Chapter 98: Turning the Tables
The team gathered by the cave mouth. The cold wind felt good after the suffocating tension of the trap.
Seraph was pacing back and forth, her movements sharp and angry like a caged panther. Her face was a mask of cold, hard ice. But her eyes burned with a contained fury that was hotter than any fire. They tried to kill her. They tried to kill her team. Her students. In her mind, this was no longer a political game. This was treason. This was war.
"We pull back now," Titus said, his deep voice grim. "We have the proof. We disarmed their trap. We return to the Academy and let the Headmaster handle this."
"He's right," Jax grunted, cleaning his knife with a practiced efficiency. "That's the safe option. We've won this round. No sense pushing our luck."
Retreating was the logical choice. The safe choice. But Jonah, looking up at the distant, clouded peak where he knew Colonel Boris was watching and waiting, felt a strong will to fight back.
"No," Jonah said, his voice quiet but firm.
Everyone turned to look at him.
"If we retreat now, they'll just try again," he argued, his gaze steady. "They'll come up with a new plan, a better trap. They won't stop until they have me, or until I'm dead. We can't spend the rest of our lives looking over our shoulders."
He pointed up towards the observation post, a dark speck against the grey sky.
"We know where they are. They think we're dead, or that we retreated. They're not expecting us." He looked at Seraph, a dangerous idea forming in his mind. "Let's go pay them a visit."
The air buzzed with a new kind of tension. This wasn't about survival anymore. This was about payback.
Draven had been silent until now. A predatory grin spread across his face. It was the first time Jonah had ever seen him smile. "I like it," the big warrior rumbled. "Turn the hunters into the hunted."
"It's a high-risk plan," Titus countered, ever the cautious one. "That post will be defended by elite Bureau agents. We don't know their numbers or their capabilities."
"It doesn't matter," Seraph said, stopping her pacing. A terrifying smile of her own touched her lips. "The Bureau has declared war on the Academy. They tried to assassinate my team. I intend to finish it."
Her eyes met Jonah's, and in that moment, they were in perfect, unspoken agreement. It was time to stop playing defense.
"Alright," she said, her voice shifting back into command mode. "New plan. We're taking that observation post. We're taking Colonel Boris alive."
The team gathered around as Seraph began to sketch a rough plan in the dirt with the tip of a combat knife.
"This needs to be fast and decisive," she began. "We need a diversion. Vanessa, can you use the components from that trap? I want a minor, controlled explosion. Something that will echo through the canyon. Make it sound like their trap partially went off, but not enough to look like total annihilation. It'll confuse them, make them think we were either lucky or there was a malfunction."
Vanessa, who had recovered some of her energy, nodded eagerly. The challenge lit up her eyes. "I can do that. I can even add a flash of chaotic mana to make it look like a botched Progeny summoning. It will be very convincing."
"Good," Seraph said with a nod of approval. "While they're distracted by the 'boom,' the main assault will hit them. Draven, Titus - you two are the hammer. Your job is overwhelming force. Break their defenses, shatter their lines. Don't give them a single second to think or regroup."
Draven cracked his massive knuckles. CRACK! "A pleasure."
Titus gave a determined nod. "Understood."
"Jax, Benita," Seraph continued. "You're on support. Jax, I want you covering their flanks. Pick off anyone who tries to escape or call for backup. Benita, stay with them and keep them standing. Be ready for anything."
Both the Hunter and the Medic nodded, their expressions grim and focused. They understood their roles perfectly.
Finally, Seraph looked at Jonah. Her expression softened, but only for a moment. "Your role is the most critical. While the diversion is happening, but before the main assault hits, you need to be inside their command center."
"Infiltration," Jonah said, already knowing his part.
"Exactly," Seraph confirmed. "That Progeny of yours, Specter. It can phase through walls, can't it?"
Jonah nodded. "And turn invisible."
"Perfect. You will use it to slip inside their command center. Your objectives are simple. First, disable their internal communications so they can't coordinate a defense. Second, cause as much chaos as possible. Sabotage their equipment, flicker the lights, anything to disorient them. By the time Draven and Titus hit the front door, I want the Bureau's command staff panicking and completely blind."
It was a bold, complicated, and incredibly dangerous plan. It relied on perfect timing, flawless execution, and the unique skills of every single member of their team. It was also their only real shot at ending this, right here, right now.
Jonah looked around at the faces of his team. Jax, the gruff but reliable tracker. Benita, the quiet but powerful healer. Titus, the unbreakable shield. Vanessa, the brilliant runic engineer. And Draven, the powerhouse who had gone from his greatest rival to a formidable ally.
They were no longer just a collection of specialists. They were a single, cohesive unit, a well-oiled machine built for one purpose. They trusted each other completely.
Jonah felt a new kind of confidence solidifying within him, a feeling of rightness. He wasn't just the scared boy from Cinderfall reacting to threats anymore. He wasn't just the Academy's secret asset to be protected. He was a leader, a strategist, a core part of this team. He was initiating the action.
"Let's get into position," Seraph commanded, her voice ringing with an authority that left no room for doubt. "It's time to turn the tables."