Gaston returned
toward the Rusty Cog after a couple of drinks, his anger reduced to a
low simmer that was already beginning to fade. Pride still lingered,
but the sharp edge of it had dulled with time and alcohol.
As he walked, he
sent a message to the encrypted signal Dashiel had given him earlier.
Returning to the
room. Let's go over the plan—unless you're still serious about
dissolving the contract.
The Rusty Cog came
into view at the end of the street.
The same smells
greeted him—synth-ale, ozone, and machine lubricant. The flickering
neon sign buzzed intermittently above the entrance, casting uneven
light across the worn pavement. The place carried the same quiet
desperation it always had.
Before he reached
the door, his wrist-comm vibrated.
A new encrypted
message appeared.
Not a reply to his
signal.
A direct
transmission.
UNIDENTIFIED SOURCE
// PRIORITY ONE
DECRYPTION ACTIVE...
A moment later the
message resolved into a single line of text.
DO NOT RETURN. ROOM
COMPROMISED. TARGET IS WATCHING. I AM SECURE.
The message erased
itself immediately after appearing.
Gaston stopped
walking.
Only then did he
notice something he had missed before.
Across the street,
the air shimmered faintly—barely perceptible unless someone knew
what to look for. A distortion field hung above the alleyway, the
telltale signature of a cloaked surveillance drone.
Small. Professional
grade.
And it was watching
the Rusty Cog.
His instincts told
him Dashiel was right. Returning to the room now would be walking
straight into a trap.
Gaston turned away
from the bar without breaking stride and headed deeper into the
Mid-Spire.
The Mid-Spire rose
clean and polished above the Ironworks. No metal dust. No smoke. Only
glass towers and curated luxury.
The Rudrick family
safe house sat on a quiet side street between a high-end boutique and
an exclusive members-only club.
Once, it had been an
impressive townhouse.
Now its facade was
faded and weathered. The Rudrick crest—a hawk clutching a lightning
bolt—was barely visible above the doorway, etched into stone that
had long since begun to decay.
Gaston approached
the door and activated the old family entry sequence.
Third iron stud.
Key turned twice
counter-clockwise.
A single pull on the
brass lion knocker.
The lock released
with a soft mechanical sigh.
Inside, the safe
house was dark and silent.
Dust hung thick in
the air. The rooms smelled of stale air and forgotten memories.
Gaston moved through
the darkness toward the library, where the emergency reserves were
hidden behind a false fireplace panel.
As he reached for
the hidden latch—
The faint sound came
from behind him.
Gaston spun around,
his hand already reaching for the arcane-tech pistol at his side.
A figure stood in
the doorway, wrapped in shadow. The stranger lifted
a hand. The room exploded
with light.
Standing before him
was a woman in a sleek black uniform. Her silver-blonde hair was
pulled into a tight bun, and her pale blue eyes studied him with calm
precision. A small data-slate hung from her wrist.
“Hello, Gaston.”
Noelene Salem smiled faintly.
“You really should
reconsider your choice of safe houses.”
Noelene Salem’s
voice was cool and controlled.
“I’ve been
expecting you.”
Two figures stepped
forward behind her—enforcers in House Salem livery. Their
arcane-tech rifles rose in perfect synchronization.
They were aimed
directly at his chest.
Noelene tilted her
head slightly, her gaze unwavering.
“I’m afraid I
have some questions for you about your recent activities,” she
said.
Her eyes sharpened.
“And about your…
associate.”
“Noelene, love,
what are you talking about?” Gaston said, leaving his hands out
wide.
Noelene doesn't
smile. She takes a slow, deliberate step into the room, her dove-grey
dress whispering against the dusty floor. The two enforcers fan out
to either side, their rifles unwavering.
"Don't 'love'
me," she says, her voice sharp as a shard of ice. "You used
that line this morning. It was charming then. Now it's just
insulting."
She stops a few feet
away from him, studying him from head to toe. "You left my
coffee shop and went directly to the Ironworks. You met with someone
at a flophouse called The Rusty Cog for several hours. Then you went
drinking in my district before returning here."
She raises her wrist
comm, showing Gaston a grainy, enhanced still image taken from a
high-altitude drone. It shows Gaston and Dashiel entering Room Three.
"The woman you
were with is not your 'aide.' She's Dashiel Vivien. A freelance
systems analyst with no noble connections and a recent employment
history that ends abruptly... at Crimson Sigil." Her gaze hardens.
