The rift juddered again—this ti upward—as though sothing had yanked it by the spine. The whole siphon of color lifted several cubits into the air, dragging a swirl of dust and translucent motes up with it.
“Why is that rift airborne?” He asked. The other rifts he’d seen had never been that high up.
Severa was too busy forcing their aetheric altitude higher. “Rao,” she shouted over the wind, “begin Aetheric Transfer Link. Full channel stability, no reservoir tether.” Fabrisse knew about Aetheric Transfer Link. Unlike Synchronization spells which were Emotion focused and required both casters to align their affective vectors, this was simply Rao giving Severa his aether.
Rao extended both hands toward her. His aether bore a neutral ivory of resolve, which was preferred for stable transferring. The link stabilized around Severa’s back, swirling like a miniature helix.
Only once the link held did she turn her attention back to Fabrisse. “It could be that it’s ant to be anchored to an elevated structure that no longer exists. It may not be a terrestrial rift at all. The signature resembles patterns from Gale-class dungeons.” Even as she spoke, light gathered along her forearms before fracturing into dozens of razor-thin filants.
“Gale-class?”
“Wind-bound and migratory dungeons, often producing aerial creatures and turbulence-elent monstrosities.” She angled her free hand toward the riìt, and the light shot out to the rift’s parater, tracing boundaries around its writhing edges. It wasn’t an offensive spell. Was she trying to nd the portal?
The mont he opened his mouth to ask how she was doing that mid-flight, Severa said, “Observe, Kestovar. Not questions. Don’t distract .”
Right. He was supposed to docunt the anomalies. But . . .
He asked anyway, “What does a normal Gale-class dungeon look like?”
Severa inhaled sharply, but responded cordially anyway, For one, it does not release rainbow aether. Gale-class winds generate pale cyan turbulence, sotis white or silver.” The rift pulsed violently, the colors bending into a jagged spiral that made Fabrisse’s stomach flip. Severa continued, “You’d also hear low and continuous vortex shear. And the air pressure should drop. It hasn’t. Try to notice anything unusual entering or appearing from the mouth.”
He forced himself to focus the way she wanted—disassembling the scene ntally, cataloguing deviations one by one.
No cyan wind-signature.
No shear-noise.
No pressure drop.
That last one bothered him most. If a Gale-class dungeon should have been pulling the surrounding air in, then . . .
Either sothing is compressing all that turbulence inside, or the rift isn’t generating wind at all. Sothing else might be manifesting instead.
Then he noticed sothing protruding from the bottom of the rift.
At first, he thought it was just distortion—warped light, or the rainbow aether refracting oddly. The edge of the rift bulged out like stretched mbrane, thinning, stretching, then dragging itself back with a shudder. It was so small he almost missed it, and he was sure Severa didn’t see it as she was busy nding the top edges.
“Montreal,” he said, “I think sothing is trying to co out from the lower—”
“Observe first,” she cut in. “Describe only once you are certain.”
“But it’s gone.”
She didn’t respond this ti. She was operating at the edge of what a human could focus on, with whatever she was doing.
Then a second bulge appeared, larger this ti, spreading out like an unrolling carpet. The upper edges stabilized, but now the pressure below had nowhere to vent. The lower mbrane twitched in irregular bursts. Every ti Severa nded one side, the other strained in response. Whatever was inside was conscious, or at least semi-intelligent.
Fabrisse forced himself to inhale slowly, forcing his mind back into observation mode. He didn’t want to draw conclusions, but the rift itself seed to be conserving energy to feed it.
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“Montreal,” he said, “the bulge is not uniform. The mbrane pulses like a heartbeat. The edges are streaked with dull violet and gray, not the rainbow aether of the rift itself, and the movent isn’t smooth.”
Severa cancelled her nding spell imdiately. “Where?” she demanded.
He pointed toward the bulge at the bottom edge. It could very easily be overlooked amidst the rainbow hue overload.
The mont she saw it, she growled a mnemonic: “Solar Convergence!” and fired a blinding column of focused light onto the bulge. The dark shapes vanished.
