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The question hung in the air like a blade balanced on its point, ready to fall either way. Russell watched with morbid fascination as Mr. Stern's face underwent a complete metamorphosis—from professional calm to startled recognition, then through several increasingly uncomfortable shades before settling on something that might charitably be called controlled panic.
The office, which had felt spacious moments before, suddenly seemed to contract around them. Russell could hear everything in the suffocating silence—the mechanical tick of an antique clock on the wall, the distant hum of the building's ventilation system, even the slight wheeze in Stern's breathing as the man struggled to formulate a response. The afternoon light streaming through the blinds cast prison-bar shadows across the desk, and Russell wondered if that was how Stern felt—trapped between political realities he couldn't acknowledge.
"Sorry, Mr. Stern." Russell backpedaled smoothly, raising both hands in what he hoped was a disarming gesture. The leather of his chair creaked as he shifted, trying to project harmless ignorance rather than the pointed curiosity that had prompted his question. "Just pretend I didn't ask anything. My mistake—I'm still learning how things work here in the capital."
The transformation in Stern's demeanor was almost comical—like watching a drowning man suddenly discover he could touch bottom. Color flooded back into his cheeks so quickly Russell worried he might faint from the sudden blood flow. The administrator's hands, which had been white-knuckling the edge of his desk, slowly relaxed.
"So!" The word emerged an octave higher than Stern's usual register, and he winced at the sound of his own voice. He cleared his throat, adjusted his glasses unnecessarily, shuffled papers that didn't need shuffling—anything to buy precious seconds to reconstruct his professional composure. "How's life at Northgate treating you? Settling in well? The dormitories comfortable? Making friends? I know the transition from a coastal city to the capital can be quite significant."
Smooth as sandpaper on silk, Russell thought, but he carefully schooled his expression into one of mild interest. The clumsy deflection told him more than any direct answer could have. The rift between the Federation court and the Cardmakers Association wasn't just real—it was deep enough to make seasoned administrators break into flop sweat at its mere mention. This supposedly unified capital, this shining example of humanity's cooperation against the demon threat, was riddled with fractures that ran to its very foundation.
"It's been quite an adjustment," Russell replied, deciding to throw the man a conversational lifeline. He leaned back in his chair, adopting a more relaxed posture. "The facilities are certainly impressive—nothing like what we had in New Metro. And my classmates have been welcoming enough, though I think some of them are still trying to figure out what to make of me. Ms. Hazel has been particularly helpful as our counselor, despite her... unique communication style."
Stern latched onto the safe topic with the desperation of a man clinging to driftwood in a storm. "Ah yes, Ms. Hazel. Brilliant cardmaker, absolutely brilliant. One of the youngest to reach diamond level in the past decade, you know. Her social anxiety is unfortunate, but the university makes accommodations. We value talent above all else here." He was babbling now, words tumbling over each other in his haste to establish safer conversational ground. "And your classes? Not too overwhelming, I hope? The curriculum can be quite demanding, especially for students entering mid-year."
Russell played along graciously, discussing course loads and training schedules, comparing Northgate's resources to New Metro's more modest facilities. But while his mouth moved through the motions of small talk, his mind raced through the implications of Stern's reaction.
Since the award ceremony, he'd begun noticing the cracks in the Federation's supposedly united front. At first, he'd attributed the tension to standard institutional rivalry—the kind of bureaucratic friction that existed in any large organization. But this ran deeper. The court and Association were like two predators forced to share territory—circling each other warily, maintaining a facade of cooperation only because the demon threat gave them no choice. Remove that external pressure, and Russell suspected the claws would come out faster than anyone wanted to admit.
The thought led him down increasingly uncomfortable paths. The court's so stingy they make terrorists look generous. The bitter realization surprised him with its truth. He'd never received a single credit from official channels—no stipend, no equipment allowance, not even a congratulatory fruit basket. Meanwhile, the Spirit Begging Society, a terrorist organization dedicated to humanity's downfall, had at least thrown him sponsorship money. Granted, it came with moral complications and strings attached, but they'd made more effort to recruit him than his own government.
