ECHOES OF THE CONTINUIST
FRAME 01
THE FIRST FRAME
Some routes don’t lead somewhere new—they lead somewhere almost familiar, and that “almost” is where people vanish.
Avery had learned to distrust comfort. Comfort was what you felt right before the world decided you’d stopped paying attention.
He paused on a strip of broken shale where the wind should have been simple. It wasn’t. It leaned against his cheek as if it belonged there, then—without changing temperature—shifted and pressed the other side of his face, like the air had discovered a different rule mid-breath. Even the gravel under his boots sounded delayed, not louder or softer, but a fraction late, like a voice lagging behind a mouth.
Eli stopped behind him, close enough that Avery could feel the heat of his body through the layers. Eli always ran tight when the air went thin.
“What is it?” Eli asked. His words slid out with the familiar drag, as if he’d sanded the edges off his own voice. Not sloppiness. Not laziness. A choice—half-made, half-forced—so what lived in the noise couldn’t grab hold of him as easily.
Avery didn’t answer at first. He crouched and put two fingers to the stone at the path’s edge. The rock was cold, but not with the honest cold of shade. This cold had a memory to it, the chill of something that had been sealed once and was remembering where it ended.
He straightened slowly and looked ahead.
The ridge rose in jagged black teeth, stitched through with pale seams—fine, geometric hairlines that caught the light wrong. Repairs made by a hand that only understood straight edges. Lattice scars, some of the old field notes called them, when someone was brave enough to write the phrase down.
They weren’t supposed to be visible this high. Not on a route that still pretended to belong to the Root.
“Drift signs,” Avery said at last, voice level. “Condensation bands. Shadow lag.”
Eli snorted softly. “That’s your way of saying the mirror’s slipping.”
Avery didn’t correct him. He didn’t confirm it, either. Naming a thing too cleanly sometimes made it stick.
He slid his pack off one shoulder and pulled out his survey slate. Continuists didn’t worship objects; they worshiped repeatable steps. The slate was just a surface that didn’t forget.
He made three short marks with his pencil. One. Two. Three. Frame. Conduit. Limiter.
Eli watched the marks form, his eyes narrowed as if he could hear the graphite scrape. “You’re doing the lines again.”
“It works,” Avery said, though “works” was never the whole truth. Nothing truly worked here. Things held until they didn’t.
Ahead, an arch cut through the ridge—a natural break reinforced long ago with stone bracing that had been placed by someone who understood the Rule of Three even if they didn’t write it down. Avery could see the logic in the construction: a boundary that declared here, a channel that allowed through, and places where something had once sat like a lock.
Missing pieces. Avery’s jaw tightened. “Limiter’s gone.”
Eli’s head tilted slightly, the way it did when he listened past what was visible. “Yeah,” he said softly. “I can feel it. Like a sentence that never got finished.”
Avery tucked the slate away and forced his voice into calm procedure. “We cross. We mark. We don’t improvise.”
Eli gave a small, humorless exhale. “You say that every time.”
“Because every time,” Avery replied, “the temptation is to do the opposite.”
They walked toward the arch, boots grinding softly on stone that wanted to be quiet. The closer they got, the more the air seemed to narrow—not physically, but conceptually, as if the world was compressing itself into fewer allowed outcomes.
Avery drew a stick of pale chalk from his pocket and dragged it along the inner face of the arch. The chalk squealed, a short clean sound—and then the sound came back wrong, half a heartbeat late, as if the arch had to decide where Avery’s hand ended before it could reflect it.
Eli flinched hard.
Avery’s hand snapped out and caught his sleeve. “Still with me?”
Eli forced a laugh that didn’t reach his eyes. “Yeah. Unfortunately.” For a heartbeat, Eli’s words came clean, edged with urgency beneath the drag. “Don’t answer it.”
“I’m not,” Avery said, and didn’t ask what it meant. He’d learned not to pull too hard on Eli’s thread when the air was already tight.
They crossed under the arch. On the far side, the path dropped into a shallow cut, stone walls close, boots having worn a faint groove into the floor over years of cautious travel. This had been a trusted route once. There were old marker scars on the rock—faded paint, shallow cuts, the field language of strangers who didn’t want to be remembered, only understood.
Avery knelt and planted a marker stake: treated wood, dull metal banding, memory made practical. He tapped it twice with the heel of his palm. “First turn,” he murmured.
Eli glanced at him. “We haven’t turned.” Avery lifted his chin toward the corridor ahead. The cut split. Not dramatically. No grand fork. Just a subtle widening: left passage rising slightly, right passage sinking slightly, both leading into shadow. Two ways that felt—wrongly—like the same way.
Eli’s expression tightened, and Avery saw his hand twitch near his coat pocket where the flask lived like a secret. “Second door,” Eli whispered.
“There’s no door,” Avery said automatically—then stopped, because Eli wasn’t speaking literally. Eli almost never was, when he was frightened.
Avery reached into his pack and pulled out a small cloth-wrapped shard. When he unrolled it, the sliver of Veilglass caught daylight with a pale inner sheen. It didn’t glow. It simply looked as though it belonged half an inch out of phase with everything else.
Eli winced, eyes darting away. “Put that away.”
“It’s a conduit,” Avery said, keeping his voice even. “And we didn’t come out here without one.” His other hand found the wrapped metal ring clipped to his belt—his Timed Limiter, cold and certain. A thing meant not to create, but to end. Conduit in one hand. Limiter at his side. All they needed now was a frame they could trust.
Avery studied the fork again and found a detail almost erased by weather: a faint dusting of old chalk on the left wall. Someone had marked it, once—quietly, just enough to say I went this way and lived long enough to tell you. “We take the left,” Avery said.
Eli exhaled through his nose. “You’re sure?” “I’m sure someone wanted us to be,” Avery answered.
They stepped into the left passage. For three breaths, the world behaved. Then the corridor ahead shimmered like heat above a fire that wasn’t there. A seam in the air—subtle, almost polite—made the stone beyond it look slightly too straight, slightly too clean, as if reality was readying itself to snap into a simpler shape. Eli’s hand clamped onto Avery’s sleeve, grip hard. The drag vanished from his voice, replaced by a tight clarity that always arrived when the Veil tightened around them. “Avery,” Eli said low. “That’s a thin place.”
Avery’s gaze fixed on the seam, and something tugged at the back of his mind—an almost-memory of grabbing Eli’s wrist, of hauling him back from a threshold he couldn’t properly see. A moment that didn’t sit right in his head, like a page torn out and shoved back in upside down. Eli’s grip tightened. “Don’t let it finish the thought.” Avery didn’t like the way the seam looked. It wasn’t a tear. It wasn't a door. It was a permission waiting to be granted. “Frame,” Avery murmured. “We find the frame.”
“And if there isn’t one?” Eli asked. Avery set his jaw. “Then we make one.” They moved forward—not running yet, but fast enough that hesitation didn’t have time to grow teeth. The seam shivered. Then the world snapped. It wasn’t a sound so much as a feeling, like a joint resetting. The stone ahead rearranged itself by inches—only inches, but enough to turn a straight corridor into a slope that shouldn't have existed. The left wall leaned inward. The right wall leaned away. The floor dipped as if the world had decided gravity could be negotiated too. Avery staggered and caught himself on the wall. The stone under his palm felt briefly slick, like glass, then returned to rough rock.
