Cherreads

Chapter 31 - Chapter 26: The Starforge Nexus

Location: Starforge Nexus - Central Hub | Dimensional Fold Space

Time: Subjective - Outside Time Flow

The transition felt like falling and flying simultaneously.

Jayde's stomach lurched—that awful sensation of gravity suddenly uncertain, direction meaningless, up and down negotiable concepts. Colors blurred past her vision: blues bleeding into silvers, whites fracturing into prismatic spectra, reality itself seeming to ripple like disturbed water.

Then—

Solid ground.

She stumbled, catching herself on hands and knees. Stone beneath her palms—cool, smooth, faintly luminescent. Not natural rock. Something crafted. Something made.

Deep breath. Assess. Orient. Survive.

Jayde looked up.

And forgot how to breathe.

***

The central hub of the Starforge Nexus defied simple description.

It was vast—easily two hundred feet across, circular, with a domed ceiling that arched maybe a hundred feet overhead. But calling it a room felt inadequate. Calling it architecture felt wrong. It was something between structure and organism, between technology and nature, between the crafted and the grown.

The walls—if they could be called walls—were a seamless blend of crystalline, metallic, and organic materials. Smooth crystal surfaces flowed into what looked like living wood, which melded with metallic conduits that pulsed with faint inner light. The transitions were impossible to track: where did the crystal end and the metal begin? Where did technology stop and biology start? The boundaries didn't exist. Everything was everything, all at once, unified in purpose and form.

Luminari engineering, Jayde's tactical mind catalogued. Thousands of years beyond Federation technology. Beyond Doha magic. Something else entirely.

The lighting came from everywhere and nowhere. Bioluminescent elements—some kind of engineered organism—grew in veins through the walls and ceiling, pulsing with gentle blues and greens and occasional flashes of gold. The light was alive. Breathing, almost. Creating an atmosphere that felt simultaneously ancient and pristine, untouched despite obvious age.

The floor beneath her was translucent crystal—dark but not opaque, like looking through smoky quartz. Faint patterns flickered in its depths: geometric shapes, flowing lines, what might've been circuit diagrams or magical runes or something that incorporated both concepts seamlessly. The patterns shifted occasionally, responding to... what? Her presence? The Nexus's operation? Something she couldn't perceive?

And the air—

Fresh. Clean. With just a hint of—

"Herbs," Isha supplied, materializing beside her. "And flowers. The Nexus grows them in cultivation chambers deeper in the structure. Their essence helps maintain dimensional stability and provides... ambiance." His whiskers twitched. "The Luminari believed environments should be beautiful as well as functional."

Jayde stood slowly, turning in place.

The hub was circular, yes. But radiating outward from the central space were passages—twelve of them, evenly spaced around the perimeter like spokes on a wheel. Each passage was identical in size: maybe fifteen feet wide, twenty feet tall, with arched openings that suggested depth and distance.

But most of them—

Mist.

Thick, swirling mist filled eleven of the twelve passages. Not natural fog. Something else. The mist moved wrong—too slow, too deliberate, like it had weight and purpose. Colors shifted within it: greys and silvers, with occasional flashes of other hues buried deep inside.

Only one passage remained clear: straight ahead from where she'd entered, perfectly lit, the bioluminescence bright and welcoming.

"The locked areas," Isha explained. "Fifty-two distinct facilities within the Nexus, but most require more power than we can currently allocate. Or they're keyed to your strength—areas that won't open until you've proven yourself worthy of accessing them." He gestured to the mist. "The fog is... the Nexus's way of being efficient. No point illuminating and maintaining areas you can't use yet."

Energy conservation, Jayde translated. And gating content behind progression milestones. Smart design.

(It's beautiful,) Jade whispered. (Like a palace from the old stories. Where gods lived.)

If gods lived in dimensional pockets powered by crystalline batteries.

"How old is this place?" Jayde asked.

"The Nexus itself? At least a hundred thousand years. Possibly older—Luminari record-keeping near the end was... chaotic." Isha's ears flicked. "But despite its age, you'll find it's perfectly maintained. Self-repairing, self-cleaning, self-optimizing. The Luminari built to last."

A hundred thousand years.

Older than Doha's current civilizations. Older than the Great Cataclysm that sundered the realms. Built when gods supposedly still walked the world.

