Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 94: Seperated
A sudden, violent drop of stone that hit the floor with an impact that shook the ground hard enough to make them all stagger, that sent a shockwave through the stone beneath their feet like a physical blow delivered by something that wanted them to feel its weight, to understand in their bones that it was real and permanent and final.
The kind of impact that didn’t just happen to the ears—it happened to the chest, to the teeth, to the hollow space behind the sternum where the body kept its most animal understanding of danger.
The displaced air hit their faces in a rushing wave that smelled of ancient dust and something metallic, something that suggested deep earth and deep time and places that hadn’t been disturbed in millennia. It tasted of sealed rooms and forgotten centuries and the particular emptiness of spaces that had never expected to be breathed in again.
Solid. Complete. Seamless. The kind of permanence that didn’t negotiate, that hadn’t been built to accommodate second thoughts or reconsideration or the desperate hope that what had just happened might be reversible if you pressed the right place or said the right thing or waited long enough.
Kael and Seris on one side, their muffled voices cutting off mid-sentence as the stone fell—Kael had apparently been saying something about the left branch being suspicious, the words severed as cleanly as the corridor itself, leaving only vibration and silence where sound had been. Whatever opinion he’d been forming about the architecture of their doom would remain unfinished, hanging in the air on his side of the wall like something interrupted at exactly the wrong moment.
Tank, Whisper, and Zeph on the other side, staring at two feet of ancient stone where corridor had been moments before, where their companions had been standing seconds ago, where everything had been fine in the specific way that fine had been redefined throughout this expedition—meaning alive, together, and not actively dying.
Nobody moved. The maze had separated them so suddenly, so completely, that the mind required a moment to process the new reality it found itself in, to update its understanding of how many people were present and where they were and what that meant for everything going forward. Three people where five had been. A wall where corridor had been. Silence where voices had been. The arithmetic of it was simple, and simple was the worst thing it could be.
Whisper quickly ran their hands along the edges of the fallen slab, examining the seam where stone met floor with the practiced touch of someone whose profession involved finding hidden mechanisms and exploiting structural weaknesses.
Their fingers moved methodically, covering every inch of the join with the focused attention of someone who had picked their way through mechanisms considerably more sophisticated than most people ever knew existed. Their expression, visible in the light of the remaining stones, showed the conclusion before they communicated it through gesture—nothing. No mechanism. No trigger. No seam that suggested the slab had ever been anything except this: final. The stone hadn’t fallen as part of a sequence that could be reversed. It had simply become wall, and wall was what it intended to remain.
Then Kael’s voice came through, muffled by two feet of ancient stone but audible. The voice carried a quality that suggested someone who had just experienced a cardiac event and was attempting to determine whether they’d survived it, whether the heart was still beating, whether forward was still possible from here: "...Is everyone alive? Tank? Zeph? Please tell me everyone is alive. Please. I need an actual verbal confirmation because I am currently standing on the wrong side of a wall that appeared from nowhere and I need to know the situation is not as bad as it currently seems."
"We’re here," Tank said. "Everyone intact?"
"Yes."
"Okay, good. That’s good. That’s—"
A pause, filled with the sound of Kael doing something with his breathing that suggested he was applying deliberate regulation techniques to prevent it from becoming something less controlled. "The wall isn’t moving."
"No," Tank confirmed, his hands still moving across the surface in systematic assessment now rather than the previous instinctive gesture, pressing and probing and searching for any seam, any mechanism, any indication that this was temporary rather than permanent, that the maze had dropped this barrier as a challenge rather than a conclusion.
The stone gave him nothing. Not even the faint vibration of hidden gears or the subtle warmth of recent displacement. Just stone, doing exactly what stone was meant to do: hold its position against everything that wanted it to be otherwise.
Seamlessly integrated into the floor and ceiling and side walls with a precision that suggested either extraordinary engineering or something beyond engineering entirely, showing no indication that it had ever been anything except exactly what it was now—an absolute barrier designed to stay exactly where it had fallen. "It’s not moving."
"So we’re—" Kael’s voice again, very carefully controlled this time, each word placed with the deliberate precision of someone building a sentence the way you’d build a wall against something that wanted to get through, using language as a structural material against the panic pressing from the inside. "We’re separated."
"Yes."
"And you can’t get through."