Eli sucked in a breath. “It’s trying to—” “Make it simpler,” Avery finished, because he knew what simplification cost. It cost detail. It cost nuance. It cost the parts of you that didn’t fit cleanly into a pattern. Avery dropped to a knee and shoved the Veilglass shard back into its cloth. His hands moved fast. “Brace,” he snapped, then pointed at a protruding stone. “Get cord around that. Tight.” Eli blinked—then obeyed, shaking out a length of cord from his coat with more competence than his usual posture suggested. He looped it around the protrusion and yanked. The cord sang, high and tense.
Avery ripped two short lengths of timber from the outer straps of his pack—support slats meant for shelter building, not heroics—and jammed them into the new angle where wall met floor. Improvised frame. “Hold it,” Avery said. Eli braced his shoulder into the timber, face tightening as the corridor pressed inward. “Avery, this is stupid.” “Correct,” Avery said. “Stupid and necessary.”
He pulled the Timed Limiter free. The ring was heavy for its size, metal etched with shallow grooves that didn’t look like decoration so much as instructions. He pressed his thumb into a notch, felt a faint click. The limiter didn’t hum. It didn't glow. It simply refused to be ignored. “Limiter set,” Avery said, and brought the ring down onto the floor between the braces with a sharp, decisive motion. For a heartbeat, nothing happened. Then the air tightened around the ring as if the corridor had inhaled and was suddenly forced to hold its breath. The pressing sensation eased. The walls stopped trying to converge. The floor stopped pretending it wanted to be a slope. The seam’s shimmer dulled—still present, but less eager. Eli let out a breath that sounded more like a laugh than relief. “You just… threatened the world with a clock.” Avery didn’t smile. “I reminded it that endings exist.”
He felt Eli’s gaze on him—quick, searching. Eli knew, better than most, what it meant to be pulled toward completion. To feel the pressure of a pattern that wanted to finish itself through you. Behind them, from the right passage they hadn’t taken, Avery thought he heard footsteps. Not echo. Not wind. Footsteps, matching theirs, just a fraction behind. Eli didn’t look back. Neither did Avery. Some things became real the moment you acknowledged them. Avery made a decision: he wouldn’t. They moved forward together, leaving the limiter seated in the stone like a quiet threat. Avery marked the wall with chalk—three short strokes—and then a single arrow that pointed only one way. No second door. Not today.
The passage opened into a wider chamber that should have been daylight-bright but wasn’t. The light inside felt filtered, as if passing through thin cloth. Avery spotted the reason: the ceiling was webbed with pale seams, lattice scars branching like frost. In the center of the chamber, a low pile of stones formed something that might once have been a work surface—a collapsed station, a half-made place. Rusted metal brackets protruded from the rubble like broken ribs. A survey site. Not a full post. Not a hold. A temporary field node—somewhere someone had tried to work fast, work clean, and then leave before the world changed its mind. Eli drifted toward a wall and pressed his fingertips against an old painted symbol, faded but still legible if you knew what to look for: a boundary line, a channel line, and a cap mark. “Continuist,” Eli murmured.
Avery approached slowly, eyes scanning the chamber the way you scanned a room you were about to sleep in: for exits, for angles, for anything that looked like it might repeat. Then he saw it. A flat stone slab, half-buried, with a thin metal plate bolted to it. The plate was scratched and scuffed, but someone had etched words into it with deliberate care. Not many. Just enough. Avery knelt and brushed debris away until the etching was clear. IF THE ROOM GOES QUIET, STOP. IF THE QUIET STOPS, LEAVE. Eli let out a sound between a grunt and a sigh. “That’s… cheerful.” Avery’s throat tightened for reasons that had nothing to do with fear. He’d read that line before. Not here. Somewhere else. Somewhere he couldn’t place cleanly. A familiar instruction in a place that felt unfamiliar by inches.
He rose slowly, then took a slow sweep of the room again—listening, not like Eli listened, but the way a measured person listened: to what was present, and to what was missing. The chamber was quiet. Too quiet. Eli’s head lifted. His eyes unfocused slightly, gaze turning inward as if he were listening down a long corridor nobody else could see. “Avery,” Eli said, voice suddenly thin. “The quiet—” Avery’s hand rose. “Don’t.” Eli swallowed. “It’s… wrong.” Avery didn't argue. He didn't need to. The hair on his arms had already started to lift. Avery reached into his pack and pulled out his slate again. He wrote without looking down. Frame. Conduit. Limiter. Under it, he added one more line. Do not repeat. Then, because he couldn’t help himself—because procedure was the shape he built around panic—he began to salvage. A coil of cord. A bracket that could be reforged later. A half-cracked ceramic vial that still smelled faintly of clean water. The kind of small supplies that kept you alive when the world decided to tighten. Eli watched him, tension building in his posture. “Avery,” Eli said again, and this time there was no humor in it. “We shouldn't stay here.” Avery slid the salvaged items into his pack and stood. “Agreed.”
He turned toward the chamber’s far exit—a narrow passage half-hidden behind fallen stone. Then the seam in the ceiling brightened. Just for a moment. A single lattice scar flared pale, like a thread pulled taut. Eli stumbled backward as if the light had struck him physically. His hand flew to his coat pocket. Avery heard the faintest clink of metal against glass. Eli didn't drink. Not this second. He just held the flask like a talisman. “Avery,” Eli breathed, voice raw. “Something’s coming through.” Avery’s heart beat once, hard. He didn’t draw a gun. He didn't have one. Guns solved the wrong problems in a world where the room itself could decide to change its rules. Instead, he pulled the Veilglass shard free again, held it low in his fist, and stepped between Eli and the center of the chamber. “Then we don’t let it finish,” Avery said quietly.