Or maybe it's because of Teacher? The pieces clicked into place with sudden clarity. Blake Whitmore commanded the coastal defense line—pure Association territory, where court influence was about as welcome as a demon at a dinner party. The moment Blake had accepted him as a disciple, Russell had been claimed for the Association as surely as if they'd branded him. No wonder he'd been admitted to Northgate mid-year, fast-tracked through bureaucracy that should have taken months.
No wonder the court ignored me after the exam. They'd probably taken one look at his new status, checked which faction his teacher belonged to, and filed him under "Enemy Asset" without a second thought. In their eyes, he might as well be wearing an Association uniform.
Mr. Stern was still talking, something about campus resources and library access privileges, but Russell's attention had turned inward, following the implications to their logical conclusions. If the Association and court were barely cooperating, what did that mean for humanity's survival? Were they sharing intelligence properly? Coordinating defensive strategies? Or were they too busy watching each other's backs to watch for external threats?
The thought sent a chill down his spine. How many people had died because critical information got buried in political maneuvering? How many defensive positions had fallen because the court and Association couldn't agree on resource allocation?
And where did the Spirit Begging Society fit into this three-dimensional chess game? Their attacks showed no preference between court and Association targets—they seemed happy to kill anyone who stood in their way. That suggested they opposed the entire Federation structure, not just one faction. But in a world of realpolitik and shadow alliances...
Would the Masters actually cooperate with terrorists? His knowledge from his past life offered no comfort on that score. History was littered with examples of governments making deals with devils when it suited their purposes, justifying atrocities with phrases like "greater good" and "necessary evil."
Misty's face floated unbidden through his thoughts—that knowing smile that seemed to see through every pretense, those eyes that held secrets deeper than her professional persona should possess. How does a brothel owner get intelligence on contestants from multiple cities? The pre-exam dossier she'd provided hadn't just been comprehensive—it had been impossibly detailed, containing information that should have been classified several times over. Training schedules, psychological profiles, even medical histories.
Unless those teachers are all regular customers... The mental image made him grimace involuntarily, and he quickly suppressed it before Stern could notice. But the question remained: Misty had access to resources that suggested connections far beyond what her cover identity should allow. Another thread to pull when he had time—assuming pulling it wouldn't unravel something better left alone.
"—and of course, the dimension access is one of our premier benefits," Stern was saying, drawing Russell back to the present conversation. "A free entry to any controlled dimension once per year. Most students save theirs for their senior year, when they can handle gold-level challenges, but there's something to be said for early utilization."
"Actually, that's precisely why I'm here," Russell said, seizing the opening to steer toward his actual purpose. "I'd like to use mine as soon as possible. Iron and bronze materials are fine for practice, but I need to start working with silver-level resources if I'm going to keep improving at a reasonable pace."
Stern nodded approvingly, though concern flickered across his features. "Ambitious! That's exactly the attitude we like to see. Though do be careful—silver dimensions are exponentially more dangerous than what you've experienced. Even controlled ones can surprise you. We lose a few students every year who get overconfident."
They spent the next twenty minutes discussing practical details. Stern pulled out maps and charts, pointing out recommended dimensions for various material types. He explained the check-in procedures, emergency protocols, communication standards—all the bureaucratic safeguards that might mean the difference between coming home with materials or not coming home at all.
"The [Night's End Banquet] dimension is particularly popular for death-aligned field materials," Stern noted, pulling up a detailed schematic on his tablet. "Though I should warn you—the environment is quite oppressive. Some students find it psychologically challenging."
"I'll manage," Russell assured him. After the nightmares of [Black Flag], how bad could controlled dimension possibly be?
Finally, as their meeting wound down, Russell stood to leave. He'd gotten what he came for—dimension access approval—plus unexpected insight into Northgate's political landscape. Knowledge that might prove even more valuable than any materials he could harvest.
But as he reached the door, Stern called out, his voice carrying an undertone that made Russell pause.
"Russell?" The older man had removed his glasses, rubbing the bridge of his nose in a gesture of profound weariness. "Be careful out there. Not just in the dimensions—in everything. The waters you're swimming in... they're deeper and darker than they appear. And there are things in the deep that would happily see you drown."
