Chapter 60
Fear of Falling
An hour had passed since takeoff, the cabin’s steady hum broken only by the occasional rustle of movement, or the clinking of ice in Augustus’s drink.
Talia napped, reclining in her seat. Annie sat cross-legged with her boots on the seat, glued to the massive screen. Alexander appreciated that she’d switched to using headphones.
That left Alexander and Augustus sitting in silence. Comfortable enough, but heavy with thought.
Alexander had been replaying the invasion over and over. The army of strangers he’d crushed in a matter of seconds, buckling armor, cracking bones, voices screaming until they didn’t. He’d felt worse for the technicians back at the prison, though even that memory had dulled since, filed away in the recesses of his mind.
The ease of it all unsettled him. His understanding was that there should be more weight to it, but how he felt didn’t fit the way he thought he should feel.
Not that emotions had ever been his strong suit. Seeing and predicting them in others was a skill he’d developed from childhood, but logic usually won over emotion when he had to make decisions or choices.
Asking Annie about it was off the table. He knew she still hadn’t come to terms with the fight against Pandora, let alone the medical techs. Throwing herself into the arena again and again seemed to be her way of bleeding it out, one fight at a time. Talia, on the other hand, could probably cite research and clinical studies, backed by a dozen personal experiences. But he didn’t want clinical, or an essay on trauma.
What he wanted was perspective. Should he feel bad about removing enemies from a fight where his friends were in danger? He even regarded the Throne of Scales’ continued existence as important, especially over strangers that just wanted to kill everyone. And that wasn’t even factoring in Julia.
That part was just complicated, though.
He’d been considering how to ask Augustus. The older man had killed as a soldier, a ranger, and now as a supervillain. If anyone could tell him whether his reaction meant something deeper, it was him.
“Augustus,” he began, “have you ever felt little to nothing after killing someone?”
Augustus paused mid-sip. One brow arched as he studied Alexander over the rim. Then he set the glass down carefully.
“Straight to the point, huh?”
Alexander shifted in his seat. He glanced at his favorite drone hovering nearby, remembering that it was still recording. They’d made the call to record the entire trip, along with whatever they found, so there could be no doubt about the evidence.
“I was going for subtlety.”
“You failed spectacularly.” Augustus leaned back, fingers drumming lightly on the armrest. His gaze wandered out the window for a moment, thoughtful. “But I’ll give you credit. You at least asked instead of brooding about it for weeks.”
Alexander waited patiently, letting the silence do the work.
Finally, Augustus sighed. “The first time I killed someone, I felt everything. Shock, guilt, anger, shame. Not in the moment, but later, when I had time to think about it. I remember every detail. The sounds. Smells. The look on his face. It weighed on me for months.”
He picked up the glass and took another sip before setting it back down. “But after a while, the weight changed. Or I learned to carry it, perhaps. You learn that some fights demand action before thought. Sometimes you second-guess yourself, waking up in the middle of the night and questioning the necessity. Other times, you walk away feeling nothing at all. It doesn’t mean you’ve lost your humanity. It means you’ve adapted or made peace with what needed to be done.”
Alexander frowned. “So, not feeling anything isn’t… a warning sign?”
“Not on its own,” Augustus said. “I’d be concerned if you enjoyed it. Or if you stopped questioning it.”
Alexander tilted his head, considering his words. “I didn’t enjoy it. I didn’t even want to do it. But I knew I had to do something, and that the simplest, safest solution was to remove the threat entirely. Afterwards, though, I just… didn’t care. Everyone else was safe, and so the end justified the means.”
“That’s the difference.” Augustus leaned forward. “You are asking yourself the right questions. That’s what keeps you human—holding yourself accountable. The moment you stop asking is the moment you’ve lost something essential.”
Alexander glanced out the porthole. “Thank you.”
A small smile tugged at Augustus’s mouth. “You’ll be fine. And if you ever lose your way, you’ve got people that will look out for you.”
From the other side of the cabin, Annie snorted without looking away from her screen. “If you two are done getting all philosophical, the Barkforce is about to infiltrate a space casino!”
