[Ti]: Sumr Break, Day 35 — 8:15 PM
[Location]: White City · Official Tournant Hotel · Room 1004
Victoria stood in the doorway.
"Hathaway," she said. "How long have you been standing in the hallway."
Not a question. The asured, unhurried tone of soone reading a temperature off a gauge.
Hathaway froze.
Her [Greater Invisibility] was still running at full capacity. Thermal signature: zero. Mana emission: perfectly masked. Physical presence: a dense pocket of invisible air displacing the corridor.
She had been standing here for approximately four minutes, engaging in what she privately classified as "pre-mission ntal fortitude" and what any external observer would classify as "losing her nerve." The ice-blue eyes in the doorway were fixed directly on the bridge of her invisible nose.
Four thoughts crashed into each other at maximum volu, all at once:
Victoria looked completely fine.
Victoria was looking straight at her.
Her stealth was fully operational.
Victoria was still looking straight at her.
The math did not resolve itself. Hathaway dropped the stealth.
A ripple moved through the air. Her figure, windbreaker slightly damp from stairwell cardio, materialized in the corridor.
The warm suite light imdiately illuminated everything: the fine sheen of sweat at her hairline, the very un-infiltrator-like flush in her cheeks, and the expression of a person who had climbed ten flights of stairs expecting ambush and arrived to find absolutely nothing wrong.
Victoria stepped aside.
Hathaway stepped in. The heavy mahogany door clicked shut behind her.
She had prepared twenty different opening lines on the way up, mostly variations of Are you hurt? and Do we need to break a window? But looking at Victoria—perfectly healthy, wearing expensive loungewear, and regarding her with an expression of mild philosophical boredom—every single one of those panicked scripts died in her throat.
"Why can you see ?" Hathaway asked instead.
"I learned [Psionic Vision] this month," Victoria said, walking toward the minibar.
The tooltip assembled itself in Hathaway's brain automatically. [Psionic Vision] didn't read mana. It read matter itself. Photons. Density. The physical signature of solid objects displacing space.
Her [Greater Invisibility] had hidden her magic. To [Psionic Vision], she had simply been a very dense, invisible clump of atoms standing in the corridor for four minutes.
Which ant Victoria had also seen, with perfect clarity, the fine sheen of sweat from her cardio. The flush in her cheeks. The specific expression of soone working up the courage to knock.
A wave of retrospective, burning mortification washed over Hathaway.
She took a deep breath. She reached into her spatial pouch, bypassed the arcane detonation charge she had packed as a "contingency asure," and pulled out the items she had actually co to deliver.
A Cyan-Jade Bamboo tube flask, polished smooth, with a few green leaves deliberately left attached.
A sleeve of locally made Petal Pastries.
A potted Gem-Sand Plant, its roots threaded through luminous mineral powder in a delicate glass bowl.
She arranged them on the coffee table. "I went to Gaia last week," Hathaway said, keeping her voice scrupulously casual. "Local specialties. Just a small gift."
Victoria looked at the items. She closed her eyes for one full second.
When she opened them, the glance she directed at Hathaway contained the compressed emotional weight of a very long month.
"You maintained a high-tier stealth matrix," Victoria said, "risked being shot dead on sight by the four ntally unstable won currently occupying this building, and climbed ten flights of stairs." A beat. "Just to deliver this?"
Hathaway's brain went completely blank.
"Yeah," she said. "What else?"
Victoria let out a long, very quiet exhale.
She stepped forward and took the gifts from the table. She didn't set them down imdiately. She held the glass bowl in both gloved hands and looked at it for a mont. Then she turned and walked toward the nightstand.
What followed was a process of calibration. Victoria placed the glass bowl down. Nudged it two milliters to the left. A fraction of an inch forward.
She tilted her head, stepped back, studied the angle of lamplight catching the luminous mineral powder. Stepped forward and adjusted again. The operation concluded with the plant resting in what could only be described as the absolute, most geotrically optimal configuration possible relative to the lamp, the wall, and the predicted trajectory of morning light through the window.
