Chapter 496: Cold Math
Chapter 496: Cold Math
The cold didn’t belong here.
Psycho knew that before he consciously named it. The air above the training grounds was warm with churned dust and humidity so dense that it added an extra layer to everything it touched. That wasn’t even counting the human heat, sweat and breath mixing under the dull afternoon sun.
After all, this was Region L, part of the very southern Country M where even the devil didn’t want to be... or so they said.
Here, the ground held heat, baked into the packed earth and concrete from hours of movement and bodies. The generators hummed beneath it all, their vibration a steady mechanical heartbeat.
And yet—
There were places where the air simply died.
Not cooled. Not shaded.
Dead.
He felt it the way glaciers feel pressure long before they fracture. A subtle wrongness, a thin absence that cut through warmth instead of displacing it.
Pockets of cold that did not move with wind or shadow. They remained fixed, anchored, as if something beneath the surface was drinking heat directly from the world.
Psycho slowed his steps without stopping, letting his awareness stretch outward in careful threads.
This wasn’t climate control.
This was containment.
He didn’t look at Zubair when he spoke. "There are cavities under us."
Zubair didn’t ask what he meant. He shifted his stance just enough to match Psycho’s pace, eyes forward, posture loose in the way that fooled everyone except the people who knew better.
"Depth?" Zubair asked quietly.
"Several layers," Psycho replied. "Some shallow. Some... not."
They were on the perimeter of what Hope Sanctuary called a training ground. In practice, it was a wide, circular expanse of dirt and reinforced sand, ringed by observation platforms and half-finished structures that looked modular enough to be rearranged overnight. People trained here in clusters, supervised by guards who watched like bored parents at a playground.
Psycho saw none of that.
He saw patterns.
Heat rising unevenly. Footfalls that never quite echoed the same way twice. Air that bent inward near the far wall, as if being drawn through invisible seams.
"Something’s below the staging lanes," he said. "And it’s not storage."
Zubair’s jaw tightened. "You’re sure."
"Yes."
They walked on.
Around them, civilians with gifts—some minor, some dangerous—ran drills that had nothing to do with survival. Power was being shaped into performance. Efficiency was discouraged. Control was rewarded.
A man with kinetic ability was told to stop using his legs and "focus on output." Another with enhanced hearing was scolded for flinching when a stun round cracked nearby. No one corrected bad form if it looked impressive enough.
Psycho watched it all with mild contempt.
"They’re training obedience," he said. "Not skill."
Zubair’s gaze flicked toward a group where a young woman struggled to hold a shimmering shield steady while an instructor barked at her for shaking. "They want predictable responses."
"And broken instincts," Psycho added.
They reached the far edge of the training zone, where a row of reinforced crates formed a visual boundary between sanctioned space and something else. No signage. No warnings. Just a subtle change in air pressure that made the back of Psycho’s neck prickle.
He slowed.
Zubair noticed instantly. "You feel it."
"Yes."
Psycho stepped closer to the crates. The cold thickened. Not freezing, not hostile—contained. Disciplined. Like a held breath.
He crouched and pressed his fingers to the ground.
The concrete vibrated faintly beneath his touch.
"Elevators," he murmured. "Or lifts. Vertical movement. Heavy."
Zubair scanned the area. "No access points."
"Not from here."
A shout rang out from the far side of the field as a trainee lost control and scorched the ground. An instructor swore. Guards moved in. The noise washed over them, loud and meaningless.
Beneath it all, the hum persisted.
Psycho closed his eyes.
He let his awareness sink—not downward exactly, but inward. Into the spaces between systems. Into the parts of the world that existed only because someone had forced them to.
There.
A pressure like a held breath behind steel. A rhythm too regular to be natural. And beneath that—
Movement.
Not footsteps. Not walking.
Transport.
His jaw tightened.
"They’re moving people," he said quietly. "Down there."
Zubair didn’t ask how he knew. "From where?"
"Everywhere," Psycho replied. "And to somewhere they don’t come back from."
Zubair’s hands curled slowly into fists. "Then that’s where she is."
"Most likely, yes."
They stood in silence for a beat.
Around them, the training exercise ended. A whistle blew. Trainees began to disperse, laughing or groaning or pretending not to be disappointed. None of them noticed the two men standing at the edge of the world’s seam.
"You said she wanted to be here," Zubair said.
Psycho didn’t answer immediately.
He was tracking something else now—a distortion moving beneath the floor, sliding laterally with unnatural smoothness. It paused. Then continued, slow and deliberate.
"She did," he said finally. "That doesn’t mean she wanted to be taken."
Zubair exhaled sharply. "Then why—"
"Because she knew this would happen," Psycho cut in. "Because this is where the line is drawn."
Zubair turned to him, heat flickering along his skin. "You’re saying she let them take her."
"I’m saying she positioned herself where only one kind of predator would notice."
Zubair’s expression hardened. "And that predator is—"
"Not human," Psycho finished.
A shadow passed over the training field as something mechanical moved overhead. Not a drone. Larger. Slower.
Psycho tracked it without lifting his head.
"That’s new," he muttered.
Zubair followed his gaze. "So what do we do?"
Psycho’s mouth curved faintly. Not a smile. A decision.
"We map the bones of this place," he said. "We find the veins. We learn how it breathes."
"And then?"
Psycho’s eyes went cold.
"Then we tear it open."
A whistle shrieked across the yard.
"All units, clear the field!" a voice barked over the loudspeakers. "Maintenance cycle commencing!"
People scattered. Guards ushered bodies away with sharp gestures. The training field began to empty with practiced efficiency.
Zubair and Psycho moved with the flow, blending easily.
As they passed the edge of the field, Psycho felt it again—stronger this time. A draft of cold air escaping from a seam that shouldn’t exist.
He reached out and brushed his fingers along the metal paneling.
The vibration changed.
Below them, something shifted.
Psycho stilled.
"There," he said.
Zubair followed his gaze.
A seam in the ground opened soundlessly, just wide enough for a platform to rise. Guards stepped forward as it emerged, escorting a metal transport cage up into the light.
The cage was sealed.
No windows.
No markings.
But the cold leaking from it was unmistakable.
Psycho felt it down to his bones.
His jaw tightened.
"That’s her," he said.
Zubair’s breath went shallow. "You’re sure."
"Yes."
The platform locked into place with a soft mechanical chime.
A guard reached for the latch.
Psycho took a step forward—
—and Zubair caught his arm.
"Not yet," Zubair said low. "If you move now, we lose her."
Psycho didn’t look at him. His gaze was fixed on the cage.
"I won’t lose her."
The latch clicked.
The door began to open.
And from somewhere inside the metal box, something shifted—slow, deliberate, alive.
Psycho’s breath went still.
The world narrowed to the sound of metal sliding free.
novelraw