Alexander closed his eyes, choosing not to entertain her. Augustus chuckled, settling back into his seat.
The silence returned, still comfortable, but with thoughts lighter than before.
The quiet hum of the engines had grown deeper since the pilot had dropped altitude. Alexander could feel it in the floor, though he doubted anyone without Metallokinesis would. The hoverjet was an expensive piece of tech, and it showed.
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The plane cut through a thinner layer of cloud, adjusting slightly to match the new course.
Alexander had nudged the flight path down through the avionics, feeding false weather data to justify the altitude change. Now at fifteen thousand feet, right where Augustus wanted them, they were minutes away according to Talia’s calculations.
He turned from the window. The others were strapping on their gear. The jumpsuits Augustus had purchased fit snug. Alexander had woven fine steel wiring into them the night before, so that they could pull off the insane part of the plan. Helmets with small oxygen tanks rested beside every seat except Augustus’s. They each had a slim parachute strapped on.
Their signature masks had been left in storage for this mission.
“We can still bail,” Alexander said. His voice carried evenly across the cabin. “I know this is something I want, but I don’t like how little intel we’re going in with. We could find another angle.”
Talia adjusted the seals on her wrist unit before meeting his eyes. “There’s no other way. This site’s so far off the books the CEO made a point of letting others handle it. We’d need access to military or corpo satellites to see more than what I’ve scraped together.”
Augustus swirled the last of his whiskey in its glass before setting it aside. “Intel or not, waiting is the greater risk. Once Santiago realizes exactly what we stole, they could do anything. Shut the site down. Move the gateway. Double the guards. Lay a trap. Every hour we wait makes it more likely, and that’s assuming they haven’t already found out.”
Alexander frowned at that.
“Sometimes success comes down to timing,” Augustus continued. “This is the window we have, and it’s a fair one. Fifteen thousand isn’t high for a jump, and we’ve covered our options. Alexander brings us down to the roof and handles security. My portal gets us inside. We drop down the elevator shaft, go through the gateway, destroy the anchor on the far side, get what we need, and then extract cleanly.”
Talia crossed her arms. “That doesn’t account for superhuman interference on the way, or on the other side of the gate.”
Annie slammed her helmet onto her lap, grinning wide. “Anyone who comes at us, they’ll get messed up!” Then her grin faltered, and she started breathing quickly, muttering to herself. “I am a superhero. I am a goddamn superhero.” She jammed the helmet over her head and twisted it until it locked in with a click.
When she glanced up, the others were staring. Her voice was muffled through the helmet. “What? Okay, so I’m scared of heights. Bite me.”
Alexander reached out and rapped his knuckles on the dome of her helmet.
Augustus chuckled, then sobered. “Talia’s right, but once we destroy the anchor on the far side, they won’t be able to follow. On-site security is the only real concern. And in my experience, on-site security is always light for secret facilities.”
Talia considered that, then pulled her own helmet into place, the gesture as much an answer as any words she might have said.
Alexander studied them, then nodded once. “Alright. Let’s do it. But if this turns sideways, defensive formation on Auggy, and you get us out. As much as I want this… the team comes first.”
The team drew in tight at the center of the cabin. Talia raised her hand, fingers steady despite the tension. Augustus stood beside her, wand angled down and ready to cast. Annie’s breaths rasped loudly across the comms.
Alexander closed his eyes. The mission depended on whether he could pull this off. Augustus could quickly cast another portal to send them back up into the sky to use the parachutes, but that would mean mission failure. Augustus could handle the parachute, maybe even Talia, but he and Annie would not be able to hit the mark if it came down to it, and that meant landing outside the facility. The world narrowed to threads of metal woven into their jumpsuits, the buckles of their packs, the locks on their helmets. All targets for his power. All things he could grip.
Technopathy gave him finesse finer than thought, every circuit and intended purpose of a machine laid bare to him. Metallokinesis was clumsier. Blunt and difficult. But brute power he had in spades. Enough to guide them, and to slow their descent when it was time.
