Author's Note: Unedited Chapter
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"He was..." Gustav confird, his eyes scanning his group, ensuring he had their full attention.
"From what I've pieced together, Karis made a deal with a criminal group to secure her escape and retrieve the Rion. But their plan seems to have had so kind of mishap with Thalos being left for dead."
Falco frowned at the complexity of the situation.
"So since he survived, what's his move now?"
"That's where it gets interesting," Gustav continued. "I suspect Thalos is desperate to regain the Rion. He will likely convince Karis to take him to its location. If we can keep track of him, they'll lead us right to it."
Aildris looked up. "So we use Thalos as our unwitting guide. When Karis takes him to the Rion, that's our window to strike. We'll need to be ready to move on a mont's notice."
Gustav nodded imdiately while responding.
"Exactly. We'll need to maintain constant surveillance on Thalos but since that can't be done, Life Signs Track will help keep tabs on him without needing to get close."
Endric chid in with a steady voice. "What about the criminal group Karis made the deal with? Wouldn't they try to save Karis or sothing?"
"That's a valid concern," Gustav acknowledged.
"We need to be prepared for interference but at the sa ti..." he paused while his eyebrows furrowed.
"...I have a feeling they're no longer in play."
"You an..." Ria's eyes widened slightly.
"Yeah. They may all be dead already. Thalos may be the last survivor. He did call her a traitor before vanishing with her," Gustav analyzed.
Everyone felt it made sense. Although they didn't know the full story, if Karis had sabotaged the group and escaped with their spacecraft after taking the Rion, anyone would have been very pissed.
...
...
In an ethereal dinsion where reality seed suspended, Karis and Thalos floated amidst a shimring expanse that reflected fractured images of their past.
The surreal space, bound by the fabric of mory and ti, pulsed with translucent, glowing lines that ensnared Karis, holding her captive. The lines wrapped tightly around her, their luminescence casting eerie shadows across her anguished face.
Around them, echoes of past events played out like ghostly scenes from a film—flickering images of their heist, the escape, and the catastrophic explosion that had changed everything.
Thalos, his figure free from the bindings that held Karis, paced before her, his voice filled with bitterness and betrayal.
"You left us to die, Karis! You betrayed our trust, and you ran with the Rion, alone!"
Karis, struggling against her glowing restraints, replied with a mix of desperation and sincerity in her voice.
"Thalos, I thought you were all dead! The vessel was coming apart; there was no ti. I had to escape, or I would have perished with the ship."
"You're a liar!" Thalos shouted, his voice echoing in the dinsion, distorting as it rebounded off the mory images.
"You caused that explosion on purpose to rid yourself of us and take the Rion for yourself!"
Karis's eyes, wide and filled with pain, t Thalos's accusing gaze. "No, that's not true! I never intended the explosion to be so powerful. I didn't know any of you had survived. I wouldn't have left if I'd known."
Thalos paused, his anger montarily giving way to grief as images of their forr comrades—friends, and allies in their clandestine activities—flickered around them.
"They trusted you, Karis. We all did. And they died because of it. I'm the last one, the only survivor of your betrayal. And for what? For a cursed artifact that has brought nothing but misery."
Karis's voice broke as she pleaded, her words tinged with a profound sadness.
"Please, Thalos, you have to believe . I know how betrayal feels; I wouldn't inflict that pain on anyone. I'm so sorry."
Thalos, unmoved by her pleas, his features hard as stone, continued relentlessly.
"Where is the Rion, Karis? If you truly regret your actions, prove it. Where did you hide it?"
Karis shook her head slowly, her voice a whisper lost amidst the swirling mories.
"I can't... I can't tell you."
Thalos scoffed, his disbelief evident.
"Convenient, Karis. Always thinking of yourself, even now. You say you feel remorseful but the truth is you don't."
The dinsion around them seed to pulse with increased intensity, the images speeding up, replaying their last monts together on the vessel, the escape, the explosion, and the aftermath that had led each of them to this point. The air was thick with the weight of unsaid words and unresolved grief.