The quiet didn't stop. It broke—not with sound, but with presence. Something moved at the chamber’s edge where shadow collected too neatly. Not a person. Not an animal the way animals were supposed to be. A shape that suggested a four-legged gait but failed to commit to it, edges shimmering as if the creature couldn't decide how many inches it occupied. Its eyes caught the light—pearly, wrong, reflecting the lattice scars above. Eli’s voice went soft, almost reverent in the worst possible way. “Veil-glazed…” Avery tightened his grip on the Veilglass shard. He didn't know what the creature wanted. He knew what it could do. He knew the rule that mattered most right now: No improvising. Not with the Echo listening. “Avery,” Eli whispered, too close to fear now, “if it circles, don’t let it complete the loop.” Avery stepped sideways—one deliberate pace, careful not to form a circle around anything. He lifted his chalk and, with a quick, practiced motion, drew a boundary line on the stone between them and the creature. The creature’s head tilted. It watched the chalk line like it meant something. Maybe it did. Avery held his breath and made a decision that felt like the first true one of the day. “Move,” he said to Eli—quiet, firm. “Now.” They backed toward the far passage, keeping their shapes open, refusing to become a pattern. The creature advanced one step. Avery brought the Veilglass shard up, not as a weapon, but as a reminder: conduit, yes—but also a lure, a risk, a thing that could make the room behave worse if handled wrong. The creature’s shimmer intensified. The lattice scars above brightened in sympathy. Eli’s fingers dug into Avery’s sleeve, just once. A warning. A plea. Not to be brave. To be careful. Avery kept his eyes on the creature and his feet on the stone. No circle. No second door. No skipping the limiter. They reached the passage mouth. Avery’s heel bumped loose rubble, and the sound—too loud in the false quiet—made the creature flinch. It surged forward. Avery slammed his palm against the wall at the passage entrance and shoved the Timed Limiter ring—still ticking, still seated in his mind like a promise—into the memory of stone. Not physically. Not here. But conceptually. A practice. A habit. A refusal. “End,” Avery said, not as command, but as insistence. For a fraction of a heartbeat, the air tightened, and the creature’s forward motion stuttered, as if the world itself had been reminded that completion had a price. That fraction was enough. Avery and Eli slipped into the narrow passage and ran. Behind them, the chamber’s lattice scars flared once more—bright as pulled thread—then dulled as they put stone and distance between themselves and the place that wanted to finish its thought through them. They didn’t stop until the air felt honest again. When they finally did, breath burning, Avery leaned one hand against the wall and forced himself to count. One. Two. Three. Frame. Conduit. Limiter. Eli bent over, hands on knees, breathing hard. Then, without looking up, he said, voice rough, “You know it’s going to follow the marks.” Avery stared at the stone under his hand, at the faint chalk dust still clinging to his fingertips. “Yes,” Avery said quietly. “That’s why we don’t leave many.” Eli straightened slowly, eyes shining with something Avery didn't like seeing there. Not fear. Not exactly. Recognition. “Somebody built that site,” Eli said. “Somebody wrote that plate. Somebody tried to make it safe.” Avery nodded once, jaw tight. “And somebody left.” Eli’s gaze flicked toward the darkness ahead, where the corridor continued like a question that didn't want an answer. “…Or didn’t,” Eli said. Avery didn't respond. Because the truth was, he didn't know which was worse. And because, in the distance, the wind changed sides again.
FRAME 02
SURVEY POST: UNLATCHED
The air got honest again, but it didn’t get kind.
They ran until their lungs burned and their legs started to complain in that blunt, animal way that meant the body was about to take over decision-making.
When Avery finally raised his hand and forced a stop, it wasn't because he felt safe. It was because he knew what panic did to people in places that liked patterns.
He leaned one palm against the corridor wall and counted without looking down. One. Two. Three. Frame. Conduit. Limiter.
The words didn't calm him the way prayer calmed some people. They gave him something better: a shape. A set of edges. A way to stop his mind from rushing into the same corner over and over.
Behind him, Eli bent forward with his hands on his knees, sucking in air. For a moment, the drag in his voice was gone completely.
“That thing… back there,” Eli said, breathless. “It didn’t want us. It wanted the—” He swallowed and put a hand to his temple like he could hold his thoughts in place. “It wanted the loop.”
Avery didn't answer immediately. He listened—not the way Eli listened, not for whispers in the Veil, but for the world's simpler tells: the direction of the wind, the cadence of distant settling stone, the way his own footfalls behaved when he shifted his weight.
Everything was still slightly off, but it wasn't tightening anymore.
"Second doors want repetition," Avery said at last, because the truth was, repetition was the first tool anyone reached for when they were afraid.
"Every set at three," he continued, quieter. "Three steps. Three breaths. Three checks. That's how we keep our hands steady."
He tapped the wall once with his knuckles—sharp, controlled. "But second doors don't care about steadiness. They care about completion. They want you to do the same thing until you stop noticing what changes."
Eli swallowed. The drag started to creep back into his voice, not as weakness, but as armor.
"And when you stop noticing…" "The Echo does," Avery finished.
They stood there a moment longer than either of them liked, listening to the corridor breathe. Not wind, exactly. Pressure shifting, subtle as a thought you hadn’t meant to have. Avery looked back the way they’d come. The rock behind them was unremarkable—pale seam-lines fading into natural stone—except for the chalk. Three short strokes, and an arrow. His arrow.
He frowned. He didn't remember marking here. Eli saw the shift in his face and went still. “Avery.” Avery crouched and dragged two fingers over the chalk marks. The dust came away clean, bright against his skin. Fresh enough to be his. But his memory refused to seat it properly.
He stood, slow. "Loop," Eli said, and this time the word didn't have fear in it. It had resignation. "It's already trying."
Avery forced his breathing to stay even. Panic made patterns. Patterns fed second doors. He wouldn't give it the shape it wanted.
"We're not turning back," he said. Eli gave a thin, humorless sound. "We are already turning back. That's the point."
Avery didn't argue. He set his survey slate against his thigh and made three marks again—harder than before. He drew a box around them. A frame.
"Okay," he said, voice all procedure now. "We treat the corridor like a measurement. We don't 'walk.' We take a read."
Eli's brow furrowed. "In plain." "In plain," Avery agreed. Plain words didn't invite the world to get clever.
He took the Veilglass shard from its wrapping and held it low at his side, where it wouldn't catch much light. Eli flinched anyway.
"Just enough," Avery said. "Conduit, not temptation."
He pressed his thumb against the Timed Limiter's notch. A faint click answered—small, final, like a door latch deciding it would hold.
He didn't set it on the ground. He didn't have to. Limiter first, even in the mind.
"Time," Avery said. "We give this one minute to pretend it owns us. Then we end it."
Eli's mouth tightened. "And if it doesn’t end?"
"Then we do," Avery said, and hated how clean it sounded.
They moved. Not fast. Not slow. Measured.
Avery picked a point in the wall ahead—a chip of pale stone shaped like a crooked tooth—and walked to it without looking away.
He stopped with his boot toe just shy of the chip. He put his palm to the wall. Cold, honest stone.
Then he looked down. A shallow scrape across the floor, almost hidden under dust. A boot-drag line. Two lines, side by side. Their stride.
Eli saw it too and went rigid. “No.”
Avery lifted a hand, palm open. “Don’t name it,” he said softly. “Naming sticks.”
Eli nodded once, but the movement looked like it hurt.
Avery stepped over the boot-drag lines instead of into them. A stupid defiance, maybe. A small refusal.
The corridor did not like it. The air tightened for a heartbeat, and the sound of his boots went thin, as if the stone couldn’t decide whether to acknowledge his weight.
Avery's fingers closed around the Veilglass shard. He didn't raise it. He didn't threaten. He simply held it like a reminder: this world was not the only agreement in play.
The tightening eased. They continued.
At thirty paces, Avery found another mark. A tiny nick in the wall where chalk had caught, a pale smear that should not have been there. His chalk.
He tasted metal at the back of his throat.
Eli's voice came out almost whisper-clean. "It's folding us."
"Trying," Avery corrected. He refused to give the corridor victory in tense. "It tries until we agree."
He checked the Limiter with a glance he didn't need. He could feel its count, like pressure behind his teeth.
