Two dozen empty eyes blinked down at the boyâs dead body. Emilia wanted to avert her own eyes, but doing so seemed like the perfect way to give herself away. Just act normal, if
normal
meant act like your mind has been melted under the oppressive power of magical giftsâor worse, something insidious winding its way through the platform or entire raid systemâanyways.
Not having had much of a chance to converse with the other visitors Clarity had acquired, Emilia had no idea if they had already had their brains melted or if something about the labyrinths theyâd been taken to before coming here were special, but the two visitors of the other team theyâd happened to across were just as strange as Vermilion now was. It was horrible, but at least everyone seemed to have fallen into the mindset of
the mission comes before all else,
and questions about her own normality werenât coming up.
She worried for V, though. Her wisp energy hadnât returned, although she was unsure if it would have, even if it did manage to find her friend. Hopefully, it had found himâwarned him about what was happening, even if that meantâŚ
Emilia blinked down at the boy lying at their feet. There was no blood, one of Jerrinaâs gifts having the ability to snuff out life like it had never been there. She supposed she could be grateful the woman hadnât turned that magic on her, but at least then sheâd be home, out of here andâ
And worrying for the lives she had left behind.
â¸Letâs move,⸠the other groupâs leader said, chin jutting out in the direction both of their groups had been heading.
Apparently there were three teams assigned to each task, coming in from different locations. A stop gap in case two of the groups didnât make it; if they were caught by the Ingogia family or forced to detour. The other group had run into the Risen Guard back in the city, and while their last messages had spoken of trying to escape, their presence had since been removed from Clarityâs messaging system.
No one had answered her when she asked if that meant they were dead. When sheâd been inside the labyrinths, her access to the Risen Guard system had been cut off, but Honey and Boundary had both been able to message herâher name had still existed on their contact lists. If the members of the other group were just gone⌠Well, it was possible the Risen Guard had ways of completely blocking systemsâof faking deaths.
Stars knew The Black Knot could do such things, their technology blocking communication so completely that any messages sent to their captives would be bounced back as undeliverable, just as they would be, were the person actually dead. Unless things had changed in the last decade, they rarely used that technology. It wasnât something the public knew they could do: create complete black sites, no information in or out unless the group allowed it. Being taken to such a place was a death sentence. You did not escape those places.
It could be like that here as well.
Finally, then began to move again, flying over the purple grass with ease as Vermilionâs gift activated, sending blood-red tendrils cascading out with each of their steps. The lack of night was annoying, the Ingogia Estate existingâEmilia assumedâon top of one of the city systemâs buildings, just like the Stringer Estate.
Two suns burned in the sky, filling the world with light that scattered through the foliage of the abundant trees. At least they could sprint between the copses of trees to keep hiddenâEmilia didnât really want to come across more people to kill before she could⌠do something. What? She had no idea. Maybe, once they were closer to the houses where the Ingogia family lived, she could alert them to their presence and hope theyâd give her clemency, or at least stop Clarity from murdering them and every Enclave member they found.
Not that she didnât have mixed opinions on that. The reality of the situation was that huge swathes of the Enclave were corrupted, and from what sheâd heardâalthough who knew how trustworthy anything out of a Clarity memberâs mouth wasâthe Ingogia family was one of the worst.
The least they could do was let the children live, but then theyâd just be hoping those children wouldnât come seeking revenge another day.
Inevitably, they would. One day, the children they let live would pop out to destroy Clarity and whatever world they built, even if it was likely the majority of the Clarity members taking part in this siege would be dead by then, leaving those soon-to-be grown children without the ability to seek out vengeance on the specific people responsible for the deaths of their loved ones. The visitors among them would be home as well, heading back into their regular lives and leaving memories of this place behindâor dealing with the psychological trauma of whatever the heartcores had done to them. That was also an option.
The point was, Emilia hated this: hated this quest that sheâd accidentally been dragged along on. It was stupid and ill thought out and going to get so many people needlessly killed. She hated that she couldnât do anything about it, hated that V was out there somewhere, and she couldnât help himâcouldnât keep him safe, hated that these people had been infected by the heartcores and Ajarniâs manipulations.
â¸Shh!⸠Kyren hissed, everyone tugging to a halt behind him.
Vermilion hissed, one hand slapping over her mouth while another gripped at her overexerted core. It hadnât been this bad before, when sheâd just been moving the two of them. Even their group of six had clearly been too much for them, but Yuka and the leader of the other group had insisted they stick together on their now joint mission. Now, Vermilion was paying the price.
