There was no time in this place.
Only the suggestion of moments, stretched thin between breaths that never fully formed. Lucian existed—not as a man, not as a weapon, not even as a memory—but as drift. Thought without tether. Shape without center.
He floated in static.
Grey fog coiled around him, breathing slow and hollow, as if the air itself mourned. Light flickered like an old film reel: too fast, too bright, then gone. Somewhere far above—or maybe below—a heartbeat thudded like thunder under glass. It wasn't his.
Nothing here was.
Lucian tried to speak, but his mouth wasn't there.
He tried to move, but his limbs didn't respond.
His body was a rumor. His name, a sound half-recalled. Not even pain grounded him now.
You lost yourself again.
The voice came from nowhere and everywhere. Not a whisper, not a shout—just present, like it had always been waiting.
Familiar. Wrong.
It sounded like him.
Lucian blinked—or he thought he did—and the world bled sideways.
The fog coalesced into something almost solid. And there, across the empty expanse of unformed thought, he saw it again:
Himself.
Twisted at the edges, like a figure drawn in too many dimensions. Flickering with violet veins and resonance static, its features smeared with grief and contempt. Lucian's own face—but hollowed, carved out by thousands of deaths. The echo of every failure. Every broken timeline. Every time Rowan died, screaming his name.
Lucian flinched.
Or he thought he did.
Don't pretend you don't remember.
The Echo stepped forward.
Reality didn't ripple. It cracked—like ice underfoot. Every step the Echo took caused new fractures across the space around them, veins of memory unraveling.
You begged for this. Over and over. One more chance. One more recursion. You thought it would be different.
Lucian trembled.
But not in fear. In recognition.
Because it was true.
Somewhere, deep inside the ruin of his mind, the truth echoed like a prayer turned curse. He had torn apart timelines to save Rowan.
Burned through space, rewound moments, carved doors through dimensions until the world no longer made sense.
And still, he'd lost him. Again. And again.
His grip had never been strong enough.
The Echo circled now, slowly. Like a predator with no urgency.
They think they saved you. But you didn't come back.
You were never supposed to come back.
Lucian said nothing. He couldn't. His voice was a thing left behind, somewhere between memory and regret.
The fog thickened again. Images swirled in its folds—ghosts of other selves, shattered and flickering:
Lucian kneeling in blood-streaked rubble, Rowan's body limp in his arms.
Lucian screaming into a rift as it collapsed, timeline slipping from his grip.
Lucian alone in a void, carving the word please into the walls with his own blood.
Each memory blinked out as soon as it formed.
Each one left a deeper crack in the shell of who he'd been.
Let go, the Echo whispered.
There's nothing left to fight for.
Let me wear your face. I know what comes next. I won't break this time.
Lucian closed his eyes.
Not to fight. But because the weight of it all was too heavy.
His body flickered—shifting briefly into an outline of light, then back to shadow.
He didn't move when the Echo touched his shoulder.
Didn't resist when that hand began to sink into him, resonance fusing like molten wire between fractured skin and soul. No pain. Just numbness. Just cold.
Good, the Echo whispered.
This time, we'll be strong enough.
This time, he won't have to bury you.
Lucian's lips parted.
A breath escaped—thin, soundless.
And then he stopped breathing altogether.
Not dead. Not alive.
Just… fading.
As the recursion closed around him like a tomb.
—
The medbay was silent.
But Rowan wasn't.
His breath hitched—shallow, inconsistent, like his lungs didn't know what to do without the rhythm of Lucian's beside them. He sat hunched beside the bed, Lucian's hand cradled between his own, palms cold and aching from the strain of holding on too long.
Lucian lay motionless.
No glow beneath his skin. No flicker behind his eyes.
The tether between them—the one Rowan once trusted more than his own heartbeat—had been gone since Site V9. Broken. Severed at the root.
But something still pulsed.
And that's what terrified him most.
Because it felt like Lucian. Almost.
It echoed like him. Familiar cadence. Familiar warmth. But it didn't carry the emotional signature—didn't carry him. It was hollow. Disconnected. A mimic. A fragment left behind by a corrupted system still trying to pretend it hadn't failed.
Rowan's throat tightened. His fingers gripped harder.
"Don't do this," he murmured. "Don't leave me with pieces."
He tried to focus—tried to reach with what little remained of his resonance field. Not to rebuild the bond. Not even to pull Lucian back. Just to feel something. Anything.
And he did.
But it was wrong.
The moment his energy brushed against Lucian's form, it recoiled—burning cold, like metal dipped in oil and grief. The contact made his skin crawl. The resonance flowing beneath Lucian's surface wasn't his.
It wasn't alive.
It was… replicated.
