Chapter 175: Iron Cathedral
The interior of the Aegis was not designed for human breath. It was a monument to an era when logic had divorced itself from the flesh, a multi-layered fortress of cold, non-reflective titanium and uninsulated lead pipelines that hummed with the high-voltage vitality of three-hundred-year-old nuclear piles.
As the three of them moved out from the shadow of the crippled Obsidian, the sheer scale of the automated logistics bay seemed to swallow the sound of their leather boots. The air inside the sovereign shell was pressurized, freezing, and thick with the distinct, sterile scent of weaponized alcohol, liquid nitrogen, and the faint, bitter tang of old copper grease. It was a space built for machines by machines, completely devoid of handrails, stairs, or any concession to the physical limitations of a biological body.
[LOGISTICS BAY STATUS: LEVELING RETRIEVED]
[SECONDARY DISPATCH VECTOR: 02 MINUTES, 45 SECONDS]
[WARNING: UNKNOWN BIOMETRIC RESIDUE DETECTED ON TIER 01]
"The automated perimeter logic is sniffing the room," Vesper whispered, her smoky voice clipped and precise as she kept her back flat against a massive, six-foot-wide hydraulic line that was pulsing with cold coolant. Her dark navy wool coat was gone, left behind in the steaming cockpit of her ship, leaving her in a slim, dark grey linen tunic that made her almost invisible against the slate-colored bulkheads. "The system hasn’t activated the defensive turrets yet because it still thinks we’re part of the automated barge’s cargo payload. But the moment we step off this lower staging deck, we’re crossing a hardcoded security seam."
Airi didn’t answer with words. She simply adjusted her grip on her plasma rifle, her thumbs flicking the secondary safety toggle down to the lowest mechanical detent. She was crouching low behind a stack of unmachined titanium ingots, her silver-streaked braid tucked tight under the collar of her tactical harness to prevent it from catching on the low-hanging copper grounding wires that laced the ceiling like a spider’s web. Her dark eyes were fixed on the primary lift gantry fifty yards ahead— a massive, vertical iron column where a pair of heavy mechanical forks were slowly descending to claim another raw hull from the fabrication floor.
"The core terminal isn’t on the catwalks," Arata said, his voice a low rasp that barely carried over the sub-sonic throb of the carrier’s central processing units.
He was kneeling at the base of a structural pillar, his bare right hand pressed flat against the cold metal of a localized diagnostic junction box. The silver crescent scar on his palm was no longer quiet; it was vibrating with a cold, jagged intensity that sent a dull, throbbing ache straight up his forearm to his collarbone. Through the raw metal contact, his mind was picking up the immense, geometric architecture of the floating fortress. He could feel the weight of the twelve vertical launch silos directly above their heads, the pneumatic pistons expanding as they prepared to punch the secondary wave of diagnostic needles into the morning sky.
"The primary administrative node is housed inside the central ballast column," Arata continued, his eyes closed as he translated the structural telemetry bleeding into his neural paths. "The system uses the weight of the central server arrays to stabilize the ship’s center of gravity against the Atlantic swells. If we want to intercept the launch sequence before the silo clocks hit zero, we have to climb through the manufacturing grid while the automated cranes are in motion."
"Then we use the gantry," Airi said simply.
She didn’t wait for a tactical debate. With a single, explosive burst of movement, she vaulted over the titanium ingots and sprinted across the slick, oil-stained floor toward the descending mechanical lift. Her boots made no sound against the iron plating, her body staying low, almost parallel to the deck, as she slipped between the massive, shifting pistons of a secondary assembly line.
"She really has no appreciation for naval hierarchy," Vesper muttered with a sharp, thrilling laugh, her violet eyes flashing with that familiar, dangerous adrenaline as she drew her long silver naval dirk from her belt. She broke cover a fraction of a second after Airi, her long legs eating up the distance as she trailed the soldier’s shadow through the labyrinth of iron.
Above them, the carrier’s automated manufacturing routine continued with terrifying indifference. A colossal, automated overhead crane— half the size of an island freighter— slid across its ceiling tracks with a high-pitched, mechanical scream, its magnetic claws holding the naked, unpainted framework of a five-story diagnostic needle. The raw iron ribs of the machine passed mere yards above their heads, shedding tiny, white-hot sparks of welding slag that hissed violently as they hit the wet floorboards.
[CRANE ROUTINE: INTERCEPT SEGMENT 04]
[SILO PRESSURE: MAXIMUM CAPACITY]
[LAUNCH EVENT IMMINENT: 60 SECONDS]
Arata lunged forward, his boots slipping once on a patch of discarded hydraulic fluid before he caught the cold iron ladder welded to the side of the central lift column. The vibration through the rungs was immense, threatening to rattle his teeth from his jaw as the lift forks slammed into their lower stops with a concussive *Thud* that shook the entire staging bay.
"Arata! Lock the frequency!" Vesper shouted from the tier above him. She had reached the first catwalk, her silver blade wedged deep into the manual override slot of a secondary terminal housing, using her weight to force the internal copper contacts together until a bright, green spark erupted from the casing.
Arata reached the upper platform, his chest heaving, his face slick with freezing salt-mist and engine condensation. He didn’t look down at the drop. He threw his bare, scarred right palm directly onto the circular glass screen of the primary ballast terminal.
The silver crescent scar didn’t just throb this time— it bit. ƒreeωebnovel.ƈom
A blinding, needle-sharp arc of pale green static shot from the glass interface straight into his neural network, instantly shattering his physical vision. In his mind’s eye, the iron cathedral of the staging bay vanished, replaced by a terrifying, three-dimensional wireframe map of the global quarantine network. He felt the cold, empty spaces of Sector 11; he heard the frantic, rhythmic ticking of one hundred and forty-two thousand stasis boxes inside the alpine mountain, their air valves groaning as the automated thaw cycle began to starve the internal chambers of oxygen.
[ADMINISTRATIVE INPUT OVERRIDE DETECTED]
[IDENTITY PROTOCOL: CORRUPTED ACCESS KEY]
[TACTICAL INTERVENTION: INITIALIZING INTERNAL SANITIZATION]
Deep within the walls of the ballast column, a series of hidden pneumatic ports slid open with a heavy, synchronized click.
"Arata! Move!" Airi’s voice tore through the digital static, raw and loud enough to break his neural lock.
Through the green haze of his vision, he saw her leap across the gap between the moving crane gantry and the terminal platform. She didn’t use her rifle; she grabbed the collar of his linen shirt with her bare hand and violently hauled him backward off the console just as a high-pressure jet of liquid nitrogen erupted from the wall ports, instantly turning the glass screen of the terminal into a cloud of frozen, shattered crystals. freewebnoveℓ.com
They hit the iron catwalk together, tumbling across the narrow plates as the first silo door directly above them blew open with a monstrous, atmospheric roar that signaled the start of the launch.