And here she stood. Fifteen years old, Voidforge, escaped slave, with dual consciousness and a sealed Crucible Core, in the lobby of an ancient alien—no, Luminari—dimensional facility.

Life gets weird sometimes.

"Show me," Jayde said.

***

Isha led her toward the only clear passage.

As they walked, Jayde noticed details: the silent humming she'd initially dismissed as tinnitus from the dimensional transition was actually the Nexus itself, operating at some fundamental frequency just at the edge of perception. The sound was soothing, almost meditative. Like standing near a massive machine that ran so smoothly it created harmony rather than noise.

The temperature was comfortable—neither warm nor cold, perfectly regulated. No drafts. No stuffiness. Just ideal atmospheric conditions maintained by systems she couldn't see.

"The training facility," Isha announced as they reached the passage's end.

The space beyond opened into something between arena and gymnasium. Maybe seventy feet on each side, squared rather than the hub's circular design. The ceiling here was lower—only forty feet—but somehow felt more intimate despite the size.

The same crystalline-organic-metallic blend continued here, but with clear functional elements: raised platforms at various heights, what looked like reinforced sparring areas with slightly different floor surfaces, equipment racks holding weapons and training implements, and along one wall—

Is that an obstacle course?

Multiple levels, varying heights, different surfaces. Climbing walls. Balance beams. Rope sections. Platforms that looked mobile, like they could reconfigure. Everything was built from that same impossible material that looked simultaneously ancient and untouched.

"Time dilation is active here," Isha said. "Six to one, as I mentioned. You'll feel no different—hunger, fatigue, sleep cycles all operate normally from your perspective. But outside, in Doha, time passes six times slower."

Tactical advantage: extreme. Six weeks of training in one external week.

"The Exchange System." Isha gestured, and something happened.

Reality rippled again—less dramatic than the portal, more localized. The air before them shimmered, and suddenly a crystalline screen floated there. Not a physical object. Something projected or manifested or... existing in a way Jayde's brain categorized as "holographic but not quite."

The screen showed text in multiple languages—Doha's common script, Federation standard, others she didn't recognize—all overlaying each other perfectly, somehow readable simultaneously.

╔═══════════════════════════════════════

║ STARFORGE NEXUS - INTERFACE

║ EXCHANGE SYSTEM 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ Welcome, Contractor 

║ Current Status: Level 0 

║ Available Nexus Merits: 0 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ [Skills] [Knowledge] 

║ [Abilities] [Modifications] 

║ [Equipment] [Resources]

║ [Facilities] [Upgrades] 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ Mission Board: 47 Available Tasks 

║ (Minimum Level 3 Required) 

╚═══════════════════════════════════════

"Nexus Merits," Isha explained, "are the currency of progression. You earn them through training milestones, mission completion, achievements, and personal growth. You spend them on skills, knowledge, physical modifications, resources—anything that makes you stronger."

Jayde studied the screen. Like a game interface. Progression-based reward system. Gamification of training.

"You start at zero," Isha continued. "No free gifts. No shortcuts. You must prove yourself worthy of every resource the Nexus provides. It's harsh, but effective—ensures contractors value what they earn."

"How do I earn merits?"

"Multiple paths. Training is slowest but most reliable—each session awards small amounts, major milestones provide larger rewards. Completing your physical foundation training over the next six to eight weeks will grant you fifty merits."

Six weeks of brutal training for fifty merits. What does fifty buy?

Jayde touched the [Skills] option. The screen shifted, displaying categories:

╔═══════════════════════════════════════

║ SKILLS CATALOG

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ Combat Skills: 

║ - Basic Sword Mastery: 25 merits 

║ - Unarmed Combat I: 20 merits 

║ - Archery Fundamentals: 25 merits 

║ 

║ Survival Skills: 

║ - Herbalism I: 15 merits 

║ - Tracking I: 20 merits 

║ - First Aid I: 30 merits 

║ 

║ Cultivation Skills: 

║ - LOCKED (Core Sealed) 

║ 

║ [Additional categories...] 

╚═══════════════════════════════════════

Fifty merits from foundation training would buy... two basic skills. Maybe.

This is going to be a long climb.

"The other primary method," Isha said, gesturing to bring up a different screen, "is missions."

The interface shifted, and suddenly Jayde was looking at what appeared to be a job board. Dozens—no, hundreds—of listings, organized by difficulty, location, reward, and requirement level.

