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Chapter 11 - Echoes in the Dark

You know that feeling when your skin knows something is watching you — before your eyes catch up? That cold weight on your neck, that heartbeat that isn't quite your own?

That's how it started.

The mission was supposed to be simple. A cleanup operation in a C-rank Rift that opened near the Hollow District. A dozen monsters. A few traps. Nothing a low-tier squad couldn't handle.

But the Guild wanted me to go.

They'd started doing that lately — "volunteering" me for missions I had no business being on. I think they were testing me. Watching me. Waiting for me to crack open like a melon and spill whatever secret they suspected I was hiding.

Arlen came anyway. Uninvited, as usual.

"Why are you here?" I grumbled as I pulled on my broken-tinted goggles.

"Because," he said, slinging a crossbow over his shoulder, "every time you go alone, you come back either bleeding or staring into nothing. I like my friends not dead."

"You call me a friend now?"

"You're too annoying to be a stranger."

I snorted.

Truth was — I was glad he came. Not because I needed help fighting, but because I was starting to forget how to act human when no one else was around.

The Rift stood in an abandoned subway line — a spiral of violet haze that shimmered like oil on water. It pulsed. Breathed.

Waiting.

And when we stepped in, the temperature dropped like a stone.

Inside the Rift

The place looked like a drowned cathedral.

Pillars made of warped iron. Benches half-melted into the floor. A soft chittering echoed in the distance — like insects with lungs. I took point, while Arlen kept his back to mine.

[System Notification]

Gate Type: Abyssal Echo

Risk Level: B-

Anomaly Detected: Presence of a False Core

Objectives:

— Terminate Hostile Entities (12)

— Locate the False Core

— Extract Alive

A False Core?

That was new.

Rifts usually had a Source Crystal — the thing that powered the whole Gate. But a False Core? That meant the Gate had created a decoy. Something intelligent. Something that could trick you.

And tricked we were.

By the time we reached the central chamber — a round arena with glasslike walls and writhing shadows — half the squad that entered with us were gone.

One screamed.

Then silence.

Then a pop, like a melon splitting open.

Arlen gripped his weapon tighter. "Crispin. You feel that?"

I did.

It wasn't fear. It was worse.

Recognition.

Something was calling to the Echo inside me.

And the Echo was listening.

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