The common area had been loud thirty seconds ago.
Noah was still riding the tail end of it, the cheering and the handshakes and Angel’s kiss and Marcus talking about Lucas’s debriefs, all of it still warm in his chest, when he looked at Sophie’s face properly and the warmth went sowhere else.
She was holding his hand.
He had not registered when she had taken it. Just beca aware of her fingers around his and the way she was holding on with slightly more pressure than the mont seed to require.
He looked at her eyes.
"Sophie," he said quietly. "What is it."
She opened her mouth.
Nothing ca.
Kelvin’s hand landed on his shoulder from behind. Not a pat. A grip. The kind of grip that said I am here and I am not going anywhere and I need you to know that before whatever cos next cos next.
Behind him, Sam’s voice, low and even, the coordinator’s voice that knew how to move a room without making it feel like the room was being moved.
"Hey everyone, let’s give them so space yeah? Common area’s clearing out, there’s food on the lower deck, let’s go."
Then there was the shuffle of feet. The murmur of a crowd that understood sothing was happening and was choosing to be decent about it. Noah did not turn to watch them go. He kept his eyes on Sophie.
"Tell ," he said.
Sophie looked at their joined hands.
"Two years ago," she started, and then stopped. Took a breath. "Right after you left. A few days after." She looked up at him. "Mrs Harper collapsed at her apartnt. They called us because Eclipse was in her phone and you weren’t answering."
Noah felt sothing shift in his chest. Not a drop. More like the first vibration before sothing important moves.
"Void sickness," Sophie said. "That’s what the doctors called it. Void energy saturation in her cells at levels they’d never seen in soone who wasn’t awakened." She kept her eyes on his. "They think it was prolonged exposure. The academy, the cleaning work, being around beast cores for years and years without the biological capacity to process the ambient radiation. All of it accumulating slowly." She paused. "None of us knew that was even possible. Nobody thought to check."
"So where is she now," Noah said. "Is she still at the hospital? Is she still—"
"Noah."
"Is she still sick? Because void sickness, there’s no treatnt but the body can filter it, I’ve read about that, the doctors said that, so is she—"
"Noah." Sophie’s voice cracked on the second one.
He stopped.
She stepped closer to him and he stepped back without aning to. Not away from her. Just the automatic movent of a body that has received early information and is trying to create space to process it before the rest arrives.
"Sophie." His voice had gone sowhere different. Quieter. The kind of quiet that happened when the throat closed around sothing and sound had to find a narrower path out. "Where is she."
"The void sickness was eating her from the inside," Sophie said, and she was crying now, not loudly, just the silent kind where tears moved down a face without any of the sounds that usually accompanied them. "Her organs. The doctors said it had been progressing for years before the collapse, they just hadn’t caught it because she’d never had cause for the kind of scans that would have shown it. By the ti she ca in it was already—" She stopped. "They put her in a coma to slow it down. To give her body a chance." Another stop. "We tried everything, Noah. Kelvin tried to find a void stone fast enough, he tried, we all tried, but the damage was already too much. We had to let her go,"
"Let her go where," Noah said.
Sophie moved toward him.
"Let her go where, Sophie."
She reached for him and he stepped back again and his voice had climbed slightly without him deciding to climb it, not angry, just the voice of soone whose understanding was arriving in pieces and was refusing the next piece before it was ready.
"Let her go where?" he said again, and this ti it ca out hoarse, the kind of hoarse that had nothing to do with volu, the kind that ca from sowhere below the throat entirely.
Sophie shook her head.
She was sobbing now, her hand over her mouth, and she moved toward him again and he stood still this ti, not because he was ready, but because his legs had stopped offering options.
"Noah," she managed, through her hand.
He looked at her face.
He looked at Kelvin, still behind him, still gripping his shoulder, and Kelvin was not saying anything. Kelvin, who always had sothing to say, who could fill any silence with sothing, was just holding his shoulder and not saying a word.
The common area was empty now. Just the three of them and the Eclipse insignia on the floor and the viewport windows showing dark harbor water and the ambient hum of a headquarters that did not know it needed to be quiet.
Sophie reached for his hand again.