╔═══════════════════════════════════════

║ MISSION BOARD 

║ Inter-Dimensional Contract System 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ [LOCKED - Level 3 Required] 

║ 

║ Sample Available Missions: 

║ 

║ • Retrieve Ember Moss 

║ Location: Fire Realm, Dimension 7 

║ Level Req: 5 | Reward: 75 merits 

║ 

║ • Escort Merchant Caravan 

║ Location: Void Wastes, Telia 

║ Level Req: 8 | Reward: 150 merits 

║ 

║ • Investigate Temple Ruins 

║ Location: Lower Realm, Doha 

║ Level Req: 3 | Reward: 50 merits 

║ 

║ [347 Additional Missions...] 

║ [Sort by: Level | Reward | Location] 

╚═══════════════════════════════════════

Jayde stared.

"Wait. These missions—they're from different worlds? Different dimensions?"

"Of course." Isha's tail swished. "Did you think yours was the only Starforge Nexus?"

I— actually, yes.

"The Luminari seeded these facilities across reality. Dozens of dimensions. Hundreds of worlds. Maybe thousands—we've never achieved full network mapping. Each Nexus has a contractor. Each contractor can post missions to the board, requesting assistance from others. Or they can accept missions posted by the Nexus system itself, which generates tasks based on dimensional stability needs and resource distribution requirements."

Jayde's mind reeled.

An inter-dimensional network of contractors. People—beings—across countless realities, all connected through these ancient Luminari facilities. Trading missions. Sharing resources. Competing or cooperating across barriers of space and dimension.

Federation intelligence would've killed for this kind of communication system.

"Some contractors hoard merits," Isha continued. "Some trade freely. Some abuse the system and face... consequences." His expression darkened. "The Nexus has rules. Break them severely enough, and the Overseer intervenes. You don't want that."

(Who's the Overseer?) Jade asked nervously.

"Later," Isha said. "Much later. After you're significantly stronger and less likely to accidentally trigger a response. For now, just know: follow the rules, don't abuse privileges, and you'll never meet them."

Noted. Don't piss off the dimensional oversight entity.

"But I can't take missions yet," Jayde observed. "Level zero, level three minimum requirement."

"Correct. Which is why we focus on training first. Build your foundation, unseal your core's first layer, reach level three or four, then start accepting missions. The merit flow will accelerate dramatically once you have access."

Jayde pulled up her character screen—just thinking about it made the interface appear, responding to intent rather than physical input.

╔═══════════════════════════════════════

║ STARFORGE NEXUS - CONTRACTOR ID 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ Name: Jayde Phoenix (Jade Freehold) 

║ Contractor Level: 0 

║ Nexus Merits: 0 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ PHYSICAL STATUS: 

║ - Strength: 2/100 

║ - Agility: 3/100 

║ - Endurance: 1/100 

║ - Constitution: 2/100 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ CULTIVATION STATUS: 

║ - Core: SEALED (Divine Eightfold Lock)

║ - Tier: Voidforge 

║ - Essence Access: 0/8 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ SKILLS: None Acquired 

║ ABILITIES: None Unlocked 

║ MISSIONS COMPLETED: 0 

╠═══════════════════════════════════════

║ ACCESS LEVEL: Training Facility Only 

║ LOCKED AREAS: 52 

╚═══════════════════════════════════════

Everything at baseline. Everything locked. Everything waiting for her to climb from zero.

Like the Federation training simulators, she thought. Except this is real. And permanent. And failure means actual death instead of a digital reset.

(We're so weak,) Jade whispered.

For now. But we've been weak before. And we survived.

"The numbers will improve," Isha assured her. "Rapidly, once training begins in earnest. Your foundation is poor—malnourishment, lack of proper development, years of abuse. But your Federation muscle memory gives you an advantage. Your mind knows what this body should be capable of. White just needs to drag your physical form up to match."

"Speaking of which—" Jayde gestured to the training facility. "Where is this White?"

"Preparing." Isha's whiskers twitched. "First, let me show you something else. Something important."

He led her back through the passage to the central hub, then toward one of the mist-shrouded passages on the left.

As they approached, the mist thinned slightly—not clearing completely, but becoming translucent enough to see shapes beyond. A large space. Orderly rows of something stacked floor to ceiling.

"The warehouse," Isha announced. "Partially accessible because it contains the Quantum Flux Cores. You need to understand our energy situation."

