Chapter 108: Imperfect Mimics
They brought the bodies back slow.
No words on the walk. Just rope, breath, and the scrape of a sled cutting two neat scars into the white.
Camp gathered without being told. Miners lined up with their caps in their hands, eyes raw from cold and the kind of crying that never leaves your face. Feris stood at the front with her jaw set like she could argue death into leaving. Lynea didn’t blink. Obi stopped talking.
They built two low cairns out of hard snow and flat stone. Names went first - spoken soft by the crew chief who’d never spoken that gently in a long time. Then a handful of chips from the vein, pale blue against white, tucked at the top like light that refused to hide.
Hikari’s voice was the last one. "They never even got to turn back." She set her palm on the nearest grave, then let it go.
Raizen took a step forward and realized everyone was waiting to see if he’d speak. It felt too big for him. It also felt wrong not to.
He cleared his throat once, because the cold had stolen it. "We came to protect you. We were late."
Then, to himself, as soft as a whisper "I was late. Again."
It wasn’t pretty. It didn’t need to be.
They stood a breath more. Then the camp exhaled together and remembered it had jobs. Someone relit the stove. Someone adjusted a lightbulb. The world frowned and kept moving, the way it always does.
Under the tent, they unbagged the blades.
Frost wouldn’t touch the metal. It didn’t bead. It avoided. Under the lantern, the edges looked wrong in a way Raizen couldn’t name - too straight for human eyes, like the line knew it was a line and loved itself for it.
Hikari ran a reader over the first blade without letting the device graze the metal. Numbers climbed, dipped, then settled into nothing, as if the blade had learned they were looking and decided to be boring.
"Alteea" Raizen said, tapping his comm. "Do you copy?"
Static. Then her voice flooded the tent, breathless and farther away than it should have been.
"Finally" Alteea said. Sirens keened small behind her, a steady background pain. "You three went off my map. Talk."
"We engaged" Raizen said. He kept it clinical. "Tall Nyx. Blade-arms like guillotines. Hikari got a penetration on the back plate. It withdrew. We recovered -" He glanced at the table. "- these."
Obi leaned into the mic like a kid showing a stolen trophy. "Two long, lovely razor friends. No fingerprints. No manners."
Hikari angled the blade toward the lantern so Alteea’s feed could catch the outline. "They’re not scrap. They match the Nyx arms perfectly. Length, taper, everything."
A moment of silence so brief it had to be thinking.
"It... Withdrew!? That’s... interesting" Alteea said, and the word wore both excitement and disgust.
"Well... What can I say? Across history we’ve had reports - Nyxes picking up tools, learning by accident, imitating shapes. They mimic function like a child copies handwriting. But this - " She actually laughed once, short and without joy. "This is not copying. This is fabrication. Full-on mirroring. And they adapted so fast..."
"You mean it made hands out of swords because it looked at swords" Obi said.
"I mean it saw a weapon and reinvented itself" Alteea said. Her voice sharpened as if she needed the edge to keep herself steady. "We almost lost another one on the West grid tower ten minutes ago. He’s alive - barely. And listen to this: one of the Wraiths from the earlier alert was carrying a gun."
Hikari looked up, quick. "Carrying? Not... fusing?"
"Carrying is the wrong word... I’d say more like... Made itself a gun." Alteea said. "Even functioning. Firing. Badly - but the fact it tried? That’s new. That’s not a tool in a hand. That’s a memory in a body."
Raizen thought about the Nyx turning its head to watch him, the patience in it, the way it left. Testing, not afraid.
"Our readings are weird" Alteea went on. "Your area is full of interference I can’t name. I’m catching faint signatures underneath the grid - low, repeating. Not one entity. A pattern. Like echoes of the same thing walking in a row. Or... A single entity with immense influence and output"
"Could be reflections off the vein" Hikari offered, then shook her head at her own suggestion.
"No. The timing’s wrong."
"Alteea" Raizen almost interrupted her. "You said you almost lost someone?"
"West grid tower" she repeated, and papers or slates rustled, the sound of twelve hands doing eight jobs. "Vanguard from the sixth division. The gun fella couldn’t aim properly, so it just shot chaotically. And with no pattern involved, our little Vanguard couldn’t parry them. I swear... I think that even you, Raizen, would have done better..."
The channel cracked, frayed, and briefly spit back Hikari’s voice from earlier, twisted - "They never even got to turn back" - before stitching itself into static.
"Alteea?" Raizen said to the silence, because it was better than letting it win.
Outside, camp tried on normal. The burner complained and then obeyed. Someone laughed too loudly at nothing and then apologized. Feris paced like an animal with a favorite fence. Keahi coiled rope into perfect circles and then uncoiled it again because order was a story she told herself when the world refused to agree.
Raizen stepped out for air. The sky had flattened, clouds closer than ever. The light came from everywhere at once, the way it does right before weather changes its mind.