This tale has been unlawfully lifted without the author's consent. Report any appearances on Amazon.
"Now tell me,
Gaston Rudrick of the defunct Rudrick branch... what business does a
Legacy Reject have with a missing Crimson Sigil asset? And why did
you ask about Crimson Sigil mere hours after breaking one
of their field teams?" The enforcers'
fingers tighten on their triggers.
“I told you
already. I gave you the shortened version this morning when we met.”
"You gave me a
story," Noelene corrects, her voice low and dangerous. "A
story about finding a distress signal and interfering with a Crimson
Sigil operation to get 'proof.' You conveniently omitted that you
then took their asset with you and spent the day holed up in a room
with her."
She takes another
step closer. The enforcers shift their stances, ready.
"The shortened
version leaves out the most important part, Gaston. Why? Why risk
everything for a stranger? Why bring that kind of heat down on
yourself... and by extension, on me?" Her eyes search his,
looking for any crack in his fa?ade.
"Are you
working for a rival house? Are you trying to blackmail my father? Or
is this something else?" Her voice drops to a whisper. "Does
it have to do with what I felt this morning? That... pull?"
“A little of the
last and exactly what I told you this morning. I’m trying to build
my family up from the ashes, stronger and more powerful than the main
branch of the family so we can separate from them and let them fall
on their own.”
Noelene studies
Gaston for a long moment. The tension in the room is thick enough to
cut with a knife. Finally, she makes a subtle
gesture with her hand. The two enforcers lower their rifles a
fraction, though they remain alert.
"You are either
the most reckless fool in Veridia," she says slowly, "or
you're telling the truth. And unfortunately for my
peace of mind, I'm inclined to believe it's the latter."
She turns and walks
to the dusty library table, placing her data-slate on it.
"The pull I felt. It wasn't just nostalgia or attraction. It
was... systemic. My family dabbles in things we shouldn't. I've been
scanned by Crimson Sigil's sensors before, during 'routine health
checks' at the Conservatory. I know what a dormant signature feels
like when it's being passively monitored."
She looks back at him.
"Yours flared this morning. Just for a moment. It was like
nothing I've ever felt—dense, hungry. It wanted to consume. Is that
what this is about? Are you trying to awaken it?" Her expression is unreadable—a mix of fear, fascination, and
cold calculation.
"And more importantly... does Crimson Sigil know about it
yet? Because if they do, they won't just be watching your flophouse.
They'll be coming for you, Gaston. And anyone connected to you."
“I don’t know what that thing inside me is, if it’s even
real,” Gaston said. “That woman can see the signatures. She can
help me understand it—safely. And more importantly, she’s the one
I saved. She uncovered their secrets and what they’ve done to
people. They were going to eliminate them.”
“I’m going to get proof of their activities and go public with
it so I can start building my social networks again. Bring my house
up from the ashes. My father and mother committed suicide in shame
when the main branch lost their bet and duel.”
Noelene closes her eyes for a second, a flicker of genuine pain
crossing her features at the mention of his parents. When she opens
them again, the calculation is still there, but it’s tempered by
something else—perhaps empathy, or a recognition of shared tragedy.
"She can see signatures," Noelene murmurs, almost to
herself. "A Seer. That explains why they wanted her so badly.
And why you kept her."
She turns fully to face him, her posture less rigid.
"Gaston... you have no idea what you're playing with. My
father isn't just a discreet investor in Crimson Sigil. He's one of
their primary financiers. The Conservatory isn't just a front; it's
their primary research and containment facility in this sector. The
'new wing' you would have toured? That's where they keep the
high-value subjects. The ones they're either trying to weaponize...
or dissect."
She gestures to the enforcers, who finally lower their rifles
completely and step back to the doorway.
"If you go in there with that thing inside you stirring—even
dormant—their sensors will light up like a beacon. You'll be
captured before you reach the data core."
She picks up her data-slate and taps it a few times.
"I intercepted the surveillance order on The Rusty Cog an
hour ago. They're looking for Dashiel Vivien and an unidentified male
accomplice with a potent latent signature. They don't have your name
yet. But they will."
She looks at him, her expression grim.
"You have two choices. You can run. Take your Seer and
disappear from Veridia forever. Or…" She takes a deep breath.
"You can let me help you. I can get you better schematics
than anything she stole—the real blueprints, including the
sub-levels and the emergency purge vents. I can provide you with a
frequency scrambler to mask your signature for a short time. And I
can create a distraction during the Gala that will pull security away
from the containment block." Her eyes hold his. "But my help comes at a price. A real one.”
