Mere moments after Nadia left Button Check in her roguish new getup, the sight of a curbside bulletin board, gleaming with effulgent golden letters, reminded her that Esaka’s newest series of tournament was just about to begin. With no time to lose, she hurriedly bid Annie farewell and bolted away at top speed, her hood flying off as her coattails fluttered behind her. Asymmetrical thanks to her missing arm, she quickly found that her balance was off as she ran, and did her best to compensate on the fly as she dodged pedestrians and vaulted obstacles. The Pools might be only a short sprint and a long fall away, but there was no telling where exactly her first match was supposed to take place, so she couldn’t afford to dilly-dally.
For now, her rigging pack and Kagari Rokushikisouken box cutters would have to remain in the NMO dojo where she left them yesterday, though maybe that was for the best. Versatility in abilities and arsenal paid dividends on cross-country adventures, but in serious fights against skilled opponents, Nadia thought it wiser to pare her options down to her tried-and-true favorites, the weapons and powers she’d built up synergy and muscle memory with. Skating through the Pools with the help of Massachusetts’ shipgirl rigging had been a blast, but walking on water wouldn’t do her much good if going out of bounds in a pools match resulted in a ring out. As she made for the perimeter of Esaka’s Middle Tier, Nadia couldn’t help but laugh at herself; if she really had a head on her shoulders, she would have spent last night practicing her combos and mixups instead of getting drunk, ambushed, and then blown up. Instead she was tired, bedraggled, and mentally unsound. No matter how bad she felt, though, she knew she couldn’t back out now, not when winning Mortal Kombat would be her the one thing that might buy back the other Seekers’ respect. Getting through today would be her toughest challenge so far, and she’d need to put on her bravest face yet.
As she closed in on the tier’s edge, Nadia took a deep breath, then dove over the railing.
The Pools tier unfolded beneath her, an enormous donut-shaped water park of unremarkable stone or wood arenas connected by a variety of bridges and walkways. The feral plummeted, her heart pounding as fresh adrenaline coursed through her veins and the brisk wind whipped at her hair and clothes alike. Beneath her the water sparkled in the morning sunlight. The stone brick surged closer and closer as onlookers stopped and stared, stunned and wondering if she’d survive the fall. Nadia didn’t know either, but the raw life-or-death exhilaration of freefall cleared her head just enough for her bravado to grab hold. She twisted around in mid-air, hardened her claws, and jammed them into the sheer stone wall behind her. “Hrrrrrrrrrgh!” Her muscles strained, tight as a drum, and her arm threatened to wrench itself free from her socket, but she willed her fibers to hold together as they stretched like bungee cords.
After a tense couple moments, she slid to a stop a few dozen feet above the water’s surface. In front of her, two fighters who’d already taken their places on a floating raft watched, taken aback. One, a
girl with a spiky blonde ponytail and a chain attached to her ripped jeans, seemed dumbfounded, while the other, a
darkly-dressed edgelord with very baggy pants, gave her an unamused golf clap. “Nice stunt,” he said dryly. “If I were you, though, I’d save my energy for the matches.”
“Oh, don’t you worry!” Planting her Mantreads against the wall, Nadia leaped forward, flipped, and landed on her feet between the two fighters. When she raised her claws, their edges sharpened like razors after their grind through solid stone, they practically glinted. “I’ve got purr-lenty to go around!”
She ran across the raft, her tail waving with excitement. Another jump brought her to the nearby pier, and when she glanced back at the floating arena she’d just landed on, she spotted ethereal golden characters on its surface.
W-37, she read. That must be setup thirty-seven for the World Warrior, then, and she was looking for setup M-12. Nadia looked around, grimacing. Her designated arena could be anywhere, and with no clocks around to tell the time, she couldn’t tell how many minutes remained before the tournament officially began. Would failure to show up on time result in an instant disqualification?
Oh boy. Maybe going to fetch her shipgirl rigging from the dojo would’ve been a worthwhile detour after all. “Well, no time to lose,” Nadia muttered to herself with an air of resignation.