Severa’s frown didn’t ease. “I don’t think my spell made contact.”
It didn’t? The thing disappeared.
“This is worse than I thought,” she muttered, backing away from the rift as shouts of call for reinforcents from Rao could be heard from afar. She turned toward Fabrisse. “We need to get you on the ground. Creatures don’t crawl out of dungeons unless they’re voidtouched. You’ll be a liability if you stay.”
Voidtouched? He didn’t think he would hear that word again so soon.
Fabrisse swallowed, nodding, but before he could react, grotesque flying creatures shot out of the rift like a swarm. Their bodies were segnted like a mantis, but grotesquely elongated. The front limbs stretched far beyond any natural proportion, jointed and knotted like brittle, desiccated tree branches.
“Ballsacks!” Severa growled, conjuring a wide arc of fiery aether that seared through the approaching swarm. “Rao! Disengage! Retreat to safety!” she snapped, then looked at Fabrisse. “Kestovar. You can open the Aetherrealm, correct?”
He jolted. “How do you know?”
“Unimportant.” She cut him off, eyes scanning the swarm. “I will protect you no matter what.” That did sound rather assuring. “But there are too many.” That did not sound assuring. “If any cos at you—”
A creature lunged at him faster than he could react. He understood instantly: his mont. He flung out his robe, angling it perfectly so his Aetherrealm pocket would lean toward the insect. The creature hit the fabric and was sucked into his Aetherrealm, pocketed safely away.
[Slots taken: 2]
[Aetherrealm slot: 7/10]
Another creature skitter‑darted toward them, its spindle‑thin forelimbs scratching the air like dead twigs dragged across glass. Severa angled herself so both of them moved out of the way of the creature.
“Good reflex!” She growled, “How many more Chasm Mantes can you store?”
Fabrisse flinched. “One.”
She twisted toward him so sharply the aether around her flickered. “You’re jesting. You can surely hold at least a few more?”
He winced. “I’ve got rocks in the Aetherrealm.”
Severa’s spell circle flared brighter. “Remove your rocks, then!”
A dozen Chasm Mantes shrieked as she lashed her arm through the air. Her aether erupted in a sudden column, eting the swarm mid-flight. The creatures collided with it and burst into sparks of violet and gold. The light exploded across the sky like a shattered sun, scattering scorched motes that hung briefly in the air before drifting down, turning the space around them into a storm of fire.
“The rocks are rare!” Fabrisse shouted, shielding his eyes.
“I’ll get you different ones!” Severa yelled, already tracing another sigil.
“Can you get my emotional attachnt then?” he cried.
“You are so . . . argh!” She released an exploding burst of fire that completely overkilled an incoming Mantis, turning it into bits.
[QUEST RECEIVED: Contain the Chasm]
Objective: Capture 4 Voidtouched Chasm Mantes in your Aetherrealm.
Reward: 100 EXP
New Concordance Skill: Subspace Compression (Rank I)
Effect: Objects stored in the Aetherrealm now occupy 50% less space.
Fabrisse stared at the shimring aether column as it twisted through the swarm. Even a great skill like Subspace Compression won’t get to part with my rocks.
They were still arguing when a half-dozen Chasm Mantes darted past Fabrisse, claws scraping the air, front limbs jerking like brittle branches. When Severa finally turned to et them, they were already way too close.
“Whipspin!” A vortex of wind and fire erupted in front of them. Both the shout and the vortex didn’t co from Severa.
The swirling column slamd into the swarm, throwing Chasm Mantes like ragdolls before incinerating them. Fabrisse and Severa turned in unison to see a figure cutting through the smoke and motes: a man, flying, wreathed in fire. His gauntlets were enormous and grotesque, glowing a pair of giant phosphorescent oranges, yet sohow he moved with uncanny precision.
“Tom!” Fabrisse breathed.
Tommaso Ardefiam shouted over the roar. “Good seeing you! Can you two stop arguing and just give the rocks, then?”
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