When the minute was close, Avery stopped. He didn't stop at an intersection. He stopped in the middle of the corridor, where nothing invited the pause.
He turned his body a fraction—not enough to make a circle, not enough to complete any shape—and placed the flat of his palm against the wall.
"End," he said, not as command, but as boundary.
The Limiter's count clicked over in his mind. For a heartbeat, the corridor's air stuttered.
Then something shifted. Not the stone. Not the light. The story of the corridor changed, the way a sentence changes when you cut off its last word.
The boot-drag lines behind them blurred, as if the dust couldn't decide whose memory it belonged to.
Eli let out a breath that shook. "Did we—" "Not yet," Avery said.
Ahead, the corridor widened slightly. Not a fork. Not a second door. Just space. A place where the stone forgot to press in.
Avery took it as permission, but not granted by the Veil. Granted by their own refusal to repeat.
They walked on. And slowly, the world gave them something it hadn't offered in a long while: Signs. Not drift signs. Not lattice scars. Human signs.
Faded paint on the wall—three angled strokes, half-erased. A boundary line. A channel line. A cap mark. Continuist.
Eli's shoulders dropped a fraction. Relief, and then immediate suspicion. Relief was never free here.
Avery ran his fingers over the paint. Old. Dry. Flaking. "This route was worked," he murmured.
"Worked and left," Eli said. Avery kept moving, eyes sharper now. "Worked and meant," he corrected. "Someone tried to build a frame that would outlast them."
Ahead, an archway opened into a broader cut of stone. Not natural—too squared, too deliberate.
Anchor-iron brackets were set into the rock, rusted but intact, the honest hardware of people who had believed the Root could be persuaded to hold.
The air changed at the threshold. Not thin. Not tight. Simply… held, as if the corridor had been told, once, to stop pushing.
Avery slowed. On the right side of the arch, bolted into the stone, was a small metal plate. The edges were dulled by years of grit.
Someone had scored it with a diamond point, neat and careful. SURVEY POST — 07. Below it, in smaller cuts: LATCH STATUS: UNLATCHED.
Avery's jaw clenched. There were only two reasons to label a latch. Either it mattered. Or someone wanted you to notice it.
Eli stepped close, eyes scanning the plate without fully focusing on it, as if direct attention would make it hungry. "Unlatched means the limiter's gone."
"Or disengaged," Avery said, though he didn't believe his own softness. A limiter didn't "disengage" by accident. A limiter left on purpose meant someone had accepted a debt.
He crouched and looked at the stone just below the plate. A shallow groove. A worn slot. A place where something circular had sat flush, like a ring pressed into the Root. A Timed Limiter mount. Empty.
Eli's voice dragged again, protective. "Avery. We shouldn't go in."
Avery didn't answer immediately. He checked the seams overhead. Faint lattice hairlines, but not flaring. He listened for footsteps behind them. Nothing. Not even the wrong kind of nothing. Just the honest hush of a place that had been sealed once and was remembering what quiet felt like.
He reached into his pack and pulled out his chalk. Not to mark. To test.
He dragged the chalk along the arch's inner face—just a whisper of white. The squeal came back right. No delay. No half-beat.
Eli blinked like he'd been slapped. "That's… clean."
"Clean isn't safe," Avery said. But his hand tightened on the chalk anyway.
He stepped forward, one boot over the threshold. The air didn't compress. The stone didn't argue.
Inside, the passage widened into a chamber that had once been built to hold people and their work: low stone platforms, collapsed shelving, a half-caved wall where anchor-iron had been pried free by time or by hands.
A field post. A place to stop, measure, write, and leave.
The smell hit him next—faint, dry, like old Embercoal that had burned down to nothing but memory.
Eli hovered at the threshold, not fully entering, like a man who didn't trust the room to admit him twice. "You feel that?" he asked.
Avery nodded. "A frame," he said, and the word tasted strange, like he'd found it where it shouldn't exist.
He took three steps into the chamber—no more—and stopped. He set his slate against his knee and wrote: Frame: Post 07. Conduit: Veilglass present. Limiter: absent (unlatched).
Then, underneath, he added one more line, harder than the rest. Do not complete circuits.
Eli finally stepped in, but only to the edge of Avery's shadow. His eyes kept flicking to the corners where dust gathered too neatly.
"Avery," he said, almost gentle, "if this place is unlatched… then what did it let through?"
Avery stared at the far wall, where another Continuist mark had been painted long ago—boundary, channel, cap—and beneath it, someone had scratched a second message into stone with blunt desperation.
IF YOU FEEL THE ROUTE REPEAT, STOP. IF STOPPING FEELS FAMILIAR, LEAVE.
Avery's throat tightened. Because comfort was what you felt right before the world decided you'd stopped paying attention.
And this room—this held, quiet room—felt almost familiar. That was enough to make him afraid.
He shifted his stance carefully, refusing any shape that could become a loop, and looked past the collapsed shelving to a darker recess at the back of the chamber.
Something like a work surface sat there, half-buried, its top scarred by tools and time. A proper survey table, maybe. Or a place someone had used to leave a warning.
Avery didn't move toward it. Not yet.
He counted once more under his breath. One. Two. Three. Frame. Conduit. Limiter.
The missing word hung in the air like an open latch. And somewhere deeper in the post, the quiet waited to see if it would be answered.
FRAME 03
LOCKED DESIGN
The world did not return to normal.
It *stopped trying to be wrong.*
That was worse.
Avery did not speak for the first sixty steps.
He counted them.
Not aloud. Not even in a whisper. The count lived behind his teeth, paced against breath and pressure. When it reached sixty, he stopped—not at a junction, not at a marker, but in the middle of a corridor that offered nothing.
"End," he said quietly.
Not a command. A boundary.
He waited.
Nothing corrected.
That was the problem.
Eli leaned against the wall like it might drift away if he didn't.
"You feel it," Eli said, voice dragging at the edges. "It's… not pushing anymore."
Avery didn't answer immediately. He lifted the survey slate, tapped once, twice—then a third time, deliberate spacing.
Frame. Conduit. Limiter.
"Pressure reduced," Avery said. "Not resolved."
Eli huffed a quiet laugh. "Yeah. That's worse."
Avery did not disagree.
They moved again.
Slow. Deliberate. No repeated steps.
The corridor had changed.
Not visibly. Not in any way that could be drawn or mapped—but the *behavior* of it had softened. Where before the air pressed, now it held. Where before sound dragged, now it arrived clean.
Too clean.
Avery marked the wall. Chalk, three strokes—angled, precise.
The mark stayed.
He didn't trust that.
A Veil-moth drifted past them, wings trailing faint light.
It shouldn't have been here.
Eli watched it go, eyes narrowing slightly.
"They follow edges," Eli muttered. "Thin places."
Avery nodded once. "Indicator, not cause."
The moth passed through a section of wall.
Not around.
Through.
It did not slow.
They stopped.
Avery did not mark this time.
He crouched, pressed two fingers to the stone, then three. Held. Counted.
"No fracture," he said.
Eli tilted his head slightly, like he was listening to something further away.