She carried the bamboo flask and pastries to the coffee table by the floor-to-ceiling windows.
Stood with her back turned for a mont.
"Thank you," she said. Very quietly.
Hathaway felt as if soone had taken a soft, extrely heavy blanket and dropped it directly onto her heart. The warmth spread outward from the impact point with no warning whatsoever, reaching her cheeks in approximately two seconds.
She had delivered the gift. Mission complete. She now had absolutely no idea what to do with her hands.
Victoria turned around and gestured to the sofa.
Hathaway sat. With slightly more stiffness than was dignified.
Victoria uncorked the bamboo flask, poured two glasses with the precision of soone who had navigated many formal social situations, and slid one across the glass table. The wine was clear, faintly cyan, and imdiately filled the space between them with a rich, cool botanical fragrance.
Then she settled back in the armchair opposite with one leg crossed over the other, looking entirely composed, which was having a certain effect on soone who had just completed ten flights of active stealth cardio.
Silence.
Not the brittle, agonizing kind. The specific, gravitational quiet of two people who had occupied the exact sa space for two months, been abruptly separated into entirely different and equally dangerous situations, and were now sitting in a sealed room, recalibrating coordinates.
Hathaway's face was still warm. She gripped her glass and stared at the faintly cyan liquid, because looking directly at Victoria at this particular mont felt like receiving too much information at once.
Before coming here, she had rehearsed twenty-three ergency protocols. Hostage Rescue. Psychological Trauma Triage. Tactical Retreat. Mutual Destruction (contingency, sub-contingency, final resort). Every single one of them was now useless.
She was sitting on a velvet sofa with a glass of stealth-blackout sugarcane wine and no applicable skill tree.
"What did you do in Gaia?" Victoria asked.
A very Victoria question. Not "how have you been," which was structureless and unanswerable. A concrete topic, a formal invitation, frad to provide a usable entry point.
Hathaway let out a breath and started talking.
She talked about the Sky Sea. The iridescent light of the crystal cavern hot springs.
"And the local ecosystem," Hathaway added, tracing the rim of her glass. "Ghost Lantern Cats. They have miniature single-blade propellers for tails. The whole cavern sounds like a very cute, highly active industrial facility."
Victoria paused, her glass halfway to her mouth. She processed the image.
"Fascinating," Victoria said mildly. "An entire species that evolved purely to optimize levitation efficiency. The aerodynamic implications alone are... distracting."
"They are very distracting," Hathaway agreed.
The mory surfaced with complete clarity: looking out the cavern's viewing port at the horizon, surrounded by glittering light, and feeling the specific, entirely involuntary wish that soone else could be there watching it too.
She didn't say that part. But she described the view in full.
Then the conversation shifted from scenery to magic. Hathaway described the sheer, almost ridiculous luxury of absorbing high-purity Source Energy that expanded her mana circuits from the inside out.
She was laying her newly acquired assets on the table, letting the numbers speak for themselves. The investnt is appreciating.
"And," Hathaway said, setting her glass down, placing her final card on the table. "I managed to pull Ovelia's exclusive spell from the randomized pool. [Cold Justice]."
Victoria went completely still.
A full three seconds passed. The silence in the room changed texture.
"Ovelia's signature," Victoria murmured, her eyes locking onto Hathaway's with sudden, razor-sharp focus.
Victoria leaned back slightly in her armchair, her hand finally relaxing on the stem of her glass.
"That is good," she said. Quiet. Flat. The specific register of soone whose expectation had been t and who acknowledged this as a factual matter.
Hathaway's gaze drifted toward the nightstand. The potted plant sat there, its position absolutely immaculate in the lamplight. She thought about the ninety seconds of calibration. The sheer focus in Victoria's eyes during that process.
Victoria offered no explanation for what that placent ant.
