The battle had just begun—and already the hallway of Site V-9 was unraveling.
Time bent in jagged waves, warping floor tiles into mirrored distortions of the past. Lights flashed—no, not lights—memories of lights, flickering back into existence where they had once been, then vanished again. Shadows of the facility's old form bled through the cracked surfaces of its present.
The Echo stalked forward through the chaos—Lucian's likeness without Lucian, a being of glitching symmetry. Every movement was surgical. Every counter, learned. It fought like a man who had killed this team a thousand times before.
And Rowan was too stunned to move.
Until—Ren stepped forward.
Not running. Striding. A controlled burst of pressure radiated from his boots as he pushed between Alexander and Dain, his expression sharpened into something they hadn't seen from him before.
Focused.
Dangerous.
He unhooked the chrono-brace from his wrist, extended it, and slammed the core charm embedded in its spine.
The floor buckled around him.
Time itself shuddered.
Rowan flinched as the resonance thread between him and Lucian throbbed in his chest like a drumbeat echoing backwards.
Static licked at the edges of his vision.
Vespera gasped. "Ren—!"
"I've got it," Ren said, voice low and fierce. "I can buy us a window."
The charm's core ignited in pale gold, threads of time webbing out from Ren's hands like spider-silk catching in the air. Around him, the corridor slowed—but not like a pause.
Like a breath held between two heartbeats.
Everything else moved like molasses—the team, the Echo, the flicker of ruined light.
But Ren moved freely.
He blinked forward, disappearing and reappearing six feet ahead.
The Echo twitched—almost reacted—but was a half-frame behind.
Ren's hands blurred, core charm splitting into two smaller fragments. He drew a circular glyph in the air mid-stride, then slammed it into the floor. A ripple burst outward—like a sonar pulse, time-coded, calibrated.
"NOW!" he shouted.
Rowan broke from his paralysis and surged forward. Alexander charged. Dain pulled gravity around his fists. Vespera unleashed a suppression pulse from the rear. Mira locked onto her target, charging her sniper to the maximum output.
And Ren—Ren was everywhere at once. To the left, then right, then above, flipping mid-air, glyphs trailing behind him like golden dust.
The charm fragments rang out in different frequencies as he tuned the rhythm of the corridor to his own pulse.
The Echo snarled soundlessly. Its movements corrected. It sped up.
Ren's eye widened. "Oh no you don't—!"
He dropped into a slide beneath its blade-like arm and grabbed time by its throat.
His final pulse hit like a bell toll—pure, reverberating through bone and metal and memory. It froze the Echo in place for just three seconds—but it was enough.
Dain landed a gravity surge directly to its chest. Alexander followed with a shoulder slam that cracked the floor beneath them. Mira pressed down the trigger right at the secondth second mark.
Ren rolled up, panting, sweat slicking the edges of his collar. His charm blinked red—nearly overheated. But his grin was electric.
"Not bad for my first day out."
Rowan stared at him, stunned. Then—his lips twitched. "Not bad at all."
"Holy shit," Dain breathed. "We're keeping him."
"Agreed," Alexander rumbled.
Vespera just nodded, violet eyes assessing Ren with new gravity.
The Echo was already starting to shift again—pieces of it cracking like broken glass, reforming into more dangerous shapes. Lucian's voice—or something close to it—breathed along the corridor's edge.
But Ren stepped beside Rowan again, still smiling even as his breath shook.
"I told you I'd help bring him home."
Fractured Reflections
The air hadn't settled.
The floor still hummed beneath their boots, vibrating like the bones of the site itself were reacting to what Ren had done.
The afterglow of his temporal pulse cast faint gold veins through the corridor—like the fabric of time had been rewoven but hadn't sealed cleanly.
They barely had a breath to recover before the next rupture hit.
A hiss split the air—not sound, but something deeper, something felt in the blood and marrow.
Then they saw it.
Another figure stepped through the glitched hallway wall, phasing through the surface like oil dripping between layers of cracked glass.
Another Lucian.
This one taller, armor fractured and scorched, with blackened claws where fingers should be. Its movements were jerky at first, then terrifyingly fluid—like a memory remembering how to breathe.
Alexander was already shifting to shield the front line.
"Get behind me!" he barked.
Rowan flinched. His resonance thread screamed at the presence of the new Echo, as if trying to recoil from the wrongness.
Lucian—his Lucian—felt like a whisper in his chest. This one felt like rot.
"They're not copies," Rowan breathed. "They're all him. Every one of them."
"How many timelines did he break?" Vespera murmured, tone stricken.
A third figure emerged—this one cloaked in static, half-transparent, its gait uneven, dragging what looked like a broken blade. It shimmered like a ghost, its eye sockets hollow.
Ren's eyes darted from form to form, sweat streaking down his temple. "Rowan—what are you feeling from them?"
