A week after the Station Chimera mission, the infirmary healers finally discharged Jonah. Physically, he was fine. Mentally, he felt like a storage room full of noise, with a single corner taped off like a crime scene.
"Are you sure you're ready?" Seraph asked, walking him to the door of the medical wing. "The healers said you should take it easy. No intense mental activity."
Jonah gave her a look that said 'you and I both know that's not going to happen.'
She sighed, a sound of resignation. "Just… be careful. What you brought back with you is not a toy."
"I know," Jonah said, and he meant it. He could still feel the echo of that psychic explosion.
He nodded his thanks and headed straight for his dorm. The moment the door clicked shut behind him, the quiet of his room was a welcome relief.
He sat on the edge of his bed, closed his eyes, and plunged into his mental Workshop.
It was just as he remembered. The workshop of his mind was calm, with his Progeny resting peacefully in their own corners. But walled off by Vanessa's shimmering, complex ward was the new addition.
The Alpha-Grade Spliced Essence.
It was a swirling vortex of black and red energy, a psychic hurricane contained in a bottle. It pulsed with a chaotic light, constantly tearing itself apart and reforming in new, ugly combinations. Even looking at it from behind the safety of Vanessa's barrier made his head ache.
He tried to mentally touch the ward, to analyze the storm within. The moment he did, a wave of pure psychic static slammed against the barrier, making him flinch in the real world. His power's warning flashed in his mind again:
[Unstable. Corrupted. Do not absorb.]
Jonah opened his eyes, sweat running down the side of his face.
Seraph was right. This was reckless.
And yeah – he was being an idiot.
But an idiot with a possible breakthrough sealed inside his skull.
And that was worth the risk.
He couldn't do this alone.
He pulled out his communicator. "Vanessa. I need you. Bring the Mana Sieve."
A few minutes later, she arrived, looking more like a scholar preparing for a final exam than a student coming to hang out. She carried a small, velvet-lined case that held the crystal for the Mana Sieve and had a stack of reference books tucked under her other arm.
"Are you sure about this?" she asked, her brow furrowed with concern.
"No," Jonah admitted honestly. "But I can't just leave a psychic bomb in my head forever. We have to figure out what it is."
They worked quickly, their partnership seamless. Vanessa placed the sieve's crystal on his workbench and began chanting the soft, complex words of the spell, her hands weaving intricate patterns in the air. A delicate, shimmering dome of light, like a soap bubble made of rainbows, formed around the crystal. The Mana Sieve was active.
"Okay," Vanessa said, her voice focused. "Easy Jonah. Just a trickle. Don't open the floodgates. Channel the smallest possible stream of that essence through the sieve. I'll try to filter out the psychic noise."
Jonah took a deep breath, closed his eyes, and focused. He mentally pierced a tiny hole in Vanessa's containment ward and allowed a single, thin thread of the black and red energy to flow out. He guided it carefully toward the Mana Sieve.
The moment the energy hit the crystal, it flared violently. Vanessa's hands flew as she reinforced her spell.
"Okay, okay, I've got it! It's fighting back. I'm filtering the pure rage first…"
For hours, they worked in a state of intense concentration. It was a psychic autopsy. Jonah would feed a tiny piece of the corrupted essence into the sieve, and Vanessa, like a master chemist, would filter and refine it, peeling back the layers of chaos.
What they found was a nightmare.
"I'm seeing dozens of partial fragments," Vanessa murmured, her eyes distant as she interpreted the data flowing through the crystal. "Wolf, serpent, several insect species… there's bear muscle fiber properties, crustacean armor plating… It's a chaotic soup of information. No wonder it's so unstable. These things are all fundamentally incompatible."
Jonah felt it too. It was like trying to read a dozen books at once, all of them shredded and mixed together in a blender. The researchers at Station Chimera hadn't just failed; they had created a monster born of pure ignorance.
Then, deep into their work, they found something new.
Buried beneath all the layers of conflicting biological data, at the very heart of the chaos, was something else. It wasn't an essence. It was… a structure. A blueprint. It was a beautiful, stable, geometric pattern of pure mana, something designed and engineered, not grown.
"What is that?" Jonah asked, sensing the shift.
Vanessa froze, eyes going wide as the pieces clicked into place. "That's it," she said softly, like she was seeing something holy. "That's what they were trying to build. Look at the structure – it's a binding agent. A framework designed to hold multiple essences together and force them to coexist."
She pointed at a glowing diagram only she could see. "The data log… it called it a 'Nexus Core'."
A lightbulb went off in Jonah's mind. "The core is what holds it all together."
"Exactly!" Vanessa said, her excitement growing. "But their artificial core was flawed. It was like they built a cage out of twigs to hold a dragon. It wasn't nearly strong enough to contain the psychic backlash from all these sources at once, so the whole thing collapsed into… that." She waved a hand at the contained storm in Jonah's mind.
The researchers had failed. They had tried to build the container from scratch.
An idea, so bright and simple it was astonishing, struck Jonah. He looked at his own two hands, thinking of the simple Fossilized Egg that had birthed Shard He thought of his power, of creation, of life itself.
"They tried to build a cage," he said slowly, the revelation dawning on him. "But I don't have to."
Vanessa looked at him, confused. "What do you mean?"
My power isn't about building. It's about weaving," Jonah said, his voice trembling with the force of his discovery. "I can take a natural foundation - a Genesis Core and weave that Nexus framework directly into its structure. I don't need to build an artificial core; I can evolve a natural one."
The air in the room seemed to stand still. They both stared at each other, the weight of what he'd just said settling over them.
This was it.
This was the secret.
This wasn't just about making stronger Progeny. This was the key to creating stable, complex creatures of Grade-4 and beyond. Hybrids woven from four, five, or even more essences. Creatures that, until this moment, had only existed in legends.
The corrupted essence wasn't a bomb anymore. It was a treasure map.
Jonah had just unlocked the next stage of his evolution.