They stepped through the thinned mist. The temperature dropped slightly—not uncomfortably, just noticeably. Preservation conditions, maybe. The space was enormous, easily the size of a Federation cargo bay, with shelving units reaching thirty feet high.

Most of the shelves were empty. Bare. Dusty, even, despite the Nexus's self-cleaning functions.

But on one platform, carefully arranged in protective cases—

Crystals.

Six of them. Each maybe the size of Jayde's fist, multifaceted like natural gemstones but clearly crafted. They glowed with internal luminescence: brilliant sky-blue light that pulsed gently, rhythmically, like a heartbeat made of photons.

I know those.

Recognition slammed into her. Federation memories surging forward.

"Quantum Flux Cores," Jayde breathed. "We called them QFCs. They powered our starship drives—the dimensional fold engines that let us cross parsecs in days instead of centuries."

Isha nodded. "The Luminari developed them. The Federation reverse-engineered fragments of Luminari technology they discovered on dead worlds. They never fully understood the principles, but they made them work well enough."

Jayde approached the cases reverently. Each crystal sat in a cushioned housing, connected to what looked like monitoring equipment. Energy readouts—still functional after a hundred thousand years—displayed status in symbols she was learning to read.

"These six," Isha said quietly, "are all that remain. When the Nexus was first created, it had hundreds. But contractors over millennia have used them. Consumed them. The previous contractor before you was... wasteful. Burned through resources without understanding their finite nature. Which is why so much of the Nexus remains locked."

"How long will these last?"

"At current power consumption—maintaining the central hub, the training facility with time dilation, and basic life support—ten years. Maybe twelve if we're very conservative."

"And to unlock more areas?"

"Each major facility requires one core to activate permanently. Some require multiple. The advanced training rooms, the cultivation chambers, the dimension expansion upgrades—all need power we don't currently have." Isha's expression was serious. "Which is why your missions, eventually, must include finding more cores. They exist—scattered across dimensions, hidden in ruins, jealously guarded by those who understand their value. But acquiring them will be dangerous."

Future quest objective: Obtain Quantum Flux Cores. Difficulty: Extremely High.

"For now," Isha continued, "we work with what we have. Build your foundation. Unseal your core. Reach level three. Then we expand. Slowly. Carefully. Sustainably."

Jayde nodded, still staring at the six glowing crystals.

Six. Just six. Between us and a total system shutdown. Between the training facility and darkness. Between progress and stagnation.

No pressure.

"Come," Isha said. "One more thing to show you before White arrives."

***

They returned to the central hub. Isha led her to a different clear passage—this one smaller, narrower, leading to a more intimate space.

A library. Or study. Or meditation room. Hard to categorize.

The walls here were more organic than elsewhere—living wood, definitely, with bark-like texture and what might've been growth rings visible in cross-sections. Bookshelves carved directly into the structure held volumes in various states of preservation. Some ancient, some newer, some clearly blank journals waiting to be filled.

A desk—also grown rather than built—occupied the center. And on that desk, a crystal interface similar to what they'd seen in the training area.

"This," Isha said, "is where we'll discuss the Divine Eightfold Lock. Where you'll understand what was done to you, why, and what it will take to break free."

Jayde sat carefully in the chair—surprisingly comfortable despite looking like it'd grown directly from the floor.

"Your Crucible Core," Isha began, "it is not missing, nor destroyed. It was sealed. Deliberately. By someone with extraordinary skill and power."

The Freehold elder, Jayde, realized. When I was five. After the Kindling Day ceremony showed Voidforge.

"The seal is called the Divine Eightfold Lock. It's ancient—from the era when gods supposedly walked Doha, before the Great Cataclysm, when magic and reality were more... flexible. The technique has been lost to most of modern cultivation society. Whoever sealed you had access to knowledge that shouldn't exist anymore."

(Why?) Jade asked. (Why not just kill me? Why go through the trouble of sealing instead?)

"Because," Isha said softly, "whoever did this wasn't trying to cripple you permanently. They were trying to hide you."

Silence.

"The Divine Eightfold Lock doesn't just seal cultivation potential. It disguises the core itself. Makes it appear Voidforge—empty, null, powerless—to any standard examination. Even sophisticated magical analysis would conclude you had no cultivation potential whatsoever."

Jayde's hands clenched. "So I'm not actually Voidforge?"

