Chapter Seven:The Answer
Posted: Sat Feb 21, 2026 2:04 pm
The tension did not leave with the battlefield.
It thinned.
That was all.
Tempest stood at the threshold of the strategy room a moment longer than necessary, eyes moving—not nervously, but methodically. Corners. Sight lines. Doors. Who carried weapons and who didn’t. Who watched them, and who pretended not to.
Lyssa tugged gently at her sleeve.
“I’m starving,” she admitted, voice smaller now that the adrenaline had drained away.
Xeia said nothing, but her stomach betrayed her with a quiet sound that made her cheeks burn.
Tempest softened.
She knelt briefly, brushing Lyssa’s hair back from her face.
“You eat. You shower. You stay close to me.”
Lyssa nodded.
Xeia tried to smile bravely, though her eyes were still wide with everything she’d witnessed.
Tempest rose and looked once more at Azazel.
It wasn’t fear in her expression.
It was calculation.
Trust, but layered.
Her chin dipped in a small, deliberate nod.
Azazel answered with one of his own.
Then she turned, gathering Xeia and Lyssa with her as a few of the newly awakened were escorted toward the communal quarters. The door slid shut behind them.
The room quieted.
Only Azazel and Nine Breaker remained.
Nine Breaker—still half-armored, gauntlets resting on the crate—watched the door for a second longer before turning back.
Azazel spoke first.
“Nine Breaker,” he said evenly. “That’s hardly a name.”
He tilted his head slightly.
“More a title. A rank, even.”
Nine Breaker’s mouth curved slowly.
“You’re perceptive.”
He leaned back against the table, folding his arms.
“My real name is Vergil.”
He said it casually—but there was something deliberate in the reveal.
A test.
“Vergil,” he repeated with a sly smile. “And yours is a moniker as well, I assume.”
Azazel’s expression did not shift.
“No,” he said. “It’s my given name.”
A pause.
“Why?” His eyes sharpened. “Does it mean something here?”
Vergil studied him carefully.
“Depends who you ask.”
He moved toward one of the walls, tapping a control panel. A dim archive screen flickered to life—old texts, mythological references, scattered articles.
“There’s an old tell,” he began, voice lower now. “A myth. About a demon who shared knowledge and power with humans.”
He glanced at Azazel.
“A being who offered strength in defiance of divine order.”
The screen shifted—ancient etchings, stylized depictions of a horned figure standing among men.
“The name?” Vergil said softly. “Azazel.”
The word hung in the air like something alive.
“They say it means ‘to whom God has given strength.’”
Azazel didn’t blink.
Vergil continued.
“In some versions, he was a teacher. Taught humanity warfare. Metalworking. Secrets of heaven.”
Another shift on the screen—now darker imagery. Chains. A pit.
“In others, he was a corrupter. The reason humanity fell into violence.”
His voice lowered further.
“Rumored to be sealed at the bottom of the world. Bound beneath stone and silence.”
A faint smile touched Vergil’s mouth.
“a herald of endings.”
Silence followed.
The hum of the patched machinery outside seemed louder now.
Azazel finally spoke.
“And you believe in these myths?”
Vergil shrugged lightly.
“I believe myths survive for a reason.”
He stepped closer.
“And I believe names have gravity.”
Azazel’s gray eyes did not waver. A subtle current moved through the air—not hostile.
Measured.
Vergil studied him not like a threat.
Like a variable.
“in your world,” he asked quietly, “when someone awakens to power…”
His gaze flicked briefly toward the door Tempest had exited through.
“…does something come to kill them?”
Azazel’s jaw tightened just slightly.
“No…not so systemically, atleast. Death is close…but never like this. ”
Vergil nodded once.
“Then Terra is broken in a way your world isn’t.”
The two men stood in that truth for a moment.
Different worlds.
Same war.
Finally, Vergil exhaled.
“If your name is truly your own,” he said, “then I suppose the legends here will have to adjust.”
A faint glint touched Azazel’s eyes.
“Legends often do.”
Outside the room, laughter rose again—faint, stubborn, human.
Vergil looked toward it.
“Eat with us,” he said after a moment. “See how we live before you decide whether to trust us.”
