-eight recruits were breathing fog into the night air. So had curled inward in their sleep, drawing their arms close, their bodies making the unconscious adjustnts for warmth.
Nobody had taught them that. That was just the body knowing what it needed.
Dragon knight academy, Noah thought, watching them sleep. Excellent training for gates and beast combat and technique developnt. Less excellent preparation for the particular military discipline of never falling asleep on overwatch regardless of conditions. The kind of thing that got drilled into you by people who'd seen what happened when it wasn't.
He felt his own eyelids grow heavier, just for a mont. Just the suggestion of it.
He let out a slow breath and looked at the core in his palm and let the amber glow pull his focus back to center.
"Co on," he said quietly, to nothing, to the dark harbor and the empty sky above it. "I know you're out there. I know you can sense this." He turned the core over in his fingers, feeling its warmth. "Co on."
The harbor stayed still.
He waited.
At so point deep into the night, sothing then happened.
KROOOOMMMM
The thunder ca without a buildup.
Not the rolling approach of real weather, not even the sharp crack of a nearby strike. Just a concussive boom from directly above, the kind that arrived and departed in the sa instant and left the air humming with charge.
Noah's hand closed around the release fra.
The sky above the harbor entrance split white.
He could see it in that flash of brilliance, the approach corridor he'd designed the trap around, the rope grid spanning the harbor entrance in its three-layered configuration, the nets hanging ready behind it, the copper wire running along both dock walls glowing briefly in the electrical light.
And through the middle of all of it, already there and already past, a streak of black edged in cold blue.
The trap engaged.
The rope grid hit the wyvern's passage and the copper wire did exactly what copper wire does when sothing that generates a continuous bioelectric field travels through it at speed. The discharge ran the full circuit in under a second, jumping from fitting to fitting, every iron component in the structure suddenly alive with current. The nets dropped, all three layers, snapping down under their weighted edges and spreading across a combined forty-foot radius.
For one mont, the harbor lit up blue-white.
The wyvern was through the nets before they fully deployed, because of course it was, because one to two seconds of slow-down was exactly what had been promised and exactly what was delivered. But the structural disruption was real. The trap didn't stop it. The trap flinched it, caught the edge of its passage and redirected a fraction of its montum, and that fraction was enough.
Noah saw it in the flash. Black scales with blue running through them like the electricity wasn't separate from the body but continuous with it, lines of cold light tracing from the base of a long neck down through the torso and along a tail that ended in a cluster of what looked like crystalline spines. Slender, faster than the eye could really follow, more like witnessing a shape in a photograph than watching a living thing move.
Then it was gone.
The nets hit the water. The copper wire smoked along its length, several sections blown out entirely. The rope grid had three of its lines snapped, the frayed ends swinging free where the wyvern's passage had sheared through them. Debris fell from where the iron fittings had blown off their mounting posts under the surge.
The sll of ozone and scorched wood sat over the harbor like a decision.
Behind Noah, recruits were waking up.
He heard it before he turned, the sudden scramble of people coming out of sleep into confusion, the sharp sounds of soone who'd been dreaming peacefully and had arrived in a world that slled like lightning and looked like destruction. Boots on dock planking. Voices overlapping.
"What happened—"
"Sothing hit the—"
"Is everyone—"
Nami was on her feet and had both knives in her hands before she was fully awake, the muscle mory covering the gap between sleeping and ready without any assistance from conscious thought.
She looked at Noah. At the destroyed trap. At the smoke still rising from the copper wire.
"Did it work?"
"Partially," Noah said.
"Partially," she repeated, taking in the state of the harbor structure. Three of the forty rope lines were down. The net system was half-deployed in the water. Two iron fittings had blown clean off their posts and landed on the dock planking, still hot enough that they'd scorched the wood where they landed.
Cael was standing at the harbor's edge looking at the water. "There are dead fish again," he said.
Sera was already moving through the recruit group doing a headcount, which was the right instinct and Noah noted it. Werner had co fully awake with the speed of soone whose body had been trained to transition from rest to ready, and he was scanning the periter with his gauntleted hand raised slightly, force of habit overriding the fact that there was nothing to hit.