I can do this. After all, I’m going to use this exact same technique to fly one day. How can I do that if I can’t even handle falling fast?
Talia’s hand shifted, fingers folding. Five. Four. Three. Two. One.
Her fist closed. Augustus cut the air with his wand.
The portal bloomed beneath their boots, and the cabin vanished.
They were falling.
Wind tore at them, a rushing void of cold night and sky. Alexander didn’t open his eyes. He tightened his grip on the surrounding metal instead, Droney included, holding all of them together as one. The force of the fall immediately tested his control. They lurched sideways, spinning slightly before he corrected, pulling them back into formation.
Hands found wrists. A circle formed in the void, each of them bound by their grips and the steel threads he refused to let go of.
“Your left,” Talia’s voice crackled through the comms. She was calm and measured, trusting in his capabilities. “Three hundred meters.”
Alexander tilted them with careful pressure, sliding their trajectory. He overcompensated, shooting them past the mark.
“Too far!” Talia’s voice cut through. “Back twenty meters.”
He yanked them back, fighting the momentum. The air howled against them.
Annie’s breathing grew sharp and shallow in his ear. Augustus answered, voice warm and steady. “Breathe with me, Annie. In. Out. In. Out.”
Seconds passed. Three. Maybe four.
His grip slipped. Just for an instant, the metal threads in Annie’s suit escaped his control. Her hand tore from his, and she spun away with a muffled shriek.
“Annie!” Augustus shouted.
Alexander’s focus snapped tight, seizing her suit again, harder this time. He yanked her back into the circle, their hands finding each other desperately. Her death grip on Augustus’s wrist didn’t loosen again.
“Ten meters right,” Talia called. “Twenty-five forward.”
He obeyed, still choosing blindness, shifting them fraction by fraction.
“Over the target,” she said.
Alexander reached down. Technopathy pulsed, and the world below lit in his mind: cameras and sensors, signals humming and painting a map within his awareness. He pressed against them, commanding secrecy.
You see nothing. All systems normal. Report no change.
Compliance rippled back at him.
He turned inward again, slowing their descent. Not too much. Not yet.
“Counting down,” Talia’s voice cut across. “Twelve seconds. Ten.”
He pulled harder, slowing their drop. The strain he felt was more the fear of failure, than from the draw on his power.
“Five.”
The wind eased. His control wavered. They dropped faster for a heartbeat before he caught them again.
“Three.”
He opened his eyes. The rooftop swelled below, filling his sight.
“Two.”
They drifted slowly now.
“One.”
Alexander released his hold. Boots met the roof with a muted thump. No shouts went out. No alarm went off.
They’d arrived safely.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 224 - Hard Truths
- Chapter 223 - Three Divine Wills
- Chapter 222 - Trustworthy
- Chapter 221 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 10
- Chapter 220 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 9
- Chapter 219 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 8
- Chapter 218 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 7
- Chapter 217 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 6
- Chapter 216 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 5
- Chapter 215 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 4
- Chapter 214 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 3
- Chapter 213 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 2
- Chapter 212 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 1
- Chapter 211 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 3
- Chapter 210 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 2
- Chapter 209 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 1
- Chapter 208 - Trust in Tomorrow
- Chapter 207 - Uncoordinated
- Chapter 206 - Within Range
- Chapter 205 - What the Future Holds
- Chapter 204 - Tell Me
- Announcing: The Spellforged Magus
- Chapter 203 - Countdown to Escalation
- Chapter 202 - The M.G.S.
