The facility lights were back on.
Actual lights, steady and white, buzzing overhead like the last hour
hadn’t happened. The spawner going offline must have released whatever
power it had been hoarding. Now the corridors looked like they had when
they had arrived.
Tess made her way toward the maintenance level access point that
Vasquez had mentioned, her footsteps echoing in the empty halls. The
contrast with an hour ago was jarring. Same building, same layout, but
without the red emergency glow and the constant threat of something
trying to kill anything that moved, the place felt like it belonged to a
different reality.
“How are you holding up?” Petra’s voice came through the
communicator, tinny but clear.
“Better than I was.” Tess checked her interface reflexively. Still 1
AP. Still exhausted. But the headache had faded to a dull throb, and her
hands had finally stopped shaking. “I’m almost at the maintenance
access.”
“The researchers are getting restless. One of them keeps asking about
data backups.”
“Tell them to wait five minutes.”
The maintenance access turned out to be a heavy door at the end of a
service corridor, marked with faded warning labels about restricted
personnel. The control panel beside it was intact—unlike the one outside
Lab 4—but locked behind a biometric scanner that definitely wouldn’t
recognize her.
She pulled out her multi-tool and got to work.
The panel came off easily enough, revealing a nest of Network wiring
that looked like it had been installed by someone who’d never learned
any actual electrical work. Color-coding that made no sense. Connections
that looped back on themselves for no apparent reason. A bypass circuit
that seemed to exist solely to make her life difficult.
Still. This was regular, simple work. No Aether patterns, no skill
crystals, no interfacing with systems that wanted to drink her dry. Just
wires and circuits and the satisfaction of understanding that she’d been
repairing systems like this since she could walk.
Three minutes later, the door clicked open.
“I’m through,” she said into the communicator. “Heading to the Lab’s
secondary access now.”
The service corridor beyond was cramped and utilitarian with pipes running
along the ceiling, cable bundles snaking down the walls, the air thick
with the smell of machine oil and recycled atmosphere. Tess followed the
path toward Lab 4, counting junctions until she found the access panel
Vasquez had described.
This one was even more straightforward. Someone had designed it for
emergency use, which meant the override was clearly labeled and easy to
reach. She pulled the lever, felt something heavy shift behind the wall,
and heard the distant grind of a door opening.
“We’re in!” Petra’s voice crackled through. “They’re coming out
now.”
Tess retraced her steps, emerging from the maintenance access just as
the last of the researchers filed into the main corridor. Twelve people,
most of them looking dazed and uncertain, blinked in the restored
lighting like they couldn’t quite believe the nightmare was over.
Dr. Vasquez found her immediately. “Ms. Rivera. Thank you.” His voice
was steady, but his hands weren’t. “I don’t think any of us expected to
walk out of there.”
“The spawner’s offline. The spawns are gone.” Tess glanced down the
corridor toward where Petra was directing the researchers away from the
lab. “What happens now?”
“Now we contact the perimeter team and…” Vasquez stopped, frowning.
He pulled out his communicator and dialed. Waited. And dialed again.
Nothing.
“That’s strange.” He tried a different frequency. Still nothing. “The
internal comms are working, but I can’t reach the exterior.”
One of the other researchers—a younger woman Tess vaguely recognized
from the vent conversation—pushed forward. “Dr. Vasquez, I’m not getting
anything either. It’s like the external channels are being jammed.”
Petra appeared at Tess’s shoulder, vibroblades sheathed but hand
resting on a hilt. “The exit?”
They moved as a group toward the main entrance, researchers
clustering behind Tess and Petra like they were the only solid things in
an uncertain world. The corridors were still empty, still eerily normal,
but tension had crept into the silence. A weight that hadn’t been there
before.
The main door was sealed.
Petra tried the control panel. Access denied. Tried her family
credentials. Access denied.
“That’s not possible.” She tried again, fingers stabbing at the
interface. “I have clearance for this entire facility. I was just using
it a couple hours ago.”
“Someone’s overriding from the security station.” Vasquez had gone
pale. “The purge protocol—if they’re trying to trigger it manually…”
“How long?” Tess asked.
“Who knows.” The younger researcher was checking a datapad, scrolling
through information with hands that trembled. “The automated countdown
was disabled when you fixed the containment field, but a manual trigger
bypasses all of that. If someone in security initiates the
sequence…”
She didn’t need to finish. They’d all heard what the purge protocol
meant.
