The Radboleth did not die.
They watched it happen from the shattered rim of the drained lake — a sinuous shadow, wounded but triumphant, slithering through the cracked black-glass dome at the bottom of the crater. For one final moment, its massive form was silhouetted against the hellish green glow of exposed reactor shielding. Then it vanished into the ancient structure like a nightmare returning home.
A cold, chemical laughter echoed through the minds of Paul Best, Mordecai, and Arkadiusz — mocking, ancient, and utterly inhuman. Their quarry had escaped.
Paul’s hands tightened into fists. “We go after it. Now.”
Mordecai stared at the Geiger counter in his hand. The needle was buried deep in the red. “The radiation down there is lethal. Even if we could reach it, we’d be dead before we got close.”
The Safari Boat Ride was gone. What had once been a lush, artificial ecosystem was now a steaming, cracked basin of mud and broken machinery. The island felt exposed, unnaturally quiet now that the Radboleth’s influence had partially lifted.
They returned to the Sleeth camp at the heart of the drained Safari Boat Ride. Thisshish greeted them with weary gratitude, his ancient reptilian eyes heavy with sorrow for the paradise the outsiders had unintentionally destroyed. The old shaman had shed his ceremonial robes and now wore a tight, battle-worn suit of hardened leather armor, making him look less like a peaceful guardian and more like a warrior who had seen far too many wars.

“You will not stay long,” the ancient Sleeth hissed. “Waldis has been watching. He summons you. But first… we must tend to your fallen.”
As his shamans prepared glowing, strangely colored berry tinctures for Noelani and Vulgaris, Thisshish spoke of deeper truths. The Sleeth were not mere refugees. They were the last remnants of a proud caretaker caste that had maintained parts of Melkath long before the Final Wars. They revered the Old Machines and practiced a strange fusion of psionics and herbalism passed down through generations.
“The Radboleth is no simple monster,” Thisshish warned. “It is a devourer of light and thought. It fled to the deep fire — the old fusion heart beneath the crater. A trapped beast is the most dangerous of all.”
Hours later, Thisshish personally escorted the battered Knights through the overgrown ruins toward the Garden of Steel. They passed the decaying Haunted Warehouse on their right and the ominous black Laser Survival building on their left, but wisely avoided both.
The Garden of Steel was unlike anything the Gamma Knights had ever seen. Every blade of grass, every leaf, every delicate flower had been transmuted into living metal. A soft breeze moved through the chromium meadow, producing a haunting, crystalline music. Metal songbirds with iridescent plumage darted between steel branches, their voices ringing like tiny bells. In the distance, Castle Melkath shimmered like a mirage — white marble towers that seemed too perfect, too delicate, to belong in the broken world.
At the center of this metallic wonder stood Waldis.
The sage of Melkath was carefully oiling a cluster of chrome roses, his movements slow and deliberate, as though tending to something sacred. He was an older man, lean and sharp-featured, with steel-gray hair and eyes that had seen far too much. Flanking him was a towering nine-foot cyborg — robot head mounted on a heavily mutated human frame, a row of bony spines running down its back, legs ending in powerful avian talons. Above them, half-hidden in the steel foliage, a security bot hovered silently, its weapons tracking the newcomers with cold precision.