Russell met his gaze steadily, seeing genuine concern there. "I'll keep that in mind, Mr. Stern. Thank you for the warning."
"I mean it," Stern pressed, standing now, his usual bureaucratic distance abandoned. "Your teacher is a good man, one of the best. But that also makes you a target. There are people—on both sides—who would love to strike at him through you. Don't give them the opportunity."
The weight of those words followed Russell out of the office and down the hallway. Each person he passed suddenly seemed suspicious—that professor deep in conversation, was he Association or court? The group of laughing students, were they as carefree as they appeared or carefully maintaining cover? Even the janitor methodically mopping the floor might be an intelligence asset, positioned to overhear careless conversations.
Paranoid thinking, Russell chided himself, but didn't stop the threat assessment. In his experience, the paranoid lived longer than the trusting. And if Northgate was half the political minefield Stern implied, a healthy dose of suspicion might be the only thing standing between him and an "unfortunate accident."
The afternoon sun had begun its descent by the time he exited the administrative building. Long shadows stretched across the campus grounds, turning the familiar paths into something more sinister. Students hurried between buildings, their laughter carrying on the cool breeze, blissfully unaware of the currents moving beneath their feet.
Russell pulled out his phone, checking the time and reviewing his preparations. Tomorrow he'd enter the [Night's End Banquet] dimension. Tonight, he had equipment to check, contingencies to plan, and mental preparations to make.
Because if Stern's reaction had taught him anything, it was that the real dangers in Northgate didn't always come from demons or dimensional hazards. Sometimes they came from the people supposedly on your side, wearing friendly faces and carrying hidden knives.
The next morning arrived with deceptive tranquility. Russell woke before dawn, his internal clock adjusted to early training sessions. He moved through his morning routine with mechanical precision—shower, breakfast, equipment check. Each motion practiced and purposeful, designed to maintain calm before entering potential danger.
The Sunset District government office opened at precisely 7 AM, and Russell stood waiting at the doors as the first clerk arrived to unlock them. The woman—middle-aged, wearing sensible shoes and an expression of mild surprise—gave him a questioning look.
"Early bird, aren't you?" she commented, fumbling with a ring of keys that seemed designed to confuse. "Most students don't show up until noon, if then."
"I prefer to avoid crowds," Russell replied honestly. The fewer people who knew about his movements, the better.
Inside, the building smelled of industrial floor wax and that unique combination of coffee and despair that marked government offices across dimensions. The fluorescent lights hummed with the particular frequency that promised headaches after prolonged exposure. Russell followed the clerk through empty corridors, their footsteps echoing in the pre-workday silence.
The reception desk stood like a fortress of filing cabinets and outdated computers. The clerk settled behind it with the satisfaction of a queen taking her throne, immediately beginning the arcane ritual of starting up systems that belonged in a museum.
"Now then," she said, fingers already flying across a keyboard that clacked like machine-gun fire. "What can I help you with this fine morning?"
"Welfare dimension access," Russell said simply, sliding his cardmaker certification across the polished counter. The document bore Blake's seal—a mark that should open doors and smooth paths, assuming the clerk was Association-aligned. If she was court...
But her expression remained professionally neutral as she examined the certificate, entering information with practiced efficiency. Around them, the office slowly came to life—other workers arriving with steaming cups and bleary expressions, phones beginning their daily cacophony, someone already cursing at a jammed printer in the back.
"Let's see... Russell, newly admitted to Northgate University, apprentice to Director Blake Whitmore." Her fingers never paused in their typing as she recited his information. "First-time dimension access, silver-level authorization granted... yes, everything appears to be in order."
The approval came so quickly Russell almost asked her to check again. He'd prepared for forms in triplicate, waiting periods, bureaucratic obstacles designed to discourage or delay. Instead, she was already printing his authorization, the machine whirring to life with surprising enthusiasm.
"All set." Her professional smile appeared as she handed back his certificate along with a freshly printed access pass. "This will get you into any controlled silver-level dimension. Just present it at the base entrance. They'll handle the rest."
"That's... it?" Russell couldn't quite hide his surprise.
