"The thing about traps is that by the ti you realize you’re in one, it’s already too late to get out."
***
In the faculty monitoring room, Professor Laurana Delacroix’s violet eyes widened as she studied the readings from her analytical instrunts.
The silver-haired elf rarely showed emotion. Her colleagues had long since grown accustod to her serene detachnt. The way she observed the chaos of the academy with the bemusent of soone watching particularly energetic ants go about their business.
But the data streaming across her ethereal displays had shattered her usual composure.
The numbers were wrong. Not just unexpected.
Impossible.
"Professor De Clare." Her lodic voice carried an urgency that made Isolde look up from her flask. "The mana resonance in Sector Seven is degrading at an alarming rate."
Isolde crossed to the scrying orb showing Team Seven’s progress. Her amber eyes narrowed as she took in the darkened tunnels and sickly moss.
"Define ’alarming.’"
"The residual magic from the old support wards is collapsing in on itself." Laurana’s fingers danced across her instrunts. Called up additional readings that floated in the air before her like ghostly mathematical poetry. "The mathematical progression suggests a cascade failure. The structural integrity of that entire section could compromise within the hour."
"Could?" Isolde’s voice had gone flat. Dangerous.
"Will." Laurana corrected herself. The admission cost her more than she cared to show. "The variables are unusual. Sothing is accelerating the decay in ways that do not conform to standard entropic modeling."
Isolde’s casual deanor evaporated. She straightened. Her powerful fra radiated the sudden alertness of a warrior recognizing imminent danger. The flask disappeared into her robes.
"Blackthorne!"
The scarred professor appeared at her shoulder. His ice-blue eyes took in the readings with swift assessnt.
"How long do we have?" he asked. His gravelly voice carried no fear. Only the flat practicality of a man who needed information to make decisions.
"Unknown," Laurana replied. "The degradation pattern is unlike anything in the literature. It’s as if sothing is actively draining the magical foundations."
"Actively." Blackthorne repeated the word like he was testing its weight. "Not decay. Consumption."
"That would be one interpretation of the data, yes." Laurana hesitated. Which was unusual enough to make both professors look at her with renewed concern. "There is also an anomalous life signature in Sector Seven. Sothing that was not present when we began the exercise."
The silence that followed said everything words couldn’t.
Isolde was already moving toward the communication array. Her boots struck the stone floor with purpose. "Get an extraction team on standby. And wake up the ergency response unit."
"You think it’s that serious?" Blackthorne’s scarred face remained impassive. But his hand had unconsciously moved to rest on the poml of his greatsword.
"I think we just sent four kids into a death trap that’s about to get worse." Isolde’s fingers flew over the communication crystals. "And I’ll be damned if I’m going to explain to their families why we sat here and watched it happen."
Rhys held up his hand. Brought his team to an imdiate halt.
The gesture was sharp. Urgent. The kind of signal that brooked no argunt from anyone who’d ever operated in hostile territory. His teammates froze in place behind him. Their breathing suddenly loud in the oppressive silence of the tunnels.
The sound that had stopped him cold echoed from sowhere in the darkness ahead.
Deep. Guttural. Wet.
It was the sound of sothing large trying to breathe through a throat full of gravel and blood. The rasping wheeze carried undertones that made his skin crawl. Suggested damage that should have killed whatever was making it but sohow hadn’t.
Each inhalation dragged on too long. Like the creature was fighting for every breath. Each exhalation ca with a wet rattle that spoke of internal injuries no living thing should be able to survive.
Rhys had heard the dying sounds of n and beasts alike.
This was neither.
This was sothing that had forgotten how to die properly.
"What is that?" Petra whispered. Her earlier bravado completely gone. Her face had gone the color of old chalk. Her hands pressed flat against the tunnel walls as if seeking comfort from the stone.
Finn had gone completely still. His tracker’s instincts engaged at the deepest level. His dark eyes swept the tunnel ahead. Read sign in shadows and air currents that the others couldn’t detect.
His weathered face showed no expression.
Which told Rhys more than any words could have. When a tracker went blank like that, it ant they were afraid. When they were afraid, it ant the fear was justified.
When he spoke, his voice was barely audible. "It’s not moving toward us. It’s... waiting."
Waiting.
The word hung in the air between them like a curse.
Things that waited were worse than things that charged. Charging ant instinct. ant animal hunger that could be predicted and countered.
Waiting ant thought. Waiting ant sothing smart enough to be patient.
The breathing sound ca again. Closer this ti. Or perhaps it had always been close, and they were only now hearing it properly. The wet, labored rhythm suggested sothing in terrible pain. Sothing that should have died long ago but had been kept alive by forces that defied natural law.
Sothing that had learned to live with suffering that would have driven any sane creature mad.
Mad things were dangerous. Things that had learned to live with madness were worse.
Jorik’s massive fra trembled slightly. Though whether from fear or eagerness to fight, Rhys couldn’t tell. The young giant’s pale blue eyes stared into the darkness ahead. His hands white-knuckled around his war hamr.
"We should go back," he said. And the admission cost him. Rhys could see it in the way his shoulders dropped. The way his jaw clenched around words that tasted like failure. "This isn’t what we trained for."
No, Rhys thought. It isn’t. None of this is.
He felt a cold satisfaction at hearing sense from the most headstrong mber of their group. The young giant had finally recognized that there was a difference between courage and throwing your life away for nothing.
Good. That ant at least one of them might learn sothing from this nightmare.
But even as relief flooded through him, he realized they might have waited too long to retreat.
Behind them, from the tunnel they’d just traversed, ca the sound of stone against stone.
Not the gentle settling of old rock. Not the natural sounds of a mine breathing.
This was sothing else. Sothing deliberate.
The kind of sound that ant structural collapse. The kind of sound that ant their escape route was disappearing.
Dust rained down from above. Small pebbles skittered across the floor like frightened animals fleeing a predator. The grinding grew louder. Accompanied by a deep rumbling that Rhys felt in his bones more than heard with his ears.
"The way back is blocked," Finn reported. His voice carried the flat calm of soone delivering news that might an death for them all. He’d turned to look behind them. His tracker’s eyes read the disaster in the shifting shadows and the growing cloud of dust that rolled toward them. "Completely. The whole section went down."
Petra pressed her palms against the tunnel walls. Her earth magic sought answers in the stone.
What she found there made her face go pale. Paler than before. Pale as the bellies of the blind fish that lived in underground rivers.
"The support structure is failing. The whole section is coming down."
"When?" Rhys demanded.
"I don’t—" She swallowed hard. "Soon. Maybe minutes. Maybe less."
The breathing sound ahead grew louder. More labored.
Whatever waited in the darkness had heard them talking. It knew they were trapped. It knew they had nowhere to run.
And sothing in the quality of that terrible, wet breathing had changed.
Sothing that might have been recognition.
Or satisfaction.
Rhys gripped his father’s spear tighter. Felt the worn leather wrapping under his palms. The weapon had served his family well in the borderlands. It had taken goblins and wolves and once, during the long winter, a desperate bandit who’d thought an isolated farmhouse would be easy prey.
His father had carried it for thirty years before passing it down.
He suspected it would take more than ancestral steel to get them out of this alive.
"Forward," he said quietly. "Slow and steady. Whatever’s ahead of us, we face it together."
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