Hathaway didn't ask.
The conversation continued through smaller things and eventually lulled. Hathaway turned her glass in both hands. Looked at the surface of the wine.
"Are you doing okay here?" she asked.
Victoria's expression moved through three distinct phases in under a second. It stopped at none of them.
She didn't answer right away. She closed her eyes and raised a hand, pressing two fingers hard against her temple. She held the pressure there for a long, heavy second, the silence in the room stretching out as she seed to grapple with sothing she didn't even know how to begin articulating.
When she finally opened her eyes, they carried the unmistakable weight of bone-deep exhaustion.
"I am fine," Victoria said. The word arrived with the deliberate weight of a door closing. "Really."
Hathaway's heart descended approximately six floors.
That is absolutely not a "fine" expression. That is the face of soone who has morized the hostage script.
The silence stretched. Hathaway opened her mouth, searching for a way to crack that flawless, exhausted defense, but found absolutely nothing. The weight of that single word pressed down on the room, heavy and immovable.
After a long mont, Victoria reached for the bamboo flask to pour a second glass. She unfastened the button at her wrist and pulled off her right glove.
Hathaway's gaze settled naturally on Victoria's bare hand.
And then it stopped.
A ring.
On the ring finger of Victoria's right hand.
Blue. But not standard sapphire blue. The gemstone had been cut with the specific, ticulous, probably-illegal precision of soone who had devoted significant ti to engineering a perfect match. It caught the ambient light of the suite and refracted it to flawlessly mirror the exact shade of Victoria's own irises under this light.
It wasn't just a close resemblance. It was an obsessive, one-to-one optical replication.
Hathaway's pupils expanded.
Her brain executed a search at a speed that would have impressed military-grade hardware:
That's—
That design—
I have read the exact textual description of this ring.
In Alice's manuscript.
Victoria.
Victoria, what is on your hand.
The wall between reality and Alice's manuscript ca down completely. Specifically, the terrifying chapters cataloging Flandmira's "custom accessories."
Hathaway's brain instantly began autoplaying the worst excerpts. She rembered the "morial Bracelet," engineered with milliter precision to cover the chafing from heavy handcuffs, fitted just tight enough into the skin to ensure the red marks beneath never, ever faded.
And worse: the sensory-link rings. Magical voodoo dolls disguised as high-end jewelry. Hathaway vividly recalled the chapters where a single thumb stroking the ring's gemstone would send direct sensory input straight into the wearer's nervous system, turning it into the ultimate prop for public humiliation and psychological dominance.
And the signature of every piece in Flandmira's prop catalog?
A gemstone perfectly color-matched to the victim's eyes.
SYSTEM ALERT: TEAMMATE CONFIRD EQUIPPED WITH HIGH-TIER SENSORY MANIPULATION PROP.
RESCUE VIABILITY ASSESSNT: CATASTROPHICALLY LOW.
RECOMNDED ACTION: NONE.
The room tilted slightly. Hathaway gripped the arm of the sofa.
NTR?!
Is this the NTR arc?!
No wait. Victoria and I are not in that kind of relationship!
Then why. Why do I currently feel the specific, soul-deep devastation of a person watching a teammate get forcibly acquired by a fanatical syndicate? Why am I experiencing this highly specific flavor of psychological trauma?!
...Oh.
Alucard.
Oh my god. I am currently standing in the rain outside the bedroom window. I have been forcibly cast in the role of the perpetual cuckold in Alice's live-action adaptation. Is there a support group for this specific existential crisis? I need an application form imdiately.
Her face had stopped performing anything recognizable as composure approximately fifteen seconds ago. It was doing sothing else now.
Across the coffee table, Victoria's eyes flicked down. She followed the exact trajectory of Hathaway's paralyzed stare, tracing it directly to her own right hand.
Then, Victoria looked back up. She sat in silence, watching the complete, escalating catastrophe of an expression that was currently unfolding across Hathaway's face.