“What do you want, love?” Noelene's lips press into a
thin line. The endearment doesn't soften her this time.
"I want my father out," she says, her voice low and
fierce. "Not dead. Out. Stripped of his title, his wealth, and
his influence. Exiled from Veridia and the Upper Spires forever."
She paces a few steps, her dress swirling in the dust. "He's sold our family's honor to those butchers for power and
prestige. He's let them use our name, our estate, to hide their
atrocities. Every test subject in that 'Conservatory' has my family's
seal on their file. I won't inherit a legacy built on torture and
dissected souls."
She stops and faces Gaston again.
"You want to build your house from the ashes? Fine. Help me
burn mine down first. The data core you're after—it won't just
implicate Crimson Sigil. It will have every transaction, every
communication, every directive with my father's signature all over
it. You leak that data publicly, you destroy Crimson Sigil's
operations and you destroy House Salem's standing in one stroke."
Her gaze is unwavering.
"In return, I give you everything you need to get in and out
alive with the proof. And when it's done... when my father is gone
and I am the head of what remains of House Salem... our houses will
have an alliance. A real one. Not based on lies or forgotten duels,
but on a shared secret and mutual survival." She extends a hand, not for a handshake, but as a symbol of the
pact. "That is my price. Do we have an accord?"
“And what about us?”
A faint, almost imperceptible tremor runs through Noelene's
extended hand. She withdraws it slowly, folding her arms across her
chest as if to steady herself.
"Us," she repeats, the word hanging in the dusty air.
"There is no 'us,' Gaston. Not right now. There can't be."
She looks away, her gaze drifting to a faded portrait of some
long-dead Rudrick ancestor on the wall.
"What you felt this morning... what I felt... that was a
spark. A dangerous one."
She gestures vaguely towards him.
"It's tied to whatever is waking inside you. Not real
yet—just potential."
Her eyes return to his, filled with a weary resolve.
"If we survive this—if you awaken that power on your own
terms and I cleanse my house of its poison—then perhaps we can see
if there's anything real left between the two people we become. But
not before. I won't be another thing consumed by that power on its
path to dominance. And you shouldn't want me to be."
She takes a step back toward the door where her enforcers wait.
"So? The offer stands. A professional alliance for a
professional goal. My resources for your mission. My father's ruin
for your house's foundation. Nothing more. Nothing less."
“Sure. Not that it matters. I lost the girl. She didn’t like
parts of my plan and dissolved the contract when we had a verbal
disagreement and I left for that bar you tagged me at.”
Noelene's eyebrows raise slightly. "A verbal disagreement," she echoes, a hint of dry
amusement in her tone. "I can only imagine. She struck me as the
type with very firm boundaries." She taps her data-slate thoughtfully.
"Losing your Seer is a significant setback. Her ability to
see signatures was your best early-warning system. And she had the
stolen schematics."
She looks at Gaston, her expression turning pragmatic. "However, it also simplifies things. One less variable. One
less person to protect—or who could be captured and made to talk."
She brings up a holographic display from her slate—a complex,
multi-layered blueprint of a sprawling facility.
It's far more detailed than anything Dashiel showed him.
"These are the true schematics for the Arcane Sciences
Conservatory, including sub-levels not on any public record. The data
core is here."
She highlights a chamber deep underground.
"Access is via a maintenance shaft that runs behind the VIP
donor gallery's 'refreshment annex.' A place no one of importance
would ever go."
She zooms in on a section.
"You'll need to get yourself 'escorted' there for being...
indisposed. Given your preferred method of distraction, that
shouldn't be difficult to arrange, even alone."
She closes the display.
"I will provide you with a scrambler pendant. It will mask
your signature for approximately twenty minutes. After that, their
sensors will pierce the static and they will know exactly what you
are."
She produces a small silver pendant on a thin chain from a pocket
in her dress. It hums with faint, cool energy.
" Wear it under your clothes. Do not activate it until you are
inside the gallery and ready to move."
She takes a final look around the dusty safe house. "Be at the Gilded Grind tomorrow night at ten. I'll have your
formal invitation chip and final instructions. Don't be late."
With that, she turns and walks toward the door, her enforcers
falling in behind her. She pauses at the threshold.
"And Gaston?" She glances back.
"Try not to pick any more fights with pragmatic women before
the mission."
She smirked.
"We're in short supply."

