What Was Left The debrief happened in the eastern wing's
smaller common room. Kai had chosen it because it was off the main student corridors,
because the lamp-stone configuration gave enough light without drawing attention from
outside, and because after everything that had just happened the group needed a table
and chairs and a closed door. Not a corridor. Not the dormitory. Something with four
walls and a clear sense of being contained. He gave them ten minutes first. Not
explicitly — he didn't say take ten minutes. He sat down at the far end of the table and
let the room do what it needed to do. Finn and Lira took chairs on the same side, which
they always did and which had stopped being notable after the second dungeon run.
Lenden moved to the window and looked out at the eastern grounds the way he did
when he was processing through his class — reading the geological resonance of the
district, grounding himself in the physical structure of the world the way some people
grounded themselves in breathing. Thatch stood near the door. Nadia sat down
immediately and ran a quiet check on her own vital state, which was the same thing she
did after every difficult run. Roan stood. Orin sat against the wall. Not at the table. Not
peripheral, not excluded — just outside the table's geometry, back against the stone,
legs extended. He was looking at the lamp-stone in the ceiling with the unfocused
quality of someone who was still calibrating to a space that had four ordinary walls and
no dungeon logic running through the floor. Kai watched him for one second. Then he
looked away. When the ten minutes had run, he said: "Debrief. Start with what
happened and what you observed. Leave interpretation for after." They went around the
table. Nadia: the vital reads during transit were clean — no threshold approaches, no
class degradation in any group member from the Void transit itself. The Remnant's
fragmentation field had been active for approximately three seconds before it was
erased. In those three seconds she'd flagged a mild perception-bleed onset in Finn and
a similar onset in Thatch. Both had self-corrected after the field went down. "How
mild?" Kai said. "Below the threshold where I'd classify it as a symptom. Call it a twosecond warning of what would have happened if the field had held." Kai filed it.
"Lenden." "The convergence point's geological structure is unlike anything in the survey
catalogues," Lenden said, turning from the window. "It's not dungeon stone — that's the
artificial substrate. What's at the base of the cluster is something pre-existing. The
dungeon stone formed around it. The gates themselves formed around it." He paused.
"Whatever the formation is, it's load-bearing for the entire network. If it collapsed, all
five gates would destabilize simultaneously." "Is it stable now?" "More stable than
anything I've read in two years of gate work. Whatever maintains it has been doing so for
a very long time without degradation." Thatch: the Void Sight reading of the convergence
point's architecture showed three distinct signal layers — the dungeon stone layer, the
pre-gate formation layer, and something below both that Void Sight couldn't fully
resolve. Not blocked. Just deeper than the skill's current range. "How much deeper?"
Kai said. Thatch held up two fingers. Then reconsidered and held up three. "Three layers
deeper than Void Sight can reach," Kai said. "Noted." Sera: the Remnant's skill erasure had happened in a clear sequence. She'd been tracking with her notation — the habit
was too ingrained to switch off even in a live situation — and the timing was: field
generation skill erased at contact, two backup activations erased in 0.8 and 0.4
seconds respectively. "The gaps were closing," she said. "Each activation came faster. I
don't know if that's acceleration or if it was running a test sequence." "Running a test,"
Orin said. Everyone looked at him. He was still against the wall. He hadn't moved. But
he was looking at the table now, not the lamp-stone, and his voice had the quality of
someone who had been waiting to contribute something specific. "It tests things," he
said. "That's how it operates. It doesn't attack until it understands what it's dealing with.
The acceleration in the skill activations wasn't aggression — it was calibration. It was
measuring how fast your Erasure responds." He looked at Kai. "It knows your reaction
time now." Kai held this. "Is that a problem?" Roan said. "Not necessarily," Orin said. "It
also knows he can erase faster than it can layer. That was part of the test. It was
checking whether the Erasing Class had developed past the previous Nullifier's level."
"Had it?" Finn said. Orin looked at Kai. "Yes," he said. Simply. "The previous Nullifier was
Journeyman rank when they went in. At Journeyman, Erasure takes approximately half a
second per skill. At the level Kai just demonstrated —" He paused, recalibrating. "It
wasn't half a second." Kai didn't comment on this. "What happened after the skill
sequence," he said. "The second communication — not skills. The structural presence.
You said it has another way of speaking." Orin looked at the table. "Yes," he said. "I've
been trying to describe it for four years and I'm still not certain the language I have is
adequate." He was quiet for a moment. "It doesn't speak in words. It doesn't
communicate through any channel you can classify as sensory. It communicates
through the dungeon architecture — through the physical structure of the space. The
geometry changes. The weight of the air changes. If you have a class that reads dungeon
topology, you can feel it." "And if you don't?" Lira said. "If you don't have a class that
reads topology, you can still feel the secondary effects. The perception bleed that Nadia
flagged — that's what happens when the Remnant's communication frequency bleeds
into standard perception range. It's not the field. It's the underlying transmission. The
field is the defensive layer." The room was quiet. "The fragmentation field is a defensive
response," Kai said. "Not an attack." "It's both," Orin said. "But primarily defensive. It's
protecting the communication channel. Anything that comes near the convergence
point and could theoretically disrupt the channel — it isolates with the field first. It
isolated me for about a week when I first arrived. Just the field, nothing else. When it
confirmed my class couldn't disrupt the channel, the field went away and it started
trying to communicate." Finn leaned forward. "For a week it just had you in a
fragmentation field." "Yes." "What was that like?" Orin considered. "Educational," he
said, in the tone of someone who had found a word that was technically accurate and
left everything else unaddressed. Finn looked at Roan. Roan's expression said: leave it.-
- Mira Callant was waiting in the administrative corridor when Kai came to find her. She
had been waiting, he understood, since the moment they left — not pacing, not watching the clock. Just present in the way she was always present, the deep
perception class running at its careful maintained depth, tracking the building and
everyone in it. She had felt the Void transit. She had felt the return. She had known the
count before he said anything. She looked at Orin first. Not with the expression of
someone who had heard about him. With the expression of someone who had been
reading the convergence point for twelve years and understood, without being told,
what it meant that he was standing here. "Orin Duskmore," she said. "Yes," Orin said.
"Your class." "Voidwalker." Mira held this for a moment. Then she looked at Kai. "All of
you came back intact." "Yes." "The Remnant engaged." "It ran a test sequence.
Fragmentation field, two backup activations. All erased." He held her gaze. "Then it
stopped. We extracted Orin. We exited." Mira was quiet. She had the expression she got
when she was absorbing something that changed the shape of a thing she'd spent years
understanding. Not shock — she was past the range where shock was a useful
response. Something more precise. The recalibration of someone whose model had just
been updated with data they hadn't been able to get before. "It let him go," she said.
"Yes." "It didn't pursue. Didn't extend the field to the exterior." "No." She looked at Orin.
"Did it communicate? After the skill sequence." "It communicated with Kai," Orin said.
"Through the structural channel. I don't know the content." She looked at Kai.