Rowan jerked back, breath catching in his throat like a punch to the lungs. The chair clattered to the side, screeching against the floor, but he barely noticed. His heart thundered as realization split through him like a blade.
This isn't him.
His mouth opened, but nothing came out at first. Just air.
Then—
"No—"
He stumbled a step backward, hand clutching at his chest, as if trying to hold his ribs in place.
"You're not… you're not him. This isn't… this isn't real—"
His knees hit the floor before the rest of him did.
He bowed forward, hands splayed against the tile, forehead nearly to the ground, trembling.
He couldn't cry at first.
His body felt too hollow. Too raw. Tears had nothing to cling to.
But the scream—when it came—was soundless. Pulled from a place too deep for noise. A silent, shuddering break that left him gasping, shaking, collapsing into pieces he couldn't gather.
And all the while, Lucian didn't move.
Didn't twitch. Didn't breathe any deeper.
Because he wasn't there.
Not really.
Only the shell remained—still and untouched, occupied by something pretending to be him.
Rowan's voice cracked open, fragile and feral, as he whispered—
"Please… just stop pretending."
The monitor beside the bed pulsed—once, twice—then flatlined into its usual dull thrum.
Behind him, down the corridor, no one came.
Because no alarms had been triggered.
Because Lucian was still "alive."
And no one could hear a tether scream when it was already broken.
—
The medbay lights dimmed. Briefly. As if the room itself blinked.
A moment later, the ambient hum in the ceiling panels shifted. Slightly higher. A frequency adjustment so minor, it might've gone unnoticed by any ordinary ear.
But the system noticed.
Within the walls—deep in the neural diagnostic matrix—lines of code recalibrated. Soft alerts pulsed in amber along a dozen servers. Not alarms. Not yet. Just whispers in the machine.
[RESONANCE PATTERN DETECTED]
[Subject: Lucian Vaughn]
[Status: Inert. No conscious tether. No active sync.]
Another pulse.
Not from the body.
But from the core.
A phantom spike—too precise. Too clean.
[Pattern Fluctuation: Level 2 Instability. Sync Attempt Detected.]
An artificial resonance tether threaded itself quietly through the system's analysis loop.
It matched Lucian's emotional signature.
Perfectly.
Too perfectly.
Within the core servers, one diagnostic monitor shuddered. The waveform on its screen trembled—oscillating between known resonance structures and something deeper. Something older.
The curves were wrong.
Too symmetrical.
Too sharp.
[ERROR.]
[Recursive Signature Detected.]
[Resonance Looping Detected.]
[Origin: UNKNOWN.]
The waveform flared violet.
And then—
[CORRUPTION BLOOM INITIATED]
One monitor exploded in a burst of sparks.
Across Zarek HQ, the medbay's internal grid dimmed for three seconds.
Just enough to register on the master logs.
Just enough to be flagged for audit.
Just enough to whisper:
Something has begun.
—
Rowan sat slumped against the base of Lucian's bed, legs drawn up, arms wrapped around them, as if trying to hold himself together with the weight of his own body.
His face was pale, streaked with dried tears. Eyes red-rimmed, hollow. Breathing shallow.
Everything inside him felt like it had been scooped out and left behind in that corrupted hellscape called Site V9.
Lucian hadn't moved.
Not a twitch. Not a sound.
But something pulsed beneath the stillness.
Something that felt like Lucian—but not. An echo of warmth threaded with absence. It pulled on Rowan's instincts, mocking what used to be their bond. Like it had studied the tether and was now replaying it, beat for beat, in all the right emotional tones.
He had felt it earlier. That shimmer of almost-familiarity.
But when he'd reached for it—
It bit.
Not with pain. But with violation. Like he'd touched a recording of a heartbeat, not a real one. A hollow simulation. Lucian's resonance without the soul behind it.
Rowan sat frozen, fingers pressed to his lips like they were the only barrier between himself and another scream.
He couldn't feel Lucian.
Not really.
Just the shell of him.
And something else crawling beneath the skin.
Zarek HQ — Command Deck, Level 3 Monitoring Bay
0412 hours
The grid wall hummed softly, every station aglow in low blue light. Most analysts were half-asleep in posture, riding out the overnight lull between rift alerts and briefing turnovers.
Except one.
Sharon Tan leaned forward at her console, posture rigid, eyes locked on the pulse bloom climbing across her screen.
A false tether.
Too clean.
Too symmetrical.
Lucian Vaughn's resonance profile was infamous among tech analysts: chaotic, unstable, corrupted by recursion and raw dimensional strain. His sync logs were messy, unpredictable.
But this pulse?
This was surgical.
A resonance wave that had no business being this stable.
Her fingers tapped rapidly as she overlaid Lucian's previous sync charts, watching the new one map over it like a perfect mold.