"Over here," Finn said, from near the inner dock.
He was crouching over sothing on the planking. Several recruits moved toward him and Noah followed, looking over shoulders until he could see what Finn had found.
A beast core.
Small by the standards of what Noah had been carrying, maybe Category 1, sitting on the dock planking and glowing with a faint internal light that pulsed slowly, the rhythm of sothing still active.
"Where did that co from?" Sera asked.
Nobody had an answer. They stood around it in a loose circle, looking at a crystallized fragnt of void energy in a tiline that had no frawork for explaining what void energy was or why it would be lying on a dock at two in the morning.
"Soone get Valen," Noah said.
---
Valen arrived still pulling on his jacket, his expression carrying the specific alertness of a man who'd been half-awake since he'd heard the boom from his room in the Saltback and had been listening carefully ever since. He looked at the destroyed trap, at the smoking wire, at the dead fish floating in the harbor. He looked at his recruits, standing and uninjured.
Then he looked at the core.
He crouched over it without touching it, his face close, his eyes moving across its surface with the attention of soone who'd handled these things before and knew what they looked like at various states.
"Beast core," he said. "Active. Category 1 by the look of it." He looked up at the recruits around him. "Where did this co from?"
Nobody answered.
Valen looked at Noah. Noah said nothing, which was its own kind of answer, or at least it gave Valen sothing to file alongside everything else he was filing.
"The wyvern?" Cael said, from the back.
"Wyverns don't carry beast cores," Werner said. "They don't have them in the way beasts do."
"Then where—"
"Where's Burt?"
Nami's voice cut through the overlapping conversation, not loud, just clear. She was standing at the edge of the group looking at the space where Noah had been standing a mont ago.
Everyone looked.
The release fra stood empty. The dock behind it was empty. The harbor was empty.
Nami looked at the core on the dock planking, then at the destroyed trap, then at the dark water.
"Where," she said again, to no one in particular, "is Burt."
---
The cave arrived with him rather than the other way around.
One mont Noah had both hands locked around the wyvern's neck, which had seed like a reasonable decision in the two seconds between the wyvern clearing his trap and coming directly for him at the harbor's inner end, and the next mont the world was dark rock and the sound of his own body hitting stone at speed and rolling and hitting more stone before friction finally won the argunt with montum.
He lay on his back in the dark for one full second, staring at a ceiling he couldn't see, doing a rapid internal inventory of his structural integrity.
Everything hurt. Nothing was broken. He sat up.
The cave was large, or at least the section he was in was large, the ceiling sowhere above where his eyes could reach in the darkness. The walls showed score marks, long parallel gouges in the stone at various heights, and in several places the rock was discolored, blackened and in so sections glazed over into sothing glassy, the signature of extre heat or electrical discharge applied repeatedly over ti.
Sothing had been living here for a while.
He stood up slowly, brushing rock dust off his jacket. His left shoulder was going to be unpleasant for the next twenty minutes, but his enhanced recovery was already making quiet progress on that. He looked around at what the limited light source let him see, which was a faint blue luminescence coming from sowhere further into the cave system, cold and electric, casting shadows that moved slightly.
He knew what that glow was.
The screech arrived from sowhere behind and above him, the sa high-pitched compression of sound that had crossed the harbor, but contained now, bouncing off stone walls until it ca from everywhere simultaneously.
From the tunnel entrance he'd tumbled through, a blue light was advancing. Not the scattered ambient glow of the deeper cave. Concentrated, moving, brightening as it closed the distance.
"Shit," Noah said.
He moved.
The cavern had cover in the form of a rock formation to his left, large enough that he got behind it in three strides and pressed himself flat against the stone a half second before the wyvern ca through the tunnel entrance.
The blast that followed was not lightning.
It was cold.
He felt the temperature drop hit him even behind the rock, a wall of cold that arrived ahead of the actual projectile and dropped the air temperature by what felt like thirty degrees in a single second. The frost blast hit the far wall of the cavern and the stone it touched went white, ice crystals spreading outward from the impact point in a fractal pattern that reached six feet in every direction before stopping.
