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Chapter 13 - Borrowed Lives Leave Marks

I learned the difference between carrying a memory

and using one.

It happened on a bus.

Crowded. Loud. Ordinary.

The kind of place where nothing important is supposed to happen.

I stood near the back, one hand gripping the pole, eyes unfocused. The noise pressed in on me — not sound, but presence. Too many people. Too many absences.

That's how I felt it.

A wrongness.

Three rows ahead, a woman sat rigidly in her seat, fingers digging into her bag like she was holding onto it for balance. Her breathing was shallow. Too fast.

Panic.

Before I could stop myself, the inherited memory stirred.

Not an image.

A pattern.

I knew this panic.

Not because I'd lived it —

but because someone else had.

I felt it overlay my own senses like a transparency.

A memory surfaced:

A different bus.

A different woman.

A different city.

A heart attack mistaken for anxiety.

Ignored until it was too late.

My chest tightened.

"Not again," I whispered.

The mirror-version of me appeared faintly in the dark window beside my reflection.

"You don't know this one," she warned. "Don't interfere."

I hesitated.

Rule One: Don't acknowledge the memories out loud.

Rule Two: Don't speak when they are near.

But rules never accounted for now.

The woman gasped.

Her hand slipped from the bag.

People around her noticed — too late, not enough.

I moved.

"Ma'am," I said sharply, crouching beside her. "You're not having a panic attack."

Heads turned.

The pressure shifted immediately.

I ignored it.

"You're having chest pain, radiating to your left arm," I continued, the words coming out clean, practiced — not learned, remembered. "You need help. Right now."

Her eyes widened.

"How do you—"

"Does your jaw hurt?" I asked.

She nodded, tears spilling.

I raised my voice. "We need to stop the bus. Now."

Someone argued.

Someone swore.

The driver slammed the brakes.

The world bent — not violently, not visibly — but decisively.

Time leaned in.

I felt it.

A presence sharpening.

The woman was helped off the bus. Someone called emergency services. The crowd buzzed with delayed adrenaline.

As the doors closed again, the pressure eased.

I sagged into a seat, shaking.

The mirror-version of me stared at me from the window.

"You used it," she said.

"I saved her," I whispered.

"Yes," she replied. "And now you've told the world you can."

My phone vibrated.

Unknown Number.

I already knew.

> You accessed unowned memory.

I swallowed.

She would have died.

A pause.

Longer than usual.

> Outcome deviation detected.

My heart thudded.

That's not a warning, I typed. That's an observation.

> Correct.

I exhaled shakily.

So now what?

The reply came slowly.

> Now Tomorrow adapts.

I stared at the message.

"What does that mean?" I whispered aloud.

The mirror-version of me looked away.

"It means you're no longer just a container," she said quietly.

"You're a variable."

The bus rolled on.

The city continued.

No lights flickered.

No distortions appeared.

That terrified me more than any correction agent.

Because silence meant recalculation.

I leaned my head back and closed my eyes.

The borrowed memory didn't fade.

It settled.

Not comfortably.

But permanently.

Somewhere in the city behind us, an ambulance wailed.

And I knew — without knowing how — that the woman would live.

I also knew something else.

I hadn't just saved her.

I had taken responsibility for what came next.

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