Theyâd all pay the price later, if her ability to augment their movements was lost because her core broke down.
Emilia blinked around the group, wondering if the world they were hoping to create was worth their lives. Regardless of what was happening inside themâof what or who was manipulating themâthey did truly seem to want to make the world a better place. It was unlikely any of them would see that world, their lives destined to be ground to a halt by this mission or ones that would follow.
They had all accepted that fateâaccepted their lives were worth the world they wanted to create. Emilia might not agree with their methods or the sensibility of their plan, but she hoped it was worth itâhoped the world they made wouldnât simply be a mutilated extension of this one.
Kyrenâs energy swept out of him, moving over the giant empty field they had stopped short of. It was too open; anyone looking into it would clearly see them and sound the alarm. They couldnât go through it, so instead theyâd simply jump it, even if Emilia could feel how each jump was cracking Kyrenâs core.
â¸Letâs go,⸠the man said, eyes flashing black as magic swept out of him and the aether.
It was the third such jump theyâd made, although the first with so many people. The world vanished, the black of the aether pulling them inside it in a move that was similar to sparking but felt impossibly more ominous and dangerousâand this was coming from the person who had designed and tested sparking and definitely worried they would get stuck inside the aether while doing so!
It had been war, thoughâas this arguably was as wellâand safety precautions were pushed aside more often than any of them would have liked to admit. Luckily, only a handful of people had ever fucked up sparking badly enough to have seemingly disappearedâor, in a few extremely unfortunate cases, come out a mangled flesh blob. But! Those had all been outliers and the result of either not using the skill properly or using a hacked Censor!
It had not been her fault, thank you! Operator, not programmer, error!
That thought stuck with her as the world bent under someone elseâs control, and they popped out on the other side of the field, Kyren immediately leaning over and beginning to dry heaveâheâd already lost what food heâd eaten that day after the first time.
The aether shuddered, and when Emiliaâs eyes followed the stream of angry black energy, she found a line of power leading from Jerrina to another bodyâanother teenager, by the looks of it. Most likely, theyâd just been out for a stroll in the early hours of the holiday, celebrations beginning at midnight and continuing for the entirety of the dayâapparently sometimes extending into the next day, if there were enough people still going.
They hadnât deserved to die like this, alone and unsuspecting. Had the other child struck down just as emotionlessly by Jerrina been waiting for this one? How many more children would they kill because it was a
necessity?
â¸
We will do our best to restrict the deaths that occur at our hands,â¸
Ajarni had sighed from his pedestal, his own hands clean of the lives his followers were now taking. He had almost looked sincereâalmost. Emilia had seen that look before, in the eyes of politicians concerned with saying the right thing and being believable. Some could do it well, others not so much. Ajarni almost had it down, but not quite. Definitely enough that, in this world without political broadcasts, no locals was liable to have seen enough to realize their deceptions.
The man had shifted, looking uncomfortable in a fabricated way. His eyes had flickered shut while he just
breathed,
and for those long minutes where he had sat, seemingly composing himself before needing to lay out the truth of the matterâthe truth that they would need to kill everyoneâto his followers, the world had been silent.
It had been thoroughly disconcerting, and when she and V had dared to even whisper privately between each other, they had received dirty looks from
everyone
. Apparently, mister high and mighty overlord was not to be interrupted in his inner contemplation.
Eventually, he had spoken again, his words filled with contradictions about not taking any lives, killing all those who deserved death, enacting suffering on their enemies, forgiving even the worst offences.
â¸
We are all children of the universe,â¸
he had said, rising and beginning to pace the room, the heads of his followers swivelling as they followed himâas though to lose sight of him would be a travesty, a sin in its own right. â¸
We return life to the universe, where those lives have strayed from the path. We let lives continue, as they are only following the path the universe has laid out for them. Who are we, to question the way the universe has guided them? Who are we, to allow them to forsake the world we live in and the plan the universe has for all of us?â¸
â¸
Talk about contradicting yourself with every word you say,â¸
V had muttered to her, ignoring the disapproving glower Phlostra sent his way. The woman hadnât heard him, of courseâVâs words were for Emilia alone, after allâbut apparently she was paying just as much attention to the ripple of aether around them as much as to her leaderâs insanity.
