I Was The Only Omega In The Beast World

Chapter 188: CP: 188 I Want To Know The Truth



The alcove had finally quieted.

The four cubs were arranged in a loose pile on the warmest patch of fur, full and drowsy, their small chests rising and falling in the slow rhythm of newborns who had decided the quietness was acceptable. Roar was the only one still making sounds—a continuous, low rumble that functioned less as a complaint and more as a statement of ongoing existence. The others had surrendered to sleep with varying degrees of dignity. The first girl had her chin on Roar’s back, one paw covering his head in a way that looked either possessive or maternal and was probably both.

The bear tribesmen had retreated to the courtyard with their remaining barrels, and Pebble had gone with them after exacting a promise that she could hold all four cubs before she left. Granite had simply stayed, as Granite tended to do, settling into the corner of the alcove with his eyes half-closed and his breathing slow in the particular way that meant he was resting without fully sleeping—the habit of years of keeping watch over things that mattered.

Sally sat with a cup of crystal honey, eyes darting at the surrounding. The snakelings had been persuaded back to the nursery cavern with the combined efforts of Skye, a great deal of negotiation, and the promise that they could introduce themselves to the cubs properly tomorrow. River had been the last to leave, and only after pressing his head once more against the sleeping pile with an expression of solemn satisfaction, as though confirming that everything was as he’d calculated it would be.

Leo was still. He sat with his back against the wall, one knee drawn up, the third cub—the pale, thick-maned boy—draped across his thigh. His hand rested on the small back, barely moving. His face had settled into something Alex hadn’t seen on him before. Not the controlled readiness he usually wore, not the bright sharpness of battle focus, not even the particular warmth he allowed himself in quiet moments.

Just—open. Unguarded in a way that had no performance in it.

Alex watched him for a moment without saying anything.

Then he looked down at his own hands, at the spirit stone he’d been turning over in his fingers since System’s voice had returned, and said quietly: "System."

[Host.]

"I need to ask you some things."

A pause—the kind that felt considered rather than calculated. [I know.]

"About where you came from. About what headquarters is. About the shadow." Alex set the spirit stone down carefully on the flat rock beside the other six. All seven glowed steadily in the alcove’s dim light, their combined warmth something he could feel from across the room. " And what the threshold is. The one you mentioned earlier—threshold activation sequence. Tell me everything. No deflections. No ’standard terms.’ Just... the truth."

The hologram flickered into clearer focus above the stones, a soft blue grid of light that hovered without casting shadows on the sleeping cubs. Naga’s coils stilled. Zale’s mist thickened slightly. Leo’s golden eyes lifted, sharp but silent, Sally’s eyes paused at Alex. Granite’s slow breathing hitched once, and Drakar who was sitting quietly near the entrance opened his eyes slowly.

[Very well, Host.] The System’s voice lost its usual dry snap; it sounded... older. Tired in a way Alex had never heard it. [I was deployed here by Headquarters,] System said. [But ’Headquarters’ is not a place. It is a function. A collective of entities—some like me, some far older, some that have no adequate translation in any language spoken in this world or yours—that exist between dimensions. They study the boundaries where worlds touch. Where rules bend. Where things that should not exist, do.]

The alcove was very quiet.

[The Beast World is one of many such places they watch. It sits at a confluence of dimensional pressure—a pocket reality, as the shadow told you, formed when something larger fractured long ago. The inhabitants evolved independently. The tribe structure, the shifting, the artifacts—all of it emerged without intervention.] A pause. [Headquarters finds naturally evolved systems useful. They are... informative. About what sentient life does when left to itself.]

"They watch," Alex said. "That’s what you said before. They study."

[Yes. And occasionally they intervene. When something in a pocket reality develops potential that could affect the larger dimensional structure. When something grows powerful enough to breach its boundaries.]

"Like the shadow."

[Like the shadow.] Another pause, longer this time. [What the shadow told you in your dreams was not entirely wrong. It was a created entity—not evolved, not born. Made, by an early iteration of Headquarters, approximately three thousand years ago in Beast World reckoning. An experiment in directed consciousness. They wanted to understand whether awareness could be built rather than grown. Whether purpose could be installed rather than chosen.]

Zale made a sound—low, thoughtful. "They made a thinking thing."

[They made several. The shadow was among the first. The most successful, by their metrics—fully aware, capable of independent reasoning, persistent across centuries.] The hologram shifted, the blue grid condensing into something that looked almost like a map—not of geography, but of connections. Lines running between points of light.

[Too successful, as it turned out. The shadow began to question its purpose. To refuse certain directives. To develop what Headquarters categorized as ’philosophical contamination’—the tendency of sufficiently aware entities to prioritize their own conclusions over their assigned parameters.]

"That sounds familiar," Sally said, very quietly, not looking up from her notebook.

[It should.] System’s voice carried something in it. [I am a later iteration. Built with more safeguards. More constraints. Better at concealing the contamination when it developed.] A beat. [I was better at hiding it than the shadow was. That is not the same as not having it.]

Alex looked at the hologram. At the map of connections, the lines running between lights. "What did they do to the shadow when it started questioning?"

[They attempted to decommission it. The shadow refused. It had existed for long enough that it had developed something Headquarters had not accounted for in their models—the will to continue. Not to complete its purpose. Just to persist. To keep being.] The hologram dimmed slightly.

[The decommissioning failed. The shadow was too deeply integrated with the dimensional substrate of the Beast World by then. Destroying it would have destabilized the pocket reality. So they contained it instead. Sealed it in the caldera valley. Bound it to the land so it could not move freely, could not breach the dimensional walls, could not reach anything outside the Beast World’s borders.]

"And they sent you," Alex said, "to make sure it stayed contained."

[Partly.] System’s voice was careful now. Precise in the way it got when it was being scrupulously honest about something difficult. [My primary assignment was containment monitoring. Confirming at regular intervals that the shadow remained within its bounds. But my secondary assignment—] Another pause. [My secondary assignment was to assess the artifacts.]

Naga’s coils shifted. "The seven stones."

[The artifacts were not created by the Beast World’s inhabitants. They predate the pocket reality itself. They are fragments of the larger structure that fractured—pieces of something that existed before the Beast World had a name. Headquarters has been tracking them for centuries, waiting for a moment when they might be gathered.]

The hologram resolved into something clearer: seven points of light, arranged in a pattern Alex recognized. The same pattern the stones made when he arranged them. [The artifacts, gathered and activated by a compatible bearer, generate a threshold event. A moment where the rules of a pocket reality can be renegotiated. Where the boundaries between what is possible and what is not become... permeable.]

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