Chapter 557: Into the unknown
Chapter 557: Into the unknown
The corridor beyond the archway was long, its black stone walls absorbing rather than reflecting the faint light from the crimson sconces spaced evenly along its length. The air here was different—denser, as though it carried the weight of hundreds of unseen eyes. Every breath felt measured, as if exhaling too loudly might betray them.
Mia held up a hand, signaling a brief halt. She tilted her head slightly, listening—not for obvious footsteps or voices, but for the subtler cues of movement: the faint scrape of metal, the shift of air. Nothing yet. Her eyes swept over the walls, following the vertical grooves carved into the stone, each lined with those strange crimson symbols. They were uniform, almost ceremonial, but the fact that they pulsed faintly suggested more than mere decoration.
Hiro edged forward to stand beside her, his stance low, weight balanced. "Corridor bends left about twenty meters ahead," he whispered, his voice barely above breath. "Can’t see what’s beyond."
Zion adjusted his glasses again, squinting down the hallway as though trying to read a language invisible to the rest. "The markings repeat every six panels. I’d wager they’re sigils—reinforcement, maybe surveillance. If that’s the case, we might already be walking through a net."
Lisa shot him a sharp glance but kept her voice low. "If it’s surveillance, wouldn’t alarms have gone off by now?"
"Not necessarily," Sylvia murmured from the rear. "Some traps don’t trigger right away. They wait until you’re deep enough that escape isn’t an option."
Mia’s jaw tightened. "Then we don’t give them the chance to spring it. Move in pairs. Hiro with me, Zion with Lisa, Sylvia with Misha. Keep distance between pairs—if one set gets caught, the others can adapt."
They moved.
The faint hum of Amelia’s holy shield still lingered around them, a comforting yet fleeting presence. Mia counted in her head—seven seconds left, six, five—until the veil dissolved like mist in sunlight. The loss of that protective buffer was almost physical, like stepping from under a shelter into cold rain.
At the twenty-meter mark, the corridor bent sharply to the left. Mia slowed her pace, flattening herself against the inside wall of the corner. Hiro mirrored her on the opposite side, peering around the bend. His fingers tapped lightly against the hilt of his weapon in a steady rhythm—once, twice, three times—a silent signal they’d used in past missions to indicate "clear, for now."
They turned the corner.
The hallway widened here, with alcoves breaking up the smooth expanse of wall. Each alcove contained a tall, rectangular slab of black stone, like standing coffins, each engraved with those same pulsing red sigils. The light from them was faint, but in the darkness, it made the carvings seem to writhe.
Misha’s voice came in a whisper from the back. "Storage?"
"Or containment," Sylvia countered quietly.
Zion leaned closer to one slab, stopping just short of crossing its threshold. "These aren’t inert. They’re active channels... feeding energy somewhere." His tone was a mix of fascination and unease.
Lisa’s eyes swept the alcoves, counting. "There’s a lot of them. If each one’s storing something dangerous, we don’t want to find out what."
"Then keep moving," Mia ordered softly. "Eyes forward."
The further they went, the more the air changed—warmer now, tinged with a metallic tang that clung to the back of the throat. Somewhere ahead, the hallway ended in a set of towering double doors, their surface inlaid with thick, jagged lines of molten crimson that seemed to pulse in time with the slabs they’d passed.
Hiro glanced at Mia, his brows lowering. "That’s not standard architecture."
"No," Mia agreed, her eyes narrowing. "That’s a seal."
The implication hung between them. Seals were meant to keep things out... or keep something in. And either possibility meant danger.
Mia motioned for them to fan out slightly, keeping to the shadows along the walls as they approached. Every footstep seemed amplified in the silence, and though the vastness of the corridor should have made them feel small, it only heightened the sense of exposure.
They were ten meters from the doors when a faint, rhythmic sound reached them. Not boots on stone, but something lighter, faster—a patter that echoed faintly before vanishing again.
Sylvia’s eyes darted upward toward the vaulted ceiling, scanning the shadows. "Movement," she mouthed.
Mia’s hand went to the signal position—halt.
They froze.
The sound came again, this time from somewhere ahead, behind the great doors. It was almost like... training drills. The measured pace of coordinated movement, not the chaotic noise of a battle. And then, faintly, the dull ring of metal on metal.
Zion’s expression darkened. "Arena," he whispered, so softly it was barely sound. "We’re right next to it."
That explained the scale of the earlier hall. If they were indeed inside enemy territory’s primary training or combat facility, then every step deeper meant they were threading the needle between reconnaissance and suicide.
Mia glanced back, meeting each of their eyes in turn. No one needed her to say it aloud—they all knew. This was the point of no return for this infiltration phase.
Her hand made the signal: low stance, minimal noise, keep moving.
The six of them slipped closer to the massive doors, pressing into the thin strip of shadow cast by the molten crimson inlays. The heat here was more noticeable, the air alive with a low, steady vibration that seemed to hum in their bones. The sensation made Mia’s skin prickle—not fear exactly, but a deep, instinctive awareness that they were standing in the heart of something dangerous.
When they reached the base of the doors, Hiro crouched, running a hand just above the stone surface without touching it. "Layered wards," he murmured. "They’d know if these open."
"We’re not opening them," Mia said firmly. "We skirt around, find another vantage point."
And so they moved again, slipping into a narrow side passage barely visible unless one was looking for it. The crimson light didn’t reach here, and the absence of it made the air feel even heavier.
They were in. Deeper now. Every instinct told them they were close to uncovering what this place truly was.
And every instinct told them they were also running out of time.