The ice didn't lt afterward. It just sat there, white and final.
Noah pressed himself against his rock and thought about that.
He ca around the edge of the formation at a low angle, putting as much of the rock between him and the wyvern as possible while getting a look at what he was dealing with. The blue light was coming from the wyvern itself, the lines of electric light running through its scales, but up close it was clearer than it had been at the harbor.
It was smaller than Storm. Notably smaller, the proportions different in a way that went beyond simple size comparison. Where Storm's build had always carried weight, mass, the kind of fra that suggested raw destructive capability as a primary feature, this one was built along different lines entirely. Slender, the neck long and flexible, the body tapered toward the tail in a way that was almost elegant if you weren't currently hiding from it. The crystalline spines at the tail's end were fanned slightly, each one lit from within by that cold blue light, and the eyes, when the wyvern turned its head and Noah got a clear look at them, were a pale silver with pupils that were currently very wide in the dark.
"Are you a girl?" Noah asked, before he'd fully decided to say it.
The wyvern's head turned toward his rock formation with the precision of sothing that had just heard exactly where he was.
The spines lit up.
Noah ran.
The frost blast hit the rock formation behind him and he heard the stone crack, ice expanding through the fractures with enough force to split the formation down the middle. He was already in motion, moving through the cavern in the direction of the deeper glow, putting distance between himself and the wyvern while his mind worked through the problem at speed.
She gave chase.
He heard her moving behind him, not at harbor-crossing velocity, she was navigating the cave system which required sothing closer to actual thought, but still fast, still alarmingly fast for sothing her size in confined quarters. A frost blast ca over his left shoulder and the wall beside him went white. He angled right. Another blast, low this ti, aiming for his legs, and he jumped it, felt the cold pass under him close enough to numb his ankles briefly through his boots.
He thought about why Kelvin loved Storm and feared Storm.
Kelvin had explained it once, in that way Kelvin had of explaining things that were both highly technical and intensely personal. Storm was affectionate, which was terrifying in a creature of that scale because affection from sothing that generated a continuous bioelectric field that could stop a human heart ant you were very close to sothing that could kill you by accident. But Storm was also, at its core, not a combat animal by preference. It had power that it had largely learned to manage because the alternative was damaging things it didn't want to damage.
A wild one, Kelvin had said, with no bond and no learned restraint, would be different. It would be everything Storm was in terms of capability with none of the behavioral modifications that ca from years of living alongside humans.
The blast that hit the wall directly in front of Noah was close enough that he ran through the ice crystals at the edge of it, and several of them opened small cuts across his left forearm where the edges caught him.
He noted this without slowing down and filed it under things to be concerned about later.
'She's not trying to kill ,' he thought, processing. 'She could. She's had three clear shots and taken two of them wide. The blasts are controlled. She's trying to herd .'
The realization arrived at almost exactly the sa mont as the cavern opened up.
He ca through a narrow passage into a space so large that the ceiling disappeared completely into darkness above him, the walls retreating in every direction to distances his eyes couldn't confirm. The blue glow in here was stronger, coming from multiple sources rather than one, and it took him a full second to understand what he was looking at.
They were everywhere.
Oval-shaped, roughly the size of large barrels, clustered in groups of four and five across the cave floor in patterns that weren't random. Each one sat in a slight depression in the stone, nestled there with the settled permanence of sothing that had been placed carefully and not disturbed. The surface of each one had a quality to it like polished obsidian, dark but not quite opaque, and from inside each one that sa cold blue light pulsed, slow and steady.
He stopped walking.
The passage behind him was lit with approaching luminescence.
"Oh," Noah said. He looked at the clusters, at the careful spacing between them, at the shallow depressions worn into the rock that suggested the stone itself had been shaped over ti to hold these. "I see why you're cranky now."
He turned toward the passage entrance, where the wyvern was already coming through.
"Are these all yours?"
User Comments
0 comments from readers