He looked at her fingers closing around his.
He looked at the floor.
Then he said one word, very quietly, to nobody and to the room.
"Domain."
The glow covered him from the feet up, that deep purple-black, and Sophie’s fingers closed on empty air where his hand had been, and the headquarters and the viewport and Kelvin’s grip on his shoulder all dissolved at once, and he was gone.
Sophie stood in the empty common area with her hand still outstretched and her fingers curled around nothing.
----
Sowhere in the Eastern Cardinal, the Eclipse faction were busy. They were having a full day today.
The settlent on the outskirts of ridian District had been cleared of its residents three hours ago, the evacuation running smoothly enough that the faction’s ground teams had been able to move straight into cleanup without the usual complication of civilians wandering back into active zones. What they were cleaning up was considerable.
Rhinosaurs. Kelvin had nad them two months ago when the first confird sighting ca through and the na had stuck because nothing else fit better. They were prehistoric looking in the way that sothing was prehistoric looking when it was large enough that your brain reached for the oldest, most extre reference point it had and still ca up short. Six of them were dead across the settlent periter, the largest one asuring thirty feet from snout to tail, and the Eclipse ch units were doing the heavy lifting work of moving the bodies while faction mbers in standard gear handled the periter and the settlers.
Seraleth stood near the eastern boundary talking to a group of residents who had been allowed back to assess their properties. She had the particular patience for this kind of conversation that ca naturally to her, listening fully before responding, her seven-foot fra sohow less intimidating in these monts than in combat, the settlers looking up at her and seeming to find it reassuring rather than alarming.
Lila was twenty feet away doing the sa with a different group, her military-cut shirt practical for the weather, her pale blue eyes moving between the faces in front of her and the treeline beyond the settlent with the regular rhythm of soone who was listening and watching simultaneously because those were not mutually exclusive activities.
A ch unit groaned as it lifted the second-largest carcass, servos working at capacity, and the operator inside compensated with a lateral shift that kept the load balanced as it moved toward the designated disposal area.
On the stream, the chat had been running since they arrived.
[GhostViewer44: where’s Noah tho, he’s been back two weeks and nothing]
[EclipseFanatic: fr where is he, thought he was back]
[TacticalObserver: is he gone again?? no one even said where he went the first ti]
[StreamGremlin: word from leaks in the faction says he’s mourning, his mom died apparently]
[NightshadeX: guardian, not his mom]
[StreamGremlin: sa thing]
[GhostViewer44: wait he didn’t know she died? how long was he actually gone]
[TacticalObserver: two years according to the faction mbers who were there when he ca back]
[EclipseFanatic: bro really didn’t know for two whole years, that’s devastating]
[NightshadeX: give him ti, he just found out]
[StreamGremlin: it’s been years though, why is he only mourning now]
[GhostViewer44: because he just found out genius, did you read what I wrote]
Kelvin and Lucas stood together at the settlent’s northern edge, watching the ch units work, hands on their hips.
"Two weeks," Kelvin said.
"I know," Lucas said.
"He has not co out of the domain once. Not for a al, not for a check-in, nothing. The chips I made specifically for him and snuck on all his dresses shows he is active in there, moving around, not just sitting. I can’t find where it is but I can tell he is okay. But he has not co out."
"I know," Lucas said again.
"Is that normal? For him? Because I have known Noah for years now and I have never seen him go two weeks without—"
"It is not normal," Lucas said. "Nothing about this is normal. She raised him. His parents left for the Ark when he was a child and she stepped in and did everything they did not do." He kept his eyes on the treeline. "Finding out she is gone after two years of not knowing, while also processing two years of absence all at once." He paused. "Give him ti."
"I am giving him ti," Kelvin said. "I am just also very worried while I am giving him ti."
"That is allowed. Thing is–" Lucas was going to say.
Then the ground moved.
Not an earthquake. Not the settlent shifting. The deep percussive vibration of sothing very large moving through dense forest at a speed that dense forest was not designed to accommodate. Trees at the settlent’s northern edge began moving in the wrong direction, not swaying with wind but being pushed aside from below, root systems losing their argunt with whatever was coming through them.