She dashed off, searching high and low for any sign of her designated battleground. It was slower going than she would have liked, in part because she couldn’t use the water like she normally could. In fact, with her new costume, getting soaked would be a major detriment, so Nadia had to put her agility to the test to stay both mobile and dry in a place with precious little solid ground. She had no choice but to pressurize her limbs with blood and blast it out to boost herself through the air, trusting in the Life Gem’s power to replenish her reserves by the time she needed it for kombat.
Within a few minutes, she’d reached the quarter of the Pools allotted for the Mortal Kombat qualifiers, judging by all the arena codes with the ‘M’ prefix. Nadia’s nerves only got worse as she darted around the area, though. With the seconds ticking down, she tensed up as if expecting to be struck with a disqualification at any second. In the midst of her panicked search, however, she received a surprise in the form of a bright pink laser beam, fired straight up into the sky. The feral recognized it instantly, of course. “Robo!” The cybernetic catgirl she’d coerced into being her Kameo was already where she needed to be, and in her mounting impatience had fired off one of her death rays into the sky as a makeshift beacon. “Hang on, Tin Cans, I’m comin’!”
Nadia raced toward the source of the pink beam, scrambling over stone brick bridges and leaping between perilous pillars. Finally she spotted her destination: a
smooth stone platform at the edge of the Pools. The fighting ground was simple enough, a flat and unembellished distended hexagon shaped like a tapered trapezoid atop a cube, but the architecture around it was remarkably ornate. Water flowed out beneath gothic arches that stood on the tier’s perimeter, cascading down to a river that wound through the Low Tier. An ornate stone balustrade between the pillars that flanked the arena provided the only protection one could expect against a ring out. With a large, elaborate fountain nearby, where a couple dozen parabolic arcs of water streamed out beneath the statue of a winged pegasus, it was a shockingly picturesque battleground for the very first match of a tournament.
Unfortunately, Nadia’s prospective opponents -also present and accounted for- were nowhere near as aesthetic pleasing. Both appeared to be monstrous cyborgs, with heavy-duty tech weapons grafted onto living bodies. One at least resembled a human with visible skin, eyes, and green cargo pants, though the reactor planted in his chest, built-in respirator, and menacing robotic arms tipped with giant rotor blades meant that
Purge was anything but natural. His partner, meanwhile, was simply a
giant green mutant made into a living weapon, complete with fearsome steel teeth.
Of course, Robo wasn’t much better. Though her metallic faceplate betrayed nothing, something about her cold dead stare told Nadia that her doohickey doppelganger was livid. Despite Nadia’s hood, her copycat seemed to recognize her at a glance. “You are late,” she intoned, her buzzy electronic voice harsh and flat.
“Fashionably late,” Nadia corrected with a wink. “Gotta keep you on your toes…ster. Toaster, get it?”
“Sigh.” If Robo could have rolled her eyes, Nadia suspected she would have. Instead she turned them on the enemy team, and the real feral followed her gaze.
The cat burglar grinned as she sized up the opposition. “Sigh-borg, you mean. I mean, look at these guys! Who’re you grease monkeys supposed to be?”
“I am Purge! Though soon, you may come to know me as ‘your worst nightmare’!” As if he’d been waiting for the opportunity, the wannabe helicopter stepped forward to announce himself. Nadia guessed that he must be the leader, and the green one his Kameo. “And this is Ssapo. Say hi, Ssapo.”
Ssapo snapped his huge metal teeth together.
Clang, clang!Nadia sucked in air through her own teeth as she grimaced. “Ooh, uh, sorry bud, but you’re a little early I think. Wasn’t expecting you ‘til tooth-hurty!”
Purge stared, his lifeless white eyes unblinking. “The chatty type, eh? You ought to save your breath.” He reached out a giant arm, rotating his four fingers as he spread them wide, then clamped them together in the direction of Nadia’s throat. “You’ll need every last one!”
Nadia didn’t respond, since she was busy altering her outfit. It proved to be a little tricky with just one arm, but a few quick, precise cuts were all it took to reduce her sleeves and pant legs to workable lengths. With her seams unobstructed, her one-of-a-kind fighting style would be firing on all cylinders. Purge just watched for a few moments, dumbfounded, before he found his voice. “What...what are you doing?”
“Huh?” Nadia looked up, her electric blue eyes wide within the shadow of her hood. “Oh, nothing. Just gettin’ comfortable. What, never seen a girl be-fur?”
