Offshore Vessel - 2:34 PM
In front of him was a cold pipe .
Yoo pressed his palm against it, feeling vibrations travel through tal — steady, strong and regular rhythm. The generator was running hot—he could tell from how warm the pipe got every third interval.
Thrum... thrum... thrum...
He’d been counting for two hours now. Seventy-three pulses per minute. Every forty minutes, the vibration weakened for exactly ninety second, either hift change in the engine room or automatic maintenance cycle.
Either way—a pattern, makes things more predictable, opening doors for opportunities.
His broken fingers throbbed inside the splint. Dr. Shen had done good work, but the bones still ground against each other when he moved. He ignored it, pain was just information, Akasha Archive had taught him that much.
The guards hadn’t moved in thirty minutes. Standing at attention, weapons ready, eyes on him, professional and bored. Boredom ca from the fact that Yoo couldn’t possibly escape.
Perfect.
He couldn’t ask for more.
Yoo shifted slightly, scratching his neck casually, not alerting the guards.
His fingers touched the data chip hidden against his skin, tucked under his collar. Still safe there.
The chip contained Incomplete Damascus Protocol fragnts, but enough to understand what was coming and what Crucible was up to.
Seven people blessed with Primodial seed, seven deaths and one rift.
He needed Subject 31 to stay missing, without the seventh key, no ritual would take place, simple.
But first—let’s leave this room.
Akasha Archive, status update on generator heat cycle.
"Current temperature: 94 degrees Celsius. Optimal range: 70-85. System is running above safe paraters. Estimate: cooling system compromised or undersized for current load. Probability of thermal failure in next 12 hours: 34%."
Thirty-four percent.
This is not enough I need certainty, not probability.
Calculate: if I block the cooling water intake, how long until critical failure?
"Without cooling: generator overheats in 18-23 minutes. Triggers automatic shutdown, the backup systems activate and the crew start investigating."
Twenty minutes of chaos.
Enough ti? Maybe.
The sink’s drain was connected to the cooling system—he could trace the pipe connections by sound. Block the drain, water backs up, flow decreases, generator overheats.
Easy enough;
Except the guards were watching.
He needed a distraction.
Yoo stood slowly. Both guards tensed.
"Uh, I need to use the bathroom," he said.
"Use the bucket." The first guard pointed to a corner.
There was indeed a bucket, busty tal, slled like fish, maybe used to pack so fishes.
Yoo walked casually toward it, his foot caught on the chair leg.
He stumbled, arms windmilling, heading straight for the second guard—
The guard stepped back reflexively, hand going to his weapon—
Yoo’s montum carried him past. He slamd into the hard wall, his shoulder hit tal with a aty thunk.
"Shit." He clutched his shoulder, face twisted in genuine pain. The impact had hurt. "I’m sorry, the sedative must’ve been stronger than I thought."
The guards relaxed slightly.
"Watch where you’re going."
"Yeah, sorry."
Yoo straightened, rubbing his shoulder.
While stumbling, he’d grabbed sothing from the first guard’s belt, not sothing as obvious as a weapon;
A pen.
Cheap plastic, normally used by guards to fill out reports. Clipped to the man’s vest pocket. Now hidden in Yoo’s splinted hand.
The guards hadn’t noticed.
He used the bucket, slightly humiliating, but necessary, given his part as a defeated prisoner, compliant and harmless, that would indeed increase his chances of escape
When he returned to his seat, he kept the pen hidden against his palm.
What he needed for now.
Seoul - Gangnam District - 3:45 PM
Subject 23 crouched on a rooftop, breathing hard.
Her na was Park Min-seo. Thirty-two years old, forrly part of the military and silver 35 before the seed integration started, now transford into sothing else, far stronger—and worse.
Foreign blood covered her hands.
She’d killed six hunters two hours ago, who had co for her, a group of gold ranks professionals who ca prepared but...
They hadn’t been prepared enough.
Her seed was Deadly Series—Wrath lineage, which made her faster when angry. Stronger when hurting. Deadlier when cornered.
The extraction team had cornered her.
Big mistake.
Now she was running already crossed three districts. Hunter Association would obviously send more teams, better ones at that, not that she could fight forever.
The rooftop door burst open—CLANG!
Min-seo spun, hands raised—
"Wait!" A young woman erged, Rank: Gold 32, showing peace with empty hands. "I’m not here to fight."
"Then why are you here?"
"To offer information." The woman stepped forward slowly. "My na is Chen Wei, subject 45 on the Damascus Protocol, and I’m also a target, like you."
Min-seo didn’t lower her hands. "How did you find ?"
"I tacked the Hunter Association response teams and judging from the situation, I figured you’d go to ground sowhere high with good sight lines." Chen Wei gestured at the rooftop. "Your military training shows."
"What do you want?"
"What else, to survive"Chen Wei pulled out a data chip. "This contains the real Damascus Protocol, not the leaked version, including what the ritual actually does, it’s complete"
"I don’t care what it does, all I care about staying alive."
"They’re not extracting seeds. They’re opening a rift." Chen Wei’s voice was tight. "Seven seed bro’s die, sothing cos through, sothing that’s been waiting for this."
Min-seo stared at her. "You’re serious."
"Crucible has five of us already. They’re taking a sixth now—Subject 47, so kid nad Yoo, they need one more." Chen Wei t her eyes. "They need you or ."
"So we hide."
"For how long? They have resources, tracking equipnt, divination rituals. Eventually they’ll find one of us." Chen Wei’s jaw tightened. "Unless we hit them first."
"Hit Crucible Initiative? That’s...are you insane"
"Probably, but I didn’t survive my First Nightmare by playing it safe." Chen Wei’s smile was sharp. "They’re holding recipients offshore, Outer waters, ship called the Daedalus. If we sink it before convergence—"
"They’ll just have to reschedule the ritual."
"Not if we make enough noise, alert every faction, force this into the open." Chen Wei pocketed the chip. "Right now, Crucible operates in shadows, secrecy is their advantage, we just have to take that away."
Min-seo considered it.
She was tired, So tired, three days of running. Six hunters dead by her hands. The seed integration was at 61% now—every day, less human. More inhuman.
Fighting was easier than thinking.
"What’s your plan?"
"Find Subject 47, the kid they just took, get him before they reach the convergence point." Chen Wei pulled up a hologram from her wrist device. A faint blue glow shimred in the air. "I’ve got satellite tracking on the Daedalus. Forty-two kiloters offshore. Moving south. Small crew. Maybe fifteen people."
"Against two of us."
"Against two desperate people with nothing to lose." Chen Wei’s grin widened. "I like our odds."
Min-seo looked at her blood-covered hands.
Six dead already. What was fifteen more?
"When do we leave?"
"Midnight, we’ll et at Incheon Harbor, pier 7." Chen Wei turned to go, paused. "Bring weapons. The good kind."
She left.
Min-seo stood alone on the rooftop, watching the sun sink toward the horizon.
Wind howled softly through the city ruins.
Sowhere offshore, a kid was about to die for a ritual, while factions were back here tearing each other apart.
Min-seo’s seed whispered that violence was coming—the satisfying one, that would make everything disappear.
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