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Jonah stood in the center of his simple room, the fossilized egg held tightly in one hand. This was it. The mont of truth. He had all the pieces or at least, he thought he had all the pieces. The Core he held, and the essence he'd absorbed from that crystal beetle.

He walked to the door and locked it. It slid shut with a satisfying thunk. Whatever was about to happen, he didn't want any interruptions. Sergeant Seraph wanted a tangible result? He was about to give it everything he had to make one.

He took a deep breath and sat cross-legged on the floor. The cold floor felt very different from the strange warmth of the egg in his lap. He closed his eyes, blocking out the plain white room, and focused on his mind.

The world vanished, replaced by the huge familiar space of his ntal Workshop

It was still very silent and dark, an empty factory waiting to be used. But now, for the first ti, Jonah wasn't just watching. He was here to create.

His first act was to will the Genesis Core into the space. He focused on the fossilized egg in his real-world hands, on its weight, its texture, its ancient spark of life.

With a surge of ntal effort, an image of the egg appeared before him in the Workshop's darkness. It wasn't a mory; it was a perfect, glowing replica – an orb of stone-colored light that pulsed with a steady heartbeat.

It was the canvas.

Okay, step one: successful, he thought, a hint of relief cutting through his nervousness. Didn't accidentally blow it up. That's a good start.

Now for the materials. He reached deeper into himself, searching for the mory of the Crystalline Beetle. He found it easily – a glowing, silvery mote of light hidden in a corner of his mind.

This was the Essence, the blueprint of the defeated monster.

He carefully drew it out, guiding the mote of silver light until it floated in the darkness opposite the stone orb. The Essence sparkled, containing strange feelings: the solidness of earth, the sharpness of a knife and a strong will. Earthen, Sharpness, Fortitude.

The very properties the Prir had described for that type of beast.

Now ca the part that wasn't in any book. He had to combine them.

The process felt surprisingly easy, as if so part of him already knew what to do. It wasn't about using raw strength. It was delicate, like threading a needle in the dark. He had to take the "paint" of the essence and apply it to the "canvas" of the Core. He had to convince the dormant life within the egg to accept the qualities of the beetle.

He ntally reached for the essence, preparing to rge it with the Core.

Just as he was about to start, a new line of golden words burned into his mind, clear and impossible to miss.

[Begin Synthesis? WARNING: Initial synthesis is ntally taxing. Proceed?]

Jonah's focus wavered. ntally taxing. The warning was clinical, but the implication was clear. This was going to hurt. The Undercroft had taught him to trust his gut, and every instinct he had scread that this was a point of no return. If he ssed this up, he could damage his own mind, or worse, destroy the only Genesis Core he was ever likely to find.

He hesitated for only a second.

What was the alternative? Failing Seraph's test? Getting branded a dud and sent back to the Cinderfall with his tail between his legs, or worse, back to the Undercroft?

No. He'd co too far to back down now.

Proceed, he commanded.

The mont he gave the command, the Workshop erupted. A wave of pressure slamd into his mind, so intense it felt physical. A splitting headache blood behind his eyes, and in the real world, his body tensed, sweat beading on his forehead. This wasn't just "taxing." This was like trying to ntally lift a mountain.

He grit his teeth, pushing through the pain. He directed the glowing mote of the essence toward the glowing stone orb. As it moved near, the essence spread out, turning from a single point of light into thousands of sparkling lines.

His task was to weave these threads into the Core's very foundation. He focused on the property of "Earthen," pulling the stable threads of brown and grey light and carefully weaving them into the Core's outer shell, reinforcing its structure. Then he took the "Sharpness," the razor-thin filants of silver light, and began to stitch them along what he imagined would be the creature's mandibles and leg joints.

Finally, he wove the "Fortitude" threads deep into the core, a strong knot of energy ant to give the new life a stubborn will to live.

The strain was imnse. He could feel his stamina draining away like water from a cracked cup. The empty darkness of the Workshop turned from comfort to a heavy burden, trying to kill his focus. His concentration started to break apart. So "Sharpness" threads moved wrongly, risking cutting the Core's base.

Panic flared in his chest. If the weave broke, the whole synthesis would fail.

He poured more energy into it, his vision starting to blur. He could feel his body shaking from the effort. This was the final push.

He gathered every stray bit of focus, and forced the wild energies into one clear pattern.

The silver and brown threads of light wrapped around the stone orb, swirling faster and faster until they blurred into a single, vibrant cocoon of swirling light. It pulsed with a contained, powerful energy, a perfect fusion of stone and essence.

Then, as suddenly as it began, the pressure vanished.

The cocoon stabilized, hanging silently in the center of his Workshop, glowing with a soft light.

Another prompt appeared in his mind.

[Synthesis Complete. Progeny Gestating. Incubation Ti: 1 Hour]

Jonah's awareness snapped back to his body. He gasped, his lungs burning, and collapsed backward onto the cold floor of his room. He was completely exhausted. Every muscle ached, and his mind felt like a rung-out sponge. He lay there for a long mont, just breathing, the sweat on his skin feeling cool in the sterile air.

Slowly, a feeling of pure triumph washed over him, chasing away the exhaustion.

He did it.

He actually did it.

A wide smile spread across his face. He had created sothing. He didn't know what it was yet, or what it would look like, but it was his.

A tangible, repeatable result.

He pushed himself into a sitting position, his back against the wall, and looked at the clock on the desk. One hour. Sixty minutes until he t his first creation.

Jonah was tired but felt a strange energy, not from his body, as he waited.

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