The first thing he knew was the cold. It wasn't the clean, clinical chill of
a sleep-cycle; it was a deep, leaching frost that felt like it had been settled
in his marrow for centuries.
Then came the sound. A rhythmic, screeching protest of
metal——as
if someone were peeling back the lid of a tin can with a pry-bar.
His eyes flickered open. A thick, grey frost obscured
the glass of his pod, but he could see a silhouette through the haze. It was
small, jagged, and frantic. A heavy blow landed against the reinforced seal,
and a spiderweb of cracks blossomed across his vision. With a final, violent
hiss, the internal pressure equalized, and the world rushed in.
The air tasted like dead batteries and ancient,
pulverized stone.
"Finally," a voice rasped. It was a woman’s
voice, dry as sand and heavy with exhaustion.
A hand reached through the opening—a smaller hand,
mapped with grease and week-old cuts. The skin was stained a sickly blue-grey,
a color that didn't look like paint, but like the pigment itself had been stained.
She gripped the edge of the pod and hauled him upward. He tumbled out, muscles
feeling like wet clay, and hit a floor made of shattered data-slabs and rusted
metal debris.
"Drink," she commanded, shoving a pouch at
him.
He looked up, squinting against a flickering, angry red
light. The woman standing over him looked like she had seen the end of the
world and survived out of spite. Her hair was nearly shoulder-length, with
unevenly hacked ends framing a face of sharp angles and weary, piercing eyes.
She wore an antique flight suit patched so many times the original fabric was a
memory. The gold trim—Sophia
Engineering, his brain whispered—pulled at his chilled, foggy mind.
"Who..." his voice cracked and then retreated.
"How long has it been? Where is the Director?"
The woman let out a short, hollow laugh. She sat back
on her haunches, resting a hand on a jagged piece of scrap metal she’d been
using as a lever.
"This is what's left of the planet, 'Scholar.' The
Director has been dead for a long time."
He tried to focus on her face, but his vision
stuttered. For a heartbeat, the red emergency light overhead flickered into a
brilliant, mock-sun gold. The rusted metal walls of the vault didn't just look
old; they looked like they were vibrating at a frequency his eyes couldn't
catch.
"The Archive..." he whispered, his hand
brushing a shattered data-slab of the pod. As his skin touched the cold
surface, a burst of static-laced sound filled his head—a thousand voices
whispering categorized Dewey-decimal codes. It vanished as quickly as it came,
leaving his brain throbbing against his skull.
"Careful," the woman warned, her voice
cutting through the mental noise. "The data-rot down here is thick. Touch
the wrong thing and it'll jump-start your link with ten thousand years of
garbage data. You'll go braindead before you hit the stairs."
He froze, the water pouch halfway to his lips.
"How long?"
"For you? Not sure. The system is a haunted
graveyard. Sophia is a tomb. And right now, you and I—and one other signature I
can barely find on a long-range scan—are the only things in Logos that haven't
been turned into the enemy by the Pictos broadcast."
She leaned in, the red light reflecting in her pupils.
"I've spent six months digging through this basement to find you. Do you
remember your name? Or why they buried you in a cryo-vault with so many
protections?"
The memories were foggy. He remembered a grand library.
He remembered the scent of blood being washed away by rain. But everything else
was a void. "I... I don't know."
The woman’s expression softened, just a fraction.
"Figures. You know less than I do. Comes with the cryo territory,
especially if you’ve been under half as long as I think."
A low, melodic hum echoed through the ruins. It wasn't
mechanical; it was a multi-tonal chord that vibrated his teeth in their
sockets. The woman’s face went deathly pale. She grabbed his tunic and hauled
him to his feet.
"The Wraiths," she hissed. "They usually
don’t come this far. They must have smelled the pod. They're coming to index
the leftovers. We move. Now."
He almost recognized the word. It meant . It meant monsters.
But even in his daze, he knew monsters weren't real. To him, the woman was
scarier than any ghost that could exist.