“No! I mean, yes, I have! Obviously!” Purge averted his gaze, his eyes narrowed. It ended up on Ssapo, who clanked his teeth together again, which seemed to annoy Purge further. “Hmph!”
At that moment, Nadia’s ears twitched beneath her hood at the sound of familiar footfalls. She turned her head and spotted Primrose approaching. She stiffened up, her mouth agape for a brief moment, but rather than speak a word the feral tentatively swallowed. She hadn’t expected to run into another Seeker so soon, though maybe in retrospect it should’ve been obvious someone would figure out where to find her. Paralyzed, Nadia could only watch and wait for Primrose to make the first move.
Rather than rebukes or accusations, though, the dancer offered her a missing limb. After a second, Nadia let out a relieved breath, then took the arm and reattached it to its stump. When she closed her first and tightened her muscles, blood spurted out from her seams. “Well, how about that,” she managed. Though her sheepish smile was hidden beneath her hood, Primrose could probably see the feral’s gratitude in her eyes. “Appreciate you goin’ out on a limb for me.” With that, the two women drew apart, and Nadia turned a mischievous look on purge. “Guess you don’t get a hand-icap after all.”
The cyborg scoffed. “Pah. Didn’t need one anyway.”
Rolling her eyes, Nadia looked over at Robo-fortune, one eyebrow raised. “When’s the tournament start, again? I’m bored~”
Slowly, the Seekers of Light made their way out of Quick Rise, through the Low Tier, and toward the nearest lift to the Pools. Despite the general hubbub among both Esaka residents and yokai alike, it wasn’t exactly a stampede. The people here were all fighters of some stripe, but comparatively few planned to fight in this tournament series, and even fewer would be headed up to watch matches this early in the tournament. While not familiar with Esaka’s tournament culture just yet, Band could more or less guess why. In any given tournament, the number of elite combatants that people wanted to see would probably be vastly outnumbered by low to mid-level fighters trying their luck, who formed the bulk of the fighting community. That meant a lot of bouts between unknowns or one-sided stomps to get through before quality matches happened, and judging by the tournament schedule, that could easily take days. Band still had no idea how all this would be televised, but that was probably a factor, too. Still, there were at least enough people on their way to the tier lift that he and the others didn’t need to bug Terry for guidance.
It seemed like Terry had enough to deal with already, after all. Band glanced at the Hungry Wolf as the Seekers closed in on the elevator, his side-eye furtive and a little dubious. Though the burly blond put on an easygoing, cheerful air, making himself out to be an irrepressible everyman that the others could always lean on, Band could see by now that trouble brewed beneath the surface. Now where had he heard that one before? A shame Ms Fortune hadn’t been around to handle the solvable problem of Terry being broke, especially after he treated her to lunch the day before. The real eyebrow-raiser was how he blamed himself out of the blue for the attack on Banishing Flats, while absolving the catgirl who probably was the most at fault. After making connections that were tenuous at best, he went on to describe himself as beyond forgiveness, and more of a burden than a boon to the team.
All the while, Band had treated him to an increasingly incredulous stare. Part of him wanted to tell the younger man to snap out of it and quit being so melodramatic, but he didn’t know Terry well enough to determine if a little tough love was what he needed. Thus, in the interest of not actually doing more harm than good, the detective held his tongue and let Pit console him. Clearly the man had a lot more inner conflict going on than one might expect. Band could only hope that he got his head in the game by the time fists started flying.
Terry had dropped one important clue, though. As Band stepped aboard the tier lift and turned away from the inner city to watch the Low Tier recede beneath him, he mulled over the unlikely detail that Terry managed to remember. Apparently, the thunder god he, Harry, and Kim encountered yesterday had actually used the term ‘Seekers of Light’. If either of the other detectives remembered letting that name slip, this Raiden could be the lead that Roland or another investigator needed. If neither Harry nor Kim gave away the team’s name, though, they might have come even closer to the culprit than they realized. Plus, now that the Seekers had a thunder god involved, Band could help but remember that all-too-sudden storm surge from last night. Making connections where none existed was a common pitfall, of course, but still. A good detective left everything on the table.