- Chapter 201 - Where the Bodies Went
- Chapter 200 - Signed and Sealed
- Chapter 199 - Concessions
- Chapter 198 - Red Handed
- Chapter 197 - Plan S
- Chapter 196 - The Sidearm
- Chapter 195 - The (Not So) Wise One
- Chapter 194 - Blood on the Sand
- Chapter 193 - Everything Metal
- Chapter 192 - Dead Hours
- Chapter 191 - Due Diligence
- Chapter 190 - Opening Negotiations
- Chapter 189 - Price of Admission
- Chapter 188 - Cheap Tricks
- Chapter 187 - Old Habits Die Last
- Chapter 186 - Under Surveillance
- Chapter 185 - Laying the Groundwork
- Chapter 184 - Ascension Oasis
- Chapter 183 - Legal in Dubai
- Chapter 182 - Lesson One: Survive
- Chapter 181 - One Ring Changes Everything
- Chapter 180 - One Mind, Two Thoughts
- Chapter 179 - First Roundtable
- Chapter 178 - Past Plans, Future Planning
- Chapter 177 - Making History in Broad Daylight
- Chapter 176 - Signed, the Machine God
- Chapter 175 - Outclassed
- Chapter 174 - Heavy Metal
- Chapter 173 - The Vault
- Chapter 172 - The Borrowing Begins
- Chapter 171 - Legal Counsel and Illegal Plans
- Chapter 170 - Decisions that Ripple
- Chapter 169 - The Devil’s in the Details
- Chapter 168 - Coping Mechanisms
- Chapter 167 - No High Ground
- Chapter 166 - Sunset over Manhattan
- Chapter 165 - Window Shopping
- Chapter 164 - Best Behavior
- Chapter 163 - Sharp
- Chapter 162 - A Lot of Work
- Chapter 161 - Cat and Mouse
- Chapter 160 - Seven out of Nine
- Chapter 159 - Sparks in the Dark
- Chapter 158 - Just Kids
- Chapter 157 - Storm Chasing
- Chapter 156 - VIP Service
- Chapter 155 - The Ten of Spades
- Chapter 154 - Shifting Gears
- Chapter 153 - The Lawyer
- Chapter 152 - Returning Home
- Chapter 151 - A Formal Alliance
- Chapter 150 - Return to Sol
- Chapter 149 - One Reason Too Many
- Chapter 148 - Foundations
- Chapter 147 - Not Quite Pirates
- Chapter 146 - Arcane Warden
- Chapter 145 - Running Dark
- Chapter 144 - Just a Little Detour
- Chapter 143 - Heading Home
- Chapter 142 - Strawberry and Chocolate
- Chapter 141 - Snowflakes and Steel
- Chapter 140 - Spreading the Dream
- Chapter 139 - Politics
- Chapter 138 - Cleared
- Chapter 137 - Welcome to the Jungle
- Chapter 136 - Hunter or Hunted
- Chapter 135 - Into the Dark
- Chapter 134 - Beastworld
- Chapter 133 - The Right Kind of Crazy
- Chapter 132 - More Than Whole
- Chapter 131 - Nanomachines
- Chapter 130 - Windows
- Chapter 129 - Legal Courtesy
- Chapter 128 - Life’s Song
- Chapter 127 - Moving Forward
- Chapter 126 - Mending
- Chapter 125 - Date?
- Chapter 124 - Spoils of War
- Chapter 123 - Measure
- Chapter 122 - Severed
- Chapter 121 - Animachina’s Purpose
- Chapter 120 - Practice Under Fire
- Chapter 119 - Forced Entry
- Chapter 118 - Returning Fire
- Chapter 117 - The Prophecy of Eights
- Chapter 116 - Rivals Reunited
- Chapter 115 - The Nexus
- Chapter 114 - Promises
- Chapter 113 - Starting a Fire
- Chapter 112 - Soul Circuit
- Chapter 111 - Teamwork
- Chapter 110 - Entropy Rising
- Chapter 109 - Assimilate
- Chapter 108 - The Cult of Entropy
- Chapter 107 - Sleipnir’s Landing
- Chapter 106 - All Hands on Deck
- Chapter 105 - Five and a Half Members
- Chapter 104 - Pathfinder
- Chapter 103 - Twenty-Five
