Zylara Vex’s internal lights flickered wildly, the visible data streams accelerating as she computed the implications. Chrono-energy toxicity? This suggested a natural, biological incompatibility with one of the most fundantal forces in the cosmos—Ti itself. Such an incompatibility could be a crippling weakness, or, conversely, a source of devastating resistance.
Gakoria’s single eye widened slightly, her predatory smile returning. She looked victorious. They had him. They had a weakness: Temporal Vulnerability. She leaned in, her voice now softer, more patronising.
"A fascinating disability, young Azrail," Gakoria purred. "So your power, which is the cessation of existence, is violently opposed to the continuity of existence. A beautiful irony. Tell us, then, about the nature of this Chrono-energy toxicity. Does it cause you physical pain? Does it degrade your organic structure?"
Azrail let his head drop slightly, his posture projecting exhaustion and subtle defeat. He was giving them everything they wanted.
"It is not rely a physical degradation, Lady Gakoria. It is... a temporal friction," Azrail explained, allowing a carefully asured sense of vulnerability to bleed into his voice. "If exposed to a sufficient concentration of manipulated ti—even a minor temporal ripple—it would cause my body’s molecular structure to violently de-sync, fragnting my consciousness across multiple potential pasts and futures. It’s a complete dissolution of the self."
He had made his weakness sound catastrophic, not at all exploitable, and complex enough to require imnse resources to test. The sheer absurdity of the proposed threat would force them to imdiately run tests on temporal manipulation resistance, leading them down a completely irrelevant rabbit hole.
Eris Thorne, the Chronicler, now entered the fray, her milky eyes alight with intellectual fire.
"Temporal friction," Eris whispered, tapping the stylus against her parchnt. "It reminds of the legends of the Shi’ar Null-Weavers—beings from the outer spiral arm who were so fundantally divorced from the flow of cause and effect that they could not exist in the presence of true ti. They were thought to be mythical. If your species, Azrail, has this natural resistance to ti’s flow, it suggests an ancestry from a pre-temporal plane. Perhaps the Great Before?"
Azrail had successfully used a technical lie to elicit a mythical truth. He now used Eris’s speculation to blur the lines between his technical ’vulnerability’ and cosmic ’destiny.’
"Lady Thorne, you touch upon the greater tragedy," Azrail said, shaking his head. "My ancestors—if they were indeed the Null-Weavers—didn’t resist ti; they existed outside it. We are the sad descendants who have been forcibly plugged back into the river of causality. My ’toxicity’ is rely the mory of a free state. It’s not a vulnerability, Lady Gakoria," Azrail insisted, looking back at his host. "It is the chronic pain of existential displacent."
He had just recast his technical ’weakness’ (Chrono-energy toxicity) as a philosophical ’destiny’ (existential displacent) using the historical lore provided by Eris Thorne. The practical information they sought was now hopelessly tangled in mysticism.
Nyx Aetheria, the artist, finally spoke, her voice like distant, beautiful music. "You spoke of pain, Azrail. Not the pain of a wound, but the ache of a misplaced soul. It is the signature of the Exile, the one who carries the truth of the void into the realm of light. Your Inverse Decay Signature—it is not a burn-off, sotis when weakness suits right can be strengthened."
Nyx, operating purely on emotion, had now validated his whole narrative.
General Rix, however, was a soldier. She needed a simpler equation.
"Exile or not, Azrail," Rix interjected, her voice sharp. "If a low-level temporal ripple can fragnt your consciousness, you are a liability on any conventional battlefield. You beco a piece of high-value weaponry that we cannot deploy near anything that can use ti-stuttering technology. That makes you conditional. And conditionals are weak."
Azrail smiled under the mask. This was the perfect setup. They now believed they had a simple condition on his use, which was exactly the boundary he wanted them to establish.
"General Rix, you are right to be sceptical of conditional assets," Azrail agreed, his tone sincere. "But tell , when does the General deploy their most critical asset? Not in a conventional battle, but when the enemy believes they have accounted for every variable. The Chrono-energy toxicity, as Lady Vex calculated, forces us to deploy a counter-asure—a full-spectrum, high-density kinetic shield."
He now presented the counter-asure, the final piece of the trap.
"When I deploy my Death elent," Azrail explained, "A localised, anti-temporal kinetic field must surround . This field is so energy-intensive that it makes visible from light-years away. Yes, it shields from temporal attack, but it also paints a massive target on my back. I am only useful when the Faction is willing to commit a massive energy investnt and accept the risk of my extre visibility."
This narrative was flawless:
Weakness: Chrono-energy toxicity (False).
Mitigation: Massive, easily traceable kinetic field (False Flag).
Cost: Extre energy consumption and high visibility (The desired restriction).
The won now had a comprehensive, logical data packet: Azrail is powerful, but prohibitively expensive and situational. He is not a high-utility asset, but a costly, ga-ending gambit.
Gakoria, having extracted two seemingly critical pieces of data and having watched Azrail squirm under the pressure, leaned back, her air of satisfied superiority now fully restored. She clapped her hands together lightly—three thin, elegant fingers eting.
"Well, Azrail. That was illuminating," she said, the subtle patronising tone returning. "I believe we have sufficient data points to create a preliminary taxonomy on your... conditionality. You are certainly not as simple as you appear, nor as complex as you pretend to be. A good mixture for a protégé."
She had delivered the summary judgnt: We see through your facade, and we have your limits.
The tension in the room imdiately dissolved, replaced by a low, contented buzz. The won had hunted, cornered, and extracted. They had won. They began to return to their floating scrolls and nectar cups, viewing Azrail now with a clinical, satisfied gaze. He was categorised.
Azrail let the relief wash over his posture. He slumped slightly, the picture of a young man whose confidence had been painfully chipped away by superior intellects.
"I apologise if my existence presents such a challenge to your models, Lady Gakoria," Azrail said, pushing himself up from the divan. He moved with the slow, almost heavy gait of soone ntally drained. "Thank you for the... comprehensive analysis. I clearly have much to learn about the politics of transparency."
He gave a final, stiff nod to the room, focusing one last, intense, silent gaze on Charine, who was still standing by the wall. Charine t his gaze, and for a half-second, a flicker of sothing passed across her neutral face—not concern, but a confirmation of their shared understanding.
Gakoria dismissed him with a casual wave of her hand. "If you are in a hurry, you may go, Azrail. We have what we need for now. Do try to be less mysterious in the future; it only frustrates your betters."
Azrail turned and walked toward Charine, his steps seeming heavier than when he arrived. As he approached the obsidian wall, Charine pushed off it and moved into the lead, returning to the ’shield’ position she had adopted earlier, whisking him out of the lounge. As he left, he saw the eyes of the rest watching him, understanding him.
Azrail had co, and he had given them a small piece of what they wanted to see. Among the crowd lay several others who still wanted to strike it up with him, but they were holding back; they gave Gakoria’s group the first hit and from there the situation would unfold.
Eyes hidden away as he left, Azrail looked at Gakoria’s group. He gave them what they wanted to hear, and 100% they didn’t believe his bullshit, but even then, they would test it, just to make sure anything was true.
’You can never truly fool those who have lived far too long and have gone through far too much; you can only confuse them till you win.’
Azrail understood that better than many, the second they were through the heavy, rune-etched door, and the soft violet light of the lounge was replaced by the cold, sterile light of the hallway, Charine spoke without turning her head.
"You gave them the data they wanted."
"Every piece," Azrail confird.
"And they know it."
Charine replied.
"They doubt it, they will first need to prove it, and that will take ti, ti I need."
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