In short order, the elevator crested the edge of the Pools. Band and the others stepped out into the tier, consulted the nearest bulletin board, and parted ways to hunt down the simple stages where they’d fight their first matches. The cyborg had been here before when traveling between the Low and Middle Tiers, of course, but today the Pools were an entirely different beast. Instead of scattered sightseers or lonesome ponderers, today’s water park hosted a smorgasbord of fighters from all walks of life. Those not bustling to and fro in search of their own battlegrounds were warming up with stretches or drills as they waited for the tournament to begin. Some sized up their opponents and traded barbs, while others chatted with old friends or rivals. Despite the looming competition, the atmosphere was fairly casual for now. Among the scattered yokai already haunting the venue, Band spotted one high above water level with an unusual
camera in its hands. Maybe that was how tournament matches would be broadcasted throughout Esaka’s lifestream?
As one might expect of the city’s biggest and most popular tournament, World Warrior demanded the lion’s share of the available Pools setups, so even though the Seekers arrived in that section, it would take a while for Band, Sakura, and Harry to find their stations. Looking at the enormous number of would-be street fighters around here, it was hard not to be intimidated; the Seekers numbered just three in a pool of two hundred and fifty six competitors, all vying for the chance to lay their hands on Bison. According to his encounters yesterday, Kim Wu, Balrog, and TJ Combo should all be here, but even Band couldn’t pick them out of the visual chaos. He did, however, manage to find his own destination: arena W-119. This took the form of a roughly circular
stone circle of pitted, porous stone brick, ornamented with a large rug that sported an emerald-colored bump in the very middle. A large stone statue in poor condition rose from the water on one side, a venomous smirk on her timeworn face. Band seemed to be the first one here, so after jumping over from a nearby bridge he settled in to wait.
He wasn’t left waiting for long. Just minutes later, he spotted a man walking the same bridge he did, headed toward the arena. The
stranger wore his long brown hair and beard unstyled, along with a simple slate blue robe with bright yellow highlights. When he gathered himself up and leaped over the water, his robe fluttered upward like a parachute, and after catching a glimpse of pale skin Band looked away before he could observe whether or not the man was wearing anything underneath it. Once the stranger landed opposite him and dusted himself off, Band cleared his throat. “So. You’re Mr. Rasputin, I take it?”
“Oh, yes! Grigori Rasputin, at your service!” Rasputin replied in a singsong voice. “And you must be Big Band. I must say, you certainly fit the bill…” He spread his arms wide, a wild smile on his face. “I come to you today in the name of love, to preach an end to mankind’s endless cycle of violence!”
Big furrowed his brow, blinking. “To…a fighting tournament?”
Rasputin bowed. “Of course! To purge ourselves of our temptations, we must face and overcome them first-hand, be it on the battlefield or in the bedroom!”
“Uh huh…” Band couldn’t help but chuckle dryly at the strange man’s mission statement. “Guess you got your work cut out for ya, pal.”
At that, Rasputin just smiled and closed one fist, which sparked with electricity, sparkled with ice, and blazed with embers. “Certainly. But love will always triumph!”
Just then, the serpentine airborne streams of ghostly energy that flowed around and throughout Esaka began to surge. Enough spread throughout the city’s tiers, including the Pools, that every makeshift arena received at least one. Other fighters quickly leaned into the ethereal currents, including Rasputin, so Band went ahead and followed suit. When he did, he experienced a brief, dizzying burst of psychedelic colors and voices, but after a moment they resolved into the image of a balcony. It featured a set of double doors flanked by two crimson banners on both sides, one representing each tournament. Band couldn’t identify what building this balcony might be attached to, but judging by the architecture and the way the banners fluttered in the wind, it could easily be one of the towers in the Top Tier. This, he quickly realized, wasn’t just how the tournaments would be commenced; the commencement would be announced by the infamous Four Kings themselves.
