©Novel Buddy
My Infinite System.-Chapter 257: Echo Vault
The silence after the battle was louder than the fight itself. Lucian and Marc stood amid the floating wreckage, the Nova Sanctum groaning softly behind them. The last of the enemy ships had vanished, but that cold, watched feeling hadn’t left Lucian. It was closer now. A pinpoint of wrongness in the void.
His eyes, sharpened by his space-time manipulation, scanned not the physical space, but the layers beneath it. He saw it then—a subtle fold in reality, a pocket of distorted space no bigger than a closet, clinging to the Sanctum’s hull like a remora on a shark. Someone had been hiding there, watching the entire fight.
He didn’t signal Marc. He didn’t speak. He simply moved.
One moment he was standing on the command ship’s hull. The next, he was gone. He phased through the layers of reality, a sensation like pushing through cold, thick water, and emerged inside the fold.
It was a cramped, shimmering pocket. A woman with skin the color of twilight and hair like spun silver wires stood there, a complex holographic display hovering before her eyes. She was so focused on her data stream—recording the aftermath, analyzing their power signatures—that she didn’t notice the space warp behind her.
Lucian’s hand clamped down on her shoulder.
Her head snapped around, violet eyes wide with utter shock. She opened her mouth to speak, to scream, to activate a weapon—but the world twisted again.
They reappeared on the bridge of the Nova Sanctum in a blur of displaced air. The woman stumbled, disoriented, her holographic display fizzling out. Before her vision even cleared, Kaelis—now no larger than a house cat, his golden scales gleaming—uncoiled from Lucian’s shoulder like a striking serpent. He didn’t growl or roar. He simply wrapped around her body with impossible speed, his tail becoming living chains of molten gold, pinning her arms to her sides and binding her legs. The heat was controlled, not burning, but it was unbreakable. She was seated forcefully in a vacant crew chair, the metallic bonds sealing with a soft hiss.
She blinked, her breath coming in ragged gasps, finally taking in her surroundings. She was surrounded. Lucian stood before her, his expression unreadable. Marc was to his left, back in his human form but with a gaze that promised unimaginable pain. Reia, Evelyn, Silas, and Vyn formed a half-circle around her, their faces a mixture of cold curiosity and grim determination.
Reia spoke first, her voice calm and analytical, like a scientist examining a new specimen. "Who are you?"
The woman drew herself up, a flicker of haughty defiance returning to her eyes despite her situation. "I am Sira," she said, her voice laced with a resonant, melodic accent. "First Observer of the Diva Celestial Archive. My status grants me diplomatic immunity under intergalactic law. You will release me immediately, or the consequences will—"
Marc sighed, a soft, almost bored sound. He didn’t even raise a hand. He just looked at her.
The air around Sira thickened, pressing in on her from all sides. It wasn’t painful, but it was absolute. It felt like the universe itself was telling her to be silent. Her voice cut off mid-sentence, her mouth moving but producing no sound. Her eyes bulged with a fresh wave of terror. This was a power that ignored laws, ignored status, ignored everything.
Lucian took a step closer, leaning down slightly to look her in the eye. "We ask the questions," he said, his voice low and flat, devoid of any threat because it didn’t need one. It was a simple statement of fact. "You answer. That’s it."
He glanced at Marc, who gave a slight nod. The pressure lessened, allowing Sira to breathe, but the warning was clear.
Reia began, her tone all business. "How long were you observing us?"
Sira swallowed, her arrogance thoroughly shattered. "Since you entered the Veil. Your passage through the Nexus Point created a... ripple. I was sent to monitor."
"What were your orders?" Evelyn asked, her arms crossed.
"Observe and report. Document the capabilities of the... the Aethels. Do not engage."
Silas snorted. "Your buddies outside didn’t get that memo."
"They were Fleet. Military. We are... different branches," Sira explained, her voice trembling slightly. "The Archive seeks knowledge. The Fleet seeks eradication."
Vyn spoke next, her voice softer but no less intense. "What does the Archive know about our father? Alistair."
Sira’s eyes darted between them. "He is a ghost. A legend. The Last Progenitor. Our records on him are fragmented. He was believed dead for eons. His reappearance has caused... panic in the highest tiers of the Diva and Ashura governments."
Lucian’s patience was wearing thin. The answers were too general. "The Hunters. Who sends them?"
"A... a consortium," Sira stammered. "The Psion, the Mechanist, the Xylos... ancient powers. Older than the current Diva-Ashura alliance. They are the ones who truly fear you. They initiated the first Culling. They see your bloodline as a cosmic disease."
Reia leaned in. "And how do they track us? The Hunter found us almost instantly."
"The resonance," Sira said, looking at Lucian and Marc. "When you use your power, especially in a significant way, it echoes through the substrate of reality. Like a bell ringing in a silent hall. The more power you use, the louder the ring. The Hunter was drawn to the echo of your battle on the plain."
A heavy silence fell. Every fight was a beacon.
Lucian finally asked the question that had been burning in him since the foldspace ripped open and stole his sister away. He looked Sira dead in the eye, his own gaze as cold and hard as the void outside. 𝐟𝚛𝕖𝚎𝕨𝗲𝐛𝚗𝐨𝐯𝐞𝕝.𝐜𝗼𝗺
"So," he said, his voice dropping to a near whisper. "Do you have any idea where my father could be?"
Sira paled. This was the question she had been dreading. This information was beyond her pay grade, beyond any single observer’s clearance. But the memory of Marc’s silent, reality-bending power was fresh in her mind.
She took a shaky breath. "There are rumors," she whispered. "Whispers in the deep data-streams of the Archive. About a place even the Fleet won’t go. A place the Culling couldn’t touch because it doesn’t fully exist in our reality."
Every person on the bridge leaned in.
"What place?" Lucian pressed.
"They call it the Echo Vault," Sira said, her voice hushed. "It’s not a location on any star chart. It’s a... a memory. A perfect, self-sustaining echo of the primary Aethel world at the peak of its power, preserved in a permanent state of quantum superposition at the moment of its destruction. To enter, you don’t travel through space. You... align yourself with its frequency."
"How?" Reia asked, her mind already racing with the physics of it.
"It requires a Progenitor’s key," Sira looked at Lucian and Marc. "A living Aethel of the direct bloodline. Your very presence is the coordinate. Your will is the engine. But the stories say the Vault is also a prison. It was never meant to be a sanctuary. It was the place they sealed away their most dangerous artifacts and most unstable concepts. It is a world of ghosts and half-formed ideas, held together by a will that should have died long ago."
She looked at Lucian, a genuine, chilling fear in her eyes.
"If your father is there, he isn’t just hiding. He is trying to open a door that should have remained sealed forever. And if he succeeds, he won’t just unleash an army. He will unleash the un-made, the un-thought, the errors of creation that the Aethels themselves locked away."
The only sound was the low hum of the ship and the soft, panicked rhythm of Sira’s breathing.
Lucian stared at her, processing. The Echo Vault. A prison of ideas. A graveyard of concepts. It was the perfect place for a broken god to plan his revenge.
"Show us," he said.







