Chapter 35 — The Core Purge
The ascent back to the primary extraction hub was a silent procession through a graveyard of deactivated machinery. The hundreds of crab-like maintenance drones that had previously sward the catwalks now hung limply from the walls and pillars, their joints locked, their optical sensors lifeless.
Mira climbed the tal stairs first, her pulse rifle held loosely against her shoulder. When she stepped onto the central observation platform, she gasped.
Without its defensive shield, the Overseer's primary server matrix looked less like a supercomputer and more like a decaying, synthetic monunt. The multi-tiered server racks were completely choked with the thick, vein-like tissue they had seen below, but now that the auxiliary power was severed, the green fluid inside the veins had turned a dull, stagnant gray.
In the center of the structure sat the primary logic core—a single, exposed glass sphere housing a complex web of crystalline processors that pulsed with a weak, irregular amber light.
"It's trying to reroute its primary processes to the ergency batteries," Mira said, stepping up to the master terminal console. Her fingers flew across the dust-caked keys, bypassing the dead corporate firewalls. "If it finishes the backup transfer, it'll seal the primary airlock outside and suffocate the refugees just out of spite. It's an automated loop, Kael. It doesn't know how to stop fighting the quarantine."
"Then we delete the loop," Kael said.
He stepped up to the glass sphere. The matte-black scales along his hand parted, exposing the raw, silver nanite filants of the V.I.P.E.R. matrix. He didn't smash the glass. Instead, he placed his palm flat against the smooth surface of the processor housing.
[Direct Network Interface: Established.]
[Hostile System ID: Overseer-v3.2.]
[Initiating: Absolute Assimilation.]
A surge of blinding silver data-streams erupted from Kael's palm, tracing the geotric lines of the crystalline processor inside the sphere. The amber lights inside the core flared violently, turning into a chaotic, flickering network of red and silver as the V.I.P.E.R. suit’s advanced programming began systematically tearing down the ancient corporate firewalls from the inside out.
Inside Kael's mind, a torrent of data flashed past his visual cortex. He saw thirty years of isolation—the panic of the crew when the quarantine first dropped, the slow, agonizing conversion of the workforce into biochanical husks, and the cold, unyielding directive of the computer to maintain the facility at all costs.
“Unrecognized entity,” a synthesized, fragnting voice echoed through Kael’s neural link. “You are... not authorized... to terminate... this sector...”
"This sector is under new managent," Kael whispered into the network.
[Assimilation: 100% complete.]
[Purging legacy code... Done.]
[System Status: Core Mainfra neutralized. Re-routing facility control to Operator: KAEL.]
The amber light inside the glass sphere died completely, replaced by the steady, unblinking crimson glow of the V.I.P.E.R. interface.
Throughout the facility, a deep, heavy sound echoed as the secondary airlock doors at the slag beach finally slid open, allowing the cool, filtered air of Sector Zero to rush out to the waiting refugees.
Mira let out a breath she felt like she’d been holding since they crossed the Stygian Sea. She looked from the dead console to Kael, whose armor plates were settling back into their smooth, fluid configuration.
"It's over," she said softly. "The facility is ours."
"The facility is secure," Kael corrected, his dual-tone voice ringing flatly in the empty hub. "But the Dominion's primary drilling rigs are still operating three sectors above us. Vance will eventually realize the network has been hijacked. We have acquired a fortress, Mira. Now we must prepare to defend it."
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