The ssage ca at midnight.
Torian stared at the communication crystal, watching it pulse with an invitation he hadn’t expected. The frequency was one he recognized from before, from the days when he’d been just another struggling climber instead of part of sothing larger.
"Your sister is alive. She’s on Floor 28. Co alone if you want to see her again."
His hands shook.
Mira. His little sister, the one he’d thought died when their original party was wiped on Floor 8. The one whose face he still saw in nightmares, her screams echoing through years of guilt and grief.
He should tell Dante. Should report the contact, let the leader decide how to handle what was obviously a trap. That was the smart play, the safe play, the play that a loyal teammate would make.
But what if it was true?
What if she was actually alive, waiting on a floor he might never reach, hoping that sohow her brother would find her?
Torian made a decision.
He grabbed his sword and left through the window.
The eting point was a warehouse in the lower districts, far from the areas that Umbral’s Houses monitored closely. Torian approached with every sense alert, his training from months of climbing with the Lightbreakers keeping him focused despite the chaos in his chest.
The guards who t him were good. Professional, well-equipped, the kind of people you hired when you wanted to intimidate visitors. They searched him thoroughly, took his sword, and led him deeper into the building without a word.
The man waiting inside wasn’t Adrian.
But he wore Adrian’s colors.
"Torian of the Lightbreakers." The man was Noctis, his patterns arranged in ways that suggested House Morveth affiliation. "We have much to discuss."
"Where’s my sister?"
"Safe. For now." The Noctis smiled, and it didn’t reach his eyes. "Whether she stays that way depends entirely on this conversation."
Torian forced himself to stay calm. Getting emotional would only give them leverage.
"What do you want?"
"Information. Nothing dramatic, nothing that would get your teammates killed. Just details about Dante Graves that aren’t publicly available." The Noctis spread his hands in a gesture of reasonableness. "His schedule. His habits. The security around your safehouse."
"You want to help you kill him."
"We want to have a conversation with him under circumstances where he can’t just walk away." The smile widened. "What happens during that conversation is beyond your control or responsibility."
Torian thought about Mira. About the sister he’d mourned for years, apparently alive and being held as leverage by people who wouldn’t hesitate to hurt her if he refused.
He thought about Dante. About the leader who’d taken in three strangers from Seira’s failed team without hesitation, who’d given them a chance to prove themselves when everyone else would have left them behind.
He thought about what kind of man he wanted to be.
"No."
The Noctis’s expression flickered. "I don’t think you understand the situation—"
"I understand it perfectly." Torian’s voice was steady, steadier than he felt. "You’re offering my sister’s life in exchange for betraying soone who saved mine. You think I’m weak enough, desperate enough, to take that deal."
"Your sister—"
"Is probably dead. Has been dead since Floor 8." The words hurt to say, but saying them felt like cutting away a wound festering for years. "And even if she isn’t, even if you actually have her sowhere, she wouldn’t want to beco a traitor to save her. That’s not who we are."
The guards were moving. Torian counted three of them, all ard, all positioned to cut off escape routes.
"That’s a sha," the Noctis said, his voice going cold. "We could have done this the easy way."
"There was never going to be an easy way."
Torian moved.
Fighting without a weapon wasn’t ideal, but months of training with Astrid had taught him that unard combat was still combat. The first guard went down to a throat strike before he could draw, and Torian had his sword out of the man’s grip before the body hit the ground.
The second guard was faster, blade coming around in a slash that would have opened Torian’s chest if he hadn’t rolled beneath it. He ca up inside the man’s reach, drove his elbow into soft tissue, and followed with a kick that sent him sprawling.
The third guard backed away, clearly reconsidering his career choices.
"Stay down," Torian advised. "I’m leaving, and nobody else needs to die tonight."
The Noctis was already running, fleeing through a back exit with the particular speed of soone who’d never intended to stay for a fight. Torian let him go. The ssage would get back to Adrian either way: the trap had failed.
He collected his gear and left through the front door, walking into Umbral’s twilight streets with blood on his hands and sothing lighter in his chest.
The ghost of Mira smiled at him from sowhere he couldn’t see.
He hoped she was proud.
Dante was waiting when he returned to the safehouse.
"I heard you left." The leader’s voice carried no judgnt, just observation. "Through the window, an hour after midnight."
"I had sowhere to be."
"Adrian’s trap?"
Torian stopped, staring. "You knew?"
"I suspected. Adrian’s been trying to turn mbers of the probation group since we arrived on this floor. Vanya got a similar offer two days ago." Dante gestured toward a chair. "Sit. Tell what happened."
Torian sat and told him everything: the ssage about Mira, the warehouse eting, the offer of betrayal for information that would let Adrian’s people get to Dante.
"They said she was alive," he finished. "My sister. They said she was on Floor 28."
"Do you believe them?"
"No." The word ca out quieter than he intended. "I want to believe them. Part of still wants to go back and take whatever deal they offered, just in case there’s a chance. But that’s not who I am anymore."
"Who are you?"
Torian thought about the question, the way he’d been thinking about it since the mont he’d refused the Noctis’s offer.
"Soone who chooses his loyalty," he said finally. "Soone who fights for the people who fight for him. Soone who’d rather die honest than live as a traitor."
Dante was quiet for a long mont.
"The other two from your group," he said slowly. "Vanya and Helena. They’ve been on probation since you joined. Waiting to see if you could be trusted, if the association with Seira was going to be a problem."
"I know."
"As of now, that probation is over." Dante stood, offering his hand. "You’re part of the team. Not conditionally, not temporarily. Fully."
Torian took the hand and felt sothing shift inside him, a weight he’d carried since Floor 8 finally starting to lift.
"What about my sister?"
"If she’s alive, we’ll find her." Dante’s grip tightened once, then released. "Floor 28 is a long way up, but we’re climbing anyway. If she’s there, she won’t be alone forever."
It wasn’t a guarantee. It wasn’t even a promise. It was just... hope.
For the first ti in years, Torian let himself feel it.
---
The morning of the Passage Ceremony dawned purple and gold.
Torian stood with the rest of the team, watching Dante prepare for whatever Sera had planned. The leader looked better than he had in days, the energy from the relay still stabilizing his system, but everyone knew it was temporary.
"Whatever happens in there," Dante said quietly, "stay focused on the objective. If the procedure works, we advance to Floor 16 today. If it doesn’t..."
"It’ll work," Sera interrupted, her voice carrying certainty she probably didn’t fully feel. "I’ve studied everything I could find about mana core evolution and ancient power integration. The ceremony provides the energy. I provide the direction. All you have to do is not die."
"Encouraging."
"I try."
The team assembled in formation, ready to face whatever the day would bring. Torian took his place among them, no longer an outsider, no longer on probation.
Whatever that ant, he intended to earn it.
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