Chapter 111: It’s Still Watching
The floodlights dimmed one by one until the ridge went back to being a ridge and not a stage. Rotors thinned to a far hum. The last drone winked out over the basin and the sky closed behind it like nothing had been there at all.
Alteea’s voice filled the open channel, clean and official. "All divisions, stand down. Incident 167-B reclassified as a "visual resonance anomaly" Maintain perimeter discipline. No confirmed hostiles."
The words were a blanket people were happy to pull over their heads. Shoulders dropped. Someone laughed too loud. A Warden clapped another on the back like the world made sense again.
Raizen’s slate buzzed in his palm.
**PRIVATE // LIGHTHOUSE**
He didn’t move his mouth. He didn’t look at anyone.
Alteea’s whisper slid under the noise, in his ear. A secret channel. "Don’t talk. Listen."
The channel had no interference, an uncommon thing in that area.
"Those numbers weren’t noise. They were real."
"What was it?" he breathed, hardly a sound.
"I don’t know" she said. "But it’s still watching. Be careful."
Then Alteea cut the line.
He stared into the snow where the light had made a box around nothing. That patch of air felt like a held breath.
"Back to camp." Keahi said. No one argued.
They walked. The path looked like theirs and a little off, like a copy made in a rush. Feris hummed three notes and let them fall apart. Hikari kept close enough that their sleeves brushed.
"You think she’s right?" Hikari asked quietly.
"Alteea doesn’t brush off what she can’t measure" Raizen lied.
Esen snorted. "So... optimism’s a myth?"
"Was it ever here?" Obi said, trying for light, landing short.
The lamps at camp wrote a circle of warm glpw on the snow. People moved inside it, smaller now that the sky wasn’t full of machines. The air felt like it was listening.
The scream cut through the cold like a knife.
Everything around exploded into motion - hands up, bodies turning. Raizen ran before his brain finished the thought. They cleared the last tent and saw it at the same time.
A young miner lay half-buried under a fallen brace, jacket ripped, one leg a ruin. He had a shovel up like a useless shield. Something human-sized pinned him, sleek and wrong. After all, that’s what all Nyxes are. It reared back to drive its arm down.
"Move!" Raizen shouted.
Feris lunged and would’ve hit it with her whole life if Keahi’s hand hadn’t found her collar and yanked her back. The Shade turned, quick as a blink.
Esen didn’t blink.
He sprinted, boots hammering, rings on his fingers waking into heat. He slid the last step, planted, and slammed his palms together. The air folded.
The shockwave hit like a cannon. Snow jumped in a ring. The Shade’s body bowed in, ribs that weren’t ribs collapsing, skin that wasn’t skin tearing like wet paper. Black ash, with a few small golden particles blew out and vanished faster than it hit the ground. Echoes rolled across the rock and came back late, like they’d had to climb something on the way.
Esen stumbled three steps, rings smoking, eyes wide. "Hah-" He choked on it instead of saying it.
Raizen was already on his knees by the miner. Blood soaked his gloves in one breath. "Pressure" he said, to himself, to anyone, pressing down hard. "We need a medic now."
Static. The line hissed like an animal that didn’t want to be touched.
"I can try..." Hikari said.
"No-" Raizen started.
"We don’t have time." She was already there, dropping beside him, staff in her hands like it had always been meant for this and she had just remembered. She pressed her palm just above the shredded edge and closed her eyes.
The staff lit, a thin, unsteady blue. The light jumped, faltered, then caught. It wasn’t clean. It pulsed with her breath, with fear, with the way her hand shook and wouldn’t stop. Heat ran down the shaft and into her wrist. Veins lit under her skin like drawn lines.
"Easy..." Raizen said, even though nothing about this was.
She didn’t answer. The glow narrowed to a line and pushed inward, coaxing the blood to clot, knitting tissue in clumsy, urgent strokes. It wasn’t pretty. It was enough to slow the red from a river to a spill to a seep.
The miner made a sound like he’d forgotten how air worked and remembered. Hikari’s mouth went tight. The staff sparked. A crack of blue ran the length of it and died. She coughed once, then again, worse - wet. Red drops hit her glove.
"Hikari! Stop!" Raizen’s voice broke in the middle.
"If I stop, he’ll bleed out." she whispered, pushing once more, the light flaring and then failing like a star nobody asked to be born.
Her shoulders sagged. The glow left her hand. She swayed. Raizen caught her and pulled her against him before the snow could. "You did it. That’s enough."