The double doors slammed open, and one by one the overlords of Esaka strode through. Out first swaggered a
brolic warlord clad in little more than spiky red armor and a skull-faced helmet, the cruel and mighty Shao Kahn, who reveled in the bloodsport called Mortal Kombat. Next, in sharp contrast to his predecessor’s practically naked villainy, sauntered a
gentleman in lavish crimson attire, the wine in his glass as ruby-red as his right eye. His curtains of neck-length blond hair and rectangular mustache marked him as Rugal Bernstein, notorious statue collector who stood alone as the undisputed King of Fighters. Even now two black panthers slunk along at his heels, either impeccably trained or simply cowed by his overwhelming presence. After him came the
man with an impressive mustache and shocks of gray hair, the huge muscles visible beneath his black karate gi weathered and scarred from a lifetime of use. This was Heihachi, who ruled the Tekken tournament with an iron fist, and though every bit as prideful as he the others he put on no airs to exaggerate his self-evident strength. Finally, white eyes blazed in the darkness, and out into the light of day strode
M. Bison, every inch the ruthless dictator who reigned over the World Warrior tournament. He alone grinned wildly into the camera, as if imaging one face in particular whose shock and horror he yearned to relish.
As each man took up his position in front of his banner, one more figure stepped out onto the balcony. This one belonged to a woman, clad like three of the four kings in red, with a black satin cape at her back and a tall helmet upon her head. The purple eyes of the
lady consul stared impassively as the door closed behind her and she stood, hands clasped behind her back, between the Four Kings.
Just as he arrived first, Shao Kahn was the first to speak first. “Fighters of Esaka! Welcome back to the stage of history!” he roared with the vigor of a seasoned announcer. “Are you ready to fight, bleed, and die? Do you have what it takes to claim victory and glory everlasting? Or will you drown in the Pools, wasted and forgotten? Steel yourselves, and struggle with every last drop of your strength! Climb the mountain we call Esaka, if you dare, and throw yourselves at the feet of your gods!”
“Before you begin!” Though Heihachi spoke in what was clearly Japanese, everyone understood him somehow. “Know that there are cowards in your midst. Last night, G-Corporation perpetrated a vile and underhanded attack on a beloved establishment in the Middle Tier. This is only their latest outrage, and it is past time we held them accountable. Starting today, my Mishima Zaibatsu will lead the charge to wipe G-Corporation from the face of Esaka, once and for all! And if one of you brings me the head of Kazuya Mishima, you will find yourself amply rewarded.” He held up a single finger. “An audience with the Heavenly Principles themselves!”
After a brief pause, Bison let out a guttural laugh. “But that’s not all that happened last night. Yesterday evening, a feeble, paltry attempt was made on my life.” Still wearing his horrific rictus grin, Bison clenched his fist and rose into the air. “Yet here I stand, stronger than ever! So know this, vermin. Such pathetic tricks are the last resort of weaklings and losers, incapable of becoming World Warrior!” He pounded his fist into the palm of his other hand in a burst of psycho power. “So if you really want me dead, come! Fight through the bracket, and give me your best shot!” He let out a malevolent laugh as he drifted back down. “I’ll be waiting.”
Rugal sipped his wine, then cleared his throat as he adjusted his tie. “And there you have it, fighters. Come and get us, if you can. And try not disappoint the Lady Consul, hmm? The tournaments start…now!”
The vision blurred, the lifestreams receded, and the fighting began.
After leaving Blazermate to try and puzzle her way through the security checkpoint’s training program, Sandalphon returned to sort out the mess that the stagecoach’s interior had become. While Ace worked on the exterior to repair some of the damage done to the vehicle’s black steel armor, the archangel meticulously sorted through the expedition’s fallen equipment alongside Ramattra, though like the monster hunter she kept an eye out for any sign of Belial. After all, few opponents encountered by the Seekers possessed both raw destructive power and dangerous intelligence, and fewer still managed to survive a fight with the heroes in order to threaten them again later. For her part, Sandalphon used External Information Network to run scans of the area at regular intervals, perhaps to excess, though in her mind one could never be too careful.
For now, though, her scans returned no signs of any potential enemies in the immediate area, aside from the Traffikrabs and Delibird. With Heismay still outside, perched atop the stagecoach as a fully dedicated lookout, she could feel reasonably confident that the team could spot any would-be ambushers in time, especially in such an open area like this. Only airborne foes could get the drop on them now, but in a way those high-yield explosive turrets that Heismay discovered provided a sense of reassurance, promising that any enemy fliers would be pulverized the minute they entered the local airspace. As such, the only things falling from the skies were fresh snowflakes, gently raining down from the dark clouds high above as the Frozen Highlands’ temperature slowly continued to drop, one fraction of a centimeter at a time. The warm glow of the stagecoach’s lamps and stewpot provided what little heat the Seekers had, and the soft, Aeolian song of the chimes drifted away in the wind.