She sat completely still for one second.
Then, with the expression of a woman maintaining absolute control through sheer sustained effort, the corner of her mouth executing one small, involuntary, microscopic spasm, Victoria spoke.
"Hathaway."
"I put it on myself."
As a clarification, it was brutally efficient.
It also aggressively failed to address "what exactly is that thing," "why is it designed like that," or "why would any sane person voluntarily do this." And judging by that microscopic, lingering spasm at the corner of Victoria's mouth, Hathaway knew with absolute certainty that Victoria was acutely aware of the exact questions she was dodging.
Five seconds.
Hathaway's mind was running two completely incompatible processes at maximum load and they had found each other and were eating each other alive.
Alice's manuscript cross-referenced the ring in real ti: iris-accurate gemstone, custom calibration, maximum possessiveness rating, confird dark route. Her own cognitive correction responded imdiately: we are not in that kind of relationship, stop feeling like a wronged husband, this is embarrassing, stop, this is so embarrassing. The two processes deadlocked. She sat with her mouth slightly open, staring at the ring with the expression of a technician who had just received a logically impossible output from a system she trusted completely.
Victoria watched this for three seconds. Then, deliberately, she raised her hand, placed her thumb against the band, and rotated the ring on her finger.
Hathaway snapped back to reality with a full-body startle.
"It twists?!" Her voice had achieved a register usually reserved for witnesses of structural collapse. "Victoria. You put it on yourself? You voluntarily agreed to be controlled?! Are you feeding yourself to the monsters to keep them off your sister?!"
Victoria looked at her. The look contained the specific, bone-deep weariness of a person who had long since stopped expecting standard cognitive output from her peers.
"This is not a control device," Victoria said, in the flat, precise tone of soone reading from a technical manual against their will. "This is a tether network ring. Real-ti location sharing, linked spatial storage, ergency mana borrowing. That is the full function list.
"Do you have any idea what happens to local physics when five apex-tier anomalies share a living space?"
She did not wait for an answer.
"Three weeks ago, I walked out of my own bedroom to get a glass of water. The floor dropped out from under reality. I spent four hours in a non-Euclidean labyrinth that used to be my hallway." A beat. "This ring is a spatial anchor. I equipped it because my only alternative was dying of collateral damage in my own pantry."
Four hours.
In her own hallway.
Alone.
But one crucial question remained entirely unaddressed.
Hathaway let out a breath, her voice steadying. "I understand the tactical necessity. But if it is just a survival item..." She pointed at the blue gemstone. "...why is it designed exactly like a textbook, custom-forged wedding ring?!"
Victoria looked at her.
Sothing settled into Victoria's eyes in that mont. The profound, particular serenity of a woman who had analyzed a terrifying, structural insanity and simply decided to adapt to it.
She took a slow sip from her glass. Set it down carefully.
"Hathaway," Victoria said, her voice completely even. "How does a syndicate of apex predators define a family unit?"
Hathaway blinked. The question was so far outside her expected dialogue tree that her brain stalled. "What?"
"They do not share blood," Victoria said thodically, laying out the facts with the clinical precision of a coroner. "Marriage, to them, is not a romantic endpoint. It is a structural chanism. It is the legal and magical assimilation of an outsider into the core periter. Cecilia is my sister. Therefore, by their operational logic, I am already within the periter. I am family."
A pause.
"This is not a wedding ring," Victoria said, looking down at the blue gem. "It is a family crest. Engineered by a lunatic with severe separation anxiety, yes. But fundantally, a family ring."
Hathaway's mouth opened. Her brain searched for a counterargunt with real, urgent effort.
The terrifying thing was, it made complete, flawless sense. It perfectly aligned with Greed Umbrella's sociopathic, mafia-style logic.
Hathaway looked at Victoria's face. The icy, completely composed face of a woman who had examined a madhouse, found the underlying mathematical formula, and simply integrated herself into the system.
