Before the geometry of space folded in on itself, before reality became a negotiable concept, I was Junior Technomancer Sera Nyx, specialist in recursive defense algorithms and the most expendable member of Chief Arcanist Voss's crisis team. The taste of synthetic stimulants lingered on my tongue — bitter and metallic — as I maintained my station at the east quadrant of the Arcanodrome, level 157.
The attack had begun three days prior. The quantum chronometers had given us warning, whispers of something probing our defenses, but nothing could have prepared us for what emerged from that crystalline fissure in the central atrium. The entities phased through matter like it was theoretical, leaving corrupted code and inverted spell matrices in their wake.
My fingers trembled slightly against the cold surface of my technomantic interface terminal. The smooth obsidian responded to my touch with subtle warmth, its embedded arcane circuits pulsing with amber light that cast long shadows across my workspace. Sweat beaded on my forehead, its salt stinging my eyes as I blinked away exhaustion.
The isolation had been her first desperate gambit — severing our connection to Hextech City's technomantic network to prevent the infection from spreading. It had bought us time, but left us alone in this besieged tower with limited resources against an enemy that defied comprehension.
Through the reinforced windows, I could see the city sprawled below us, its neon arteries pulsing with life, oblivious to our struggle. The scent of ozone and burnt circuitry filled my nostrils, mingling with the distinctive cinnamon-like aroma of recently discharged arcane energy. The Arcanodrome's environmental systems were struggling to filter the air, another sign of our precarious situation.
Beside me sat Technomancer Elias Reed, his eyes reflecting the scrolling data on his terminal. We had trained together at the Academy, had celebrated our assignments to the prestigious Arcanodrome with expensive synthalcohol and promises of revolutionizing thaumaturgical computing. Now his face was gaunt, dark circles under his eyes, the left side of his jaw discolored where a malfunctioning ward had backfired yesterday.
"Adapting to our adaptations," I replied, feeling the weight of fatigue in every muscle.
The warning klaxon shattered our focus — a piercing wail that resonated in my chest cavity and sent spikes of pain through my augmented auditory cortex. The sound cut through the constant background hum of the Arcanodrome's systems like a scalpel through flesh.
"Breach on Level 156! Eastern quadrant!" The panic in the announcer's voice was unmistakable.
Elias's eyes met mine, wide with realization. "They're directly below us."
I felt the floor vibrate beneath my boots — not the familiar subtle pulsation of the Arcanodrome's systems, but something alien and wrong, as if reality itself was being rewritten one atom at a time. The temperature in the room plummeted suddenly, my breath fogging in the air before me.
"We need to reinforce the eastern firewall," I said, already accessing the defense protocols. "If they break through here—"
"—they'll have direct access to the Probability Engine chambers," Elias finished. "We'd lose everything."
I remember thinking, in that last moment of normality, how strange it was that the scent of cinnamon had intensified, how the amber lights of my terminal seemed to bleed into the air itself, how the constant background hum of the Arcanodrome had shifted to a dissonant chord that made my teeth ache.
We didn't know then that we were already out of time.