When Sectonia had her antlers clear the traffic jam by the security gate, of course, the noise of scraping metal and skidding tires was quite hideous. Heismay grimaced as he watched the giant bugs work for a few moments, glad that his long ears were currently tucked inside his parka’s hood. Having scoped out the gridlock earlier while accompanying Sandalphon to the security booth, he had briefly wondered if there might be some method to the madness–a way to slide the vehicles around so that a path could be created between them without destroying anything. It wasn’t like the team needed those strange contraptions, though, so the scorched earth approach worked just as well. Soon Sectonia’s underlings had the road more or less clear, the route straight to the checkpoint flanked by lanes of smoking, sparking mechanical wreckage. The area now looked like a junkyard, but it would suit the Seekers’ purposes as long as they found a way to open that gate. Heismay certainly wasn’t about to brave those guard turrets to try and find gate controls on the other side, and in his eyes Sectonia was wise to not try her luck either.
Not long after Sandalphon finished organizing the stagecoach interior, pleased with everything now firmly fastened into place, her communication sigil manifested at her cheek. Geralt reported that he’d reached some sort of control center, indicating that he’d made it through the cargo sorting system without any apparent issue, and that he would open the way. Sure enough, a klaxon sounded out from the direction of the security checkpoint, and when Sandalphon stepped out into the cold to look, she saw the two-story metal barrier sliding open. As the gate receded, it revealed the sight that Heismay briefly glimpsed earlier before ducking away from the guard turrets’ targeting lasers: a
stretch of tarmac pitted by large, irregular holes. There were a variety of military vehicles as well, all destroyed wrecks. At the far side, the words
Raphael Space Center still shone like new over the main entrance to said facility, so near and yet so far.
“Oh, just a moment, by the way.” Heismay hopped down, landed beside Sandalphon, and offered her a device shaped like a tuna can. “Adam said this is called a Legacy. It contains the partial account of a woman named Raven. Nothing too important, I don’t think, but I figured you’d want to know.”
Sandalphon nodded and accepted the item. “Thank you, I certainly do. Even things that may seem irrelevant at first glance may reveal their significance later on.”
As the wind picked up and the snowfall quickened, the Seekers reunited and got ready to move. Ramattra and Edward worked together to hitch the newly-created Shieldrix to the stagecoach. Despite appearances, the creatures were one hundred percent obedient to their creator, as if they had no will of their own. Meanwhile, Adam and Eve rejoined the main team from the side path they’d taken, accompanied not just by the scavenger’s drone but by a
damaged drop pod on an automated cargo trolley. “Hey!” Eve called, waving. “Sorry, but could anyone lend us a hand here, perhaps?”
Adam quickly explained the situation. “We tracked down Lily’s signal to this pod, meaning she’s trapped inside. Problem is, the lock’s jammed, so no matter how much I try to hack it, I can’t do a damn thing.” He looked around at the Seekers with a helpless shrug. “Don’t suppose any of you happens to be a locksmith?”
That made Roxas perk an ear,
"Leave it to me." He offered, finally cheered up a bit from his earlier dour mood. He let Adam and Eve lead him to the drop pod and immediately summoned one of his Keyblades,
"This should work." He said as he confidently brandished the black blade of Oblivion and tapped it gently on the drop pod's doors. With a groan, the lock literally unjammed itself and opened, allowing the drop pod's door to also open along with it.
"My weapons can open any lock." Roxas said, offering a brief explanation.
Once the door slid open, out popped a short-haired
young woman with a weather-inappropriate outfit and an extreme Cockney accent. “Whew, thanks bruv! I’ve been stuck there for ages! Dunno how this keeps happenin’, I’ve got such rotten luck with these bleedin’ pods…” After stretching her arms, she reached back in and pulled out a toolbox almost half as big as she was. “Alright, back in business! What’s next?”
Eve looked over at the Raphael Space Center. “The space elevator’s in there, and it’s our ticket to the Alpha Naytiba. If anything’s broken, we’ll be needing you to get it operational, Lily.”