The thousand-yard stare descended on Hathaway like a settling fog. The specific hollowness of a QA tester who has found a ga-breaking bug, submitted the report, and been inford by the developnt team that it is actually core gaplay chanics.
But there was still a hook left in Hathaway's chest. Sothing unresolved.
Where do I stand?
"Let ask you sothing, Victoria." Hathaway's voice arrived from a significant distance. "If I went to Flandmira tomorrow. And offered to pay any amount of money for an identical matching ring. Would she agree?"
Victoria's expression went completely blank.
The silence that followed was three seconds long. They both knew Flandmira. They both knew that territorial lunatic viewed Hathaway as a tolerable nuisance at best. Flandmira would sooner sever her own hands than forge a family ring for an outsider.
Victoria took a slow, deliberate breath.
When she spoke, her voice dropped an octave. It sounded like glass being ground between two equally hard surfaces. The aura of a true Wellington, contained, lethal, accustod to absolute authority, moved through the room in a single, clean wave of terrifying resolve.
"I would make her agree."
Hathaway was completely and utterly silenced.
The sheer weight of that statent hit her directly in the chest. She could literally see the tactical calculations unfolding behind Victoria's icy eyes: I will leverage Cecilia. I will emotionally extort an Arch-Witch and force them to forge you a ring, because if I am in this, you are coming with .
She swallowed hard, her pulse hamring in her ears, and kept her mouth firmly shut.
Victoria gave the symbol of family integration one final deliberate spin. Then she picked up her right glove and pulled it smoothly back over her hand, hiding the blue gem from sight.
The conversation was over.
Hathaway stood.
Victoria walked her to the door, unhurried. As Hathaway pulled the Tier-6 matrix back over her body, settling the stealth into place while ntally preparing to face ten descending flights of stairs, Victoria spoke.
"Take the elevator," Victoria said calmly. "Do not walk down the stairs."
Hathaway's footsteps locked.
One hour ago, standing in the lobby, she had perford a full tactical analysis and concluded with complete certainty that the elevator was the single most dangerous object in the building.
She had expended a deeply embarrassing quantity of cognitive resources to reach this conclusion. She had then paid for it with ten flights of stairwell cardio while maintaining active stealth the entire way up.
Victoria had overturned the entire analysis in one sentence. Using zero mana and no visible effort.
Hathaway stepped out into the corridor. The door clicked shut behind her.
She walked to the end of the hall and pressed the call button. The elevator chid. The doors slid open.
An elevator containing no visible passengers descended through a hyper-secured luxury hotel, alone and unhurried, as if nothing were unusual at all.
Hathaway stood in the center of the car and watched the numbers count down. 9... 8... 7...
Sothing resolved quietly in her chest, and imdiately beca a problem.
When Victoria had said "take the elevator," her voice had carried zero hesitation. No caution about lobby detection systems. No question about exit viability.
Which ant soone upstairs had watched her sweat her way up ten flights of stairs, run all her panicked contingency plans, and simply chosen to let it happen.
She had not been infiltrating. She had been permitted.
Ding.
The doors opened.
The lobby was exactly as she had left it. Crystal chandeliers blazing at full power. The white tea fragrance from the front desk perfectly sustained. The whole space absolutely silent and immaculate, like a very large and extrely well-fed predator that had eaten its fill and was now resting.
Hathaway walked out. Through the revolving doors. Into the cool sumr night of White City.
The night breeze touched the back of her neck, where the cold sweat from the stairwell climb had long since dried.
She reached into her pocket. Her fingers found a small, exquisitely crafted glass flower. It sat cool and smooth against her palm.
She held the bomb for a mont, feeling the terrifying, silent density of the mana compressed inside its fragile petals.
Then, her fingers relaxed. She let go of it, leaving the glass flower safely in her pocket, and pulled her empty hand out into the night air.
Nothing had happened tonight.
She had just gone to deliver a gift.
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