And then, through the convergence architecture, through the structural channel that
Orin had been able to feel but not read for four years, through the frequency that the
previous Nullifier had described as not words but something that the class translated
into meaning — The question. Kai stood in the center of the convergence point and felt it
arrive. Not heard. Not in any sense that corresponded to sound or language. But
understood, the way you understood a thing that had been built into the class
architecture before you held it — the way the Null Field understood what to erase
without being told, the way Erasure knew the difference between a skill and the person
holding it. He understood the question. He stood with it for a long moment. The
previous Nullifier had heard this and said nothing and come back out and begun the
process of removing themselves from the world. He thought about why. Then he thought
about Orin, asleep in the room down the corridor from Roan, mapped the whole interior
of the network for four years because something needed eyes that could move and he
was the eyes that were there. He thought about Mira Callant, twelve years at the edge of
an answer she couldn't reach without the class. He thought about eight people in a Tier
Three boss room who had looked at everything he'd told them and said: we're going. He
thought about what it meant to be the one who came next. He looked at the Remnant.
He looked at the passage below the convergence radius that Orin hadn't been able to
navigate safely. The third signal layer that Thatch's Void Sight couldn't resolve. The
constructs that the gate classification system had no tier for. He answered.-- The
convergence point changed. Not violently — not the way the sub-basement formation
had changed when he'd first run the Null Field through it at full range, the all-at-once
activation of something that had been waiting for the right frequency. This was different.
Deliberate. Like a door opened by someone who had been standing at it for a long time
and was finally, precisely ready. The formation in the walls brightened. The wrong-blue
light intensified and then settled into something that was no longer wrong — something
that his class registered as correct, as calibrated, as the exact ambient quality that this
space was supposed to have when it was operating at full function rather than reduced
standby. And in the floor of the convergence point, below the dungeon stone layer,
below the pre-gate formation layer, in the third level that Thatch's Void Sight hadn't been
able to reach — A signal. New. Or not new — present, the way the previous Nullifier's
trace had been present, dormant, running at minimum power for sixty-one years. But
this was larger. Much larger. The same structure as the convergence point architecture,
the same frequency as the passenger, but extended — radiating outward through the
network below in a pattern that the Null Field radar read as: A gate. Not a surface gate.
Not a Tier Two or Three or Five exterior with a classification designation and a survey
history. Something foundational. Something that the surface gates — all five of them, all
forty-three formations in the Survey Division's twelve-year catalogue — had been built
around. The real gate. The one that was always here. Kai stood in the convergence point
and felt the Class Origin Log update. [Entry 006 — The Answer. You answered. This is
noted. What follows is the reason the previous Nullifier could not prepare you: the answer changes the architecture. Not yours. The network's. What is now accessible was
not accessible before. What is now your responsibility was not yours to hold before.]
[The Remnant's function is complete. It was a lock. You are the key the lock was built
for. It will not obstruct you again.] [Below the convergence point: the Source. Not a
dungeon. Not a construct. What the dungeon system was built around. What the
Erasing Class was built for. What has been waiting.] [You will need to decide what to do
with what you find there. That decision is yours. The previous Nullifier was not wrong to
refuse it. You are not wrong to accept it. The class does not make the choice. You do.]
[Void stat: 82. The path is open. Go when you are ready.] Kai read it once. He looked at
the floor of the convergence point. The signal below — the Source — steady and
enormous and waiting. He thought about the previous Nullifier. Who had been here.
Who had heard the question and understood it and said no, not because they were
wrong but because the cost of yes was something they hadn't been able to carry. Who
had made the only choice available to them and then spent the rest of their existence
removing the weight of it from the world. He thought about what it meant to carry the
cost instead. He was not going today. Not because he was afraid — not exactly. But
because the Origin Log had said go when you are ready and he had learned, over the
past several weeks, that ready was a category worth taking seriously. You renegotiated
it. You didn't skip it. He needed Orin. He needed the interior map that four years of
Voidwalker navigation had built. He needed to know what was between the
convergence point and the Source, and he needed to know what the constructs below
the protected radius actually were, and he needed Mira to have the full picture because
twelve years of research deserved more than a debrief over a restricted reading room
table. He ran the Null Field one more time through the convergence architecture. The
passenger's frequency was steady. Present. The circuit was closed and it wasn't going
anywhere. The Remnant was still in the south wall. Still. For the first time since he'd
entered the network, it felt like something that was at rest rather than something that
was waiting. He took one more second. Then he activated Void Navigation and came
home.-- Roan was in the eastern corridor when Kai stepped out of the Void transit. Not
at the dining room. Not waiting at a table. Standing in the corridor outside the dormitory
wing with his back against the wall and his arms crossed and the particular expression
he had when he had been there for a while and had absolutely not been doing anything
as unstrategic as waiting. He looked at Kai. "You're back," he said. "Yes." Roan looked at
him for a moment. Running the read he always ran — checking the signals, the tells,
whatever the assessment was that lived behind his eyes and that Kai had stopped trying
to reverse-engineer because the outputs were always accurate anyway. "Well?" he said.
Kai looked at him. "I answered the question," he said. "And?" "And there's more below.
Something larger." He looked down the corridor toward Orin's room. "I need Orin's map.
And I need everyone in the common room by sixth bell. There's a second conversation
that needs to happen." Roan looked at him for a long moment. "You're not erased," he
said. Simply. Like confirming a data point. "No," Kai said. "You're going back in." "Yes. Not today. Soon." "And the thing below the convergence point." "Is real," Kai said. "And
accessible. And has been waiting since before the gate system existed." He met Roan's
gaze. "I don't know what it is yet. I know it's the reason the class exists." Roan was quiet.
Then, with the specific economy of someone who had decided the shape of a thing and
was settling into it: "Sixth bell," he said. "I'll get everyone up." He pushed off the wall and
walked down the corridor. Kai watched him go. The Null Field was running at full eastern
district range. The convergence point below: the passenger's frequency quiet and
present and at rest. Orin's signal, clear and stable, from inside the room down the
corridor. Eight other signals distributed through the academy, all of them moving
already — Roan activating, the group beginning to come to attention the way groups did
when the person who coordinated them started moving with purpose. The pre-gate
fragment was still on his desk in the dormitory. He thought he might leave it there. It had
done what it came to do. He walked down the corridor toward Orin's room. There was a
map to look at. A Source below. Everything else could follow.