Tess looked at the sealed door, then at Petra. “Can you cut through
it?”
“Not even close.” Petra drew one vibroblade anyway, examining the
door’s construction. “This is blast-rated. Even with both blades, they’d
die before I got through a a meter of cutting.”
From somewhere outside the door—muffled by walls and distance but
unmistakable—came the rhythmic pops of gunfire.
Everyone froze. The researchers drew closer together, some of them
grabbing onto each other, all of them staring at the door as if they
could see through it to whatever was happening outside.
Gunfire popped, followed by shouting, and then... silence.
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
Silence stretched for ten seconds. Twenty. Tess counted heartbeats,
waiting for something—anything—to break the tension.
The door exploded.
The blast-rated panels blew inward in a shower of metal fragments and
smoke, and through the gap came a flood of armored figures in Tertian
colors, weapons raised, spreading out to secure the corridor with
practiced efficiency.
Leading them was a woman Tess recognized from Petra’s delving team.
Carys Venn—Knight class, Level 7—looked like she’d been born in her
armor.
She swept the corridor with her weapon, took in the cluster of
terrified researchers, and then her eyes found Petra.
“Facility secure.” The tension in her voice cracked slightly. “Lady
Petra. You’re alright?”
“Carys.” Petra sheathed her blade, and Tess saw something pass
between them—relief, concern, the wordless communication of people who’d
worked together long enough to trust each other completely. “The
situation inside was handled. What happened out there?”
“Network infiltrators. Six of them, embedded in the perimeter
security team.” Carys gestured, and more soldiers filed in, herding a
group of restrained figures in front of them. “They were trying to
trigger something from the security station. We stopped them.”
Tess studied the prisoners as they were marched past. Most were
zip-tied, hands behind their backs, expressions ranging from defiant to
terrified. But three of them wore something else—thick metal bands
around their necks, glowing faintly with a soft teal light.
“What are those?”
Carys followed her gaze. “AP suppressors. Standard issue for
detaining anyone with combat classes.” Her voice was flat, professional.
“They can’t use abilities while collared. Keeps everyone safer during
transport.”
Tess filed that information away. AP suppressors. Another piece of
the world she was only beginning to understand.
“This wasn’t just the Director,” Carys continued, turning back to
Petra. “The infiltration runs deep. We’re going to have a lot of
questions for a lot of people. They took an opportunity to harm House
Tertian, and they almost succeeded.”
Through the ruined doorway, Tess could see the sky,
the first natural light she’d seen in hours. And hovering above the
facility, visible even from this angle, were dozens of military vessels.
Tertian colors. Heavily armed blocks of metal and guns hovered in the
air over the facility.
A show of force.
“The Duke sent the fleet?” Petra’s voice was flat, controlled.
“The Duke sent everything, Petra. There’s a Frigate stationed above
us in orbit. He’s making a statement,” Carys’s expression didn’t change,
but a flicker of warmth crossed her eyes. “When we received word the
facility was compromised, he mobilized immediately. You’re his daughter,
Lady Petra. Did you expect anything less?”
Received word. Tess felt a chill that had nothing to do with
the temperature. Had someone sent a message? How had House Tertian known
they were in trouble?
Bee had relayed information to Marcus. Had Marcus found some way to
contact the Tertians? If he did, there were going to be questions. A lot
of questions that Tess didn’t want to answer.
“Come.” Carys was already moving, gesturing for them to follow. “The
skipper is waiting on the roof. The Duke is… eager to see you both
safe.”
The way she said eager suggested Amos Tertian was anything
but calm.
The Skipper’s interior was a stark contrast to the lab, but Tess
didn’t care. It was comfortable, and she was tired. Military escort
vessels flanked them on either side, visible through the curved
windows.
Tess sat across from Petra, watching the facility shrink beneath them
as they climbed. The researchers had been loaded onto a separate
transport—statements to give, debriefs to endure. She and Petra had been
pulled aside, given their own vessel, treated like something between
honored guests and valuable assets.
Neither of them had spoken since takeoff.
The silence wasn’t uncomfortable exactly. It was the silence of two
people who had too much to say and no idea where to start. Tess stared
at her hands, still faintly trembling despite her best efforts to keep
them steady. Petra stared out the window, her expression unreadable.
Finally, Petra spoke.
“That thing you did. With the containment field.” She didn’t look
away from the window. “Walking through it like it wasn’t there.”
Tess kept staring at her hands. “Yeah.”
