Leon hadn’t spoken since they returned to the Anchor.
Dante watched him from across the common room of their lodgings, noting the way the buffer sat with his back to the wall and his eyes fixed on nothing. The others gave him space, recognizing the particular silence of soone processing a wound too fresh to touch.
They’d delivered the navigation artifact to the Driftwardens, received the third Void Fragnt, and returned to their temporary headquarters without incident. Three pieces of the Gate Key now sat on the table before Dante, waiting to be assembled, waiting to carry them to Floor 15.
None of that mattered if his team was falling apart.
"Soone should talk to him," Sera said quietly, settling beside Dante with the careful movent of soone trying not to attract attention.
"Talking won’t fix this."
"Maybe not. But isolation makes it worse." She glanced at Leon, and sothing flickered in her expression. "He’s blaming himself. For not seeing what Seira was going to do, for not stopping her, for whatever history they share that I don’t understand."
"Their history is complicated." Dante had never asked for details, had never wanted to know more about the woman who’d destroyed him in another life. "They were teammates before they joined us. She was the leader of a failing group, and he followed her because he believed in what she was trying to build."
"Until it collapsed."
"Until she made decisions that got people killed." Dante stood, making a choice he probably should have made days ago. "Keep everyone here. I need to handle sothing."
Sera didn’t ask what. She just nodded and watched him go.
---
The Anchor’s observation platforms were crowded during the day, but at night they emptied except for the occasional insomniac or guard on patrol. Dante found the one overlooking the void where he’d stood with Ravenna, and he found her there too.
Not Ravenna.
It was Seira.
She turned at the sound of his footsteps, and her hand went to her weapon before she recognized him. The gesture was telling, fear reflexes trained by ti spent around people she couldn’t trust.
"Dante." Her voice ca out rough. "If you’re here to kill , could you at least make it quick?"
"If I wanted you dead, you wouldn’t have seen coming."
She laughed, a broken sound with no humor in it. "Fair point. So what do you want?"
He moved to stand at the observation rail, looking out at the islands drifting through eternal twilight. "I want to understand."
"Understand what?"
"Why you chose Adrian." He didn’t look at her, letting the question hang in the air. "You knew what he was. You saw the sa warning signs everyone else did. And you still went to him."
"Because you never gave another option." Her voice hardened. "From the mont I joined your team, you treated like an enemy waiting to happen. Every task was a test, every conversation was an interrogation, and no matter what I did, I couldn’t shake the feeling that you were just waiting for an excuse to throw away."
"So you gave one."
"I gave myself a chance to survive." She moved closer, and Dante could see the exhaustion carved into her features. "Adrian at least pretends to value . It’s not real, I know that, but pretending is better than nothing."
"Is it?"
"When the alternative is carrying bags for people who will never see you as anything but a liability? Yes. It absolutely is."
Dante finally turned to face her, and sothing in his expression made her step back.
"You want to know why I never trusted you?" His voice was quiet, dangerous in its calmness. "It’s not because of anything you did on this floor or any floor we’ve climbed together. It’s because I’ve seen the choices you make when things get hard."
"You’ve never seen—"
"In another tiline." The words ca out before he could stop them, a truth he’d never intended to share with anyone. "A different version of events, one that doesn’t exist anymore. In that tiline, you were everything to . And when the mont ca, when trusting you mattered more than anything else, you chose power over loyalty."
Seira stared at him, confusion and sothing else, fear perhaps, warring in her expression.
"You’re not making sense."
"I’m making perfect sense. You just don’t have the context to understand it." He stepped closer, and his presence seed to fill the space between them. "You’re not a person to , Seira. You’re a strategy. A pattern of behavior that I’ve learned to predict because I’ve seen it play out before."
"That’s insane."
"Maybe." He turned away, walking toward the platform’s exit. "But here’s the thing about patterns: they repeat. You chose Adrian because you thought he was stronger than . You were wrong. And when that becos clear, when he throws you away the way everyone eventually throws away tools they no longer need, don’t co back."
"Dante—"
"We’re done." He paused at the exit, not looking back. "Leon was your last connection to this team. Whatever you want to say to him, whatever explanation you think will make this better, say it now. Because after tonight, if I see you again, it won’t be as a forr ally."
He left her there in the darkness, and he didn’t feel guilty.
He’d already mourned the loss of Seira Valen years ago.
There was nothing left to grieve.
---
Leon found her an hour later.
Dante hadn’t told him where to look, hadn’t needed to. The buffer had spent enough ti with Seira to know her patterns, even if those patterns led to places he’d hoped she’d never go.
He watched from a distance as they talked, unable to hear the words but reading the body language clearly enough. Seira was pleading, reaching for sothing she’d thrown away, and Leon was listening with the patience of soone who’d already made his decision.
The conversation ended when Leon turned and walked away.
No shouting, no drama, just a clean break that spoke louder than any argunt could have. Seira called after him, sothing that might have been his na, and he didn’t turn around.
By the ti Leon returned to the team’s lodgings, his expression had smoothed into sothing almost peaceful.
"It’s done," he said simply, taking a seat at the table where the three Void Fragnts waited. "She made her choice. I’ve made mine."
"Are you alright?" Sera asked.
"No." He picked up one of the Fragnts, turning it over in his hands. "But I will be. Eventually."
Dante nodded once, acknowledging the closure that should have happened weeks ago.
"Tomorrow we assemble the Gate Key and challenge the Floor Guardian," he said, pulling the team’s attention toward what ca next. "Tonight, we rest. Whatever happened before now is finished. What matters is what we do next."
The team settled into their preparations, and the weight of Seira’s betrayal slowly faded into the background noise of their lives.
Later that night, when the others had finally found sleep, Dante turned his attention to what ca next. The three Fragnts ca together with a resonance he felt in his bones.
He held them over the table, one in each hand and one balanced between his palms, and let the Core guide their assembly. The pieces recognized each other, ancient magic calling to ancient magic, and they flowed together like liquid tal finding its natural form.
When it was done, the Gate Key to Floor 15 floated before him: a perfect sphere of captured gravity, chaotic forces locked in eternal balance. It was beautiful in a way that had nothing to do with aesthetics, the kind of beauty that ca from power so pure it transcended ordinary perception.
"We did it," Astrid breathed. "All three pieces."
"We did it," Dante agreed.
"So what’s on Floor 15?"
He thought about the mories from his original tiline, about the place that waited beyond the gate they’d earned the right to open.
"Politics," he said finally. "A different kind of challenge. Less combat, more maneuvering."
"That sounds boring."
"It won’t be." He secured the Gate Key in his pack, its weight sohow less than the sum of its parts. "Floor 15 is where Adrian becos a problem we can’t ignore anymore. He’s going to try to beat us there, establish himself before we arrive, use whatever connections he has to make our lives difficult."
"Then we don’t let him."
"We don’t let him." Dante looked at his team, at the people who’d chosen to follow him through floors that had killed better climbers. "Tomorrow, we face the Floor Guardian. After that, we enter a new arena. Different rules, different threats, but the sa goal."
"What goal?"
"Climb. Survive. Win." He smiled, and there was nothing warm about it. "Sa as always."
The Anchor’s lights blazed around them, but beyond the windows, the void waited. Floor 14 was almost complete, and Floor 15 was calling.
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