The longest hour of Jonah's life was spent sitting on the cold floor of his small room, staring at a digital clock on the wall like it might explode.
Every tick felt like a hammer blow.
Every minute stretched into an eternity. He was too exhausted to move but too wired to rest. He kept closing his eyes, returning to his mental Workshop, just to stare at the cocoon of swirling light hanging in the darkness.
It was real. It was still there, pulsing with a gentle energy.
He'd check the clock. Fifty-two minutes left.
He'd check the cocoon. Still glowing.
He'd check the clock again.
Fifty-one minutes and fifty-eight seconds left.
He started doing it every thirty seconds now. He couldn't help it.
This was a new kind of torture. It was a tense state of alert. This was different. This was a painful slowness, like watching a pot about to boil. The suspense was so strong he could taste it.
What if he'd done something wrong?
What if the cocoon fizzled out? What if it cracked open and nothing came out but light and dust?
What if it produced something wild, unstable, something broken and dangerous? Something that would attack him the second it breathed?
He clenched his hands.
That Genesis Core was a miracle. A treasure from the deep ruins. He'd only had one. One chance. One shot at proving he wasn't just lucky to be alive, but worthy of the power he now held.
And he'd gambled it.
Not on theory. Not on guesswork.
But On faith.
He checked the clock again.
Thirty seconds.
He sat up straighter, heart pounding faster.
Ten seconds.
He closed his eyes, focusing all his attention on the Workshop.
Three… two… one…
The moment the hour was up, a sharp CRACK echoed through his mind. It wasn't a sound his ears heard, but one his soul felt. In the darkness of his Workshop, the cocoon of light fractured. Bright white cracks spread across its surface, like a spiderweb on glass.
Then, with a silent flash, it shattered.
The light faded, leaving behind a small, still form. Jonah's heart hammered against his ribs. He leaned in closer in his mind's eye, his breath hitched in his throat.
It was not the Crystalline Beetle. Not even close.
The creature that stood before him was an entirely new lifeform.
It was about the size of a small, tough dog, with a low body and six legs. It was clearly insect-like, but its shell wasn't the smooth, shifting crystal of the beetle he'd fought. Instead, it had thick, overlapping plates of stone-like material, the same gray-brown as the fossilized egg.
Where the plates joined, a razor-sharp crystal edge gleamed softly. That was the beetle's power showing. Its two front legs had very sharp points. And its jaws, below long, twitching antennae, clicked with a harsh, sharp sound.
It was a perfect fusion of its two origins: the core's ancient toughness and the sharp, dangerous nature of the Essence.
As he stared, another flash of golden text illuminated his thoughts, this one more detailed than any before.
[Progeny Created: Shard-Shell Skitterer (Grade 1)]
[Skills:]
> [Shell Defense (Passive): The Progeny's naturally hardened, stone-and-crystal plating provides significant physical damage resistance.]
> [Piercing Mandibles: The Progeny's mandibles are sharp enough to puncture light armor and tough hides.]
Progeny. The word felt right. This wasn't a pet or a summon. It was his creation. His offspring, in a way. Grade 1. So, there were levels to this. A starting point.
Jonah felt a smile touch his lips. It wasn't a blob. It was… kind of cool, actually. Weird, but cool.
Then, he felt something else. A connection.
It wasn't like making a new friend or taming an animal. This was deeper, more fundamental. An invisible, unbreakable cord snapped into place between his consciousness and the creature's. He could feel its presence in his mind, a simple awareness. They weren't equal partners; it was one side fully in charge.
Its mind was empty, like a blank page waiting for orders. It had no instincts except the ones he put in. It didn't know the world, or up from down, or hunger or fear. There was only Jonah. He was its whole world, where all its knowledge came from.
The truth of it hit him hard. He wasn't just its master. He was its creator. Its god. A tiny, insectoid-rock-monster-god, but a god nonetheless.
He was responsible for it.
The thought was terrifying, but it was also… a thrilling one. For the first time in his life, he wasn't just a survivor reacting to the world. He was a creator, about to act upon it.
He decided to give his first command. He didn't speak the word aloud, but thought it, pushing the concept gently through their new connection. A name. A designation. Its first piece of data about itself.
"Shard."
The creature, his Progeny, stood perfectly still for a second. Then, its long antennae twitched in perfect, synchronized understanding. It knew its name.
A wave of joy washed over Jonah, so strong he almost laughed out loud. He had done it. He had taken a rock and a memory and made life. He had tangible, repeatable proof.
He could walk up to Sergeant Seraph, slap this thing on her desk - metaphorically, of course, the mandibles looked like they could do some real damage to the furniture and prove he wasn't a dud.
He stood up from the floor. His body still hurt from being tired, but his spirit was high. He looked around his clean room. It didn't feel like a prison anymore. It felt like a laboratory. The first of many.
He looked at himself in the dark screen. He was still just a thin boy from the Undercroft, with used clothes and a worried look in his eyes. But he felt changed. He wasn't only Jonah the scrapper anymore.
He was Jonah the Beast Weaver.
And his work was just beginning.