"What are you saying? We’ve been attacked?"
"Shut up! You'll bring them straight to us,"
she snapped. "I still don't know what they are exactly. They're more solid
than a hologram, but not real enough to hurt conventionally. Stay down and
follow me. There’s still air in the lower levels and some systems are online.
Up there..." she gestured to the ceiling, "there's barely
anything."
She pressed a smooth, grey stone orb into his palm. It
felt heavy, unnaturally cold. He knew he should know what it was—the image was
right on the edge of his mind—but it wouldn't solidify.
"Keep that close," she warned. He didn't ask
questions. He just followed her into the dark.
They moved like vermin through the guts of a lifeless,
ruined world. The woman led him through jagged breaches where the old, twisted
metal would allow, and into crawlspaces choked with dust. Every time he
stumbled, she glared back, her eyes glowing with a frantic, solemn light.
This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
In the silence of the rusted labyrinth, the memories
began to bleed through. Flashes of white marble. Pillars that touched the
clouds. The Grand Archive wasn't supposed to be a scrapyard on a planet nobody
cared about; it was a cathedral of glass and gold where the air was scented
with electronic books and ancient, bound paper.
"It was... beautiful," Ian whispered, his
voice echoing off the rusted pipes. "The Archive. I can't believe I almost
forgot. It had a central spire that tracked the sun. We used to sit on the
balconies and watch the transit of the Inner Moons..."
"Shut up," she hissed, her hand flying to the
hilt of a jagged blade at her belt.
But it was too late. From the darkness behind them came
a sound like a thousand glass harps, each playing a note that didn’t fit. The
multi-tonal sounds rippled through the air. For a split second, Ian saw them
through the bent metals: thin, elongated things of a material that looked
caught between coarse fur and a deep black smoke. Where they touched the wall,
the rusted metal turned into a flat, textureless grey.
The woman didn't wait. She shoved him forward, her
boots clattering against a vertical ladder. They scrambled up, lungs burning,
until they reached a room with another heavy, circular hatch. She slammed the
locking lugs into place and turned to him, her chest heaving. She grabbed his
head, her grease-stained fingers digging into his temples.
"Look at me," she commanded. She felt behind
his ear, her thumb brushing a cold, dead interface. "Advanced Neural-Link.
Sophian Grade. But it’s dark. Not enough bio-electricity built up to jumpstart
it. Good. If that thing were live, they’d have picked your brain clean in
seconds."
She pointed to the hatch above them. "Beyond this,
there is no air. No atmosphere. Just those things and the cold. They don't see
light. They see .
If you turn on a HUD, if you broadcast a signal, you’re a flare in a dark
room."
She tapped the grey stone orb in his hand. "This
is an Atmos-Sphere. It
transmutes the hostile environment into a three-root pocket of breathable air.
If you drop it, you suffocate. If you get caught with it, I leave you.
Understood?"
"Watch the edges," she added abruptly,
nodding toward the grey orb in his hand. A faint, bioluminescent ring began to
pulse deep within the stone. "The Atmos-Sphere doesn't just make air; it will
eat contamination. If the ring turns red, the filters are choked. You'll have
about ten breaths of ionized ozone before your lungs turn to glass."
She checked the seal on her own wrist-mounted unit.
"And Don't look at the sky for too long. The light from the Pictos
broadcast... it's not just radiation. It’s a virus. Keep your eyes on my boots
and keep your mind on the 'Now'."
Ian nodded, his knuckles white around the stone.
"The ship is not far out," she said, her
voice dropping to a low, deadly serious tone. "We run. If you fall, I
don't stop. I'm not losing the ship for a memory-less Scholar."
The hatch hissed open, and the silence of the surface
hit him like a physical blow. Sophia was the skeletal remains of a planet. The
sky was a bruised black and violet; the buildings that once stood as monuments
to human intelligence were little more than ruined stumps of metal.
They ran.
