The cold spot wasn’t a monster.
It was a mory.
Jinx, ever the pragmatist, was the first one to investigate, a heavy-duty flashlight in one hand and a look of profound annoyance on her face.
She swept the beam across the crumbling brick of the far corner, her light cutting through decades of dust and shadow.
Behind a pile of rusted, forgotten machinery that looked like a robot’s graveyard, she found it.
A faint, shimring distortion in the air.
It wasn’t a Gate.
It was a scar.
A pale, ghostly wound in reality, left behind by a Gate that had closed long, long ago.
"Well, that’s anti-climactic," she announced, her voice echoing in the cavernous space.
She kicked at a loose piece of rebar on the floor.
"It’s dead," she declared with a cynical finality.
"Just a residual energy signature."
She sniffed the air, her nose wrinkling.
"Slls like a ghost’s fart."
The tension that had gripped the room broke with a collective sigh of relief.
Jax imdiately declared it their new "haunted corner" and started sketching plans on a grimy datapad for a motion-activated ghost projection system.
"To scare off intruders!" he’d said, though everyone knew it was really to scare Chloe.
The days that followed were a blur of organized chaos.
Their new, terrible ho began to transform.
Under Chloe’s crisp, logical direction, the dump slowly, miraculously, started to look like a headquarters.
Jax, in his elent, built them a new power grid, cannibalizing parts from a dozen abandoned factories and wiring everything together with a logic that only he seed to understand.
His workshop, set up in the far corner, was a constant symphony of sparks, manic laughter, and the occasional small, unscheduled explosion that made Chloe’s left eye twitch.
Jinx, using her encyclopedic knowledge of the Undercroft’s black market, procured everything from soundproofing materials to a surprisingly functional, industrial-grade coffee machine that gurgled like a dying beast but produced a brew strong enough to dissolve steel.
She spent her ti setting up a periter defense system, a web of silent alarms and non-lethal traps that was both elegant and deeply paranoid.
And Michael... Michael trained.
Every day, Chloe would put him through the wringer.
The goop-tank.
The psychic puzzle box.
He was getting better.
The whispers in his head were still there, a constant, low hum of monstrous static, but he was learning to build walls against them.
He was learning to control the storm.
But the nights were harder.
That’s when the haunting began.
It wasn’t loud.
It was quiet.
Sad.
From the haunted corner, faint, formless shapes would coalesce out of the darkness.
They weren’t monsters. They were just... echoes.
Flickering, silent images of workers from a bygone era, their faces etched with a weary, forgotten despair. A dropped tool. A sighed breath. A mont of quiet frustration, replayed on an endless, silent loop.
They were harmless.
They were also deeply, profoundly, unsettling.
Jinx tried shooting one. The bullet passed straight through, leaving the echo undisturbed.
Jax tried to build a "ghost vacuum," a device that looked like a leaf blower that had been cross-bred with a disco ball. It mostly just shot sparks and made a sound like a dying cat.
They were stuck with their new, spectral roommates.
One night, it was worse.
The air in the warehouse grew colder. The faint, sad echoes were gone, replaced by sothing new.
A single, larger specter flickered into existence.
It was a manifestation of pure, undiluted fear. The final, terrified mory of a creature that had died here when the Gate first tore open.
It wasn’t aggressive.
It was just... afraid. And its fear was a psychic broadcast, a low, constant thrum of terror that made everyone’s skin crawl and their tempers fray.
"Okay, I’ve had enough of this," Jinx finally snapped, her hand going to her pistol. "I’m putting more holes in that wall until the sad ghost gets the ssage."
"Negative," Chloe’s voice cut in, sharp and clear from her console where she had been analyzing the entity. "Physical attacks are ineffective. Its form is pure, residual psychic energy. It’s not a creature; it’s a recording."
"Then how do we turn it off?" Jax asked, poking his head out of his workshop. "I’m trying to calibrate a plasma coil here, and all this existential dread is really ssing with my creative process."
Chloe was silent for a mont.
Her cold, gray eyes turned to Michael.
