Page 36 of Pandora's Claws


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Hermes stopped smiling. He walked over to the console and pulled a lever. “Have to reset the system after a malfunction,” he murmured, though I couldn’t tell if he was talking to us or just saying it to himself. The golden chains binding Hephaestus dimmed. They didn't fall off, but the searing light faded, leaving just physical metal.

"I didn't write the order, Uncle," Hermes said quietly as he moved away from the lever. "I just keep the key. You have ten minutes before the perimeter sensors realize I’ve tampered with the containment field."

He looked at us, his expression suddenly serious.

"I'm leaving," Hermes announced. "Technically, there was a system error and I was overwhelmed by superior numbers and forced to retreat. That's the report I'm filing."

"Why?" Aria asked, leaning heavily on Kaelen. "Why help us?"

Hermes paused, adjusting his sandal. He looked at the shaking ceiling, where dust was falling from the waking Titan's movements.

"Because I like betting on long shots," Hermes said. "And because if the Devourer eats the world, there's nobody left to trick. Which is boring. Don't linger too long here; Mother is going to be furious that you've released the Smith, provided you can break the chains, of course."

He dissolved. One second he was there, the next he was a shimmer of heat haze and gone.

ELEVEN

Aria

The shimmer of Hermes’s departure hadn't even faded, the iridescent afterimage still clinging to my vision, before Kaelen was moving. He prowled toward the wall, his boots crunching violently on the soot-stained floor. The air in the Forge of Hephaestus was thick enough to chew, a suffocating blanket of heat that tasted of copper, ozone, and the sulfurous aftermath of the Cyclops's sweat. It was a cacophony of sensations, the very atmosphere vibrating with the latent energy of creation and destruction, but the Dragon Prince cut through it with a singular, predatory focus.

"Ten minutes," Kaelen growled, his voice tight with the friction of command. He sheathed his sword with a sharpclack, the sound echoing in the vast, rhythmic roaring of the cavern like a gunshot in a cathedral. "We have ten minutes before the perimeter sensors realize the trickster god has left the building and the illusion drops. Thane, hold the line at the archway. Flynn, check the vents; I smell rot, which probably means something in the access tunnels. Elias, can you analyze the binding?"

"Analyze?" Elias was already beside Hephaestus, his movements fluid and ethereal against the brutal, industrial backdrop of the Forge. His glowing turquoise eyes darted over the dull, heavy metal links that bound the Smith God, tracking unseen currents of power. "I am trying to solve a puzzle designed by Zeus himself, Kaelen. These aren't just chains; they are physical manifestations of the concept ofrestraint. They are woven from the logic of the mountain itself."

Hephaestus coughed again, a wet, rattling sound that shook his ruined frame. He hung suspended against the obsidian wall, his body a map of scars and soot, looking less like a deity and more like a discarded prototype. He looked at Elias, his gaze cynical and tired, then shifted his attention to me. His eyes lingered on my left arm, on the matte-grey sheen of the star-metal skin where flesh met magic, and a profound sadness pooled in his dark irises like oil slicking water.

"You should not have come," the Smith God rasped, his voice sounding like grinding gears. "The vessel is flawed. It cannot hold the fire. You are pouring the ocean into a cracked cup, girl."

"We're here to fix the vessel," I said, limping forward. My new metal leg hit the floor with a heavy, jarring thud that sent phantom pains shooting up my hip, a stark reminder of the price I’d already paid. I gritted my teeth, forcing the weakness deep down where the duty lived. "But first, we’re busting you out. We need the Master Smith."

"Busting," Hephaestus murmured, a flicker of a smile touching his ash-streaked beard. It was a ghost of an expression, there and gone in a heartbeat. "Such a mortal word. Crude. Effective. You sound like her. Like Pandora. She always thought a hammer could solve a riddle."

"Thane!" Kaelen barked, ignoring the sentimentality with the ruthless efficiency that kept us alive. "I need leverage. These links are celestial bronze tempered in the blood of Typhon. Firewon’t melt them, and Elias’s logic won't unpick them in the time we have. We need force. Raw, kinetic force."

Thane turned from the arched entrance where he had been watching for the inevitable arrival of the automaton guards. He looked exhausted. The shadows under his eyes were deep bruises, dark smudges against his skin, and his armor was scored with fresh scratches from the Cyclops’s hammer during our entry. He walked toward us, his steps heavy, shaking the floor beneath our feet with each impact.

"I can break them," Thane stated. He didn't boast; he simply reported a fact, his voice a low rumble that vibrated in my chest. He was the Earth-Shaker, the immovable object. Breaking things wasn't just a skill; it was his nature, buried under layers of gentle silence.

He positioned himself beside the chained god, his massive frame dwarfing the broken deity. Hephaestus looked up at the Bear Prince, and for a moment, something profound passed between them. It wasn't recognition; it was too heavy for that. It was an apology.

"Forgive the roughness, Uncle," Thane rumbled softly. He reached out, his massive hands wrapping around the chains where they bolted deep into the obsidian wall. "This is going to be loud."

Thane planted his feet, his stance wide and grounding. The muscles in his back bunched and coiled beneath his plate armor, shifting like tectonic plates preparing for a rupture. A low hum started deep in his chest, not a vocalization, but the resonant frequency of an earthquake, the sound of stone grinding against stone deep in the crust of the world.

"Pull," Kaelen ordered, his eyes distant, as if they were locked on the timer ticking down in his head.

Thane pulled.

The metal groaned, and then it screamed. A high-pitched torture noise that cut through the ambient roar of the Forge. The links stretched, glowing faintly red from the sheer kinetic stress Thane was applying to the molecular structure. The wall behind Hephaestus began to crack, spiderwebs of fissures racing through the black stone, dust puffing out in small explosions.

"More," I whispered, the bond in my chest flaring hot and bright. I closed my eyes, visualizing the connection between us, a golden thread turning into a steel cable, and I funneled my own stubborn will into Thane. I fed him my endurance, my refusal to break under the Citadel’s training, my desperate need to see this through.You are the mountain. Be the mountain.

Thane roared, a sound of pure exertion that rivaled the bellows. The chain on the right snapped with a sound like a cannon shot, whipping back and slicing a deep gouge into the iron floor mere inches from my boot.

"One down," Flynn cheered from the catwalk above, where he was prowling the shadows, keeping watch. "Left side! Heave! Put your back into it, Bear!"

Thane shifted his grip to the left chain, his breathing ragged. Sweat poured down his face, mixing with the grime of the forge to streak his skin. He rolled his shoulders, a grimace of pain flashing across his face before he masked it with stoicism. He took a breath, preparing to summon the earth magic again, to channel the weight of gravity itself.