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Vatican Dicastery

The instrunts went off at seven past noon.

All of them, simultaneously. The way organ pipes hit a chord when every key descended at once, the whole rack of ecclesiastical detection equipnt finding the sa note from different directions and holding it together for a few monts before collapsing back to silence.

Cavallo dropped his pen. Sabatini was at the board before it hit the floor.

"Baseline?" Ferrante asked

"It’s way past baseline." Sabatini’s voice had the flatness it got when he was moving faster than his training.

"Past anything we’ve calibrated for. This isn’t infernal, it isn’t celestial, it isn’t in the space between those two categories --" He looked at the display. "It’s nothing we’ve ever seen among those two categories."

Luccesi, from the corner: "Duration."

"Eleven seconds... Then gone."

The needles settled back with the embarrassed sluggishness of instrunts that had been asked to do sothing they hadn’t been designed to do but had given it everything they had.

The room felt the way it felt after sothing fast had moved through them -- furniture at slightly wrong angles, air not yet fully settled into the usual arrangent.

Conti had her folder open. The page she wanted was near the back -- a graph, pencilled in a hand sixty years old on paper that had yellowed with the specific dignity of docunts that had spent their lives waiting to see the light.

She set it on the table.

"The pre-civilisation texts describe a specific output signature," she said. "Associated with the being the Wall recognises. The frequency predates the frawork our instrunts were built to asure within."

She looked at the display. "We’ve never been in the sa hemisphere as it before, as in close enough to read."

Sabatini studied the readout. The ti stamp of the eleven seconds. His mouth did a thing -- the voice of a man being precise because imprecision felt like a door he didn’t want to open.

"It wasn’t ambient," he said. "It’s directional. Sothing pulled it up. Sothing..." He looked at the ceiling. "Sothing amused it."

Luccesi looked at the painting of the Judean hills. "Vantini," he said.

"Vantini," Ferrante confird.

Cavallo wrote the ti at the top of a fresh page, looked at it and closed the notebook.

So things were better recorded than transcribed, the record was the ti. The ti would have to carry the rest.

. . .

The Garden

A demon arrived on the rope at noon. Skittering inside like a lizard.

Or arrived via the rope -- the important distinction being that it had always been on the rope in the sense that it had intended to co off as though it had always been on the rope.

Which was an amateur approach to infiltration as Khalil had noted the inconsistency in the rope’s weight distribution before it was halfway down. He said nothing, he stepped back from the shaft and let it co.

Minor grade.

The infernal taxonomy was not Yosef’s particular expertise, eleven days had done extraordinary things to his sensitivity for those frequencies, and this one read like a signature printed at low resolution -- the shape of sothing genuine, the detail missing, edges soft.

A scout, soone had sent a scout.

It hit the grass, straightened and looked around the garden. Assessed the seven of them in the order the infernal always assessed humans -- by size in descending order, starting with Khalil, ending with Rania -- and then turned its attention toward the Wall at the northern end, toward the figure sitting in the grass before it.

Yosef stepped between them...

The demon looked at him,

He looked back at it.

The fire was in his chest -- the Dan gate, the coal that did not diminish, all five gates present and functional for the first ti in thirty years.

He had spent eleven days learning what it felt like from the inside. He had not yet used it on anything.

The demon moved first. Fast -- the kind of speed which was frightening, the speed of sothing that understood humans as creatures with reaction ti much slower than demons and had spent its existence exploiting the gap.

It crossed the garden in a fraction of a second, arm raised, all its mass and montum committed --

BOOM!!

One kick.

The first gate only, Mushin -- the correction, the thing finally seated, facing the direction it had been facing away from since seventeen.

It ca through his leg in a dam releasing its valves in force while at the sa ti reinforcing his leg to take the force without any problem... And the demon flew out of the garden going upward.

Through the shaft, past Level 1, past the ruins, past forty-three tres of Negev rock and finally past the surface.

The crack of its departure arrived on the surface team’s radio eleven seconds later as an anomalous seismic event. Cavern dust ballooning down from the hole that marked the demon’s forced departure.

The rope swung...

The grass held a slight impression where the demon had stood, Yosef looked at his leg.

The blue residue -- warm, precise, already fading back into the skin, he turned his hands over. Exhaling slightly as the life force reinforcing his body faded away.

From across the garden, Dawud set down his cold coffee. He turned from the seventh tree -- a reorientation so unprecedented that Rania actually stopped writing for a full two seconds, the pen lifting, the page holding the gap.

Dawud regarded Yosef with the expression of a man whose instrunt had just returned a reading outside every expected range.

"...Show how you did that," he said.

"Seconded." Shai crossed the garden with the spectral analyser already raised, pointing it at Yosef’s left leg with the focused devotion of a man who had waited seventeen days for his equipnt to be useful.