"No."
"And we can’t get through."
"No."
A longer silence from the other side, filled with the muffled sound of Seris asking something—her voice too dampened by the two feet of stone between them to make out individual words, but her tone came through clearly enough, the clinical calm of someone who had already moved past the emotional response and into problem-solving mode.
"Seris?" Zeph called, projecting his voice toward the stone with calculated volume—not too loud, not too soft. The voice of someone who had learned that the maze listened, and wasn’t sure what it did with the information.
"We’re fine," Seris’s voice came back, muffled but clear enough, the calm in it either genuine or the best professional performance either of them had managed throughout this whole expedition. "Physically fine. Processing our situation. Give us a moment." The tone of a healer and analyst who’d been dealing with crises long enough to know that understanding the situation came before reacting to it. Which was both reassuring and a reminder of how thoroughly their circumstances had normalized the impossible—when being sealed behind a wall by a learning security system in an alien facility qualifies as just another problem to analyze, something has gone profoundly wrong with your baseline.
"Okay," Kael said, and the word carried something different underneath its surface—not acceptance exactly, not the comfortable resignation of someone who has made their peace with circumstances, but the particular resolve of someone who has run out of alternatives and is choosing to treat that limitation as clarifying rather than defeating, who has decided that the absence of other options is itself a kind of direction.
"Okay. What’s the plan? Please tell me there’s a plan. A detailed plan. A plan with contingencies and backup contingencies and a section titled ’what to do when separated from your companions by an alien wall in an alien maze.’"
"Keep moving down," Tank said.
"Both groups. The maze separated us deliberately, specifically to reduce our tactical effectiveness—five people working together are significantly harder to disorient than two smaller groups. It’s trying to manage us by making us smaller. But separation doesn’t change our objective. We both need to descend. We both find what’s at the center."
"How do you know there IS a bottom?" Kael asked through the wall, and despite everything—despite the maze and the Harvester and Whisper’s transformation and the data recorder and the massacre chamber and the recording of thirty B-rank scouts dying and all the accumulated horror of the past several hours—there was something almost plaintive in the question. Something that sounded less like tactical skepticism and more like a person who genuinely needed to be told that forward led somewhere, that movement wasn’t just an elaborate way of making death more complicated. That somewhere underneath all this stone, there was a place where things resolved.
Whisper touched Tank’s arm and he glanced at them. They pointed downward, made a gesture that suggested certainty, nodded with emphasis. Something they’d read in the facility’s texts—some information in those alien archives that confirmed descent had an endpoint, that the center of this maze was real and reachable. Their alien-acquired knowledge deployed in the most human way possible: reassurance. You couldn’t ask Whisper if they were sure. You could only decide whether to trust them.
Tank turned back to the wall.
"Because something this complex has a CENTER," he said, his voice carrying the conviction of someone who has decided that doubt is a luxury he cannot afford right now, not because certainty is justified but because its alternative is paralysis, and paralysis is death. "All mazes do. They’re built around something. They exist to protect something or contain something or lead to something—they have purpose, and purpose has a location. This one was built for a reason, and that reason is at its heart. We find the heart. We meet there. Both groups, from different directions, converging on the same point. The maze has separated us—it hasn’t stopped us."
The silence that followed was the silence of people choosing to believe something because the alternative was to stop moving, and stopping meant dying. Of people accepting an answer that was insufficient but was all that was available and all that was needed right now. Of people making peace with forward because forward was the only direction that kept them alive and therefore forward was the direction they chose, regardless of what waited at the end of it.
"Okay," Kael said, for the last time, and this time the word contained everything—the fear and the exhaustion and the grief of being separated from the people who’d kept him sane through horrors that should have broken him already, and underneath all of that, stubborn and unreasonable and absolutely immovable: the determination to survive a situation that didn’t particularly want them to, to reach a bottom that might not exist, to find a center that might be worse than anything they’d already faced.
"We’ll see you at the bottom."
"At the bottom," Tank confirmed, and stepped back from the wall.
Two groups. Two directions through a maze that had proven it understood them better than they understood themselves—that knew their preferences and fears and instincts and had built an entire adaptive system around exploiting every one of them.
Both groups were now moving towards the center, the bottom, the heart of something that should never have been built, and almost certainly would not thank them for arriving.
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