The clerk's smile turned slightly more genuine. "You were expecting more hassle? Your teacher's name carries weight, young man. Nobody wants to be the bureaucrat who delayed Blake Whitmore's apprentice." She leaned forward conspiratorially. "Between you and me, your file was flagged for expedited processing. Someone high up wants you to have smooth sailing."
Association influence, Russell noted. Or someone playing a deeper game.
Outside, the morning sun had climbed higher, burning away the dawn mist that clung to Northgate's streets. Russell summoned Pidgeot in a burst of red and black, the symbiote's tendrils already wrapping around the bird's form like living armor. The enhancement was becoming second nature now, the boundary between card and symbiote blurring with each use.
Passersby scattered with the practiced efficiency of people who lived in a world where cardmakers might summon anything from cute mascots to city-leveling monstrosities. A mother pulled her child close, eyeing the writhing tentacles with justifiable concern. A businessman simply stepped wider, never looking up from his phone. Just another morning in the capital.
The flight to the city's outskirts took thirty minutes, following designated air lanes marked by floating beacons that pulsed with soft blue light. Below, Northgate sprawled in all directions—a study in contrasts that never failed to catch Russell's attention. Glass and steel towers thrust skyward next to districts that predated the demon emergence by centuries. Modern magical defenses overlaid ancient walls that had once repelled purely human threats.
The city thinned as he flew outward, dense urban construction giving way to industrial complexes, then scattered residences, and finally the barren buffer zone maintained around sensitive facilities. No one wanted civilians living too close to dimension portals, controlled or not.
The base itself squatted on scarred earth like a concrete toad—ugly, functional, and bristling with defenses both obvious and hidden. Three-story walls of reinforced concrete were studded with crystalline formations that hummed with barely contained energy. Guard towers marked each corner, manned by figures so still they might have been statues until one shifted slightly, tracking his approach.
Russell landed at the designated platform, a hexagonal pad marked with warning stripes and surrounded by suppression arrays designed to handle unstable summons. He dismissed Pidgeot with a thought, the symbiote retreating reluctantly, almost seeming to pout at being denied potential violence.
"Mr. Russell?" A guard approached before he'd taken two steps from the platform. Full tactical gear, magical suppressors at hip and shoulder, movements that spoke of military training adapted for supernatural threats. "We've been expecting you. Please follow me."
They led him through security checkpoints that grew progressively more intrusive. The first simply verified his identity against the morning's access list. The second scanned for concealed weapons, explosive materials, and dimensional parasites. The third involved walking through an archway that made his teeth ache and left the taste of copper on his tongue.
"Dimensional resonance detector," his guide explained, noting his grimace. "Makes sure you're not already contaminated or hosting any hitchhikers. Can't be too careful."
The fourth checkpoint was biological—blood sample, retinal scan, magical signature verification. Russell submitted to each test with patient resignation, noting how the staff moved with nervous efficiency. Their tension was contagious; by the time they reached the actual portal chamber, his own nerves were singing.
"Slight change to today's schedule," his guide announced as they approached the containment area. "Another cardmaker will be entering [Night's End Banquet]. You'll need to wait for their arrival."
Russell's expression remained neutral, but internally he sighed. Of course there'd be complications. "Not a problem," he said aloud. "The dimension's large enough to share."
But he could see his guide's skepticism, the way the man's eyes darted toward the portal then back. There was more to this story—there always was.
He didn't have long to speculate. Within minutes, footsteps echoed down the corridor—an interesting contrast between measured military precision and the sullen drag of someone who desperately wanted to be elsewhere. Russell positioned himself where he could see new arrivals while keeping his back to a wall. Old habits.
The first figure to round the corner was clearly military—or at least militarily trained. Middle-aged, bearing commander's insignia, moving with the kind of careful precision that suggested he was navigating a minefield. Behind him slouched a young man who looked like he'd been dragged from bed against his will.
The youth's appearance was almost aggressively casual—designer clothes that probably cost more than most people's cars, worn with the studied carelessness only the truly wealthy could achieve. Hair that looked effortlessly tousled in a way that definitely required effort. The kind of shoes that announced their price with every step.
