Chapter 27 — The Stygian Crossing
The concentric ripples on the black water died out, leaving the shores of the Stygian Sea in an uneasy, heavy silence. The sulfurous mist hung low over the lake, obscuring the opposite shore in a thick, gray shroud.
[Thermal Signature Tracking: Indeterminate kinetic mass detected at 120 meters depth.]
[Movement pattern: Predatory, rhythmic. Scanning for baseline profile matches...]
[No matches found in Dominion public databases. Categorizing threat as: Apex Organic.]
"What is it?" Mira asked, her voice tight as she watched the water flatten back into a mirror of liquid obsidian. Her fingers rested near the trigger guard of her rifle, her eyes never leaving the dark expanse. "Kael, what did the surveyor logs say?"
"The logs were scrubbed thirty years ago by early corporate scouts," Kael's dual-tone voice vibrated, low and completely devoid of human anxiety. "But the deleted telemetry fragments indicate a high concentration of predatory bio-forms that thrive on the heat of the planet's core. The Dominion didn't abandon this sector because the ore ran out. They abandoned it because the cost of clearing the water was too high."
The old shift lead swallowed hard, looking at the fragile, rusted iron utility barges chained to the broken concrete docks nearby. The vessels were little more than flat, unarmored platforms designed to haul automated drilling equipment, powered by primitive, low-frequency acoustic engines.
"Those barges won't survive a hit from anything bigger than a regular rock-crawler," the old man rasped. "If something comes up from the deep water, we're just sitting ducks in a tin tub."
"We have no alternative," Kael said, turning his crimson visor toward the crowd of weary laborers. "The air in this chamber will reach toxic sulfur thresholds within forty-five minutes. The extraction vents on the opposite shore are our only intake source. Load the barges."
The evacuation was swift but tense. The miners worked in hushed, terrified coordination, guiding the wounded, the women, and the children onto the three flatbed utility barges. The old acoustic engines woke up with a deep, rhythmic chugging that sent heavy vibrations directly into the stagnant water—a sound that, to Kael's tactical sensors, sounded exactly like a dinner bell.
Kael did not board the passenger decks. He took his position on the prow of the lead barge, his heavy, matte-black boots locked onto the reinforced iron edge. His integrated framework hummed with a resting frequency, his internal power core sitting comfortably at ninety-four percent.
[Core Reserves: 94%]
[Tactical Framework: Weapon systems optimized for aquatic engagement. Internal cooling efficiency: 100%.]
Mira stepped up beside him as the barges unmoored, the rusted iron chains rattling into the dark water as the vessels drifted out into the thick, gray fog. The shore faded behind them within seconds, leaving them entirely isolated in a world of black water and white steam.
"You're different, Kael," she said quietly, keeping her eyes on the water ahead. "When you look at me now... I don't see you. I just see the HUD reflecting off the glass."
"The interface is stable," Kael replied, his visor shifting slightly toward her before returning to the dark perimeter. "The 100% synchronization has removed the cognitive latency caused by human stress responses. My processing efficiency has increased by 400%. I am capable of keeping this column alive."
"But at what cost?" Mira murmured, her voice barely carrying over the low chug of the acoustic engine. "If you lose the part of you that wanted to save them in the first place, then who is actually driving the suit?"
Before Kael's processing matrix could formulate an answer, the water beneath the lead barge violently surged.
[CRITICAL ALERT: High-velocity kinetic mass approaching from below.]
[Impact point: Port-side hull. Proximity: 0.1 seconds.]
The entire multi-ton utility barge shuddered violently as a massive, bioluminescent silhouette slammed into the iron keel from beneath. The force of the strike lifted the front of the vessel clear out of the water, sending several miners screaming as they lost their footing on the slick deck.
From the black depths, a massive, segmented carapace erupted. It was a creature born of the planet's deepest trenches—a blind, armor-plated Leviathan, its pale white skin translucent enough to reveal the glowing, pressurized plasma sacs running along its spine. A cluster of razor-sharp, chitinous mandibles snapped inches from the barge's railing, spraying a highly corrosive, steaming acid across the iron deck.
"Open fire!" Mira screamed, her pulse rifle immediately barking into life, sending a stream of bright blue energy rounds bouncing harmlessly off the creature's thick, armored skull.
Kael didn't scream. He didn't hesitate.
[Initiating close-quarters aquatic engagement protocol.]
[Activating weapon system: Plasma Gauntlet Blade.]
With a violent hiss of escaping heat, a solid, jagged spike of brilliant violet plasma erupted from his right forearm. He launched himself forward, his heavy frame descending upon the beast like a falling anvil.