The shoreline crept closer, but so did the ominous darkness beneath them, the creatures swirling under the waves with cold, calculating hunger.
“What did I just do?” Joel muttered, glancing at the others.
Everyone was paddling with desperate energy, except Darren, who was still looking at his hands, watching the flickering, erratic pulses of electrical energy coursing around his fingers.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Darren chuckled, eyes fixed on the electric current dancing around his knuckles. “But maybe I should’ve been an electrician after all. My mom always said I was full of energy—I didn’t think this was what she meant.”
“I got a notification about my…” Joel hesitated, searching for the right words, “my card.”
Darren’s face lit up in recognition. “Oh yeah, something like that happened to me too! When I first got that lightning strike, there was this message that popped up.”
Joel tried focusing on the notification in his mind, but it remained annoyingly dim, like static hovering in the back of his thoughts. “It almost feels like a computer game,” he muttered aloud. Curiosity tinged with desperation, he mentally attempted to ‘click’ on the message, as if willing his mind to act like a touchscreen.
Then it happened—a rush of energy, and a new notification flared before his eyes.
----------------------------------------
System Notification:
Heart Card Ability Activated: Sentinel’s Last Bastion
Armor Status: Defensive and Absorption Abilities Ready
----------------------------------------
Joel felt a strange surge course through him, filling every muscle with renewed strength. From his chest outward, a sleek, bio-organic metal began to ripple over his skin, coating him in a powerful, living armor that pulsed with energy. The silvery mass spread rapidly—down his arms, across his shoulders, encasing him from heart to fingertips. It was as if Sentinel’s Last Bastion was alive, forged directly from the essence of his heart card, molding itself to his form like a second skin.
The metallic sheen shimmered in the low light, catching the attention of the others. They stared, wide-eyed, as the silver layer solidified, exuding a sense of both power and purpose. The armor seemed to breathe with him, ready to adapt, absorb, defend.
A hushed, reverent silence fell over the raft. The others sensed the shift—Joel was no longer just another survivor. He was becoming something else, something powerful.
The moment Joel’s armor solidified, Darren let out a low whistle, his eyes wide with disbelief. "Hell, man! Now that’s what I call an upgrade!" He thumped the side of the raft in excitement. “Looks like we’ve got ourselves a real-life juggernaut!”
Craig, still gripping his paddle, laughed shakily. “Damn, Joel! Where was that armor when we needed it back on the rig?”
The mud engineer grinned through gritted teeth, clapping Joel on the shoulder as best he could without wincing. “Looks like we’re paddling with Iron Man here. Think you can clear a path for us?”
Joel gave a half-smile, clenching his fist and feeling the armor’s responsive power flex beneath his fingers. “Let’s just say…” he glanced out at the dark water, where the oily forms still lurked, “…if they want to get in our way, they’re going to regret it.”
The others whooped, feeding off his confidence, their spirits momentarily lifted despite the looming threats.
As the others paddled and joked, their voices a strange comfort against the dark silence around them, Joel noticed the subtle shift in his vision. A sleek HUD overlay his sight—a map now pulsed in the bottom right corner, showing their position and the ever-closing distance to shore. Notifications lined the bottom left, clear and precise. It was surreal, like a soldier’s helmet display in a war movie, but it was real and embedded within the bio-metal casing his heart card had gifted him.
A notification, one that flickered to life on his HUD: Absorption Opportunity Available: Severed Void Tentacle.
This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere.
He scanned it quickly, but a ripple in the water refocused his attention. Around him, the others kept up their banter, cracking jokes in low voices, trying to drown out the emptiness where the other boats had been, where the panicked screams had fallen silent.
----------------------------------------
System Notification:
Heart Card detected potential resource.
Absorption Opportunity:
A severed Void Tentacle is available for integration into your Mechanist’s Core. Absorbing this piece will unlock an Eldritch Adaptation ability.
WARNING: Power usage and control are limited by current Mechanic Level. Would you like to proceed with absorption?