"It's not like that, Thalos. The Rion... it's dangerous, more dangerous than we ever imagined. I will save everyone the trouble with what I've done. You have to leave the Nereus Sector."
Thalos turned away from her, his figure silhouetted against a particularly vivid replay of the explosion. "I wish I could believe you had good intentions, Karis. But in the end, we're all just crooks. You will tell where the Rion is... Willingly or unwillingly."
As he spoke, the dinsion began to dim, the images flickering out one by one, leaving them in a growing darkness. The glowing lines that bound Karis started to fade, her figure becoming less distinct.
"Thalos, please," she called out to him, her voice echoing in the now nearly empty space. "Don't leave here alone..."
The space around them vibrated with the echoes of loss, past misdeeds, lives, and how she lost her baby, each mory replaying like a tornting specter.
"Thalos, please, don't leave here alone with these mories," Karis's voice trembled with despair as images swirled around them relentlessly.
Thalos, his expression torn between resentnt and a lingering sense of forr camaraderie, paused at the threshold of the dinsion's exit.
His voice, when he spoke, carried a cold finality, "I will return when you are ready to tell the location of the Rion. Until then, you have your mories for company."
Without waiting for her response, his figure dissolved into the ether, leaving Karis alone in the echoing void.
He watched, with a mix of strategic calculation and empathetic concern, as Thalos departed the dinsion, his location now a beacon on Gustav's ntal map.
As Karis was engulfed by the relentless playback of her past, in another realm of existence, Gustav observed the unfolding events through Thalos' eyes.
He watched, with a mix of strategic calculation and empathetic concern, as Thalos departed the dinsion, his location now a beacon on Gustav's ntal map.
Gustav stood before a large digital map, his eyes fixed on a particular location that he believed was Thalos's current physical location. Around him, his team and several Triton guards coordinated efforts, their faces etched with concentration and urgency.
"That's Thalos's location," Gustav inford them, pointing at the map.
"But hold on about moving in. He is yet to receive the Rion's location from Karis."
Falco, leaning over the console next to Gustav, frowned. "How long do we wait? Every mont is dangerous based on what Karis said."
Gustav's gaze remained fixed on the screen, his mind racing through scenarios.
"We wait until he ets Karis again. It's our best shot at getting the Rion and stopping whatever they plan to use it for."
("This would have been much easier if you had just used mories Siphon to get the location of the Rion the mont you got her,") The system voiced in his head.
'You're back... And no. If I had done that and we headed off to the location together then, Thalos wouldn't have played his hand.
If he had managed to lay hands on the Rion and used that mirror thingy to vanish, things would have gotten way more complicated. But at least now we can't be taken by surprise since we already know of his abilities,' Gustav responded.
("You could have tried to salvage the situation.")
'You just got back and you're already arguing with ... Typical,' Gustav felt the urge to pull her ears.
("Hmph! When we leave the Nereus Sector, I have sothing to tell you,") The system voiced in response.
'Oh? Alright then.'
...
In the streets and shadows of the Nereus Sector, Triton guards patrolled relentlessly, their scanners humming softly as they searched for any trace of the Rion's distinctive energy signature.
Despite their technology and training, the elusive artifact remained hidden, as if shielded by unseen forces.
"Any luck with the energy signatures?" Gustav called out to a guard stationed at a monitoring station.
The guard shook his head, frustration evident in his terse reply.
"Nothing, sir. It's like chasing a ghost."
As another day bled into night, Gustav remained vigilant, occasionally watching Thalos through Life Signs Tracking.
Ria approached Gustav, "You think Karis will actually tell him?"
Gustav sighed, "People under pressure make surprising choices, Ria. Karis might hold out, or she might crack. No one is truly absolute when it cos down to a play of emotions."
...
...
...
In the strange and ethereal dinsion of mories, Thalos re-entered to find Karis looking more desolate than ever before.
The space, charged with the echoes of her past, seed even darker, the air thicker with the weight of her sorrow. Karis floated amidst the glowing lines that held her, her face etched with deep lines of misery.
Thalos approached her, his expression hardening as he prepared to confront her once again.
"Karis, tell where the Rion is," he demanded, his voice echoing slightly in the mory-filled void.
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