Waldis did not look up at first. When he finally did, there was no fear in his expression — only weary irritation, the look of a man whose carefully balanced ecosystem had just been kicked over by reckless children.
“Marvelous,” he said dryly, wiping oil from his hands. “Simply marvelous. Centuries of careful balance, and a pack of wandering Gamma Knights decides to play demolition crew in my Safari Boat Ride.” He gestured vaguely toward the drained lakebed. “Do you have any idea what you’ve unleashed?”
He studied them for a long moment, then sighed.
“Come. Sit. Even destroyers must eat.”
He led them to a wooden table set precisely for three guests plus himself — an island of natural oak and linen in the heart of the steel garden. The chairs were hand-carved, the utensils simple wood and clay. It was a deliberate, almost defiant statement.
Waldis refused to speak of serious matters until they had eaten. Only after the last plate was cleared did he lean back and begin.
“The creature you call the Radboleth has burrowed toward the old fusion reactor beneath the crater lake. That reactor was designed to run untouched for a thousand years, cooled by the lake itself. My service tunnels were sealed long ago for good reason. Without proper shielding, the radiation down there would kill even the strongest among you in minutes.”
He tapped the table lightly.
“I cannot reach it. My machines cannot reach it. The Radboleth has grown… resistant to my usual methods.”
As if on cue, the lights across the Garden of Steel flickered. Distant mechanical hums faltered. Wall turrets across the park powered down with audible clicks.
Waldis looked toward the dying lights with grim resignation.
“There it goes. Feeding like the glutton it is. My beautiful defenses… offline.”
He turned back to the Knights, his expression hardening.
“With the turrets dormant, the Drill Tooth swarms will pour in from the outer ruins this night. They’ve been starving at the edges of my domain for years. They will butcher everything sentient in Melkath if nothing is done.”
Paul leaned forward. “So what do you plan to do?”
“I will retire to the panic room beneath Castle Melkath,” Waldis said simply. “It is… adequately fortified.”
He let the silence stretch before continuing.
“I am not without resources, however. I possess specialized Depthstrider suits — Ancient relics designed for underwater reactor maintenance. Heavy radiation shielding combined with self-contained oxygen recyclers. They are among the last functioning pieces of pre-war engineering in this park.”
Waldis’s eyes narrowed.
“I will give them to you… if you agree to descend into the crater and destroy the Radboleth once and for all. It has evaded me for years, displaying a cunning I find both infuriating and impressive. This will not be a simple hunt.”
He leaned back, studying their faces.
“Give me half a day to excavate and prepare the suits. In the meantime, return to Thisshish. Help the Sleeth survive the coming night. Prove to me that you are more than just destroyers.”
The offer hung in the metallic air like a blade.
Help defend the island through the night against the Drill Tooth swarms… then descend into a radioactive hell wearing ancient diving armor to kill a creature that had already turned two of their own into puppets.
Waldis smiled thinly.
“Choose quickly, Knights. Dawn is not far off… and neither are the teeth.”

When the Knights returned to the island, they found Garet awake — swimming in the lagoon bar, the makeshift rebreather helmet keeping him alive on land. Mordecai had finished the device just in time.
The techno-sorcerer looked up at them, water sloshing inside his helmet, voice broadcast through the external speaker.
“So,” he said grimly. “We’re going hunting.”
Thisshish’s shamans finished their work on the other two Knights. Noelani and Vulgaris would live, but it would take hours for the tincture to fully purge the Radboleth’s influence.
Night was falling fast over Melkath.
The island, once a place of eerie beauty, now felt like the calm before an apocalyptic storm. The dense artificial jungle had fallen silent. Even the very real songbirds had gone still, as if sensing what was coming.
Paul Best stood motionless among the tiki torches and thatched huts, staring south. In the distance, a low, droning buzz was rising — the sound of thousands of Drill Teeth stirring in the outer ruins, drawn by the scent of weakened prey and failing power systems.
Mordecai moved further south and checked the Geiger counter again. The readings from the crater lake were still lethal. Garet, now wearing the crude but functional rebreather helmet, stood nearby, water sloshing faintly with every movement. He looked like a man half-drowned and half-reborn.
Paul’s voice was quiet but iron-hard. “We don’t have half a day. Not with those things coming to devour everyone and everything.”
Arkadiusz adjusted the strap of his MP5K, jaw set. “Then we make our stand here. Tonight. We hold the island for the Sleeth, protect what’s left… and tomorrow we go diving into hell.”
Garet’s distorted voice crackled through the rebreather’s external speaker. “If I’m still breathing when the night ends, I’ll be right there with you. But if we fail …”
He didn’t need to finish the sentence.

The Sleeth were preparing what defenses they could — spears, traps, and ancient rituals — but everyone knew the truth:
The Drill Tooth swarms were coming.
Hundreds. Maybe thousands.
And somewhere far below, in the radioactive heart of the old reactor, the Radboleth was waiting. Healing. Thinking.
Planning its next move.
Paul looked at his battered companions — a great white ape with a cannon for an arm, a half-mutated technomage breathing water through a scrap-metal helmet, and a weary scavenger who had already cheated death more times than any man should.
He allowed himself the ghost of a smile.
“Well,” he said, drawing his katana with a soft ring of steel, “we’ve had worse odds.”
As the first distant screams of Drill Teeth cut through the twilight, the Gamma Knights turned to face the coming darkness.
The real horror wasn’t what they had just survived.
It was what they still had to do.
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