"…it's already open."
Avery looked up.
"What is?"
Eli blinked once, slow.
"…nothing."
Avery watched him for a second longer than necessary.
Then stood.
They found it twelve steps later.
It looked like a door.
That was the first mistake.
Set into the wall—perfectly aligned, clean edges, proportions that made sense. Anchor-iron hinges. A handle worn just enough to suggest use.
Normal.
Avery did not approach.
"Second Door," he said.
Eli didn't answer.
Avery waited.
Still nothing.
"Eli."
"…yeah," Eli said quietly. "Yeah. I know."
Avery shifted his stance slightly—not turning fully toward it, not giving it a complete frame.
"Observe only," he said.
"Don't complete it."
Eli nodded.
"…don't look too long either."
Avery didn't like that addition.
He stepped closer.
Not directly.
Angle offset. Three paces. Stop.
The door did not move.
Avery blinked.
It *wasn't* a door.
Not entirely.
The frame held—but the edges… didn't agree with themselves. Lines that should meet *almost* did, then corrected when looked at directly.
When Avery glanced away—
It shifted.
Not position.
State.
Like it was deciding which version of itself to be.
"Don't—" Eli started.
Avery already knew.
He adjusted his breathing. Slowed his perception. Reduced fixation.
Peripheral observation.
The door *bent.*
Not visibly—but in logic. The top edge slanted inward in one version, outward in another. Depth collapsed, then extended.
Two states.
No limiter.
"Frame incomplete," Avery said quietly. "Conduit unknown."
"Limiter missing," Eli finished.
They both went still.
The handle moved.
Not fully.
Just—
A fraction.
Avery did not react.
Did not reach.
Did not acknowledge.
"Three checks," he said.
"Yeah," Eli whispered.
"Yeah."
Avery marked the ground instead of the door.
One.
Two.
Three.
The door opened.
Not outward.
Not inward.
It simply—
*stopped being closed.*
Inside was not a room.
It was a structure.
Avery did not step through immediately.
He leaned, just enough to see without committing.
The space beyond was anchored—but incomplete.
Anchor-iron supports held a shape that should have formed a chamber, but one section was missing. Not broken. Not collapsed.
*Absent.*
Like something had been removed from the idea of the room itself.
"…it's waiting," Eli said.
Avery's jaw tightened slightly.
"For what?"
Eli swallowed.
"…for the piece."
Avery stepped in.
The pressure changed instantly.
Not heavier.
More… attentive.
The structure was deliberate.
Survey work. Old. Careful.
Frame: partially established.
Conduit: unclear, but present—etched lines ran along the floor, converging toward the missing section.
Limiter: nowhere.
Avery exhaled slowly.
"This was built without completion," he said.
Eli shook his head slightly.
"No," he said. "It was built *for* it."
Avery crouched near the edge of the missing section.
There was no hole.
No drop.
Just—
absence.
His hand hovered over it.
Did not enter.
Something sat nearby.
Small.
Unimportant.
A shard of Veilglass—dull, misaligned, like it had failed to attune properly.
Avery picked it up.
It vibrated faintly.
Wrong frequency.
"Not usable," he said.
Eli didn't look at it.
"…it's not supposed to be."
Avery turned slightly.
Something else caught his attention.
On the far wall—etched lightly, almost erased—
Three marks.
Frame.
Conduit.
Limiter.
The last mark was incomplete.
"Someone stopped," Avery said.
Eli shook his head again.
"…no," he whispered.
"They ran out of time."
Avery stood.
"We don't complete this," he said firmly.
Eli nodded immediately.
"Yeah."
"Yeah, we don't—"
"—complete it."
They both froze.
Avery blinked.
"…say that again."
Eli frowned slightly.
"I didn't—"
"—complete it."
Silence.
Avery's hand tightened around the Veilglass shard.
"…we just said that."
Eli's breathing slowed.
"No," he said carefully.
"…we're about to."
"—complete it."
The room reset.
They were standing at the threshold.
Door closed.
Marks unmade.
Shard gone.
Avery inhaled sharply—but controlled it.
"Do not move," he said immediately.
Eli didn't.
Good.
"Echo loop," Avery said. "Three repetitions."
"Yeah," Eli whispered. "Yeah, I know."
"On three, we break pattern."
Eli nodded.
"…okay."
"One."
The handle twitched.
"Two."
The frame shifted.
"Three."
Avery turned away.
Completely.
Eli did the same.
"End," Avery said.
The pressure snapped.
When they turned back—
The door was gone.
Not hidden.
Not closed.
Gone.
The wall held.
Solid.
Unbroken.
Eli let out a breath that shook harder than before.
"…it didn't like that."
Avery nodded once.
"No," he said.
"It didn't complete."
They stood in silence for a moment longer.
Then Eli spoke.
Quiet.
Careful.
"…we've been here before."
Avery looked at him.
Slowly.
"Explain."
Eli hesitated.
For once, he didn't have the words immediately.
"…not like this," he said finally.
"…but I remember the shape of it."
Avery didn't respond right away.
Instead, he marked the wall again.
Three strokes.
They held.
"Memory is not evidence," Avery said.
Eli nodded.
"…yeah."
A pause.
"…but it's not nothing either."
They moved on.
The corridor felt longer now.
Or shorter.
Avery couldn't decide.
At step forty-two, Eli stopped.
Not abruptly.
Just—
stopped.
"What," Avery said.
Eli didn't look at him.
"…someone's here."
Avery's hand moved toward the limiter at his side.
"No indicators," he said.
Eli shook his head slowly.
"…not here."
A pause.
"…close."
Avery listened.
Nothing.
"…she doesn't like open doors."
Avery went still.
"…who."
Eli blinked.
Confused.
"…I didn't say—"
A voice cut through the corridor.
Clear.
Calm.
Precise.
"Then close them."
Avery turned.
No one stood there.
Eli's breathing picked up slightly.
"…you heard that."
"Yes."
Silence stretched.
"…Sister Or—"
The world slipped.
For a moment—
The corridor wasn't a corridor.
It was wider.
Brighter.
Older.
Three figures stood where they were.
One of them was Avery.
Older.
Still.
Unmoving.
Eli saw him too.
"…that's not—"
The moment snapped.
Back.
Corridor.
Stone.
Pressure.
Avery's heart was steady.
He made sure of it.
Footsteps approached.
Measured.
Even.
This time—
They did not vanish.
She stepped into view like she had always been there.
Not arriving.
Not appearing.
Simply—
present.
Robes marked with seal-lines, each one precise.
Hands steady.
Eyes that did not search—because they already knew where to look.
She studied the wall where the door had been.
Then the marks Avery had made.
Then Eli.
Finally—
Avery.
"Surveyors," she said.
Formal.
Certain.
Avery straightened slightly.
"Continuist," he replied.
She inclined her head a fraction.
Acknowledgment.
Not respect.
"Open doors are debts," she said.
Her voice did not rise.
It did not need to.
Eli swallowed.
"…we didn't—"
She raised a hand.
He stopped speaking.
"I know," she said.
A pause.
Then, quieter—
More precise.