“And the spawns. Making them just… stop. Dissolve.” Now Petra turned,
and her eyes were sharp despite the exhaustion on her face. “That’s not
a Technician skill, Tess. I’ve worked with Technicians my whole life.
None of them can do what you did.”
The moment stretched. Tess could feel the weight of it—the fork in
the road she’d been avoiding for weeks. She could deflect. Make excuses.
Keep the secret she’d been guarding since the tutorial.
But she was tired. So tired. And Petra had just spent the last few
hours fighting spawns to keep her alive, trusting her despite
everything, following her into danger without hesitation.
The cat was already out of the bag. Had been for a while now,
probably.
“I’m…” The words stuck in her throat. She forced them out anyway.
“I’m not a Technician class.”
Petra’s expression didn’t change. “Yeah. I gathered that. Weeks ago,
actually.”
Tess looked up.
“You have maintenance tunnel access in the dungeon.” Petra’s voice
was calm, almost gentle. “The way you see problems with skill crystals.
The way they seem to respond to you. I don’t know, maybe the dungeon AI
in your pocket? In your head?” She laughed. “I wasn’t going to
force you to tell me. Some secrets are worth keeping.”
“I don’t know if you’ll tell your family.” Tess heard the
vulnerability in her own voice and hated it. “At this point I’m in over
my head. Way over.”
“I try not to tell my family anything at all.” Petra’s smile was
thin, humorless. “But that doesn’t mean they won’t find out. They have
resources. People. Ways of learning things they shouldn’t know.”
She paused, looking back out the window. The estate was visible now,
a sprawling complex of towers and gardens growing larger on the
horizon.
“Normally, I’d say you can trust them. At least a little.” Her voice
hardened. “But after today? After Allen, and the spawner, and six
Network plants embedded in our own security?”
She turned to face Tess fully, and her expression had shifted to
determination.
“I want answers just as much as you do.”
The communicator crackled.
“Tess.” Bee’s voice—not text this time, actual audio, warm and
familiar despite the slight distortion of the signal. They must be close
enough to the dungeon now for full communication. “I can hear you again.
Both of you.”
“Bee.” Tess felt something loosen in her chest at the sound. “We’re
okay. We’re heading back to the estate.”
“I know. I have been monitoring the situation and… was the one who
told Marcus how to contact Amos Tertian. They mobilized significant
resources once they received word of the facility’s compromise.” A
pause. “I am uncertain how this will play out. The facility’s
communication systems should have prevented external contact. Our
connection to one another is unique.”
Petra raised an eyebrow at Tess. Tess didn’t have an appropriate
answer.
“Bee,” Petra said carefully, “what do you mean unique?”
Another pause, longer this time. When Bee spoke again, her voice was
thoughtful.
“Her connection to me is not standard—it is not something that should
be possible based on the data I have access to.” The words came slowly,
as if Bee was choosing them carefully. “She is a dungeon repairwoman.
Not just in class designation, but in function and purpose.”
“A dungeon repairwoman,” Petra repeated.
“Her class allows her to interface with dungeon systems in ways that
no other class can. To see what I see. To access what I access. To
bridge the gap between human and dungeon. Nothing in my databases show
that this is possible, and yet… it is.”
Tess’s thoughts drifted back to the spawner. The way she’d connected
to it, seen through it, understood it. The living crystal and the Aether
flows and the desperate, isolated intelligence trying to do its job
without any guidance.
She thought about Bee, feeling whole again for just a moment.
“The Tertians will have questions,” Bee continued. “About how you
communicated with your father. About what you did in Lab 9. About the
nature of your abilities.”
“What do we tell them?”
“That is your choice. But Tess…” Another pause. “Whatever you decide,
I trust you. You and Petra have proven yourselves to me in ways I did
not think possible. Thank you.”
The estate loomed larger in the window now, landing pads visible on
the upper levels, figures moving on the ground below. Amos Tertian would
be waiting. Sara would be waiting. Questions and explanations and the
complicated dance of politics—that Tess had wanted none of.
But Petra was beside her. Bee was in her head. And whatever came
next, she wouldn’t be facing it alone.
“Thank you, Bee.” Tess kept her voice low, aware of how much she
meant it. “For everything.”
“Thank you, Tess. And you, Petra. For reminding me what I am.”
The skipper began its descent toward the estate, and Tess watched the
ground rise to meet them, wondering what answers she’d have to give—and
what answers she might receive.

