Chapter 0016: Holding the Door (While Mentally Rebooting)
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phanst
Read Reality Glitches and Other Daily Annoyances
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Chapter 0016: Holding the Door (While Mentally Rebooting)
"Ren? Ren, you need to see this. External sensors… rear quadrant. Something's coming back down the tunnel we just came from. Fast."
Leo's panicked voice crackled through the comm bead, a jolt of ice water through the syrupy fog clouding my brain. My head snapped up, scanning the oppressive darkness back down the narrow tunnel we'd just navigated. The Probability Drive's rear floodlights cast long, distorted shadows, but the tunnel itself remained stubbornly empty. For now.
Fast. That wasn't good. The Stalkers had been quick, but this sounded different.
"Specifics, Leo!" I barked into my comm, trying to keep the tremor out of my voice, leaning heavily against the rig's cool plating. My legs felt like overcooked noodles. Being outside, exposed, with my primary defense mechanism – my brain – running at dial-up speeds felt terrifyingly naked. Can't debug, can barely think straight, and Anya's playing rooftop ninja while I'm zombie-bait down here. The fear wasn't just of the unknown threat... it was the fear of my own uselessness.
"Uh… okay, okay…" Leo's voice stammered slightly, followed by the faint clicking of him presumably interacting with the sensor controls inside the cockpit. "Sensors are glitchy, lots of interference, but… it looks like… three distinct signals? Moving in tight formation. Smaller than that big construction thing on the surface, but much faster. Energy signatures are… weird. Mixed. Part biological heat, part unstable energy field? Like… like pissed-off ghosts piloting go-karts made of static?"
Ghosts piloting static go-karts. Wonderful. Just another Tuesday in the Undercroft. "Biological and energy?" I muttered, trying to process that. Glitch-augmented creatures? Technologically enhanced critters? The Undercroft clearly had its own unique brand of horrors. Three of them, coming fast.
Above me, I heard a faint scraping sound as Anya presumably reached the maintenance access shaft on the roof of the junction building. No time. We had absolutely no time.
Why did we even stop? The thought was sharp, cutting through the fog. Oh right. Damage assessment. Drive core cooldown. Fix the damn roof emitter properly. Get my brain back online. Anya's reasons were sound. Pushing the damaged rig further, especially with my patch job potentially degrading, was borrowing trouble. This layover wasn't optional, it was essential system maintenance. Didn't make being the bait any more pleasant.
I pushed myself away from the Probability Drive, forcing my shaky legs to cooperate. Needed distance. Needed options, however limited. My eyes scanned the immediate area illuminated by the vehicle's forward floodlights. Rubble piles. Thick, rusted pipes lining the walls. The sealed steel door of the junction. Not much cover.
The comm bead crackled again. "Anya? Update?" I kept my voice low.
"Working on it!" Her voice was muffled, strained, followed by the sound of metal screeching against metal. "Shaft cover is rusted solid. Applying… percussive negotiation!" A loud clang echoed faintly from the roof.
Great. She was beating on it with a wrench, probably. Meanwhile, the static go-kart ghosts were closing in.
My gaze fell on the thick pipes lining the tunnel wall near the junction entrance. Coated in grime and rust, yes, but solid-looking. One section, about waist-high, seemed to have a pressure-release valve wheel, also rusted solid. If those things hunted by vibration or sound… maybe…
It was a stupid idea, born of desperation and a brain firing on only two cylinders. But it was an idea.
Stumbling slightly, I moved towards the pipe, keeping an eye on the tunnel entrance behind me. Nothing visible yet, but the feeling of something approaching, a subtle pressure change in the heavy air, was undeniable. My dulled [Perceive Glitch] skill might not be able to analyze details, but it could still register imminent doom on a general level.
Reached the pipe. Placed my hand on the large, rust-fused valve wheel. Tried to turn it. Didn't budge. Of course not. Put my shoulder into it, grunting with effort, pain spiking behind my eyes from the exertion. Still nothing. It was seized tighter than a miser's coin purse.
Think, Ren! Don't need to open it. Just need noise. Vibration. Distraction.
My multi-tool. Still clipped to my belt. Fumbled it out with numb fingers. Selected the heaviest, pointiest attachment, a reinforced alloy punch. Maybe if I could just jar the valve, create a loud noise down here, it might draw their attention away from the Probability Drive, away from the sounds Anya was making on the roof.
Took a deep breath. Aimed for the thickest part of the valve casing, right near the rusted spindle. Swung the multi-tool with all the force my exhausted body could muster.
CLANG!
The sound echoed deafeningly in the enclosed chamber, far louder than Anya's rooftop negotiations. The valve itself didn't move, but a shower of rust flakes rained down. Did it work? Did they hear it?
A low, guttural hiss echoed from the tunnel entrance. Not insect clicking this time. Something wet. Visceral.
My blood ran cold. Turning slowly, I raised my flashlight beam, hand shaking.