Rowan gritted his teeth. "They're all anchored to me—every single one. I can't distinguish where one ends and another begins."
Then came the charge.
The scorched Lucian-Echo moved first—blurring forward, claws aimed for Rowan's throat. Dain surged in with a bellow, gravitational fields compressing outward like shockwaves. It struck the Echo mid-air, distorting its velocity—but not stopping it.
Slash!
Rowan stumbled back, a line of blood blooming along his cheek. Not deep—but personal. The Echo had bypassed his defenses.
Lucian—his Lucian—would have done the same.
Alexander roared, shield smashing down to cut the Echo's trajectory. Metal met corrupted metal with a sickening screech. Sparks burst across the corridor. The impact threw Alexander backward, his boots dragging a long, brutal groove along the floor before he found his footing.
"They're learning," he spat. "They know our moves."
Ren blinked through space again, dragging a sigil through the air mid-warp and activating a moment-freeze on the static Echo. For a second, it held—then cracked the time seal from inside and advanced, jerking toward him.
"They're adapting to me," Ren choked.
"They are you," Vespera said quietly, leveling her resonance amp and pulsing a suppression field wide. "Versions of him that fought this fight before—and won."
Rowan's eyes burned. "We're inside their loop."
The third Echo reached him—its half-formed blade slashing outward. Rowan threw up a resonance shield with both hands. It held—barely—but the psychic feedback crashed into his skull like static-filled screams.
Memories that weren't his clawed behind his eyes. Pain. Fire. Loss. A dozen deaths and none of them his.
Lucian's.
Every timeline fractured. Every end the same.
"I can't hold them off—" Rowan's voice cracked. "They remember losing me. And now they want to erase this version to fix it."
A fourth Echo dropped from the ceiling.
Lucian's silhouette again—but this one had no face. Just blank smooth skin and twin resonance scars flaring violet across its chest.
It didn't run.
It screamed.
The blast tore through the hallway like a shattering glass field. Ren's barrier barely covered them. Alexander covered Rowan with his shield. Dain was flung back, smashing into the wall. Mira was still settled in good length away from the echoes, using a column as support.
Vespera's chime-pendant cracked as she extended her field farther than she ever had—just to keep their minds from shattering under the resonance.
"Lucian—!" Rowan cried out, instinctively reaching for a connection that wasn't present.
Then—his chest jerked.
Lucian's thread flared in his mind again. Agony. Heat. Defiance.
Far away—but burning.
He was still alive.
Ren gritted his teeth. "We have to end this. Fast. I can't hold the threads stable much longer."
"How?" Alexander demanded, blood running from a cut at his temple. "They're us. But worse."
"They're him," Rowan said, staggering upright, his hands still glowing with shielding resonance. "But broken."
And then came the voice.
All the Echoes moved at once—synchronizing like puppets strung by the same master.
Their mouths didn't move—but their voices echoed in Rowan's mind.
"He always reaches for you.
You always fall.
We won't let it happen again."
Rowan clutched his head. His knees buckled.
The Echoes converged.
Then—a pulse.
Time rippled outward—again.
Ren, eyes wide, spun the chrono dial on his wrist and screamed, "CLEAR THE PATH!"
Golden rings burst out—rewinding space for just an instant. The corridor reset half a second, long enough to unweave the threads and open a narrow breach between the Echoes.
Rowan blinked tears from his eyes. "Ren—!"
"I've got it," he shouted, voice hoarse. "You need to run now!"
Alexander charged again, Dain following behind, fists heavy with gravitational collapse.
Vespera pulsed her field wide, pushing the Echoes back—if only for seconds.
Mira assisting to halt the echoes movements with bursts of her sniper shots.
And Rowan ran—toward the core chamber where he felt Lucian's presence. Toward the flame tethered to him across endless timelines.
Ren fell in step beside him.
"I told you," Ren breathed, teeth bared in a grin that trembled with adrenaline, "we're bringing him home."
And behind them, the corridor split open again—more Echoes stepping through, more fragments of what Lucian could have become.
Rowan didn't look back.
He couldn't.
Because if he did—he wouldn't stop screaming.
—
Lucian clutched his head, fingers digging into his scalp hard enough to draw blood. Nails scraped skin, as if pain could override the wrongness crawling through his skull.
The silence wasn't silence anymore—it rippled, like cracked vinyl left on endless repeat. It echoed with his own voice over and over, from every direction, every timeline.
You should've died.
You always die before I reach you.
I reached him too late. Every time.
The words festered in his bones.
Each one carried the weight of another Lucian, another shattered version of himself. Hundreds—thousands—all haunted by the same memory: Rowan bleeding out in their arms. Sometimes saving him. Sometimes failing him. Sometimes... being the one who killed him.
He stumbled forward. Boots slid on the floor that wasn't floor anymore—warped metal, shattered glass, fragments of memories carved into the corridor like scars. His breath hitched.