"You failed to complete it."
Avery's expression didn't change.
But something in his stance did.
"…intentionally," he said.
Her gaze shifted to him fully now.
Weighing.
Measuring.
"Good," she said.
A breath.
Then—
"You won't always."
Silence.
Eli glanced at Avery.
Then back at her.
"…you knew it was here," Eli said.
She didn't answer immediately.
Instead, she looked past them.
Down the corridor.
Toward something that wasn't visible.
"I knew it would be," she said.
Avery felt that settle wrong.
"Prediction?" he asked.
Her eyes returned to him.
"No."
A pause.
"Memory."
The air tightened.
Just slightly.
Eli let out a small, unsteady breath.
"…that's not how that works."
She studied him.
Longer than she had Avery.
"You're early," she said.
Eli froze.
"…what."
She didn't clarify.
Instead, she turned slightly.
Just enough to break the shape of the three of them.
Not completing a triangle.
Avery noticed.
Of course he did.
"Sealwright," he said carefully.
She inclined her head again.
"Sister Orin."
The name settled into place like it had always been there.
And for a moment—
Just a moment—
The corridor repeated.
Her head inclined again.
"Sister Or—"
The sound cut.
Reality corrected.
No one spoke.
Avery didn't mark it.
Didn't name it.
But he felt it.
The pattern hadn't ended.
It had only—
paused.
FRAME 04
PROJECT CHIMERA: INBOUND
Then everything wavered. The edges of the corridor blurred. Light stretched and bent as if reconsidering where it belonged. The stone beneath their boots pulsed faintly, then… nothing.
A warm, sterile room replaced the jagged corridor. Monitors lined a white wall, wires looping like a calm river. Machines hummed low. The smell was of clean air, not dust or stone. A single figure sat at a console, head bent in concentration.
She stirred. Dark hair pulled back, glasses catching the glow of screens. She was not Orin—but in a heartbeat, the mind traced the resemblance, the posture, the careful, deliberate motions. Dr. Sarah Chen.
She lifted a hand to adjust a monitor, unaware that her hands echoed gestures Sister Orin had made only moments before, in a place that defied conventional measurement.
"Energy patterns," a voice said behind her. Another researcher, clipboard in hand, spoke calmly, "They spike again. Same rhythm as yesterday. Same… anomalies. "
Sarah frowned, adjusting a dial. The data was messy, impossible to reconcile with the simulations. "If the patterns hold, we're going to need a closer observation point. " She hesitated, scanning the readouts. "And someone needs to go there… physically. The voxel-based rendering is breaking down at the quantum level. "
Her colleagues exchanged quiet, careful glances. One of them—a man with steady hands and a clipped voice—spoke, "Do we know what it *is*? Could we—"
"Unknown," Sarah cut in, tone precise. "Unknown, but we measure. That's what we do. We go where the data leads, not where comfort sits. Project Chimera doesn't proceed on assumptions. "
The room hummed. Monitors blinked. A map overlay pulsed with points of light—locations that didn't exist in conventional space. A lattice of anomalies. A city of numbers and signals.
Sarah traced one with a fingertip. The line shimmered in response, as if acknowledging the attention. She leaned closer, frowning. "It's… waiting," she said, low. "Waiting for us to see it directly. "
Behind her, a younger colleague, Dr. Avery Chen, glanced up from the adjacent console. "Do you think it's safe? "
Sarah shook her head. "Safe is not the point. Observation is. Accuracy. Repeatability. " She tapped a sequence into the console. A portal-like ripple appeared on the monitor—a faint shimmer, not yet physical, not yet threatening. Only a hint that something could exist, if touched.
Elijah Jay Marcus, watching the pattern, rubbed his temples. "It's… alive in a way. Or responsive. I don't know which. " His tone was measured, deliberate. Not a trace of wonder, not a trace of fear, just observation. "Whatever's happening in the Continuum, the voxel matrix is destabilizing. It's not random. "
Sarah didn't look at him. Her eyes stayed on the monitor, on the points of light that danced like a fractured constellation. "We go there," she said. "Not because we know what we'll find. Because someone must. Because someone measures. We make the data real. Continuum Prime needs answers. "
The air in the room tightened. Machines hummed louder. The ripple on the monitor pulsed again, brighter. Avery Chen and Elijah exchanged a glance. Kaden Ave Williams stepped forward, a hand brushing a wire, checking a connection. "The projection," he said. "The interface—it's syncing. The lattice is… folding toward us. "
Sarah glanced at him, expression controlled. "Then we go. Carefully. Procedure first. Observation above all. "
They suited up. Checked instruments. Calibrated the fields. A ripple of light formed across the floor, like a shallow wave caught in a sunbeam. It wasn't dangerous—yet. It was not yet alive. But it called.
"Ready? " Sarah asked, her voice calm.
Avery Chen, Elijah, and Kaden nodded.
Sarah stepped forward. The shimmering field accepted her weight. Instruments blinked. Monitors counted down.
"Wait," Rook said, his voice quiet but firm. "The timing's off. "
Sarah paused, one foot still hovering over the field. "What do you mean? "
"The transference matrix," Rook said, studying the shimmering field. "It's not stabilizing properly. If we go in too close together, the spatial coordinates might overlap. " He checked his handheld scanner. "Give me thirty seconds. I'll calibrate the entry sequence. "
Kaden frowned at his own console. "He's right. The lattice harmonics are fluctuating. We should stagger the transitions. "
Sarah nodded slowly. "Fine. Rook, you go last. We'll proceed in ten-second intervals. Avery Chen first, then Elijah, then Kaden, then me. You follow when the field stabilizes. I'll monitor the transference stability from my console. "
"Understood," Rook said, already adjusting the calibration settings.
Sarah kept her eyes on the stability readouts as the team began to transition. "Avery Chen's signature is clean. Elijah's following. Kaden's matrix is holding. " She watched the data flow. "The field harmonics are within acceptable parameters. " The coordinates were randomizing as expected—no fixed destination points, just scattered entry into the Continuum's vast territory.
But Rook's signature was different. The quantum collision was affecting his trajectory. Instead of randomizing, his coordinates were locking onto a specific point. A fixed destination that shouldn't have existed. As if something in the Continuum was calling to its counterpart, pulling him toward a predetermined location.
Rook watched the countdown timer. Five seconds. Four. Three.
The field flickered violently.
"Something's wrong," Rook muttered, checking the readings. "The spatial matrix is collapsing. I have to go now. "
He stepped forward without waiting for complete stabilization.
The last thing the monitors registered was a double signature—two identical readings occupying the same space for a fraction of a second. Then one vanished. The other continued forward, slightly altered, slightly wrong.
---
SARAH - THE CONTINUUM
The transition wasn't clean.
For a moment, Sarah was still in the laboratory. Then the world began to change around her. The sterile white walls dissolved into pixelated blocks, then reformed into ancient stone. The monitors flickered between data streams and glowing lattice scars. The air itself seemed to shift from filtered to thick with dust and age.