[YES] | [NO]
----------------------------------------
Joel’s eyes locked on the pulsing tentacle, severed and floating near the raft, its oily form writhing like it was still alive. The temptation blazed through him—an opportunity to harness the very thing that was trying to kill them. But the warning echoed in his mind: his Mechanic Level was low; control would be limited. There was a real risk it could overwhelm him, but they needed an edge, something to counter the unrelenting tide of creatures in the water.
He glanced back at the others, their eyes wide, desperate for any hope of reaching shore alive. It wasn’t much of a choice.
Without hesitation, Joel mentally selected [YES] and felt the power flow into him. A chill surged up his spine, mingling with the warmth of his armor as the Eldritch Adaptation integrated into Sentinel’s Last Bastion. The silver plates on his armor began to darken, a slick, oil-like sheen spreading across the metal, his gauntlets now edged with the jagged, shifting darkness of the creature’s tentacle.
A primal instinct told him he could wield this new force, though barely—an unholy, twisting energy that he’d need to hold with all his will. He clenched his fists, feeling the new power simmer under the surface, and turned to face the next incoming creature. The dock loomed closer, but they’d have to fight for every remaining inch.
Sooner than they had hoped, dark water churned beneath them, the other survivors paddled harder, their voices ringing out to break the oppressive silence.
“Hey, Joel!” Craig called, a grin plastered across his dirt-streaked face. “Looking good in that shiny new suit! Are you sure you’re not a robot in disguise?”
“Yeah, next thing we know, you’ll be programming us to paddle!” Darren chimed in, still flexing his fingers, electric sparks dancing between them. “Just promise you won’t short-circuit the raft!”
“Just make sure you don’t fry us when you get too excited, alright?” another survivor added, chuckling nervously. “We’re already one ‘shock’ away from becoming monster bait!”
Joel couldn’t help but smirk, the absurdity of their situation easing his tension, even if just a little. “Don’t worry, I’m programmed for survival—just don’t ask me to run a diagnostic on our luck!”
The banter continued, a mix of laughter and strained smiles, each quip trying to mask the fear that lurked just beneath the surface. But even amidst their joking, Joel could feel the weight of the silence that had fallen over their fallen comrades, the echoes of screams now hauntingly absent.
The shoreline loomed closer, only about a kilometer out, it was at the furthest range of Joel’s map. The dock for the rig supply depot sat eerily dark in the distance, its usual glow swallowed by the blackened horizon. Joel squinted, his instincts telling him the power outage could be from the storm—or worse, an attack. Whatever was left of this world’s safe places seemed to be folding into the void as quickly as the rig had fallen. He didn’t have time to dwell on it, though.
A dark shadow suddenly surged toward them, and the water began to churn with unnatural ferocity. Craig yelled out to get everyone’s attention. Darren shot his arm out, lightning crackling from his fingertips and arcing towards the creature, but it missed, illuminating the water for only a second before plunging them back into darkness. A hollow, echoing screech emerged from beneath the waves, the creature unfazed and growing bolder.
Joel felt his pulse surge. An icy rage flooded him, deep and unyielding, as he locked eyes with the writhing creature just under the water. His body hummed, and the heart card flared in his mind. His hand clenched tight, a surge of warmth cutting through the cold as Joel was about to test Sentinel’s Last Bastion.
The void creature lunged, but Joel braced himself, his stance unyielding. His card amplified his power, channeling his rage as he met the creature head-on. His armored fist crashed into the creature’s slick form, a shockwave of energy forcing it back, hissing and writhing in defiance. The creature tried again, slithering forward, but this time, Joel could sense its movements, each dark tendril as if it were telegraphed.
"Keep paddling!" he barked, his voice distorted beneath the metal, almost like a war cry. The survivors obeyed, paddling furiously toward the shore as Joel fought off the creature’s assault. He swung again, landing a punch that sent splashes of oil-like substance scattering, and for a moment, he was no longer just a mechanic—he was their bastion, their last hope.
The dock grew closer, but so did the creatures, attracted to every splash and movement. Yet with each strike, Joel felt himself gaining ground, fueled by a fury that burned brighter than the void around them. He would get them to shore; he would see his family again, even if it meant tearing down every monster that dared to stand in his way.