But when those seemingly drowsy eyes landed on Russell, they sharpened from sleepy to surgical in an instant. Russell felt himself being dissected, analyzed, categorized, and filed away in the space between heartbeats.
"Commander Linus," the young man's voice carried the kind of casual menace that made subordinates check their life insurance policies. "You told me yesterday I'd have exclusive access."
Sweat materialized on Linus's forehead as if summoned by magic. "Mr. Wade, this is... a coincidence. Young Russell here is from Northgate University. Pure coincidence, I assure you!"
Wade's smile could have curdled fresh milk and possibly caused spontaneous combustion in small mammals. "Commander Linus has always been so loyal to the court. How could I possibly blame you for such an innocent mixup?"
The sarcasm dripped so heavily Russell was surprised it didn't leave puddles on the floor. Commander Linus looked like he was calculating whether throwing himself into the dimension portal would be preferable to navigating this conversation. Russell could practically see the man's thoughts: two young masters, both with connections that could end careers or lives with a word, and him caught in the middle like a mouse between two cats.
So Wade is court faction, Russell filed away. And clearly someone with enough pull to terrify base commanders.
Wade's predatory attention swung to Russell like a searchlight finding its mark. The cruel amusement transformed into something that might have passed for genuine pleasure if you didn't look too closely at those calculating eyes.
"Russell! Director Blake's newest disciple!" Wade's voice boomed with false bonhomie. "I'm Wade—absolute pleasure to meet you. I've heard so much about you."
Russell studied the performance with the detached interest of someone watching a snake oil salesman work a crowd. "Russell," he confirmed simply. "Can we enter now?"
The blunt response seemed to amuse Wade rather than offend him. His grin widened, showing too many teeth. "Straight to business! I like that. So refreshing compared to the usual dance of pleasantries."
"Of course, of course!" Linus practically vibrated with the need to be elsewhere. Words tumbled from him in a desperate rush. "You can each claim separate zones for harvesting. Standard conservation rules apply—leave at least one-third of all creatures alive to maintain the ecosystem. However..." He paused, seeming to shrink into himself. "[The Silent End] only manifests once per year, and this year's growth period just completed. You'll need to... negotiate... for that particular resource."
There it is. The real reason for this "coincidence." Someone had arranged for both of them to be here when the rarest material was available. The question was who—and more importantly, why.
Wade's genial mask never slipped, though something darker flickered in the depths of his eyes. "Russell and I are both reasonable men. I'm sure we can come to an arrangement. Commander, you're dismissed."
It wasn't a suggestion. Linus vanished so quickly he might have been a card himself returning to his master's soul, leaving only the lingering scent of fear-sweat and poor life choices.
"After you, Russell." Wade gestured toward the portal with exaggerated courtesy, like a duke ushering a peasant into his parlor. "Unless you'd prefer to establish terms before we enter?"
"No need," Russell said, stepping toward the swirling darkness without hesitation. "We can sort things out inside."
He heard Wade chuckle behind him as he approached the portal. The dimension entrance was a sphere of absolute darkness held in a containment frame, reality worn so thin you could push through with minimal effort. The air around it felt wrong—too thick, too thin, too everything and nothing all at once.
Russell took a breath, tasting copper and ozone, and stepped through.
The transition hit like diving into ice water while being struck by lightning. Reality twisted, reformed, compressed, and expanded all at once. For a moment that lasted eternity and no time at all, Russell existed everywhere and nowhere, was everything and nothing.
Then his feet found solid ground, and he stood beneath an alien sky that had never known true sunlight.
Behind him, he heard Wade emerge from the portal, gasping slightly. Then that thoughtful voice, musing to himself but clearly meant to be overheard:
"Director Blake's disciple? What an exciting coincidence."
The way he said "coincidence" suggested he believed in them about as much as he believed in charity or honest government. Russell filed that away for future consideration, already mapping the political currents swirling around this "chance" meeting.
Whatever game was being played here, Russell intended to win. Or at least survive with all his pieces intact.
(End of Chapter 108)
PLZ THROW POWERSTONES .