The aftermath was silent, pierced only by the distant, growing wail of faculty sirens. Miyabi was safe for now, hidden and unconscious, but the threat was very much alive. “The council will treat this as a failed Anima control check,” Ayame stated, her voice sharp as she checked the perimeter. “They’ll ignore the external factor. Hand over the fragment, Akizuki. It belongs to the school.” Ryo tightened his grip on the warm metal shard. “It’s tied to the Whisper. If the council handles this, it disappears into their black archives forever. You know that.” Ayame didn’t try to wrestle it from him. Their rivalry was one of skill and strength, not theft. “I know this much: my family’s records on Kurogane’s early experiments are deeper than anyone else’s. If this is linked to the Zero Event, you’ll need my help to decode it. This is a mutually assured investigation, not a solo mission.” It was the closest Ayame had ever come to admitting she needed him. “You secure the perimeter and stall the formal investigation,” Ryo conceded, turning toward the shadows. “That buys me ten minutes. If the enforcers spot me before then, the truce is off.” Ryo vaulted onto the roof of the nearby boiler room and dropped into the abandoned server core — a place whose thick shielding offered the only temporary privacy from Kurogane’s ubiquitous Anima scanners. He placed the fragment under a weak work lamp. It pulsed with a contained energy, a signature of absorption and vector calculation. When he channeled a pulse of his own controlled Anima into it, the fragment didn’t just vibrate; it broadcast a clear, psychic echo directly into his mind. Echo: 35°44' N, 139°46' E The coordinates were for the most forbidden location on campus: the Abandoned Observatory. Containment. The power flows strongest there. The Observatory was the epicenter of Kurogane’s darkest history, built directly over a nexus of raw, planetary Anima energy, where the initial containment failures — the true Zero Event — must have occurred. If the manipulator was there, they weren’t collecting scrap; they were preparing a major operation. Ryo pocketed the Fragment and raced toward the northern fence. The iron boundary shimmered, vibrating with a high-tension psychic field — a passive deterrent that instantly rejected any uncontrolled Anima surge. A raw Kinetic attack like Ayame’s would trigger a massive defensive discharge. But Ryo’s power was finesse. He activated his Shadow Knife, carving not a physical path, but a precise, molecular gap in the psychic field. The compressed energy of the Knife acted as a surgical instrument, slicing a momentary vacuum in the Anima flow just large enough for him to slip through. He landed quietly on the Observatory grounds. The air here was heavy, cold, and charged with static energy. “Ten minutes, Ryo,” a low voice grated from the shadows of the massive stone dome. Ayame emerged, no sweat, no obvious effort. She hadn’t forced the barrier; she’d slipped around it. “You’re early,” Ryo stated, letting the Shadow Knife dissipate. “I took the scenic route,” Ayame replied, gesturing with her chin toward a rusted grate barely visible beneath the foundation of the dome. “This access was never logged by the academy’s current systems. It leads down, not up to the telescope platform.” She stepped back, revealing the tight, circular opening of an old ventilation shaft. The air wafting up smelled of damp earth, stagnant water, and a faint, acrid metallic tang. “The surface is for observation,” Ayame said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, despite the distance from surveillance. “The basement is for containment. Let’s see what secrets Kurogane buried.” Chapter 2: The Resonance of Containment was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this storyThe aftermath was silent, pierced only by the distant, growing wail of faculty sirens. Miyabi was safe for now, hidden and unconscious, but the threat was very much alive. “The council will treat this as a failed Anima control check,” Ayame stated, her voice sharp as she checked the perimeter. “They’ll ignore the external factor. Hand over the fragment, Akizuki. It belongs to the school.” Ryo tightened his grip on the warm metal shard. “It’s tied to the Whisper. If the council handles this, it disappears into their black archives forever. You know that.” Ayame didn’t try to wrestle it from him. Their rivalry was one of skill and strength, not theft. “I know this much: my family’s records on Kurogane’s early experiments are deeper than anyone else’s. If this is linked to the Zero Event, you’ll need my help to decode it. This is a mutually assured investigation, not a solo mission.” It was the closest Ayame had ever come to admitting she needed him. “You secure the perimeter and stall the formal investigation,” Ryo conceded, turning toward the shadows. “That buys me ten minutes. If the enforcers spot me before then, the truce is off.” Ryo vaulted onto the roof of the nearby boiler room and dropped into the abandoned server core — a place whose thick shielding offered the only temporary privacy from Kurogane’s ubiquitous Anima scanners. He placed the fragment under a weak work lamp. It pulsed with a contained energy, a signature of absorption and vector calculation. When he channeled a pulse of his own controlled Anima into it, the fragment didn’t just vibrate; it broadcast a clear, psychic echo directly into his mind. Echo: 35°44' N, 139°46' E The coordinates were for the most forbidden location on campus: the Abandoned Observatory. Containment. The power flows strongest there. The Observatory was the epicenter of Kurogane’s darkest history, built directly over a nexus of raw, planetary Anima energy, where the initial containment failures — the true Zero Event — must have occurred. If the manipulator was there, they weren’t collecting scrap; they were preparing a major operation. Ryo pocketed the Fragment and raced toward the northern fence. The iron boundary shimmered, vibrating with a high-tension psychic field — a passive deterrent that instantly rejected any uncontrolled Anima surge. A raw Kinetic attack like Ayame’s would trigger a massive defensive discharge. But Ryo’s power was finesse. He activated his Shadow Knife, carving not a physical path, but a precise, molecular gap in the psychic field. The compressed energy of the Knife acted as a surgical instrument, slicing a momentary vacuum in the Anima flow just large enough for him to slip through. He landed quietly on the Observatory grounds. The air here was heavy, cold, and charged with static energy. “Ten minutes, Ryo,” a low voice grated from the shadows of the massive stone dome. Ayame emerged, no sweat, no obvious effort. She hadn’t forced the barrier; she’d slipped around it. “You’re early,” Ryo stated, letting the Shadow Knife dissipate. “I took the scenic route,” Ayame replied, gesturing with her chin toward a rusted grate barely visible beneath the foundation of the dome. “This access was never logged by the academy’s current systems. It leads down, not up to the telescope platform.” She stepped back, revealing the tight, circular opening of an old ventilation shaft. The air wafting up smelled of damp earth, stagnant water, and a faint, acrid metallic tang. “The surface is for observation,” Ayame said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, despite the distance from surveillance. “The basement is for containment. Let’s see what secrets Kurogane buried.” Chapter 2: The Resonance of Containment was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story