Then it broke through the treeline.
Kelvin looked at it.
"Oh," he said. "Well. At least we did not have to go looking for the alpha."
The rhinosaur that had just co through the treeline made the six dead ones look like a proof of concept. It was the size of a small house moving at locomotive speed, its horn alone the length of a standard vehicle, its hide sitting on its fra like armor plating that had grown there rather than been applied. Its eyes were forward and it was not slowing down and the settlent was directly in its path.
It hit the first force field barricade that two faction mbers threw up between it and the nearest structures.
The barricade held for approximately one second.
Then it did not.
The energy shield shattered outward in a visible ring and the rhinosaur ca through the space where it had been without changing speed or direction, the two faction mbers diving sideways as it passed between them.
"CEASELESS CHARGE," soone shouted from the eastern periter, the warning carrying across the settlent for anyone who had not yet processed what was happening. "IT IS NOT STOPPING, GET CLEAR."
Faction mbers moved, the ground teams pulling civilians back, the ch units rotating toward the threat with the slower response ti of heavy equipnt being asked to do light equipnt work.
Lucas was already airborne.
He went straight up first, maybe two hundred feet, and then a charge ca down and it was the kind of movent that did not leave a visible streak because the streak required so duration and the duration was not present. He ca down on the rhinosaur’s back with both hands generating sothing that started blue and went sowhere else in the last half second before contact, the region around his fists going briefly dark the way air went dark when it was about to beco sothing other than air, and the lightning that discharged on impact was not the branching atmospheric kind.
It was concentrated. Focused. The output of soone who had spent two years getting significantly better at a thing they were already exceptional at.
KROOOOM!!
The rhinosaur stumbled.
One step. Its front legs buckled at the knee and it went down on them and for one mont it looked like it was going to stay down.
Then it stood back up.
Lucas landed thirty feet ahead of it, looking back at it, his hands still running with residual charge.
"This one is tougher than the rest," he said, to nobody specific, to the air, to the general situation. He looked at his hands. "I need a little more."
He went back up into the clouds.
A woman’s voice cut through the settlent noise.
"MY SON." She was pointing at a house three structures deep into the settlent, directly in the rhinosaur’s current heading. "HE IS STILL IN THERE, I TOLD HIM TO STAY AND HE LISTENS, HE ALWAYS LISTENS—"
Kelvin’s thrusters fired before she finished the sentence.
"Where exactly," Kelvin said into his comm, already moving, the suit’s targeting systems pulling up the settlent layout.
She gave the address and Kelvin adjusted heading and opened fire on the rhinosaur simultaneously, the suit’s shoulder-mounted launcher sending a series of high-yield explosive rounds into the creature’s flank. Each one hit with enough force to crater standard reinforced concrete.
The rhinosaur’s hide absorbed them.
"Incredible," Kelvin said, watching his readouts. "Genuinely incredible. The EDF would love to make vests out of these things." He fired three more. "Unfortunately these things are alive and have opinions about that."
His infrared scanner swept the house as he approached, heat signatures resolving through the walls, and he found the child on the second floor in a back room, small and still and exactly where his mother had told him to stay.
Kelvin hit the front door at speed and it made way for him.
The interior was the standard architecture of a border settlent house, practical and compact, and Kelvin took the stairs two at a ti, his suit’s servos doing the work of making that fast, and found the door to the back room and pushed it open.
A boy. Maybe seven. Sitting against the far wall with his knees pulled up, looking at Kelvin with wide eyes that were scared but not panicking, the composure of a child who had been given an instruction by soone he trusted and was holding to it with everything he had.
"Hey buddy," Kelvin said, crouching down to reduce the suit’s silhouette. "Your mum sent ."
The boy looked at him. "She said stay."
"She did say that," Kelvin agreed. "And you did great. Genuinely, my dad would have loved you as his child, you actually listen." He held out the suit’s hand. "But she sent to update the instructions. New instructions are: co with the man in the robot suit."
"Why," the boy said.
"Because there is a very large animal outside that is not going to stop walking and it is currently walking toward this house." Kelvin kept his voice even, the tone of soone explaining a weather forecast. "And your mum would like you to be sowhere else when that happens."
