The Architect vault pulsed softly above the Convergence Axis chamber.
Its imnse geotric structure hovered like a silent star of knowledge suspended in the air. Thousands of interlocking rings rotated slowly around a crystalline core, each ring etched with glowing Architect symbols that shifted and rearranged themselves as the archive continued to unlock deeper layers of information.
Streams of data flowed outward like luminous rivers.
So projections translated instantly through the Constellation's decoding systems. Others remained stubbornly opaque—locked behind encryption fraworks older than most civilizations currently alive in the galaxy.
Every few seconds another layer unfolded.
Another system activated.
Another secret revealed.
For hours, Lysarra had continued decoding.
For hours, Kaelith had grown increasingly irritated.
Ethan noticed it long before she said anything.
Kaelith rarely stayed still for extended periods. Normally she leaned against nearby structures with casual confidence, cracked sarcastic jokes, or paced restlessly whenever sothing bored her.
But now she stood near the far edge of the chamber.
Her arms were crossed tightly across her chest.
Her posture rigid.
Her eyes fixed on the floating Architect vault above them.
Watching.
Not amused.
Not relaxed.
Just watching.
Ethan recognized the tension in her stance.
She looked like a predator assessing a threat.
He glanced toward Lysarra.
She remained focused on the decoding interface at the central console, her fingers moving through the holographic projections as she unraveled another layer of the archive's language structures.
Symbols rotated around her in complex mathematical patterns.
Her concentration was intense.
Precise.
She was deep inside the data.
Which ant she probably hadn't noticed Kaelith's mood yet.
Ethan exhaled quietly.
This was going to be interesting.
Finally, Kaelith spoke.
"I don't like this."
Lysarra didn't look up.
"You've ntioned that."
"No."
Kaelith's voice sharpened slightly.
"I an I really don't like this."
That got Ethan's attention imdiately.
He turned toward her.
"What's bothering you?"
Kaelith lifted one hand and pointed directly at the massive Architect archive floating above them.
"That."
Lysarra sighed softly.
"The archive?"
"Yes."
"It's information."
Kaelith's expression hardened.
"It's Architect information."
Ethan stepped slightly between them, instinctively positioning himself where he could see both of them clearly.
"Okay…" he said slowly.
"But that's kind of the point."
"We need to understand what happened during the old war."
Kaelith's eyes narrowed.
"Or maybe we're doing exactly what the Architects want."
Lysarra finally looked up from the console.
"And what would that be?"
"Digging into their systems."
"Following their signals."
"Playing along with their little cosmic experint."
The chamber grew noticeably tense.
Ethan felt the shift imdiately.
The air hadn't changed—but the emotional atmosphere had.
Kaelith wasn't joking anymore.
She rarely dropped her playful sarcasm completely.
But when she did—
It ant she was serious.
Very serious.
Lysarra's voice remained calm, though Ethan detected the faintest hint of irritation creeping into it.
"You're assuming hostile intent."
"I'm assuming caution."
Kaelith pushed herself away from the wall and walked toward the center of the room.
Her steps echoed quietly across the chamber floor.
"You saw what they did."
"Universal resets."
"Civilizations erased because they didn't like the outco."
She gestured toward the glowing diagrams drifting above them.
"And now we're trusting their archive to guide us?"
Lysarra folded her arms slowly.
"We're studying it."
"Sa difference."
"No," she replied calmly.
"It isn't."
Ethan rubbed his temple.
"Okay… let's slow down."
But the debate had already ignited.
Kaelith pointed upward again.
"Those things treated universes like disposable experints."
"And now you're treating their archive like a holy library."
Lysarra's eyes flashed faintly with silver light.
"That knowledge contains the only detailed records of the devourers."
"And?"
"And those creatures nearly destroyed the universe once."
Her voice hardened slightly.
"If the containnt systems fail again, we need that information."
Kaelith scoffed.
"So we trust the people who caused half the problems in the first place?"
"They didn't cause the devourers."
"They reset universes!"
"—to stop worse outcos."
"According to their own records!"
Ethan stepped forward again.
"Hey—"
But neither of them stopped.
The tension between them continued rising.
Kaelith's voice sharpened.
