"That’s impossible," Zhang said sharply, his fingers moving quickly across his tablet as he tried to fix the problem. "The dampeners are made specifically to stop any such connection....."
But it was already too late.
Kailani felt it first. A pulling feeling, a vibration in the very center of her being that went around all the technology blocking her powers. The pearl was responding to her, recognizing her as family. It was a piece of her world’s old stories made real, and it was crying out because it was also trapped, calling to her across the cold laboratory.
For three years, she had been helpless. Trapped. Studied like a bug under glass.
But in this mont, she felt sothing she had not felt since they caught her: hope.
In one final act of resistance, she stopped fighting against the dampeners. Instead, she poured every bit of her remaining strength, every mory of swimming free in the open ocean, every note of the forbidden Dragon’s Song that her ancestors had sung for thousands of years, into that connection with the pearl.
Her throat opened, and a single, pure note ca from her lips.
It was not loud, but it was powerful in a way that went beyond normal sound. It was a note that seed to bend reality itself, carrying with it the weight of the deep ocean, the mory of ancient powers, the anger of three years of prison and torture.
The thick glass of her tank began to shake. Tiny cracks appeared on its surface.
The Night Pearl on its stand flared bright like a dying star. Brilliant jade-green light filled the entire room. Cracks spread across its glowing surface like lightning.
"Containnt breach coming!" Dr. Lin scread, backing away from the observation window.
"Ergency! 紧急情况! (Ergency situation!)"
Dr. Zhang stood frozen, his scientific mind still trying to understand what was happening, still trying to find a solution. "Shut down all power to the....."
The world turned white.
The explosion was not made of fire or heat. It was raw, unleashed qi, pure life force energy that had been squeezed and held for countless centuries. It burst from the breaking pearl in a silent, growing ball of jade-green light that destroyed everything it touched.
The polyr-glass of the tank simply vanished, stopped existing. The advanced monitoring equipnt and computer screens lted into liquid tal. The observation room’s protective wall offered no protection against this ancient power. Dr. Zhang and Dr. Lin were outlined for just one tiny mont against the bright light before they were unmade, their bodies breaking apart into dust.
Kailani felt her physical body fall apart. The powerful tail that had carried her through the deepest ocean turned into tiny points of shimring light. The gills that had pulled oxygen from the coldest, darkest waters moved one last ti and stopped working.
The scales that marked her as one of the sea people scattered like flower petals in a storm.
It was not exactly pain. It was more like a deep unmaking. A body returning to its most basic pieces, solid matter becoming energy, form becoming formless.
But her consciousness, the essence of who and what she was, what the old texts called a soul, did not disappear with her physical form.
Freed from its body prison, it was caught in the explosion’s shockwave, a spark of awareness thrown into the huge darkness between worlds.
For a mont that might have been one second or might have been forever, she existed as pure consciousness without any form.
It was terrifying and freeing at the sa ti. She was everywhere and nowhere, everything and nothing.
And then, through the formless emptiness, she felt sothing.
A pull.
It was like a lighthouse signal, a call of deep suffering that matched her own pain. It was the ntal scream of injustice so deep and raw that it had cut a scar across reality itself. Sowhere, sohow, a soul had just been snuffed out, leaving behind a perfect, empty vessel. A body still warm, still alive, but abandoned.
A body that still vibrated with the echoes of a fight not yet finished.
The pull was impossible to resist. After three years of being trapped, of being studied and tortured and treated as nothing more than a thing to examine, Kailani’s consciousness was drawn toward that call like a drowning woman reaching for the surface.
She followed the pull, a shooting star of will and awareness racing across dinsions, across the boundaries between life and death, between water and land, between one existence and another..
— — — —
In the cold, dark isolation cell of Blackwater Ridge, the body of Lin Shuyin lay completely still in Tank’s arms.
Tank sat on the concrete floor with her back against the wall, cradling Shuyin’s limp form like a broken child. The girl’s head rested against Tank’s chest, her battered face turned to the side, one eye swollen completely shut, the other half-open but seeing nothing.
Her broken hand lay awkwardly across her stomach, fingers still curled from where she had tried to fight back.
There was no rise and fall of breathing. No pulse beneath the bruised skin. Just terrible, absolute stillness.
"She’s really gone," Blade whispered from where she knelt beside them, her voice cracking in a way it never had before. She reached out with a trembling hand to touch Shuyin’s cold cheek, then pulled back as if burned. "I can’t... I can’t believe she just died. Just like that."
Razor sat on the floor nearby, her knees pulled up to her chest, rocking slightly back and forth. Tears stread down her face unchecked. "We were supposed to protect her. We promised we’d keep her alive. We failed. We fucking failed."
"Shuyin? Hey. Princess?" Tank whispered, her rough voice raw and broken with grief. She gently brushed a strand of dark hair away from Shuyin’s face, her scarred fingers surprisingly tender. "Co on now. Don’t do this. Don’t leave us like this."
But there was no response. No flutter of eyelids. No weak breath. Nothing.
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