My Infinite System.-Chapter 246: The Nexus Point
The silence in the library was absolute, broken only by the hum of ancient machinery and the soft rustle of Reia turning a page. She had found it.
"Here," she said, her voice cutting through the stillness.
Evelyn, Silas, and Kaela gathered around the stone table. Reia pointed to a star chart in the ancient text, its ink faded but its shapes unmistakable. It showed a familiar barred spiral galaxy, but with its territories clearly marked in a language long dead.
"The Cradle," Reia breathed. "The heart of the old Aethel domains." Her finger traced a thin, jagged line that cut across the galactic plane, separating the ordered core from the chaotic outer reaches. "The Veil. It was their seat of power. Now..."
Kaela leaned in, her analytical eyes scanning the chart. "Now it’s a buffer zone. A permanent war-front between the Diva and the Ashura. Neither side can claim it, so they fight over it. It’s the most heavily militarized and monitored region in that entire galaxy."
"Perfect place to hide," Silas said, surprising himself. When everyone looked at him, he shrugged. "What? If everyone’s busy watching each other, who’s gonna look at the empty space in the middle?"
Reia almost smiled. "Exactly. The best hiding spot is in your enemy’s blind spot." She pulled up a modern star chart on a crystal tablet, overlaying it with the ancient one. The Veil was still there, a turbulent, nebulous scar littered with black holes and wrecked star systems. "He’s there. He has to be. It’s the one place no one would ever build a fortress because they think it’s cursed."
"But how do we find him in all that?" Evelyn asked, gesturing at the vast, chaotic region. "It’s like finding a specific grain of sand on a beach."
Reia zoomed the modern chart in, her fingers moving quickly. "We look for what shouldn’t be there." She pulled up layers of data—gravimetric readings, subspace resonance, tachyon drift. Most of the Veil was a mess of conflicting energy signatures and spatial distortions. But then she found it.
A single, tiny point near the center of the Veil where the readings were... flat. The gravitational turbulence smoothed out into an unnaturally perfect calm. The background radiation dropped to near-zero. It was a hole in the chaos.
"Something is creating a bubble of absolute stability in there," Kaela observed, her voice hushed. "Suppressing local physics. That’s not natural. And it’s not Diva or Ashura technology. Their methods always leave a signature. This is... nothing. A perfect void."
"A fortress," Evelyn whispered.
"Or a cage," Reia countered. "Maybe he’s not just hiding. Maybe he’s conserving his strength, containing his power so he doesn’t give himself away." She looked at the coordinates, a cold certainty settling in her gut. "That’s where he is. That’s where he’s taken Lucy."
The weight of the discovery hung in the air. They had a target.
"Okay, great!" Silas said, clapping his hands together. "We found the bad guy’s secret clubhouse. Let’s go kick the door in."
"It’s not that simple, Silas," Kaela said, her tone weary. "The Veil is a fortress in itself. The Diva-Ashura border patrols are the most advanced in the known universe. Their sensor nets can detect a micro-wormhole forming a light-year away. The moment we try to approach the Cradle galaxy, they will see us. The moment we cross into the Veil, they will swat us out of the sky like a gnat."
"So we don’t get seen," Silas said, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world.
Reia shook her head, frustration creasing her brow. "It’s impossible. Our ship doesn’t have that kind of stealth technology. No one’s does. That’s why the border has held for eons."
A tense silence fell. They had found the needle in the cosmic haystack, but the haystack was surrounded by a billion armed guards.
Evelyn broke the silence, her voice thoughtful. "So we can’t just fly in. We need another way. A back door."
"There are no back doors into the Veil," Kaela stated flatly.
"Not a spatial one," Evelyn said, her eyes lighting up with an idea. She looked at Reia. "The texts. The Aethel didn’t just travel through space, did they? They shaped reality. They moved between dimensions."
Reia’s eyes widened. She quickly flipped back through the ancient book, her fingers tracing the flowing script. "You’re right. They didn’t use gates or ships. They ’walked the layers’." She looked up, a new, dangerous hope in her eyes. "They used pathways that exist between spacetime. The Nexus Points."
Silas blinked. "The what-now?"
"Think of reality as a stack of paper," Evelyn explained, trying to simplify it for him. "We live on one sheet. The Aethel could move between the sheets, through the gaps. They used fixed points in the universe where the... the ’stack’ is thin. Where you can punch through from one layer to another."
Kaela looked intrigued, her corporate skepticism warring with the evidence before her. "Theoretical physics has postulated such nodal points for centuries, but we’ve never been able to prove their existence or stability. The energy required to open a stable rift..."
"...is beyond anything our technology can produce," Reia finished. "But not beyond what an Aethel can do." She was cross-referencing furiously now, comparing the ancient map with modern astronomical data. "If the Aethel used these Nexus Points to move around their empire, there must be one near their throne world. In the Veil."
"And if there’s one in the Veil," Evelyn continued, the plan forming as she spoke, "then there has to be a corresponding point somewhere else. An entrance."
"Right," Reia said, her voice rising with excitement. "We don’t need to cross the border. We find the entrance to the pathway on this side, and we walk right past the patrols."
"Okay, that sounds a lot better than getting blown up," Silas admitted. "So where’s the door?"
Reia’s hands flew across the tablet, filtering the galactic map for energy signatures that matched the description in the texts—subtle, persistent quantum fluctuations that shouldn’t exist. Dozens of markers appeared across known space. Most were in deep, unexplored voids or at the hearts of black holes. Useless.
But one... one was different.
It glowed a soft, persistent amber on the map. Its coordinates were unmistakable.
Silas leaned in, squinting at the readout. "Where is that? Some fancy Diva core world?"
Evelyn’s breath caught in her throat. "No. It’s... it’s a lot closer to home."
Reia looked up from the screen, her face a mask of grim realization. "The Nexus Point. The back door into the Veil... it’s in our own solar system."
A stunned silence filled the room.
"Where?" Kaela asked, her voice barely a whisper.
Reia zoomed the map in further, the starfields resolving into familiar constellations. The indicator pulsed steadily, its location a punch to the gut.
"It’s at the edge of the Kuiper Belt," she said, her voice flat. "A region of space we’ve barely scanned. It’s been right under our noses this whole time."
The implications crashed down on them. The gateway to Alistair’s hidden fortress was practically in their backyard. Earth, a backwater planet nobody cared about, was sitting right next to a cosmic superhighway used by god-like beings.
"That’s why he was here," Evelyn realized, her hand going to her mouth. "It wasn’t just to awaken Lucian and Marc. This planet... our system... it’s a strategic location. It has a Nexus Point."
"Which means," Reia said, standing up and closing the ancient book with a definitive thud, "that our next move is obvious."
Silas grinned, a fierce, determined light in his eyes. "We’re going home."
"Precisely," Kaela said, already gathering her things. "We return to Earth immediately. We find this Nexus Point, and we use it. We take the fight to him before he even knows we’re coming."
The decision was made. The research was over. The time for action had come.
As they hurried out of the silent, ancient library, the weight of the cosmos felt a little lighter. They had a path. It was dangerous, it was insane, and it relied on theories older than human civilization.
But it was a path. And it led straight back to where it all began.