The walls melted and reformed with each step, as though Site V9 couldn't decide which moment it wanted to be.
A hum vibrated in his chest, like a heartbeat that didn't belong to him.
He turned a corner—and froze.
Another figure stood in the flickering dark.
Tall. Silent. Still.
Its body glitched with static, like it existed a half-second behind reality. The face was blank, a smear of ghost-light and fracture lines. But the stance—the way its fingers curled, the way the resonance flared purple along its hands—he knew that stance.
It was his.
Lucian took a slow step forward.
Then he saw it.
Rowan's blood.
Dripping from the Echo's knuckles.
His body locked, breath stuttering.
Something fragile inside him—already fraying—snapped.
Behind him, the team surged into the corridor, weapons raised, fields deployed, all panting from prior skirmishes—Rowan at the front, Ren close beside him, Alexander and Dain flanking, Mira covering their six.
But Lucian didn't turn to them.
"This one's mine," he rasped, voice like broken gravel scraping against a scream.
The Echo tilted its head—subtle, robotic. A flicker passed across its blank face.
Then it moved.
So did Lucian.
The two collided in a burst of resonance so violent the corridor bent. Energy crackled across the ceiling as steel buckled beneath their feet. They struck, not like tacticians, but like animals—snarling, tearing, blades colliding with the sound of thunder.
Lucian grunted as he took a strike to the ribs—right where an old wound still burned. The Echo mirrored him, spinning low, a dark blur of familiar movements turned monstrous.
"They're—" Rowan began, wide-eyed.
"Not matched," Haru interrupted, eyes narrowed. "The Echo's… ahead."
Lucian lunged again, blade aimed for the neck.
The Echo sidestepped—before he moved.
It was like fighting a future that already knew how he lost.
The Echo struck, slicing open Lucian's shoulder with a glimmer of spatial distortion—his own move, turned back on him.
Lucian stumbled, swore. Blood splashed the floor.
"Ungh..." Lucian groaned clutching his wounded shoulder.
The Echo raised its hand—and the bond Lucian shared with Rowan spasmed in his chest. He choked on the pull, knees buckling as a surge of feedback cracked down his spine.
"Lucian—!" Rowan moved forward, but Dain threw a gravity wall in front of him just in time.
Ren darted past, glyphs already burning in his palm. "Hang on—!"
He hurled a pulse of chrono-disruption into the space between Lucian and the Echo, slamming time to a halt for a single second.
Lucian roared—fury in his limbs—and surged forward, reversed blade poised.
He aimed for the Echo's throat.
The Echo caught his wrist.
And hurled him through a reinforced metal beam.
The wall caved in on impact. Dust and sparks erupted in a choking cloud. Lucian crumpled, blood streaking down his temple, his body twitching but not rising.
"Lucian!" Rowan's voice cracked, raw. He tried to run—but Vespera grabbed his arm, her eyes wide with fear.
The Echo turned.
Its gaze fell on Rowan.
The corridor pulsed red.
It lunged.
"MOVE!" Dain hurled a compression wave that crashed into the Echo's side, knocking it back.
Alexander rammed it from the other side, shield-first, and it skidded into the debris.
But—
It didn't strike back.
It reached down.
And grabbed Lucian's limp body.
"No. NO!" Rowan screamed, breaking free.
He ran. He ran like the world was ending.
Too late.
The Echo vanished.
A blur of light. A pulse of static. A final warped distortion.
Lucian was gone.
Rowan skidded to the spot he'd been, hand outstretched into nothing. His chest heaved. His fingers trembled. The resonance bond—
Was gone.
Severed.
He collapsed to his knees, breath hitching violently, eyes locked on the place where Lucian had disappeared.
"No," he whispered.
"Rowan—" Ren dropped beside him, pale, shaking. "We'll get him. We will."
Rowan didn't respond.
His mouth opened—but no sound came.
Only the choked gasp of someone who had lost their center.
Behind them, Site V9's corridor trembled—like it exhaled.
The system blinked.
[RESURRECTION POINT INTERRUPTED]
[SIGNAL DEVIATION: CLASSIFIED]
[REANALYSIS REQUIRED]
Vespera stepped forward slowly, arms limp at her sides. Her eyes were on the space where the Echo vanished—wide, haunted. She turned to Rowan.
"I saw his aura," she said quietly. "Lucian's still alive. But…"
She didn't finish.
Rowan's face twisted—grief etched deep, but fury blooming beneath it.
"I'm bringing him back," he said hoarsely.
Even as blood dripped from his fingers, even as the console on his wrist blinked failure again and again—
Rowan's voice held steel.
And somewhere far, far within Site V9…
Lucian's body lay sprawled across obsidian tile.
The real Lucian.
Still breathing.
Barely.
Above him, the Echo stood still, tilting its faceless head.
And whispered, in a voice that didn't echo right:
"You'll watch him die too."