She stumbled forward as reality reconfigured itself. Then came the terrifying part—her equipment began to change. The tablet on her belt pixelated, its smooth edges breaking into cubes before reforming. The watch on her wrist flickered between digital display and blocky approximation. Her field gear followed suit, each piece shifting between real-world precision and voxel approximation.
Then her own body began to change.
Sarah gasped as her hands pixelated, fingers breaking into tiny cubes before reforming. The sensation was terrifying—like being unmade and remade piece by piece, but without pain. Her vision flickered between smooth clarity and blocky edges. For a terrifying moment, she could see through her own hand as it dissolved into pixel data, experience more disorienting than painful.
The transformation peaked as reality finally settled. The stone corridors solidified, the lattice scars glowed steadily, and her body—her equipment—snapped back to what felt like normal. But was it? Sarah couldn't be sure. The memory of being pixelated, of existing as data points rather than matter, lingered like a phantom pain.
The corridor stretched ahead, ancient and unchanged. Lattice scars glowed faintly along the ceiling. The air felt thick, heavy with presence.
But something was wrong. Sarah tapped the watch on her wrist, bringing up the stability readouts. The transference matrix had gone critical. The system was failing.
"Avery Chen? " Sarah called out, her voice echoing slightly. "Elijah? Kaden? Rook? "
No response.
She pulled the tablet from its case on her belt. The readings were alarming. Four signatures detected, scattered across random coordinates throughout the Continuum. No pattern, no logic—just the chaos of uncontrolled transference. And the transference matrix that should have maintained their connection was... gone.
Fractured.
A cold feeling settled in her stomach. The transition hadn't just separated them. It had broken something fundamental about how they connected to each other, and to the reality around them. They weren't just in different places—they were in completely different regions of the voxel-based world, with no way to know how far apart they truly were.
The corridor behind her had sealed. No shimmering field, no way back. Just solid stone, as if it had never been anything else.
Sarah tapped commands on the tablet, cross-referencing with the watch display. "Stability check," she murmured. "Matrix integrity. Field harmonics. "
The terms felt like anchors, but they weren't holding. The system was failing.
---
AVERY - THE CONTINUUM
The transition wasn't clean.
Avery felt the equipment change first. The tablet on his belt pixelated, its smooth edges breaking into cubes before reforming. The scanner in his hand flickered between precision and blocky approximation. His field gear followed suit, each piece shifting between real-world precision and voxel approximation.
Then the world began to change around him. The sterile white walls dissolved into pixelated blocks, then reformed into ancient stone. The monitors flickered between data streams and glowing lattice scars. The air itself seemed to shift from filtered to thick with dust and age.
His body changed last—hands pixelating, fingers breaking into tiny cubes before reforming. The sensation was terrifying but brief, and without pain.
He stumbled forward as reality reconfigured itself, his research gear still intact on his body. All exactly as it had been in Continuum Prime.
Avery didn't arrive so much as find himself standing in a place that shouldn't have existed. A chamber of impossible geometry—walls that curved inward on themselves, a ceiling that was also a floor, lattice scars that formed patterns his mind couldn't quite process.
He was alone.
That was wrong. Eli should have been there. Sarah, Kaden, Rook. They'd entered together. Staggered, but together.
"Eli? " Avery called out, his voice absorbed by the strange architecture. No echo. No response.
His instruments were going crazy. Readings that made no sense. Spatial coordinates that kept changing. Time signatures that ran backward.
The worst part was the silence. Not the absence of sound, but the absence of the Veil's usual presence. The subtle pressure, the feeling of being watched by something vast and ancient. It was gone.
Or maybe he was the one who was gone.
Avery sank to the floor, head in his hands. For the first time since joining Project Chimera, he felt truly lost. Not just physically, but existentially. As if he'd been unmade and remade incorrectly.
---
ELIJAH - THE CONTINUUM
The transition wasn't clean.
For Elijah, everything happened at once. His body pixelated while the world dissolved around him and his equipment flickered between states. The sensation was overwhelming—like being caught in an explosion of data and matter, all three transformations happening simultaneously rather than sequentially, but without pain. His hands broke into cubes as the walls pixelated into blocks that reformed as ancient stone. His vision flickered between blocky edges and clarity while his tablet shifted between real-world precision and voxel approximation. The air changed from filtered to thick with dust and age all around him.
When reality finally settled, he stumbled forward, his research gear still intact on his body. All exactly as it had been in Continuum Prime.
The corridor stretched ahead, ancient and unchanged. Lattice scars glowed faintly along the ceiling. The air felt thick, heavy with presence.
"Avery? " Elijah called out, his voice echoing slightly. "Sarah? Anyone? "
No response.
He checked his tablet. The readings were alarming. Four signatures detected, scattered across random coordinates. No pattern, no logic—just the chaos of uncontrolled transference. They weren't just in different places—they were in completely different regions of the voxel-based world, with no way to know how far apart they truly were.
A cold feeling settled in his stomach. He wasn't just in the wrong place. He was in the wrong time, and completely isolated from everyone else.
The corridor behind him had sealed. No shimmering field, no way back. Just solid stone, as if it had never been anything else.
"Frame," Elijah murmured, touching his equipment. "Conduit. Limiter. "
The words felt like anchors, but they weren't holding.
Where was Avery? They should have arrived together. Close enough to see each other, at least. But there was nothing. Just endless corridor, glowing lattice scars, and the growing certainty that something had gone terribly wrong.
---
KADEN - THE VOID
The transition wasn't clean.
Kaden's experience was different—he felt the equipment change first. The tablet on his belt pixelated, its smooth edges breaking into cubes before reforming. The comms unit on his chest flickered between digital display and blocky approximation. His field gear followed suit, each piece shifting between real-world precision and voxel approximation.
Then the world began to change around him. The sterile white walls dissolved into pixelated blocks, then reformed into darkness. The monitors flickered between data streams and nothing at all. The air itself seemed to shift from filtered to the absence of everything.
His body changed last—hands pixelating, fingers breaking into tiny cubes before reforming. The sensation was terrifying but brief compared to the others, and without pain.
He stumbled forward as reality reconfigured itself, his research gear still intact on his body. All exactly as it had been in Continuum Prime.
Kaden arrived in darkness.
Not the absence of light, but the absence of everything. No space, no time, no matter. Just a vast, endless nothing that pressed in from all directions.
He couldn't breathe, but he didn't need to. Couldn't move, but he wasn't trapped. He simply... was.
In the distance, or perhaps not distant at all, he could see points of light. Four of them, scattered across the void. Each one pulsed with a familiar signature. Avery. Elijah. Sarah. Rook.
But they weren't just points of light. They were worlds. Tiny, isolated realities, each containing one member of the team. Each one sealed off from the others.
Kaden tried to reach for them, but he had no hands. Tried to call out, but he had no voice. He was just consciousness, floating in the space between spaces.
The worst realization came slowly. He wasn't just in the void. He was part of it. The space between the scattered team members wasn't empty—it was him. Or rather, he was the space that separated them.
The collision hadn't just affected Rook. It had fractured the entire transference, shattering the team into isolated fragments of reality, with Kaden himself becoming the void that kept them apart.
---
ROOK - THE CONTINUUM
The transition wasn't clean.