He felt the weight of her gaze, and he knew what she was going to ask before she even said it.
"Michael," she began, her tone all business. "Your abilities are the only ones that operate on a similar, non-physical plane."
"I theorize," she continued, "that you may be able to... interface with it."
Great, Michael’s inner monologue drawled. The scary robot lady wants to perform an exorcism.
This was definitely not in the job description.
He looked at the terrified, shimring specter.
He thought about his own power. The soul-eating. The ghost-summoning.
Maybe she was right.
He was uniquely qualified for this.
He took a slow, deep breath and walked towards the corner.
The psychic static of the specter’s fear grew louder as he approached, a wall of pure panic washing over him.
He pushed through it, his own ntal walls holding steady.
He stood before the flickering echo.
He didn’t want to devour it. That felt... wrong. It wasn’t a monster. It was a victim.
So he reached for the other option. The one he had only ever used in the heat of battle.
He focused, his mind reaching for the Void Ledger, for the familiar, cold presence of his most trusted ghost.
[REVENANT CALLING (LV. 1) ACTIVATED.]
The air grew cold.
The small, purple tear in reality opened beside him with a sound like tearing silk.
From it, the glitching, spectral echo of the alpha Phase Hound erged, its form bound in the familiar, glowing chains of the Void.
It was silent. Subservient.
It bowed its ethereal head, awaiting his command.
Jinx, who had been watching with her arms crossed, took an involuntary step back. She’d seen it once before, but not like this. Not so calm. Not so... controlled.
Jax just stared, his jaw on the floor, his eyes wide with a look of pure, unadulterated awe.
"Dude," he breathed. "Ghost puppy."
Michael ignored them.
He looked at his Revenant.
"Don’t hurt it," he commanded, his voice a low whisper. "Just... calm it down. Absorb it. Gently."
The Phase Hound seed to understand.
It glided forward, a phantom of controlled, beautiful power.
It didn’t attack the specter.
It flowed around it, its own spectral form enveloping the shimring echo of fear like a gentle, purple shroud.
There was no scream.
There was no violence.
There was just a soft, sighing sound as the terrified specter dissolved, its fear absorbed, neutralized, and integrated into the Revenant’s form.
The haunted corner was quiet.
The cold spot was gone.
The air in the warehouse felt... clean.
The Phase Hound turned back to Michael, its work done. It gave a final, silent bow, then dissolved into a wisp of purple smoke, returning to its place in the Ledger.
The silence that followed was absolute.
Jax was the first to break it.
"THAT," he declared, his voice full of a sudden, religious fervor, "WAS THE COOLEST THING I HAVE EVER SEEN!"
"CAN YOU MAKE IT FETCH A GRENADE?!" he yelled, his eyes sparkling with a million new, terrible ideas.
Jinx just stared, her face a complex, unreadable mask. The fear was gone. In its place was sothing new. A grudging, profound respect.
"Huh," she grunted, the single sound a universe of aning. "Not bad, kid."
Chloe, watching the entire exchange on her console, her screens filled with spiraling, impossible energy readings, allowed herself a single, minuscule, and deeply unprofessional smile.
"Fascinating," she murmured to the empty observation booth. "Controlled Void manipulation for non-combat applications."
The potential was limitless.
Just as the team was starting to relax, a loud, insistent beep echoed from Chloe’s main console.
It wasn’t an alarm.
It was a communication request.
A single, stark, and deeply intimidating symbol flashed on the screen.
A crossed hamr and anvil.
The official seal of The Ironhearts.
Chloe’s face went rigid, her brief, rare smile vanishing instantly.
She patched the communication through to the main holographic display.
The grizzled, scarred, and deeply unimpressed face of Forge, the Ironheart Guild Master, flickered to life.
He didn’t say hello.
He didn’t waste ti with pleasantries.
"Thanatos," his voice rumbled, a low, gravelly sound that seed to shake the very foundations of their new ho.
"The Guild Council requests an audience."
He paused, his tired eyes seeming to look right through the screen, right into their souls.
"They want to et the Dragon Tars."
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