The boy thought about this for a mont.
"Okay," he said.
"Outstanding," Kelvin said.
He picked the boy up and his sensors scread at him.
Not a malfunction alert. A proximity alert, the kind that fired when sothing large was within a distance that the suit’s collision avoidance system considered worth ntioning urgently. He checked the reading. The rhinosaur’s ceaseless charge had not stopped or redirected and was currently the length of two houses away and the length of one house away and—
Kelvin shut off the thrusters to prevent the boy from being thrown by the sudden stop, locked the suit’s shield systems to full external coverage, pulled the child against his chest inside the suit’s protective fra, gritted his teeth, closed his eyes and waited.
The impact did not co.
He opened his eyes to see the house was now open to the daylight, completely wrecked.
Outside, through the house’s remaining front wall, sothing had stopped the rhinosaur.
Not slowed it. Stopped it. Five tons of ceaseless charging apex predator, mid-charge, and it had stopped, the way things stopped when sothing had decided they would stop.
A hand was holding its horn.
One hand. Wrapped around the forward-facing horn of the largest rhinosaur any of them had seen, and the arm attached to the hand was attached to a person standing in the rubble of what had been the front section of the house, dressed in clothes that were now considerably less intact than they had been, covered in plaster dust and wood splinter.
"You good?" Noah said.
Kelvin stared at him through the gap in the wall.
"Uh huh," Kelvin said.
He lifted off, the boy still in his arms, and cleared the structure, rising to a height where he could see the full picture. Noah was holding the rhinosaur by the horn with one hand the way you held an annoying child by the collar, the animal’s legs churning against the ground, its ceaseless charge ability running continuously and going nowhere because the thing holding the horn had decided nowhere was where it was going.
Then Noah let go and stepped sideways in a single motion.
The accumulated force of the stalled charge released all at once and the rhinosaur went forward with everything it had been building and hit the empty ground ahead of it at full montum and the impact of sothing that size hitting the earth at that speed produced a crater and a sound and a dust cloud that the settlent would be talking about for a week.
The rhinosaur lay in the crater.
Not dead. But deeply reconsidering its priorities.
Noah walked out of the rubble. He dusted off his sleeve. He looked at the rhinosaur in its crater and said, in the tone of soone who had genuinely ant to take the morning off, "I’ll let soone else handle this one."
He looked up.
The clouds above the settlent had gone dark.
Not overcast. Dark, in concentrated spots, small circles of it appearing and multiplying, five of them then ten then twenty and still growing, each one maybe the size of an umbrella from this height. And from each dark spot sothing descended, dropping fast, trailing blue electrical lines that flickered and branched as they fell, making a sound that was not quite a screech and not quite a whistle but lived in the register between the two.
Wyvern hatchlings.
The hatchlings hit the rhinosaur.
Twenty-sothing of them, each one carrying the full electrical charge of a Hollow Blizzard lineage that had been building since they hatched, and they hit the downed rhinosaur in a coordinated swarm that the beast had absolutely no plan for, the blue lightning running across its armored hide and finding the gaps between the plates and the softer tissue at the joints, and the rhinosaur made sounds it had not made during any of the preceding combat.
Noah stood in the settlent’s northern approach with plaster dust on his shoulder and watched them work.
Lucas ca down from the clouds.
He hovered twenty feet up, looking at the hatchlings, looking at the rhinosaur, looking at Noah standing there watching all of it with his hands in his pockets. He stayed there for a mont, running whatever calculation he was running.
Then he looked at Noah directly.
"I knew you got strong," Lucas said. "But how strong?"
Noah looked up at him.
He did not answer.
The stream chat was moving too fast to read individual comnts, the scroll rate past anything the display could manage cleanly, thousands of ssages arriving simultaneously from people who had been watching a routine cleanup operation and had just seen sothing that was not routine in any definition of the word.
The hatchlings circled above the downed rhinosaur, their blue lightning trails cutting patterns in the dark air, making that sound, waiting.
Noah watched them and said nothing.
User Comments
0 comments from readers