The pint-sized engineer nodded enthusiastically. “Just leave it to me!” she declared with a salute. With that, she and Adam made for the stagecoach, while Eve remained outside to help escort the wagon onward. In fact, with only a short ride to the space center, few Seekers decided to hitch a ride. Even Sandalphon proceeded on foot, wary that the guard turrets might take their sights off the skyline, among other things.
Her concerns proved well-founded, as a handful of Naytiba droid and borg variants appeared to obstruct the Seekers’ path. With this many heroes on call, though, they weren’t much of a threat. As Heismay advanced to bite at the Naytibas’ ankles with his saber blade, and make openings for his allies to strike, Sandalphon lent fire support from the rear. Now that everyone present saw her as their leader, she could use her rifle without having to stand atop a blue tile, which made advancing into enemy territory much more convenient. Her task was easy enough that when Mokou arrived with another Legacy from the storehouse beneath the sorting system, Sandalphon could listen to it without breaking stride. “Thank you, Mokou.”
Click.“Day 52nd after the 2nd dive. 5th record. Legacy account Raven. I am the lone survivor. The truth…the truth always lets me down. I have gathered a good amount of information from the lab’s records and the memories of Legion’s soldiers. We’ve always followed the instructions of Mother Sphere to the letter. She was our guiding light, our salvation, our god. However…in truth, Mother Sphere was a powerful artificial intelligence created by mankind. In the distant past there was an engineer named Raphael Marks. He was her creator. Mother Sphere brought great prosperity to mankind, but…she seemed to have changed her mind upon the creation of Andro-Eidos, her self-made counterpart.”
“Perhaps I should have listened to the first record first,” Sandalphon muttered as she pulled her hexagun’s trigger. In a magical flash, a sentryborg was transformed into a harmless chicken, which clucked in confusion.
“After seeing the limits of humanity and the potential of Andro-Eidos…she decided there was no room to spare for mankind. Our god is not the god of humans. Then…why? Why do we worship Mother Sphere? I don’t know anymore. The more I learn, the more questions I’m left with. Everything…puzzles me.”
With that, the recording ended, just a few seconds short of the firefight as the Seekers cleared out the last couple Naytibas between them and Raphael Space Center. Raven’s recording left Sandalphon with a few questions, but it left Eve confounded and more than a little dismayed. “That…was borderline blasphemous,” she remarked, her brow knit with concern. “I’m certain some of my sisters would wish to destroy that Legacy outright. Yet…I cannot shake a sensation of doubt and dread deep within me.”
Sandalphon put away her rifle and summoned her gunstaff to use as a walking stick. “In this world, there is no shortage of false gods,” she mentioned off-handedly. “I would recommend getting used to the concept.”

Thanks to Geralt, the front door of the Raphael Space Center was wide open. Once inside, Heismay could look up and see that the entire structure was a single domed atrium, far larger than Krat Zoo’s greenhouse, its ceiling a gargantuan lattice of metal beams and glass with a center dominated by the space elevator. The lift itself, which was for all intents and purposes a three-story cylindrical building, sat beneath an enormous tube. To the Renaissance-era eugief, it was a flabbergasting technological marvel, yet even here in this sanctuary of circuits and steels he could see the evidence of corruption. Here and there Heismay spotted large deposits of Naytiba biomass, each clump of tumors the center of a rootlike web of tendrils slowly creeping across the structure. Worse still, the floor was littered with the corpses of soldiers, despite the World of Light’s disintegration rule. The whole place filled him with a profound sense of unease, especially since Belial -which he had yet to even lay eyes upon- had still not reappeared.
At the sight of an information kiosk, Sandalphon picked up the pace. She absorbed everything it had to offer at a glance, then reported to the team. “The floorplan is arranged around the elevator in a ring of eight sectors. We are in Sector 1. Currently, the elevator is in emergency lockdown.” While the kiosk didn’t say why, it took just a glance at the lift itself to confirm that Naytiba biomass had partially overgrown one side of it, anchoring it in place. “To ascend, that biomass would need to be destroyed, and the lockdown manually lifted.”
“I can handle the technical stuff!” Lily volunteered cheerfully.