She tried to nod. Didn’t manage it. "Guess I’m-" She coughed. Blood on her lip. "-bad at naps," she said instead, because pride was cheaper than honesty, and let her head find his shoulder for a second.
"Medics inbound!" someone yelled, finally, from the pad. Engines swelled. Floods swung around. Two medical quads dropped into the basin like fists that had learned manners. Snow turned to mist under them. Honestly? It was uncanny how fast everything was moving. Impressive, Alteea, yeah. We know you can coordonate everything flawlessly. But it’s kind of scary at the same time.
Iris jumped off the second one, coat flaring, hair tied back so tight it couldn’t panic for her. Her staff held a different color - green, steady as a held note. "Vitals?" she said, kneeling before anyone could point.
"Improvised seal, I guess..." Hikari said, voice scraped thin. "It won’t hold..."
Iris’s eyes flicked up in a quick, surprised look. "You did this?"
"Don’t scold me" Hikari muttered, which was impressive given the blood.
"I’m not" Iris said. "I’m impressed, Idiot. It took me two months to do something like this." She pressed two fingers to the miner’s neck, counted, nodded. "He’s buyable. Lift."
They slid him onto the sled. Clips snapped. Cables took hold. The quad swallowed him as if it had been built for nothing else. "Go!" Iris said kindly, and it did, rising in a storm of light and noise. Her attitude changed a lot since the arena. Maybe the second year’s influence really spread...
The camp slowly remembered it had air.
Esen sat back hard and held his hands up. His fingers had hairline cuts . Skin had torn at the web of his thumb and along the knuckles. He stared at the blood like it belonged to someone else.
"That was... loud, alright?" Obi said, finally, voice gentle. He crouched, bumped his shoulder against Esen’s. "Showoff."
"Saved him" Esen said, and the words were small and proud and shook a little. "That’s all."
A soft gust of wind moved across camp and forgot to be cold. It felt like someone’s attention.
Raizen pulled his coat around Hikari’s shoulders anyway. She made a soft sound that wasn’t quite a protest, wasn’t quite thanks. He brushed his thumb once along the ridge of dried blood at her jaw without thinking. Then he remembered people and stopped.
Alteea’s voice came back, public again, clipped not to spread panic. "Medic away. Hold perimeter. No chase. Repeat: do not pursue. We still have interference in your sector. The anomaly-" a breath. She rerouted the word because it wasn’t big enough "-the thing is reading low and wide."
"Define wide" Keahi said.
"Like echoes in a row" Alteea said. "Or one voice bounced off a dozen walls." Her tone didn’t allow what her words admitted.
Raizen looked toward the slope where the camp light ran out. The place where a gray coat had stood and had not. The snow there was smooth, ordinary, rude with quiet.
Obi followed his gaze and didn’t make a joke. "If it wanted to hit you, it would have," he said softly.
"I know" Raizen said.
"That does make it better, keep in mind."
"I know."
Esen flexed his fingers. Pain returned. He winced, then did it again, testing. "I can do bigger" he said to nobody in particular.
"Please don’t" Lynea responded, her eyes still lost, somewhere far, or just looking at the snow.
"Okay" he said, and meant it for now.
Silence settled - not the soft kind, the heavy kind that remembers everything you try to forget. The snow had turned gray where smoke had touched it. Red where blook soaked. The air kept the shape of the scream longer than it should have.
Raizen’s comm buzzed again.
**PRIVATE // LIGHTHOUSE.**
He stepped away from the ring of light until the cold touched his ankles through the boots. "Yeah."
Alteea’s voice came low, too careful. "I’m logging an official nothing. You heard it. So did I. You saw it. I... believe you."
"That’s new" he replied. He didn’t mean to sound grateful and did anyway.
"Don’t get used to it," she said, almost a smile. Paper shuffled like she was building a shield out of data. "Raizen. It didn’t hit you because it didn’t need to. That’s worse. Or maybe... It didn’t want to..."
"What do you want me to do?" Raizen cut her off.
"Stay in the light." A beat. "And whatever that was... It’s still watching."
The line clicked off before he could nod at a voice.
He went back to the fire. The others made room without making it a moment. Hikari leaned into him because she was too tired not to. He didn’t move.
They watched the dark and let it watch them back.
Nobody spoke the thought hanging between them, because saying it would make it true:
The Shade hadn’t come for the miner.
It had been coming closer all along.