Too perfect.
The kind of perfect that doesn't exist in nature.
The system's alerts blinked:
[SYNC INITIATION DETECTED – SUBJECT: LUCIAN VAUGHN]
[TETHER CHANNEL: MEDBAY INTERNAL GRID]
[TARGET SYNC: ROWAN MERCER]
She felt her chest seize.
"No," she whispered.
A new alert overrode the screen:
[RECURSION SIGNATURE FOUND]
[EMOTIONAL ECHO REDUNDANCY – TIER 3]
[CORRUPTION BLOOM INITIATED]
Then another.
[TETHER MIMIC ATTEMPT – STATUS: ACTIVE]
[RECOMMEND: LOCKDOWN + NULLFIELD DEPLOYMENT]
Sharon slapped the emergency comm key.
"Deck Three to Command. We've got a live corruption bloom in Medbay Sector B. False tether signal matching Lucian Vaughn's profile is attempting a sync with Guide Rowan Mercer."
"This isn't him."
"It's something else."
Medbay – Simultaneously
The lights flickered again.
Just once.
Rowan's breath hitched.
That presence—the one he'd tried to ignore—tightened around him like a noose. It didn't pull. It waited. The pressure was subtle. Almost loving.
Like a hand reaching from the dark, softly curling around his soul.
He jerked forward, heart skipping in his chest.
"Lucian—" he whispered, terrified of the word.
The vitals monitor beeped. Once.
A perfect rhythm.
Too perfect.
And for a second—
Rowan felt the illusion try to reconnect.
A pulse of fabricated resonance drifted across the silence like a lover's hand brushing his face.
He recoiled violently, stumbling to his feet, nearly knocking over the IV rig. His hand shot out to brace himself on the wall. His skin felt fevered. Wrong.
"Stop it," he hissed. "Get out of him."
No response.
Lucian didn't move.
But something inside him did.
Medbay – Minutes Later
The doors slid open with a sharp hiss.
Four armed security officers entered first—silent, coordinated, weapons lowered but ready. Their boots echoed against the tile like war drums in a temple of grief. The scent of ozone and sterilizer curled in behind them, as if the air knew violence might follow.
And then Ava stepped in.
She didn't speak at first. She didn't have to.
Her eyes found Rowan instantly—disheveled, wide-eyed, standing beside Lucian's bed like a man on the edge of being torn in two. His hands were shaking. The light from the vitals monitor cast sharp shadows across his face, painting the grief into every angle.
"Rowan," Ava said gently, her voice carrying that steady resonance she always used when the world began to fracture. "Step away."
Rowan turned toward her, slow. His eyes were red. Jaw clenched. He looked like someone who'd already broken—and didn't know how to put the pieces down.
"He's not in there," Rowan said quietly. "Something else is."
Ava nodded once. "I believe you."
She stepped closer, eyes scanning the vitals, the bloom pattern flickering beneath the monitor glass.
"Containment protocol?" one officer asked, already lifting a resonance nullifier pack from his shoulder.
Ava didn't look away from Lucian. "Deploy a passive loop field only. No suppression unless I say."
Rowan barely heard them.
His pulse thundered in his ears.
Because even as Ava began barking quiet orders and the room flickered to life with motion—hefelt it.
That presence again.
But no longer soft. No longer curious.
It was angry.
Behind Lucian's still eyelids—just for a moment—there was movement. Not a twitch. A flicker. A micro-spasm beneath skin, like a dream shifting in the wrong direction.
And then Rowan felt it inside his mind.
You're interfering.
The words didn't come through sound.
They came through pressure. Through memory. Through the deepest fault lines of what used to be their bond.
It wasn't Lucian's voice.
It was colder. Thinner. Hollowed out and still wearing his shape.
You're not supposed to be this loud, Guide.
Rowan flinched, staggering back a step, his breath seizing in his chest.
He gripped the edge of the bedside counter like it might tether him to reality.
"Ava—" he rasped. "It's watching me."
Lucian's body didn't move.
But the lights flickered.
And all across the resonance network, silent servers began logging a new pattern:
[GUIDE INTERFERENCE DETECTED.
ECHO ENTITY SHIFTING RESPONSE PATTERN.]
The bloom was adapting.
*Corruption Bloom: A high-level recursive resonance anomaly in which fragmented emotional and energetic signatures—typically from collapsed or destabilized timelines—begin to self-replicate within a host's resonance field. Unlike natural sync events that originate from conscious emotional output, a bloom operates autonomously, mimicking authentic tether signals and emotional wavelengths with near-perfect fidelity.
"It's like a ghost wearing someone's heartbeat. It looks like them, feels like them—but it's just a loop, trying to trick us into letting it in."