- Chapter 102 - Mystery Solved
- Chapter 101 - Borrowed Time
- Chapter 100 - Sleipnir
- Chapter 99 - Captain’s Terms
- Chapter 98 - Service Record
- Chapter 97 - Help Wanted
- Chapter 96 - Borrowing Trouble
- Chapter 95 - Four Months
- Chapter 94 - Drug Dealers
- Chapter 93 - Freedom
- Chapter 92 - Waves
- Chapter 91 - Aftermath
- Chapter 90 - Vigil
- Chapter 89 - One Vote from Extinction
- Chapter 88 - The Weight of Dreams
- Chapter 87 - Machine God
- Chapter 86 - No Words
- Chapter 85 - Pure Will
- Chapter 84 - Will and Structure
- Chapter 83 - Blood in the Water
- Chapter 82 - First Blood
- Chapter 81 - Dreams Collide (continued)
- Chapter 80 - Dreams Collide
- Chapter 79 - A Peaceful Moment
- Chapter 78 - Will Made Manifest
- Chapter 77 - Maximum Output
- Chapter 76 - Sidekick
- Chapter 75 - The Weight of Heroes
- Chapter 74 - Moving
- Chapter 73 - Pay to Win
- Chapter 72 - Pressure Points
- Chapter 71 - Henchmen Manifested
- Chapter 70 - The Big Lie
- Chapter 69 - A Nice Day
- Chapter 68 - Choosing the Dream
- Chapter 67 - Practical Matters
- Chapter 66 - Spread the Dream
- Chapter 65 - The Good (Bad) Doctor
- Chapter 64 - First Contact
- Chapter 63 - Subtle Unease
- Chapter 62 - Splitting the Party
- Chapter 61 - No Witnesses
- Chapter 60 - Fear of Falling
- Chapter 59 - Crime-A-Lot
- Chapter 58 - Auggy's Crazy Plan
- Chapter 57 - Kill Quest
- Chapter 56 - First Defeat
- Chapter 55 - Of One's Own Accord
- Chapter 54 - A New Power
- Chapter 53 - Rivals, Not Enemies
- Chapter 52 - The Black Knight
- Chapter 51 - ...Now.
- Chapter 50 - ...Begins...
- Chapter 49 - Phase One...
- Chapter 48 - Just Add Hands
- Chapter 47 - Secrets Unearthed
- Chapter 46 - Snakes in a Snakepit
- Chapter 45 - Start of a Rivalry
- Chapter 44 - Villain with a Milkshake
- Chapter 43 - Every Villain Needs a Hobby
- Chapter 42 - War Chest
- Chapter 41 - An Audience with Royalty
- Chapter 40 - The Queen Awaits
- Chapter 39 - Storage Closet
- Chapter 38 - Barely Superhuman
- Chapter 37 - We Are Grimnir
- Chapter 36 - A Will of Steel
- Chapter 35 - Realm of the Mind
- Chapter 34 - A Hint of Scales
- Chapter 33 - Every Monster Has a Lair
- Chapter 32 - Curtain Close
- Chapter 31 - No Allies Here
- Chapter 30 - Masks Against Monsters
- Chapter 29 - The Hunt Begins
- Chapter 28 - The Die is Cast
- Chapter 27 - Winning is Better
- Chapter 26 - Grim Beginnings
- Chapter 25 - No Heroes Coming
- Chapter 24 - End of the Tutorial
- Chapter 23 - Lies Do A Villain Make
- Chapter 22 - Masks and Prophecies
- Chapter 21 - Our First Injustice
- Chapter 20 - Nutcracker
- Chapter 19 - Perfection Meets Ambition and Heart
- Chapter 18 - The First Game Room
- Chapter 17 - Blackout
- Chapter 16 - Iron Nadya
- Chapter 15 - Tut, Tut. Driver.
- Chapter 14 - Welcome to the Multiverse, Nerd
- Chapter 13 - Second Spark
- Chapter 12 - Ambition to Burn
- Chapter 11 - Surviving is Winning
- Chapter 10 - Wanted
- Chapter 9 - Home Sweet Workshop
- Chapter 8 - Cognitive Resonance
- Chapter 7 - Class R
- Chapter 6 - First Spark of Will
- Chapter 5 - Pick On Someone Your Own Size
- Chapter 4 - No More Chains
- Chapter 3 - When the Sky Shattered
- Chapter 2 - The Collar
- Chapter 1 - REDACTED