Ian’s boots skidded on the vitrified, rusted soil. The
Atmos-Sphere hummed in his hand, creating a shimmering bubble of life in a
vacuum of death. The air he breathed smelled stale, like a room that hadn't
been opened in decades. But his legs were weak from the cryo-vault and not far
into the trek, he tripped over a shard of debris. He fell hard, and the orb flew
from his grip.
The air vanished. His lungs screamed as the vacuum
began to pull the moisture from his throat. He scrambled on his hands and
knees, scurrying, reaching for the rolling stone.
Behind him, the Wraiths' inhuman song erupted. They
were shimmering shapes at first, but as they came together, they formed a wall
of fractured dark light, twisted and writhing as they descended from the ruins
like a sandstorm. The woman was already fifty yards ahead, near a
strange-looking ship. She didn't look back.
He finally grabbed the orb. The air rushed back in, but
the Wraiths were already on him. They surrounded him—a miasma of cold. Long,
geometric "fingers" brushed his mind. He felt his memories—the
Archive, the smell of rain—being indexed, filed, copied, and erased. He was
about to be nothing. They whispered horrid things to him, beautiful things.
They promised him community… community in death.
The long, geometric fingers didn't just touch his mind
and skin; they felt like they were reaching through his ribs to stroke his very
soul. The whispering wasn't in his ears—it was in his bones.
“Ian
Toms,” the collective sighed, a million voices harmonizing into a single,
terrifyingly perfect chord. “Why
stay in the cage of a single body? Why suffer the cold? We are the Archive now.
We are the rain. We are the marble. Give us the sequence... give us the memory
of the spire... and be eternal.”
His grip on the Atmos-Sphere loosened. The promise of
an end to the biting cold was a siren song, a warm bath of white light. He felt
his name beginning to unravel—Ian...
I...—until a violent, artificial shriek tore through the harmony.
Then, just as he felt his essence slipping away, the
sky turned a visceral green.
A blinding, emerald spotlight cut through the violet
dark like a laser through a tumor. The Wraiths shrieked—a sound of digital
feedback—and scattered like roaches. Above him, a jagged, violet-black
silhouette descended: .
A harness dropped. With his last bit of strength, Ian
secured it. He was hauled upward, dragged into the airlock, gasping as the
hatch slammed shut.
When he was able to breathe easy again, he saw the
ship's interior was a nightmare of modifications. Thick metal and copper wires
ran along the ceiling like exposed nerves. Whatever this Sophian ship had once
been was buried under layers of scrap and reinforced shielding. It looked to be
on the edge of falling apart, but Ian didn't care. Any breathable air was
better than none.
Ian stood up and moved toward the inner corridor,
desperate for the sight of a bunk or a clean med-bay, his body aching from the
journey. But the woman stepped into his path.
From behind a sealed door came a sound that made the
hair on Ian's arms stand up. It wasn't the chord of a Wraith, but a rhythmic,
loud, wet, repeating clicking. A code maybe?
"That's not for you," she said, her voice
dropping to a dangerous, protective growl. The blue-grey stains on her hand
seemed to be brighter than before. "The galley is to the left. Sit. Don't
touch the terminals. Don't look for a jack. I need to make sure you aren't
carrying a viral-echo of those things before I let you anywhere near my life
support."
Ian leaned against a vibrating bulkhead, the cold of
the Wraiths still lingering in his mind. "I... I remember something. When
they touched me. It was like some sort of network. Like they were trying to
know me or remember me... I didn’t even remember me, but those… things knocked
something loose. It's coming back to me slowly."
He looked at his shaking hands and extended his right.
"My name is Ian. Ian Toms. I was a Conservator at the Grand Archive on
Sophia."
The woman watched him, her expression unreadable.
"Well, Ian Toms. Welcome to the end of the world. I’m Astra Nyx, Captain of this
ship. Try not to die before we get answers. I didn't spend six months digging
you up just to watch you turn into a Wraith."