"No. Your core exists. It's intact. It's just locked behind eight layers of divine-era binding magic, each layer corresponding to one of the eight essences: Inferno, Torrent, Verdant, Terracore, Metallurge, Galebreath, Radiance, Voidshadow."

Eight elements. Eight locks. Eight trials to become whole.

"Each layer," Isha continued, "must be unlocked separately. Each has different requirements—some physical, some mental, some spiritual. I can help you open the first layer, which will grant access to Inferno essence. But not yet."

"Why not now?"

"Because your body isn't ready." Isha's tail swished. "Think of your Crucible Core as a forge. Right now, it's been cold and dormant for fifteen years. If we suddenly ignite it without preparation, without a proper foundation, the thermal shock would shatter everything. Your core would crack. Your meridians would rupture. Your body would burn from the inside out."

Catastrophic failure. System overload. Death by energy discharge.

"We need to build your physical foundation first. Strengthen your body. Prepare your meridians. Create the structural integrity necessary to handle Ember Qi flowing through channels that have never carried power before."

"How long?"

"Six to eight weeks of intensive training. White specializes in foundation building. He'll push you to your absolute limits—break you down completely, then rebuild you stronger. By the end, your body will be ready to handle cultivation without destroying itself in the process."

(Two months of training just to start?) Jade sounded dismayed.

Necessary prep work. Can't build a house without a foundation.

"There's another factor," Isha added. "You need to adapt to this body. Your Federation consciousness carries sixty years of combat experience in an enhanced frame—superior strength, agility, endurance, healing factor. Your current body has none of those things. It's malnourished, stunted, and weak by comparison. The disconnect between your mind's expectations and your body's capabilities is dangerous. You need to learn this body's limits before you can safely exceed them."

That made sense.

Federation Jayde could sprint for miles, fight for hours, take damage that would kill normal humans, and keep going. Fifteen-year-old Jade can barely run half a mile before collapsing.

"How strong was I?" Jayde asked. "In the Federation?"

Isha consulted something on the crystal interface—pulling up data from somewhere, information flowing across the screen in languages that shifted and changed.

"Based on the memories I can access through our contract... your physical capabilities were equivalent to a Stage Six Blademaster Oracle."

The words hung in the air.

Stage Six Oracle.

(That's— that's impossible,) Jade whispered. (Stage One or Two Oracles are the peak of power in Doha. The absolute strongest cultivators in the Lower Realm. Father is only Inferno-tempered tier, nowhere near Oracle level.)

"Your Federation enhancements," Isha explained, "provided strength, speed, reflexes, and endurance that matched what a Doha cultivator would achieve at Stage Six Oracle rank. However—" He raised a finger. "—you had no magical abilities. No Ember Qi manipulation. No essence weaving. Just pure physical capability augmented by technology."

Jayde sat back, processing.

She'd been physically stronger than Doha's strongest. Three times more powerful than a Stage Two Oracle. Six times beyond where Za'thul would ever reach, even if he achieved Oracle rank.

But without magic.

Technology versus magic, she thought. Which is truly stronger?

"An interesting philosophical question," Isha said, apparently reading her expression. "A Stage Six Oracle with full magical abilities could destroy armies, reshape battlefields, call down elemental devastation. Your Federation body could outrun them, outfight them in close quarters, and survive injuries that would kill them. But against their magic at range?" He shrugged. "Difficult to say. Each system has advantages."

"And now I'll have both," Jayde realized. "Eventually. Physical foundation built through training, then cultivation unlocked layer by layer. Federation combat skill plus Doha magical power."

"Precisely. Which is why you're so valuable. Why the Divine Tome chose you. Why this path, however difficult, is worth walking." Isha's emerald eyes gleamed. "You'll become something unprecedented. Neither purely Federation nor purely Doha. Something new. Something stronger than either system alone."

(If we survive the training,) Jade added nervously.

"There is that," Isha agreed. "Which brings us to White."

As if summoned by his name, the air near the doorway rippled.

And White materialized.

Six foot eight. Heavily muscled. Covered in scars that mapped decades—maybe centuries—of combat across every visible surface. Short-cropped white hair. Steel-grey eyes that held a sadistic gleam.

He looked at Jayde.

Smiled.

And Jayde felt a small, cold tendril of fear curl in her stomach.

"So," White said, his voice like gravel grinding on stone, "you're the one I'm supposed to break and remake."

Oh hell.

"Welcome to training, little contractor. Let's see what you're made of."

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