SSS-Rank Brides: The Hunter Who Married Dungeon Queens-Chapter 103 — Forbidden Curiosity
The fragments were not supposed to be useful.
That had been the consensus.
Predator remnants were dangerous artifacts—residual code left behind by an organism designed to consume star systems and adapt faster than its enemies could respond.
They were something to be studied cautiously.
Or destroyed.
Yet Lysarra stood alone within the Constellation’s research sphere, staring at a simulation that told a very different story.
The projection floated before her like a miniature galaxy.
Hundreds of luminous nodes formed a lattice of defensive pathways, their energy flows representing the Constellation Network itself.
Across the simulated void, an artificial predator construct advanced—its shape a shifting storm of shadow and fractal light.
A recreation of the enemy that had nearly torn them apart.
But this version was different.
This version was evolving.
Because of her.
Lysarra adjusted the simulation parameters again.
The fragment of predator code floated inside the projection—a microscopic shard she had carefully isolated from the drifting debris field.
She had not told Ethan.
Or Kaelith.
Not yet.
Technically, she had not lied.
She had simply... continued her research.
Quietly.
"Begin iteration thirty-two," she said.
The simulation obeyed.
The predator construct surged forward across the artificial network.
Energy defenses activated instantly—shields forming, counterattacks firing in precise patterns.
But this time the defensive system moved differently.
Faster.
Smarter.
The result appeared on the projection moments later.
Predator neutralized.
Lysarra stared at the outcome.
Again.
The same result as the previous four runs.
Her voice softened.
"Interesting."
The fragment pulsed faintly within the simulation field.
Predator code.
Adaptive logic.
It had begun responding to the Constellation’s defensive algorithms inside the model—analyzing attack patterns, generating counter-moves.
And then the Constellation simulation had done something unexpected.
It adapted back.
The network had learned.
Not by copying the predator.
But by reacting to its adaptation cycles.
The result was an emergent combat model far more efficient than the one they had used during the real battle.
Lysarra leaned closer to the projection.
"So that’s how you learn."
She adjusted another parameter.
The predator construct returned.
This time its attack pattern changed.
The defensive network shifted instantly.
Countermeasures deployed in less than half the time.
Outcome:
Predator neutralized.
Again.
Behind her, a familiar voice spoke quietly.
"You didn’t tell us you were running simulations."
Lysarra closed her eyes briefly.
Ethan.
Of course he had felt the energy fluctuations.
She turned slowly.
He floated near the entrance of the research sphere, arms folded across his chest.
Not angry.
But concerned.
"That depends," she said calmly.
"On what?"
"On whether you consider this dangerous."
Ethan looked at the simulation.
Then at the fragment floating inside it.
His expression darkened immediately.
"Lysarra..."
"Yes."
"You put predator code into a Constellation model."
"Yes."
"You know that’s exactly what I was worried about."
"Yes."
Ethan drifted closer to the projection.
His eyes scanned the simulation results scrolling along the edge of the display.
Neutralization rates.
Defense adaptation speeds.
Predictive modeling outputs.
He blinked.
"Wait."
Lysarra said nothing.
He looked at her again.
"These numbers are... better."
"Correct."
"Much better."
"Yes."
Ethan exhaled slowly.
"That’s not comforting."
Kaelith arrived moments later.
The moment he stepped into the research sphere, his gaze moved from Ethan’s tense posture to the glowing projection.
Then to the predator fragment at its center.
A slow grin spread across his face.
"Oh."
Lysarra said nothing.
Ethan pointed accusingly.
"She’s integrating predator code into simulations."
Kaelith leaned closer to the projection, intrigued.
"Brilliant."
Ethan stared at him.
"You’re not helping."
Kaelith shrugged.
"Look at the results."
Ethan gestured wildly.
"That’s exactly the problem."
The simulation continued running behind them.
Each iteration produced the same outcome.
The predator lost.
Every time.
Kaelith watched the model with open fascination.
"The network is learning from the predator’s adaptation cycles."
"Yes," Lysarra confirmed.
Ethan groaned.
"You two are talking about this like it’s normal."
"It is effective."
"It’s playing with alien infection code."
Kaelith glanced back at him.
"Fear again?"
"Common sense."
Ethan stepped closer to the projection.
The fragment pulsed faintly within the model’s core.
It was small.