This
âthis stupid ass questâwasnât letting people live the lives the universe had laid out for them. This was murdering children because they were in the wrong place at the wrong timeâwhere the universe had led them to beâand it was horrific. No one but her seemed to care. The Clarity members looked down at the corpse of this second child with just as much apathy as they had the first, and even in the brief moments where the other visitors managed to escape the monster pressing down on their personalities, she could see their apathy as well.
To them, these werenât people. These were just ones and zeros, animated by artificial minds. Who were they to care about their deaths? All they wanted was to winâto escape this world with a prize and as little psychological damage as possible.
â¸Good riddance,⸠Jerrina sneered, long hair flying as she turned, ignoring Kyrenâs hiss to be silent.
The fact that the manâs hacking and coughing was silent was fascinating, his body shifting as his stomach attempted to empty itself. No sound escaped him, however. Emilia couldnât decide if the lack of sound made the attempts at vomiting more or less gross, but she was leaning towards
more.
â¸Weâre almost there,⸠Yuka said, bright red eyes staring into the distance.
On her mapâwhich she had luckily never mentioned to anyone other than the kids she had access to, and theyâd been smart enough to never bring up around other peopleâEmilia could see a collection of houses. Each was marked with a symbol to indicate she had no knowledge of who lived thereâor what the purpose of the building was, perhaps? It was unclear, but as they moved closer to said buildings, Vermilion looking more and more liable to pass out as her movement augmentation gift wore on her, little dots began to light up the houses across Emiliaâs map.
Emilia didnât know much about the group that had joined them. When they pulled to a stop and one of their members commented that there were a dozen people inside the closest house. She wasnât sure whether to assume they had a system map of their own or a gift that allowed them to determine how many people were within a building. None of the locals sheâd talked to had ever mentioned their own system access having a map, so it could have been a function exclusive to the Risen Guard. She had no idea, but as someone who had spent a large portion of their life hacking their Censor and adding functions into itânot to mention forcing those functions onto her friendsâit was interesting to consider that the Risen Guard system might have exclusive functionsâthat every groupâs system might.
Were she around nicer people, she might have asked about it. These people were not nice, and she definitely wasnât asking them, especially not when they were starting to argue about whether the mission should be reassessed or not, her eyes lingering on a glob of spit a man from the other group had rudely spewed onto the ground. A memory of Olivier flashed through her head, the man pissed and arguing with her but subtly
proud
of how much she knew, at least until she poked him a bit too much.
Things had worked out between them, though, after that debate. Heâd helped her. Sheâd annoyed him. Heâd left her behind after gifting her freedom.
Thisâtheir group falling apart because the sixth member of their group was now snapping rudely at peopleâwas not going to work out.
Yuka stepped towards the woman, apparently intent to calm her. Emilia could understand the newcomer's anger at the mere suggestion they withdraw, at least a little bit. The woman was a spy within the Risen Guard, and while Emilia still thought her being there in general was stupid, if they stopped the mission now, there would be no returning to it for her.
And she was right, someoneâtwo someones, technicallyâwere already dead. The Ingogia family would know they had been there. There would be no second chance, not with this Enclave family, and they were the only ones with a harbinger who had gained system access, as far as any of them knew.
Emilia eyed up the building that Clarityâs intel had said housed a branch of the family who were less involved in the day-to-day workings of the family. It was, allegedly, the easier place to start. Theyâd know bits and pieces about what was happening within the more active branchâthe part that was housing the visitor who had allegedly gained access to the systemâbut as they were less trained, there would be less risk of a fight breaking out.
They also couldnât hear visitors, according to intel. Not knowing the source of said intel, Emilia had no idea what to believe, but she wasnât about to risk getting them caught because she had to sneeze, the spicy air itching at her nose. Given said intel had also stated there shouldnât have been so many people inside that house, and those extra people were an unknown variable pushing the riskiness of this missionâof her sneezingâhigher and higher, she forced herself to swallow down the sneeze.
â¸We will go on,⸠Yuka was saying, their voice an uncharacteristic growl as they glared down the visitorâa girl from the other teamâwho had suggested they head back: reassess and try again another day.
The girl seemed⌠oddly insistent, uncontrollable magic from a gift she had received that granted her easier use of electric magic dancing at her fingers.
If they fought here, theyâd attract everyoneâs attention. There would be no turning backâno trying to spare any lives. Everyone would die, and while that seemed the endgame anyways, they wouldnât have even learned anything if that happened!
It would be a waste of dozens upon dozens of lives andâ
Emilia sighed, stepping forward in an attempt to stop the fight threatening to break out between the girl and Yuka.
Stupid.