Three figures emerged from the darkness, moving with an unnatural, gliding speed. Leo wasn't wrong. They were vaguely humanoid in shape, but hunched, limbs too long, joints bending at impossible angles. Their forms shimmered, constantly phasing between solid, oily black shadows and bursts of crackling, corrupted data. Purple and sickly green static clung to their outlines like tattered clothes. Where faces should have been, there were only swirling vortexes of energy, pulsing faintly. Biological heat signature and unstable energy field. Glitch-Wraiths? Data-Daemons? Whatever they were, they looked like they'd crawled out of a broken server rack in hell.
They hadn't been fooled by the noise. They were heading straight for the biggest energy signature, the Probability Drive. And I was standing right beside it.
"Ren! They're here!" Leo's panicked yell came over the comms.
The three Wraiths flowed over the rubble, their movements disturbingly silent now, the earlier hissing faded. They moved like liquid shadow, closing the distance with horrifying speed. No time to run. No energy to fight. No way to debug.
My hand instinctively went to the pipe beside me again. Useless. Brain scrambling for options. Found none. Just pure, undiluted panic starting to cut through the cognitive fog.
Suddenly, a section of the ceiling of the junction chamber directly above the Wraiths exploded downwards in a shower of concrete dust and rusted rebar.
Anya dropped through the newly created hole, landing cat-footed amidst the debris, her sonic resonator already humming in her hand. She must have given up on the shaft cover and simply blasted her way through the ceiling itself.
"Party crashers!" she yelled, immediately triggering the resonator. A focused beam of intense, multi-frequency sound slammed into the lead Wraith.
The creature convulsed, its shimmering form flickering violently, static crackling audibly. It recoiled, letting out a silent scream that I somehow felt as a spike of pure mental pressure. The other two hesitated, their energy fields wavering.
"Inside, Ren! Now!" Anya yelled, holding the resonator steady, forcing the Wraiths back momentarily. "Door override engaged!"
With a heavy clunk and a pneumatic hiss, the thick steel door to the maintenance junction slid open beside me. Safety. Relative safety, anyway.
I didn't need telling twice. Scrambling on unsteady legs, I practically threw myself through the doorway just as the lead Wraith recovered, lunging past Anya's sonic assault towards the opening.
Anya jumped back, firing a quick burst from her sidearm. Not lethal energy, but a concussive blast that slammed into the Wraith, sending it staggering back into its companions. She leaped through the doorway after me.
"Leo! Seal it!" Anya bellowed into her comm.
From inside the Probability Drive, there must have been a remote control or something. As soon as the Probability Drive slid through behind us, the heavy steel door slid shut with a clang and a final, solid thump of engaged mag-locks, plunging us into the near-total darkness of the maintenance junction, the sounds of the enraged Wraiths scraping and hissing against the outside of the door muffled but terrifyingly close. Safe. For now.
"Ren? Ren, you need to see this. External sensors… rear quadrant. Something's coming back down the tunnel we just came from. Fast."
Leo's panicked voice crackled through the comm bead, a jolt of ice water through the syrupy fog clouding my brain. My head snapped up, scanning the oppressive darkness back down the narrow tunnel we'd just navigated. The Probability Drive's rear floodlights cast long, distorted shadows, but the tunnel itself remained stubbornly empty. For now.
Fast. That wasn't good. The Stalkers had been quick, but this sounded different.
"Specifics, Leo!" I barked into my comm, trying to keep the tremor out of my voice, leaning heavily against the rig's cool plating. My legs felt like overcooked noodles. Being outside, exposed, with my primary defense mechanism – my brain – running at dial-up speeds felt terrifyingly naked. Can't debug, can barely think straight, and Anya's playing rooftop ninja while I'm zombie-bait down here. The fear wasn't just of the unknown threat... it was the fear of my own uselessness.
"Uh… okay, okay…" Leo's voice stammered slightly, followed by the faint clicking of him presumably interacting with the sensor controls inside the cockpit. "Sensors are glitchy, lots of interference, but… it looks like… three distinct signals? Moving in tight formation. Smaller than that big construction thing on the surface, but much faster. Energy signatures are… weird. Mixed. Part biological heat, part unstable energy field? Like… like pissed-off ghosts piloting go-karts made of static?"
Ghosts piloting static go-karts. Wonderful. Just another Tuesday in the Undercroft. "Biological and energy?" I muttered, trying to process that. Glitch-augmented creatures? Technologically enhanced critters? The Undercroft clearly had its own unique brand of horrors. Three of them, coming fast.
Above me, I heard a faint scraping sound as Anya presumably reached the maintenance access shaft on the roof of the junction building. No time. We had absolutely no time.
Why did we even stop? The thought was sharp, cutting through the fog. Oh right. Damage assessment. Drive core cooldown. Fix the damn roof emitter properly. Get my brain back online. Anya's reasons were sound. Pushing the damaged rig further, especially with my patch job potentially degrading, was borrowing trouble. This layover wasn't optional, it was essential system maintenance. Didn't make being the bait any more pleasant.
I pushed myself away from the Probability Drive, forcing my shaky legs to cooperate. Needed distance. Needed options, however limited. My eyes scanned the immediate area illuminated by the vehicle's forward floodlights. Rubble piles. Thick, rusted pipes lining the walls. The sealed steel door of the junction. Not much cover.