The display was not null, the display was not anything in the expected range.

He looked at the number, then he looked at Yosef’s leg. He looked at the number again.

"Seriously. Right now. Show us."

Khalil had not moved from the shaft. He was looking at the rope and the direction it swung...

The stone above the shaft opening with the patience of a man conducting a post-mortem on a structural event.

"Third," he said, to the rope, without turning around.

The voice of twenty-two years of work where imprecision had permanent consequences, watching precision applied to sothing it had never previously considered applicable.

Yosef looked at the three of them.

Eleven excavations, thirty years, eleven countries and the word finder carried between his shoulder like blades stabbing into him since seventeen like a stone in a boot.

A demon of the minor grade sowhere above the Negev Desert, dissolving into demonic essence.

Three n looking at him with an expression he had never once received in a field context.

He breathed out, the long exhalation of a calculation completed.

"It doesn’t work the way you think it works," he said.

"That’s fine," Dawud said. "Teach us anyway."

Yosef looked at his hands one more ti. Set them in his pockets.

Sothing settled in his chest -- not pride, sothing quieter, the quality of a thing finding its correct size after years of being stored too small.

"From the beginning, then," he said. "Sit down."

. . .

Rania

She had been building up to this for two days.

Rania had questions the way the Wall had inscriptions -- in layers, the newer ones accessible and the deeper ones requiring a different approach, a different frequency of attention.

The question for Vothanael was one of the deeper ones. She’d been working toward it since the dust settled.

Since he’d returned to the grass, she’d sat at the docuntation table and had written will underlined three tis, then looked at the underline and understood it was insufficient.

She crossed the garden with her notebook and stopped keeping it at her side deliberately -- this needed to arrive open-handed.

The question was technical, She had spent fourteen years developing the eye for exactly this kind of technical question, the kind where the wrong phrasing closed the inscription rather than opened it.

He was at the Wall. One hand flat against the second layer -- the ancient Hebrew, the layer Amara had translated, the words that had gone into all of them. She stopped at a respectful distance.

He turned, The forty-five degrees. He had been aware of her approach the whole ti. Acknowledged it and let her arrive.

"I want to understand what you did," she said. "The dust. The thing you removed from Kinvara." She kept her hands at her sides.

Kept her voice in the reporting tone— precise, without pressure. "The shape of it. Whatever it is. Can you... show sothing? Anything at all?"

He looked at her with the working-out quality -- checking the question, testing its edges against sothing internal.

The way he checked all words before he kept them: from the outside in, without the shortcut of prior knowledge.

Then he raised his right hand, Palm up.

The silver star light ca slowly. She had seen it flash before -- in the sub-chamber, in his hand when he’d nad it will, the bloom of it from a contact point.

This was different, Deliberate. The pace of sothing being shown rather than released -- giving her ti to see each stage, the way Amara gave him ti to see each word.

The silver gathered in his palm, pooled and spread to the fingers.

Then it lifted...

Off the skin, Hovering -- a centitre, two, the silver rising from his hand in a form she didn’t have a na for, rotating slowly.

Inside the rotation: colour. The amber of the first tree, threading through the silver. Then the silver-white of the second. The deep green of the third.

The fourth’s light-changing quality, the one that shifted whatever sat next to it into sothing slightly different than it had been. Indigo. Ember-copper.

All six colours alive in the rotating structure above his palm, the garden held in the frequency of what he was, the trees distilled into light and will.

Then from six separate points of the structure -- fruits.

Six of them.

One for each colour: amber-gold, silver-white, deep erald, the fourth’s impossible light, indigo-deep, ember-warm.

Small, perfect, blossoms still attached. He had made them from the frequency and the garden’s own light and nothing else -- made them the way the garden made things, without apology, without explaining how.

They hovered above his palm like sothing waiting.

Then a seventh, larger, pale gold -- the colour of the leaf at the highest branch of the seventh tree, the single leaf Dawud had been watching since day 3 with the patience of a man whose instrunt had finally returned the reading he’d been waiting for.

Seven fruits. Seven colours. The whole garden, overhead.

Rania stood with her notebook and said nothing. Fourteen years of epigraphy. Eleven languages living or dead.

The full docuntation reflex sitting in her completely silent, the pen not moving, the page not expecting anything, the vocabulary simply gone -- exhausted, structurally insufficient, the way a cup was insufficient for a river.

He tilted his palm and motioned to her

Take them...

To be continued...

Author’s Note: Here we go with Yosef one Shotting a demon and Rania getting more On the face reality manipulation by Vothanael! Tell if you are liking it so far my dear Readers!

You are reading Before The First Word Chapter 42: Ch-42: Infiltration and Fruits on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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