Sandalphon’s eyes followed the road-sized groove worn into the floor, bordered by burnt matchsticks, that made an abrupt right turn and circled counter-clockwise through the facility. “That said, our expedition’s goal is not to ascend via the space elevator. The Midnight Walk leads around to the right and out the Raphael Space Center’s rear exit, directly across from us.”
“Oh…” The reminder seemed to disappoint Eve, who put on a glum smile. “Well, I’ll be sorry to see you all go. We’ve known each other only a short time, and you’re definitely an odd bunch, but most companionable. Not to mention capable.”
Though his drone did not fully convey his emotions, Adam seemed less acceptant. “Are you sure? Not that I doubt Eve’s abilities, but we could use your help up there. The Highlands will be a lot safer once the Alpha Naytiba is gone.” By this point, the scavenger had also noticed that a number of the Seekers seemed eager to snatch up loot wherever it could be found, so he decided to make one last ditch attempt. “...Plus, anything we find up there other than the Alpha Core is yours for the taking. With its proximity to the Colony, there’s bound to be some good tech.”
While Sandalphon did not ignore that, her focus was more on the mission. “I believe that space would be too high of an altitude for our signalling purposes,” she began, “But I must admit that part of me is uncharacteristically curious to see it for myself. It will probably take some time to breach the Space Center’s sectors and get through to the other side.” Her pupils had become ellipsis, with one dot bouncing upward at a time from left to right. “Perhaps we could divide and conquer. If most of us remain down here to work our way through to the exit, I could accompany Eve up the Space Elevator since I could warp back.” She pursed her lips. “I wouldn’t want to ask that anyone accompany me without an easy method of return.”
Heismay scratched his chin, thinking. Under normal circumstances having the team’s leader go off alone would be an obvious recipe for disaster, but if she could return at any time it was harder to object. “I suppose I don’t see the harm.” He shrugged. “Though I struggle to imagine the allure of a place called ‘space’. There’s plenty of space down here, if you ask me.”
“Might as well get started then, Lily.” Adam’s drone gestured toward the elevator control room in Sector 8, one sector to the left, then floated over to hack open the door.
Sandalphon watched as Lily and Eve went after him, then turned toward Sectonia and Mokou. “I trust I can rely on your magical abilities to clear the Naytiba infestation?” She could only imagine that the two spellcasters could make short work of that grotesque overgrowth. “My scans indicate a few Naytibas in the area, but nothing you both can’t handle.” She doubted that the sentryborgs,
mutalist ospreys, and
mutalist moas would pose much of a challenge, but they might keep the fliers on their toes.
She then turned and began walking toward the right. “In the meantime, let us begin heading this way. I’ll accompany you until the elevator is operational.”
To reach Sector 5, the Seekers would need to get through Sectors 2, 3, and 4, starting with Sector 2. Compared to the left-hand path, this right-hand path featured a lot more corruption, especially around the bulkhead. With the mechanical controls jammed, the team had no choice but to force a way through. “I’ll freeze as much as possible,” Sandalphon declared. “Once it’s frozen, concentrate your assault on the frozen area.” Heismay nodded, becoming his Assassin archetype. Once everyone was ready, the archangel hurled a Frost Lock at the corrupt flesh, and her teammates piled on the damage. After slashing the site with Lurking Nightblade, Heismay returned to normal to avoid spending too much MP, then attacked with a flurry of flashes. Of course, his efforts paled in comparison to the crew’s heavier hitters, and when the ice finally shattered, the Dissociation was so strong that the biomass barrier practically evaporated.
That seemed to trigger an immune response from the Naytiba organism, so once the Seekers entered Sector 2, where another flesh wall awaited them, Naytibas crawled out of the woodwork to attack. This time it wasn’t droids, but cephalopod Skullings that had reached their full potential by infesting human corpses. These took the forms of
Skull Troopers with heavy hammers,
Skull Fighters with scrap metal poleaxes, and
Skull Gunners with arms mutated into biological weapons, capable of shooting out streams of highly toxic fluid. These Naytibas fought with vicious, self-destructive aggression, happily taking even fatal wounds if it meant doing some real damage, and it quickly became apparent why: whenever seemingly slain, the Skulling would ooze away from the fallen corpse to find a replacement body to serve as its new host, its killer distracted by its brethren. Unless a conscious effort was made to finish off each Skulling, the number of enemy Naytibas would not diminish any time soon.