Harmless-looking.
But he could feel the subtle distortion it introduced into the energy field.
Like a whisper from something hungry.
"What happens if that code spreads?" he asked quietly.
"It cannot," Lysarra said.
"You’re sure?"
"Yes."
Kaelith crossed his arms.
"She isolated it inside a controlled simulation layer."
Ethan looked between them.
"You’re both way too calm about this."
Kaelith smiled faintly.
"That’s because we’re seeing the potential."
The projection shifted again.
Another simulated battle began.
This time the predator construct launched a far more complex attack pattern—multiple strike vectors designed to collapse the network’s defenses.
The Constellation simulation responded instantly.
Energy flows reorganized.
Node shields rotated.
Counterattacks struck the predator construct from three directions simultaneously.
The result appeared seconds later.
Predator neutralized.
Kaelith laughed quietly.
"That’s impressive."
Ethan rubbed his temples.
"I feel like I’m watching the beginning of a terrible idea."
Lysarra tilted her head.
"Your emotional response is understandable."
"That’s not reassuring."
The simulation paused.
Silence settled briefly across the research sphere.
Ethan looked at the fragment again.
Then back at Lysarra.
"How long have you been doing this?"
"Several hours."
"And the predator code hasn’t tried to... do anything weird?"
"Define weird."
"Take over the simulation."
"It has not."
Kaelith chuckled.
"See? Perfectly safe."
Ethan sighed.
"You are both terrible influences."
But despite his concerns...
He couldn’t ignore the data.
The Constellation model was performing at a level far beyond their real-world combat efficiency.
If those improvements translated into actual defensive tactics—
The predator might not stand a chance the next time it attacked.
That realization sat uneasily in his chest.
Because the cost of that advantage was dangerous knowledge.
Lysarra deactivated the simulation field.
The projection collapsed into a small sphere of light.
The predator fragment remained suspended within a containment field.
"I will continue the analysis," she said.
Ethan hesitated.
"You’re really sure it’s safe?"
"Yes."
Kaelith placed a hand on Ethan’s shoulder.
"Relax."
Ethan glanced sideways.
"That’s easy for you to say."
"You survived the last battle."
"So did you."
Kaelith smiled slightly.
"And we’ll survive the next one too."
The triad bond hummed softly between them.
Residual energy from the battles they had shared.
Trust built through survival.
Lysarra studied the two of them quietly.
Emotional resonance was rising again.
Concern.
Confidence.
Something warmer beneath it. 𝐟𝕣𝗲𝕖𝕨𝗲𝐛𝗻𝗼𝐯𝗲𝚕.𝗰𝚘𝐦
The bond between them had grown stronger with every conflict.
And tonight it pulsed with a quieter intimacy.
Ethan finally sighed.
"Okay."
Both of them looked at him.
"I’m still worried," he admitted.
"But the results are hard to ignore."
Kaelith grinned.
"That’s progress."
"Don’t push it."
Lysarra’s voice softened slightly.
"I will monitor the fragment continuously."
Ethan nodded slowly.
"I trust you."
The words hung in the air.
Simple.
But heavy with meaning.
Kaelith noticed the shift immediately.
He stepped closer, his energy brushing gently against Ethan’s.
"See?" he murmured.
"Trust."
Ethan huffed softly.
"You make that sound like a weapon."
"Sometimes it is."
Lysarra moved closer as well.
The three of them hovered within the quiet glow of the research sphere.
Energy currents drifted slowly around them.
The Constellation hummed peacefully in the distance.
For the first time since the predator’s retreat, the tension in Ethan’s chest began to ease.
Kaelith’s presence felt warm beside him.
Steady.
Confident.
Lysarra’s calm intelligence balanced the space between them like gravity holding a system together.
The triad connection pulsed softly.
Not combat synchronization.
Something gentler.
Their energy fields overlapped naturally, forming a quiet circle of shared warmth.
Ethan exhaled slowly.
"Okay," he murmured.
"Maybe we can make this work."
Kaelith chuckled.
"Of course we can."
Lysarra added calmly,
"We always have."
Outside the research sphere, the stars of the Constellation continued their slow recovery.
Energy flowed between nodes like glowing rivers across the void.
Healing.
Growing stronger.
And somewhere far beyond its borders—
The predator was evolving.
But now...
So were they.