He swallowed cold and got something else. A voice. His voice. Where no one was. Just beyond the tents, knitted into the wind so tightly you could pretend you imagined it.
"We can’t talk here" it said. Exactly like he’d said it earlier. Calm. Patient. A perfect recording performed by a throat that wasn’t his. It was... Almost a perfect imitation. Raizen cussed in his mind for not bringing a microphone and his slate.
"Feris?" he called without turning his head.
"I heard it" she answered, appearing at his shoulder like she’d been born there. She grinned on reflex, then the grin decided it had come to the wrong face and left. "The mountain’s being funny."
"Don’t follow anything that sounds like you" he said.
"Does that include you?" Feris said.
"Not sure, but let’s say that yes" he answered.
They didn’t move.
Something scuffed behind the outer tent ring. Keahi straightened. Lynea turned her head fraction by fraction, eyes on a point that wasn’t making a point. Obi came out of the tent with his injured palm wrapped and his grin taped back on.
"Question" he said. "If the voices are doing impressions now, can I request a better one for mine? Maybe less charming. More... Humble. Come on, even I don’t sound like that!"
"Shh" Hikari said quietly, one step away from contradicting him. She cradled her staff like a promise around a problem.
They listened the way people listen to test if they’re alone.
A footstep answered. From where no one should be. Then another, as if embarrassed for being late. Then nothing.
Obi approached the edge of camp and crouched. Snow told the truth. It always does, at first. He found boot-prints circling the outer tents - clean, recent, deep. He set his heel next to one and it matched. Size, stride. Raizen beside him did the same and found the same.
"Us" Obi said. "Again."
"We haven’t been here" Hikari said.
"Not yet" Obi murmured. It wasn’t a joke. It just wore his mouth.
The generator let out a hiccup. The lightbulbs thinned for half a second, then recovered as if they didn’t want to admit to weakness. The shadow of the blades bagged under the lamp didn’t move, but Raizen couldn’t lose the feeling that they were considering the idea.
He pulled his comm back up. "Lighthouse? We have... copies. Footsteps. Voices."
The channel hissed. Then Alteea’s voice slid back in - not breathless this time, but low, controlled, the way people sound when they’re angry at physics.
"Keep everyone close" she said. Orders fired away from her as if she were standing in three rooms at once. "Don’t send pairs outside perimeter. Do not follow calls. Don’t trust a second marker if the first looks too clean. I have readings-"
"What about-" Hikari started, but the line was already cut again.
The wind bunched at the edge of camp and tugged at the tent like invisible hands. Feris pivoted toward the sound. Keahi stepped left to make space that hadn’t asked for it.
"Where are Esen and Ichiro?" Hikari asked.
"Still dark" Alteea said. "I’ve got a pulse from their tags with a delay, like it’s bouncing off something that shouldn’t be there. They’re not far. They’re not close. Which I understand is not helpful."
"Copy" Raizen said. He scanned the tree line even though there wasn’t a real line to scan. The forest crouched lower than it should, as if snow had pulled it into a smaller version of itself.
"O-one" Alteea said, voice gone suddenly clearer. "Stay in light. If you must move, move together. Don’t -"
The channel broke yet again. Then a new voice used the break like a back door.
"Hey" Raizen’s voice said from behind the tents. "Over here!"
Feris took a step. Raizen caught her sleeve. "No." It came out sharper than he meant. She didn’t take it personally. She didn’t take it at all.
"Okay" she said. "We wait."
"It learns... Too fast..."
They decided to wait, after a shriek, something... Like a laugh split the air, the sound coming from everywhere and nowhere.
The wind changed. Not faster - different. It forgot to be cold for a second and became a carrier. Footfalls approached from the notch between two drifts, staggered and wrong.
Esen came into view first, dragging a bundle of cut branches like the weight had decided it loved him too much. His coat was torn across the ribs, one sleeve hung by a thread. He was grinning in the way a boy grins when he’s pretending that he isn’t shaking. Ichiro followed, slower, steady because steady is what he is, a wide cut across his forearm making his glove stiff and crimson. Their faces had that look you get when you’ve been away for a year and it’s only been an hour.
They stopped at the edge of the light as if asking permission to enter their own camp. No one spoke. Not for a breath. Not because they didn’t have words. Because they were counting, quietly, the ways a thing can be wrong and still look like a person you love.
Ichiro looked at Raizen. His eyes had that far-distance you only get when you’ve watched something you can’t file under anything.
"We found wood" he said, voice hoarse and careful.
Esen blinked once, twice, like he was trying to reset his head. "And... We found... us?" he added, a broken laugh hitching into the middle and dying there.
Raizen took one step into the dark and felt it lean back like a mouth.
"Sit down" he told them, palm out, and the order carried a crack he didn’t know he had.
The light shivered, then held. Somewhere out beyond the ring, the mountain tried on the shape of his voice again and got better at it.