Chapter 2: The Resonance of Containment

2025/11/07 16:24

The aftermath was silent, pierced only by the distant, growing wail of faculty sirens. Miyabi was safe for now, hidden and unconscious, but the threat was very much alive.

“The council will treat this as a failed Anima control check,” Ayame stated, her voice sharp as she checked the perimeter. “They’ll ignore the external factor. Hand over the fragment, Akizuki. It belongs to the school.”

Ryo tightened his grip on the warm metal shard. “It’s tied to the Whisper. If the council handles this, it disappears into their black archives forever. You know that.”

Ayame didn’t try to wrestle it from him. Their rivalry was one of skill and strength, not theft. “I know this much: my family’s records on Kurogane’s early experiments are deeper than anyone else’s. If this is linked to the Zero Event, you’ll need my help to decode it. This is a mutually assured investigation, not a solo mission.”

It was the closest Ayame had ever come to admitting she needed him.

“You secure the perimeter and stall the formal investigation,” Ryo conceded, turning toward the shadows. “That buys me ten minutes. If the enforcers spot me before then, the truce is off.”

Ryo vaulted onto the roof of the nearby boiler room and dropped into the abandoned server core — a place whose thick shielding offered the only temporary privacy from Kurogane’s ubiquitous Anima scanners.

He placed the fragment under a weak work lamp. It pulsed with a contained energy, a signature of absorption and vector calculation. When he channeled a pulse of his own controlled Anima into it, the fragment didn’t just vibrate; it broadcast a clear, psychic echo directly into his mind.

Echo: 35°44' N, 139°46' E

The coordinates were for the most forbidden location on campus: the Abandoned Observatory.

Containment. The power flows strongest there. The Observatory was the epicenter of Kurogane’s darkest history, built directly over a nexus of raw, planetary Anima energy, where the initial containment failures — the true Zero Event — must have occurred. If the manipulator was there, they weren’t collecting scrap; they were preparing a major operation.

Ryo pocketed the Fragment and raced toward the northern fence. The iron boundary shimmered, vibrating with a high-tension psychic field — a passive deterrent that instantly rejected any uncontrolled Anima surge. A raw Kinetic attack like Ayame’s would trigger a massive defensive discharge.

But Ryo’s power was finesse. He activated his Shadow Knife, carving not a physical path, but a precise, molecular gap in the psychic field. The compressed energy of the Knife acted as a surgical instrument, slicing a momentary vacuum in the Anima flow just large enough for him to slip through.

He landed quietly on the Observatory grounds. The air here was heavy, cold, and charged with static energy.

“Ten minutes, Ryo,” a low voice grated from the shadows of the massive stone dome.

Ayame emerged, no sweat, no obvious effort. She hadn’t forced the barrier; she’d slipped around it.

“You’re early,” Ryo stated, letting the Shadow Knife dissipate.

“I took the scenic route,” Ayame replied, gesturing with her chin toward a rusted grate barely visible beneath the foundation of the dome. “This access was never logged by the academy’s current systems. It leads down, not up to the telescope platform.”

She stepped back, revealing the tight, circular opening of an old ventilation shaft. The air wafting up smelled of damp earth, stagnant water, and a faint, acrid metallic tang.

“The surface is for observation,” Ayame said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, despite the distance from surveillance. “The basement is for containment. Let’s see what secrets Kurogane buried.”


Chapter 2: The Resonance of Containment was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

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