The comm bead crackled again. "Anya? Update?" I kept my voice low.
"Working on it!" Her voice was muffled, strained, followed by the sound of metal screeching against metal. "Shaft cover is rusted solid. Applying… percussive negotiation!" A loud clang echoed faintly from the roof.
Great. She was beating on it with a wrench, probably. Meanwhile, the static go-kart ghosts were closing in.
My gaze fell on the thick pipes lining the tunnel wall near the junction entrance. Coated in grime and rust, yes, but solid-looking. One section, about waist-high, seemed to have a pressure-release valve wheel, also rusted solid. If those things hunted by vibration or sound… maybe…
It was a stupid idea, born of desperation and a brain firing on only two cylinders. But it was an idea.
Stumbling slightly, I moved towards the pipe, keeping an eye on the tunnel entrance behind me. Nothing visible yet, but the feeling of something approaching, a subtle pressure change in the heavy air, was undeniable. My dulled [Perceive Glitch] skill might not be able to analyze details, but it could still register imminent doom on a general level.
Reached the pipe. Placed my hand on the large, rust-fused valve wheel. Tried to turn it. Didn't budge. Of course not. Put my shoulder into it, grunting with effort, pain spiking behind my eyes from the exertion. Still nothing. It was seized tighter than a miser's coin purse.
Think, Ren! Don't need to open it. Just need noise. Vibration. Distraction.
My multi-tool. Still clipped to my belt. Fumbled it out with numb fingers. Selected the heaviest, pointiest attachment, a reinforced alloy punch. Maybe if I could just jar the valve, create a loud noise down here, it might draw their attention away from the Probability Drive, away from the sounds Anya was making on the roof.
Took a deep breath. Aimed for the thickest part of the valve casing, right near the rusted spindle. Swung the multi-tool with all the force my exhausted body could muster.
CLANG!
The sound echoed deafeningly in the enclosed chamber, far louder than Anya's rooftop negotiations. The valve itself didn't move, but a shower of rust flakes rained down. Did it work? Did they hear it?
A low, guttural hiss echoed from the tunnel entrance. Not insect clicking this time. Something wet. Visceral.
My blood ran cold. Turning slowly, I raised my flashlight beam, hand shaking.
Three figures emerged from the darkness, moving with an unnatural, gliding speed. Leo wasn't wrong. They were vaguely humanoid in shape, but hunched, limbs too long, joints bending at impossible angles. Their forms shimmered, constantly phasing between solid, oily black shadows and bursts of crackling, corrupted data. Purple and sickly green static clung to their outlines like tattered clothes. Where faces should have been, there were only swirling vortexes of energy, pulsing faintly. Biological heat signature and unstable energy field. Glitch-Wraiths? Data-Daemons? Whatever they were, they looked like they'd crawled out of a broken server rack in hell.
They hadn't been fooled by the noise. They were heading straight for the biggest energy signature, the Probability Drive. And I was standing right beside it.
"Ren! They're here!" Leo's panicked yell came over the comms.
The three Wraiths flowed over the rubble, their movements disturbingly silent now, the earlier hissing faded. They moved like liquid shadow, closing the distance with horrifying speed. No time to run. No energy to fight. No way to debug.
My hand instinctively went to the pipe beside me again. Useless. Brain scrambling for options. Found none. Just pure, undiluted panic starting to cut through the cognitive fog.
Suddenly, a section of the ceiling of the junction chamber directly above the Wraiths exploded downwards in a shower of concrete dust and rusted rebar.
Anya dropped through the newly created hole, landing cat-footed amidst the debris, her sonic resonator already humming in her hand. She must have given up on the shaft cover and simply blasted her way through the ceiling itself.
"Party crashers!" she yelled, immediately triggering the resonator. A focused beam of intense, multi-frequency sound slammed into the lead Wraith.
The creature convulsed, its shimmering form flickering violently, static crackling audibly. It recoiled, letting out a silent scream that I somehow felt as a spike of pure mental pressure. The other two hesitated, their energy fields wavering.
"Inside, Ren! Now!" Anya yelled, holding the resonator steady, forcing the Wraiths back momentarily. "Door override engaged!"
With a heavy clunk and a pneumatic hiss, the thick steel door to the maintenance junction slid open beside me. Safety. Relative safety, anyway.
I didn't need telling twice. Scrambling on unsteady legs, I practically threw myself through the doorway just as the lead Wraith recovered, lunging past Anya's sonic assault towards the opening.
Anya jumped back, firing a quick burst from her sidearm. Not lethal energy, but a concussive blast that slammed into the Wraith, sending it staggering back into its companions. She leaped through the doorway after me.
"Leo! Seal it!" Anya bellowed into her comm.
From inside the Probability Drive, there must have been a remote control or something. As soon as the Probability Drive slid through behind us, the heavy steel door slid shut with a clang and a final, solid thump of engaged mag-locks, plunging us into the near-total darkness of the maintenance junction, the sounds of the enraged Wraiths scraping and hissing against the outside of the door muffled but terrifyingly close. Safe. For now.