"You're assuming their logic was correct."
"And you're assuming it wasn't," Lysarra replied sharply.
"Because I don't trust cosmic gods who wipe out civilizations."
"Because you prefer instinct over analysis."
"Instinct keeps people alive!"
"And ignorance gets them killed!"
The words hit harder than either of them intended.
The chamber fell silent.
Kaelith's expression tightened imdiately.
"…Ignorance?"
Lysarra's calm mask faltered.
"That's not what I ant."
"It sounded like it."
Ethan sighed quietly.
"Okay."
"That's enough."
But the emotional tension had already spread through the triad bond.
He could feel it clearly now.
The triad connection normally flowed like a steady current between them.
Balanced.
Harmonious.
But now the energy felt uneven.
Jagged.
Kaelith's presence in the bond pulsed sharply—defensive and wary.
Lysarra's energy remained controlled but carried an undertone of wounded pride.
For the first ti in a long while—
The triad was out of sync.
Kaelith looked away from Lysarra and toward the far wall.
"I just don't trust them."
Lysarra's voice softened slightly.
"And I don't trust ignorance."
Neither of them moved.
Ethan exhaled slowly.
"…You're both right."
That made them look at him.
"We shouldn't blindly trust the Architects," he continued.
"And we shouldn't ignore knowledge that might save us."
Kaelith frowned.
"That's a diplomatic non-answer."
"Maybe."
"But it's the truth."
Lysarra studied him carefully.
"You believe the archive is worth exploring."
"Yes."
"And you understand Kaelith's concerns."
"Yes."
Kaelith raised an eyebrow.
"So what's the solution?"
Ethan stepped closer to both of them.
"We explore it carefully."
"No blind trust."
"No blind rejection."
He looked at Kaelith first.
"You keep us cautious."
Then he turned to Lysarra.
"You keep us inford."
For a mont neither woman spoke.
The tension in the room slowly softened.
Finally Kaelith sighed.
"…Fine."
Lysarra nodded slightly.
"…That is acceptable."
But the emotional strain still lingered.
Ethan could feel it clearly.
The triad bond had stabilized slightly—but it was still uneven.
Like a musical chord slightly out of tune.
He stepped closer to them.
"Hey."
"What?" Kaelith asked.
"Co here."
She blinked.
"Why?"
"Because our energy connection is a ss right now."
Lysarra smiled faintly.
"He's correct."
Kaelith groaned.
"Seriously?"
"Yes."
Reluctantly, she stepped closer.
The three of them ford a small circle beneath the glowing Architect vault.
Their energy fields brushed together again.
At first the connection felt uneven.
Residual frustration.
Lingering irritation.
The emotional echoes of the argunt still clung to the bond.
But Ethan gently strengthened the connection.
Warm currents of energy flowed through the triad link.
Slow.
Careful.
Lysarra responded imdiately, stabilizing the flow with practiced ease.
Her presence added calm structure to the energy exchange.
Kaelith hesitated for a mont.
Then finally—
She joined fully.
Her power flowed into the bond like a surge of living fire.
The connection smoothed out.
The jagged edges softened.
The tension dissolved into sothing calr.
Balanced again.
Kaelith exhaled quietly.
"…Okay."
"That helps."
Lysarra nodded.
"Yes."
The triad stood together for several seconds.
Energy flowing slowly between them.
Not intense.
Just steady.
Re-centering.
Rebalancing.
Ethan smiled faintly.
"See?"
"Conflict resolved."
Kaelith rolled her eyes.
"Don't get smug."
"Too late."
Lysarra chuckled softly.
"You two argue like gravitational storms."
Kaelith smirked.
"And you secretly enjoy it."
"I enjoy the resolution."
The Architect vault continued glowing above them.
Ancient knowledge waiting to be explored.
This ti—
Together.
Kaelith glanced upward again.
"Fine."
"We study the archive."
"But if those Architect records try anything suspicious…"
Her eyes glowed faintly with dangerous amusent.
"…I'm breaking sothing."
Ethan sighed.
"That's reassuring."
Lysarra smiled.
"In a strange way."
And the triad bond pulsed again—
Stronger than before.
User Comments
0 comments from readers