Chapter 155: chamber
The rain came down in sheets by nightfall, a heavy, unoptimized autumn deluge that washed the Scrapper ash from the beach and buried the remaining scrap metal beneath a thick layer of wet sand. In the aftermath of the skirmish, the village was quiet, but it was the tense, wired quiet of a garrison waiting for a secondary alarm.
In the center of the clearing, Akari’s healing hut had been converted into a temporary holding cell for their eccentric new resident. Gideon sat cross-legged on a woven reed mat, a half-empty bowl of wild ginger and fish broth cooling by his knee. The translucent green glow beneath his skin had entirely faded, leaving his veins a dull, natural gray, but his eyes were still wide, hyper-focused, and fixed entirely on the ceiling beams.
"The logic gates are leaking," Gideon muttered, his voice a dry rattle as Arata and Airi stepped through the low doorway. "You patched the local line, yes, yes. A beautiful ground-discharge. Very creative. But the root directory is still bleeding. When the Spire fragments, it doesn’t just drop files. It drops histories."
Arata knelt across from him, his bandaged hand resting flat on his knee. The scar tissue throbbed in time with the low hum of the rain outside. "Gideon. Look at me. What sector did you come from before the rift opened?"
Gideon’s head snapped down, his eyes locking onto Arata’s face. A flash of brief, terrifying lucidity crossed his features, followed immediately by a look of profound, submissive awe. "Sector 09, Architect. The central database for historical simulation. We weren’t a weapon sector. We were the archive. We were the ones who kept the records of how the old cities died before the central network decided to clean the drive."
Airi remained standing by the door, her hand resting casually on the hilt of her hunting knife. Her mud-stained tunic had been washed, but her posture hadn’t relaxed by a fraction. "If you were an archive, why did the Scrappers come for you with plasma saws?"
"Because an archive isn’t just data, sister," a smoky voice purred from the entrance.
Vesper slid into the hut, her wet leather duster dripping onto the dirt floor. She had bypassed the outer perimeter guards with her usual alarming ease, her violet eyes scanning the dim interior before settling on Gideon. She leaned against the structural timber of the wall, crossing her arms over her chest, the tight fabric of her sleeveless top catching the amber glow of the oil lamp.
"The Remnant Fleet has been trying to crack a Sector 09 fragment for ten years," Vesper said, her eyes narrowing as she studied the old man. "The live-data inside his neural paths isn’t just text. It’s an interactive map of the old world’s global defense grid before the encryption keys were randomized during the collapse. If the Scrappers get their hands on that code, they can activate the automated orbital arrays. They won’t just be raiding islands; they’ll be cleansing them from the sky."
The suspense in the room sharpened instantly, the warmth of the small hut suddenly feeling very small against the weight of the information.
"The grid is locked," Gideon whispered, his fingers clawing at the dirt mat. "Dual-key. Dual-key. The baseline is here... but the second key... the second key is moving."
"Moving where?" Arata asked, leaning forward.
Gideon looked up, his eyes suddenly clear, reflecting the amber flame of the lamp with a terrifying intensity. "The Remnant Fleet. They have the second key, Architect. They’ve had it for three hundred years. They just don’t know how to turn it on."
Arata turned his head slowly, his gaze locking onto Vesper.
Vesper didn’t flinch, but her playful, provocative smile didn’t return. Instead, her jaw tightened, her violet eyes darkening as she looked away from Arata and toward the dark rain outside. "The Fleet has an ancient core container in the flagship’s vault," she admitted, her voice dropping into a low, professional register that lacked her usual theatricality. "We call it the Obsidian Eye. It’s been dead since the day the fleet sailed. We thought it was just a relic."
"It’s not a relic," Arata said, standing up. The realization brought with it a heavy, familiar dread. "It’s the second half of the validation profile. If Gideon’s presence here triggered a kinetic ripple through the shelf, your fleet’s core is probably waking up right now."
"And if it wakes up without a baseline to stabilize it," Airi added, stepping forward, her eyes fixed on Vesper with a cold, protective intensity, "what happens to your fleet?"
Vesper looked back at them, a small, humorless smile touching her lips. "It converts the surrounding matter into raw data to complete the simulation. It will delete the flagship. And every ship anchored within five nautical miles of it."
The thriller had shifted from their small beach to the open ocean, and the clock was already running.
"The Fleet is currently stationed at the edge of the Dead Reef," Vesper said, straightening up and pulling her duster tight around her shoulders. "That’s twelve hours away at maximum thrusters. If we don’t leave by midnight, we won’t have a fleet left to save."
Arata looked at Airi. He didn’t need to ask the question; he could see the answer in the tight line of her shoulders and the fierce, uncompromising loyalty in her eyes. She wasn’t going to let him go alone. She was never going to let him go alone again.
"Yuna!" Arata called out toward the adjoining room.
Yuna appeared at the doorway, her face pale, a charcoal pencil clutched tightly in her hand. "I heard. I’ll stay with Akari and guard Gideon. We’ll keep the perimeter dampeners at maximum frequency. If anything else tries to break through the well, I’ll drop a pipe bomb down the shaft."
"Good," Arata said. He looked at Vesper, his voice hardening into the tone of the man who had once rewritten the sky. "Get your boat ready, Captain. We have a fleet to turn off."
Vesper’s violet eyes flashed with a sudden, dangerous spark of excitement, her sensuality returning like a weapon as she looked Arata up and down. "I love it when you play the commander, Arata. It really suits the bone structure."
Airi didn’t say a word. She simply stepped past Vesper into the rain, the ironwood harpoon slung across her back, her boots splashing heavily in the mud as she headed toward the pier. The jealousy was no longer a distraction; it had been forged into an absolute, lethal focus.
The Obsidian cut through the midnight storm like a blade through black silk, its carbon-fiber hull slicing the churning waves of the outer reef as they roared into the open, treacherous dark of the deep water.