Azazel considered that.
Then nodded once.
“I will.”
It thinned.
That was all.
Tempest stood at the threshold of the strategy room a moment longer than necessary, eyes moving—not nervously, but methodically. Corners. Sight lines. Doors. Who carried weapons and who didn’t. Who watched them, and who pretended not to.
Lyssa tugged gently at her sleeve.
“I’m starving,” she admitted, voice smaller now that the adrenaline had drained away.
Xeia said nothing, but her stomach betrayed her with a quiet sound that made her cheeks burn.
Tempest softened.
She knelt briefly, brushing Lyssa’s hair back from her face.
“You eat. You shower. You stay close to me.”
Lyssa nodded.
Xeia tried to smile bravely, though her eyes were still wide with everything she’d witnessed.
Tempest rose and looked once more at Azazel.
It wasn’t fear in her expression.
It was calculation.
Trust, but layered.
Her chin dipped in a small, deliberate nod.
Azazel answered with one of his own.
Then she turned, gathering Xeia and Lyssa with her as a few of the newly awakened were escorted toward the communal quarters. The door slid shut behind them.
The room quieted.
Only Azazel and Nine Breaker remained.
Nine Breaker—still half-armored, gauntlets resting on the crate—watched the door for a second longer before turning back.
Azazel spoke first.
“Nine Breaker,” he said evenly. “That’s hardly a name.”
He tilted his head slightly.
“More a title. A rank, even.”
Nine Breaker’s mouth curved slowly.
“You’re perceptive.”
He leaned back against the table, folding his arms.
“My real name is Vergil.”
He said it casually—but there was something deliberate in the reveal.
A test.
“Vergil,” he repeated with a sly smile. “And yours is a moniker as well, I assume.”
Azazel’s expression did not shift.
“No,” he said. “It’s my given name.”
A pause.
“Why?” His eyes sharpened. “Does it mean something here?”
Vergil studied him carefully.
“Depends who you ask.”
He moved toward one of the walls, tapping a control panel. A dim archive screen flickered to life—old texts, mythological references, scattered articles.
“There’s an old tell,” he began, voice lower now. “A myth. About a demon who shared knowledge and power with humans.”
He glanced at Azazel.
“A being who offered strength in defiance of divine order.”
The screen shifted—ancient etchings, stylized depictions of a horned figure standing among men.
“The name?” Vergil said softly. “Azazel.”
The word hung in the air like something alive.
“They say it means ‘to whom God has given strength.’”
Azazel didn’t blink.
Vergil continued.
“In some versions, he was a teacher. Taught humanity warfare. Metalworking. Secrets of heaven.”
Another shift on the screen—now darker imagery. Chains. A pit.
“In others, he was a corrupter. The reason humanity fell into violence.”
His voice lowered further.
“Rumored to be sealed at the bottom of the world. Bound beneath stone and silence.”
A faint smile touched Vergil’s mouth.
“a herald of endings.”
Silence followed.
The hum of the patched machinery outside seemed louder now.
Azazel finally spoke.
“And you believe in these myths?”
Vergil shrugged lightly.
“I believe myths survive for a reason.”
He stepped closer.
“And I believe names have gravity.”
Azazel’s gray eyes did not waver. A subtle current moved through the air—not hostile.
Measured.
Vergil studied him not like a threat.
Like a variable.
“in your world,” he asked quietly, “when someone awakens to power…”
His gaze flicked briefly toward the door Tempest had exited through.
“…does something come to kill them?”
Azazel’s jaw tightened just slightly.
“No…not so systemically, atleast. Death is close…but never like this. ”
Vergil nodded once.
“Then Terra is broken in a way your world isn’t.”
The two men stood in that truth for a moment.
Different worlds.
Same war.
Finally, Vergil exhaled.
“If your name is truly your own,” he said, “then I suppose the legends here will have to adjust.”
A faint glint touched Azazel’s eyes.
“Legends often do.”
Outside the room, laughter rose again—faint, stubborn, human.
Vergil looked toward it.
“Eat with us,” he said after a moment. “See how we live before you decide whether to trust us.”
Azazel considered that.
Then nodded once.
“I will.”