Korda Veydran
Jett Vox
Sergeant Omen
Aren didn't answer immediately. Her attention shifted back to the man as Omen moved him, and for the briefest moment, her hand paused at his throat, feeling the shallow rhythm still there. Alive. The confirmation settled something small and quiet in her, not relief exactly, but a sense of alignment, as though the outcome matched what she would have chosen even if she hadn't been the one to act. Only once that internal note was resolved did she withdraw her hand and rise, her focus returning to the room beyond the doorway.
What she had seen in the system upstairs now had shape and texture. The entries, the movement cycles, the way people were reduced to data points, all of it mapped cleanly onto the space in front of her. Her gaze moved across the room again, slower this time, not with the confidence of someone planning an assault but with the instinct of someone trying to understand how the pieces connected. She tracked where the movement bottlenecked, where the oversight concentrated, and where the system relied on itself to keep functioning without interruption.
When Omen asked his question, she looked at him, her voice low and steady when she finally spoke.
"I don't know how you'd want to play it," she said, honest in a way that didn't diminish her certainty. "But if this works anything like the system upstairs…"
She gestured lightly toward the room, careful to keep their silhouettes hidden from view.
"The control here is layered. If something trips too hard, it probably locks down instead of breaking."
There was a small pause, her attention flicking briefly to the collars and the routing patterns before returning to him, her tone more thoughtful than directive.
"Those collars are part of it. And the routing. They're not just moving people, they're managing them."
Her gaze shifted to the overseers, reading their posture, their habits, the rhythm of their attention, before she continued.
"If it turns loud too fast, it might make things worse for them," she said quietly. "I just… don't know how fast it escalates."
She didn't pretend otherwise.
Her hand moved to her comm again, checking the signal more out of ingrained habit than urgency, noting the approach markers shifting closer on the display.
"They're on their way," she said. "Side route, like you thought."
Aren stepped slightly to the side of the doorway, giving Omen a clearer position without needing to be asked, her role settling naturally into support rather than lead. Her voice stayed calm, practical, grounded.
"I can keep working the system if we get access to anything in here," she added. "Doors, power, whatever they're using to control this."
Another brief pause, not hesitant, simply giving him space to choose.
"Or I stay out of your way."
There was no self-doubt in it, only the clarity of someone who understood her strengths and the situation well enough not to overstep.
Her gaze returned to the room, steady and attentive, ready to follow his lead rather than shape it.
"Just tell me what you need."