For a moment, Rook was still in the laboratory. Then the world began to change around him. The sterile white walls dissolved into pixelated blocks, then reformed into ancient stone. The monitors flickered between data streams and glowing lattice scars. The air itself seemed to shift from filtered to thick with dust and age.
He stumbled forward as reality reconfigured itself. Then came the terrifying part—his equipment began to change. The scanner in his hand pixelated, its smooth edges breaking into cubes before reforming. The comms unit on his chest flickered between digital display and blocky approximation. His field gear followed suit, each piece shifting between real-world precision and voxel approximation.
Then his own body began to change.
Rook screamed as his hands pixelated, fingers breaking into tiny cubes before reforming. The sensation was agonizing—like being torn apart and reassembled piece by piece. His vision flickered between smooth clarity and blocky edges. For a terrifying moment, he could see through his own hand as it dissolved into pixel data.
But it was worse than for the others. Much worse.
Because as his body pixelated, something else was happening. Two sets of data were fighting for the same space. His real-world form and... something else. Another version of himself that already existed here. The collision that had been detected in the transference matrix wasn't just a quantum anomaly—it was happening to him, right now.
Rook's body flickered wildly between two different forms. One moment, his familiar research team uniform. The next, weathered survey gear he'd never seen before. His face shifted between his own features and scars he didn't recognize. The pain was unbearable—like two different people trying to occupy the same physical space at the same time.
The transformation peaked as reality finally settled. The stone corridors solidified, the lattice scars glowed steadily, and his body—his equipment—snapped back to what felt like normal. But was it? Rook couldn't be sure. The memory of being torn between two forms, of existing as conflicting data streams, lingered like phantom agony.
Rook stood in the ancient stone passage, lattice scars glowing overhead. The air felt familiar, like a half-remembered dream. He looked down at his hands—his hands, but somehow not his hands. The scars were different. The knuckles were shaped slightly wrong.
A strange sense of déjà vu washed over him. Not just familiarity, but recognition. As if he'd been here before, recently. As if he'd just left.
"Hello? " Rook called out. His voice echoed, but the echo came back wrong. Delayed, then too soon.
He checked his equipment. Everything was there, exactly as it should be. But the readings were off. Spatial coordinates that kept shifting slightly, as if trying to decide where they belonged. Temporal signatures that wavered between two different moments.
Rook frowned, a headache forming behind his eyes. Fragments of memory surfaced—memories that weren't his. Walking this corridor with someone else. Marking walls with chalk. Facing down a creature made of shimmering light.
None of it made sense. He'd never been to the Continuum before. This was his first transition.
But something deep inside him insisted that wasn't true. That he'd been here for years. That he knew these passages, these corridors, these dangers.
A fragment of another life, waiting beneath the surface like lattice scars in the mind.
Rook shook his head, trying to clear it. The team. He needed to find the team.
But as he started down the corridor, a terrible certainty settled in his heart. He wasn't just looking for his teammates.
He was looking for himself.
And something was wrong. Very wrong. His vision blurred. The corridor seemed to stretch and compress like a faulty signal. A pain shot through his chest—not physical, but existential. As if two versions of himself were fighting for the same space, the same existence, the same moment.
Rook stumbled, clutching his head. The memories weren't just fragments anymore. They were flooding in, overwhelming him. Two lives, two timelines, two sets of experiences all demanding to be real.
The lattice scars overhead flared violently, responding to his instability.
One step. Two steps. Three.
Then nothing.
---
The field in the laboratory continued its silent death. Four isolated signatures, scattered across random coordinates throughout the Continuum. Three holding steady in different regions. One fading fast at a specific, predetermined location.
Sarah Chen stared at her tablet, her face pale. The transition had failed catastrophically. The team was scattered across the vast voxel-based world, possibly trapped, possibly worse. There was no voxel version of their laboratory here—just ancient corridors and impossible geometry, the remnants of civilizations that had nothing to do with Project Chimera.
And Rook... Rook's signature was flickering. Deteriorating. As if whatever had come through the transference wasn't stable enough to survive the collision with itself. As if the composite being created by the quantum merger was falling apart. The coordinates showed he hadn't landed randomly like the others—he'd been pulled to a specific location, as if called by something already waiting there.
"Status report," Sarah said into the comms on her watch, knowing there would be no response. "Anyone? "
Silence.
The only sound was the hum of failing machinery on her tablet, and the quiet whisper of a world that had swallowed her team whole.
On her display, Rook's signature flickered one last time.
Then vanished completely.
FRAME 05
STABILIZATION & POSITIONING
The reflection in the polished metal was not quite hers. The angles had sharpened, the curves planed away as though the Continuum had redrawn Dr. Sarah Chen with nothing but straight lines and perfect geometry. She traced the edge of her own jaw and felt the lattice scars beneath her fingertips answer with a single, courteous pulse.
Her Project Chimera tablet rested on the stone, power cells steady at forty-two percent. Static hissed across the screen like wind trapped inside a narrow cut, yet beneath it beat one clear signal—regular, deliberate, almost patient. She adjusted the tracker with steady fingers.
"If I can follow this," she said, voice low, "I can find the others. Or at least the place where the world still remembers how to end."
She inventoried her gear once more: research pack intact, medical kit sealed, power cells rationed like breath. The chamber carried the faint scent of old Continuist work—chalk dust, treated wood, the memory of careful marks. Ancient, but not empty.
---
The room did not end. It simply refused to continue making sense.
Dr. Avery Chen pressed both palms to the stone and felt it shift beneath them by careful inches, as if the corridor were reconsidering its own shape. When he moved too quickly his hands fractured into tiny cubes at the edges, then reassembled. The flicker was brief, but the memory of it stayed in his bones like a warning.
His handheld scanner spat fragments of Sarah's voice through heavy static. He answered anyway. "Sarah? I'm here. The geometry is… negotiating."
He drew the survey slate from his pack—the same familiar weight—and made three short marks. Frame. Conduit. Limiter. The words still worked even when the world did not.
"If I can find a stable frame," he murmured, "I can navigate this. If not, I need to find where the stability went."
---
The face in the water puddle was his but not his. Features almost identical yet subtly wrong, like a perfect copy made by someone who had never understood the original. Elijah Jay Marcus watched the reflection ripple as he knelt. The water showed a version of himself that was sharper, cleaner, more geometric than he remembered being.
His watch comms unit remained dead, screen black and unresponsive. Four signatures drifted somewhere in his awareness, yet none could be reached. Complete isolation.
When his fingers brushed the ancient stone they pixelated for a heartbeat—tiny cubes breaking apart and reforming. The sensation was brief but left a phantom tingling that made him close his fist tight. This place was rejecting real-world biology.
Frame. Conduit. Limiter. The words felt hollow now. He rose slowly, scanning the corridor ahead. "If this place is trying to unmake me," he whispered, "I need to find a way out before it finishes the thought."
---
There was no body to observe in the void between spaces, yet Kaden Ave Williams felt his consciousness sharpen, growing more geometric. He was not in the void—he was the void. The space separating the scattered points of light that were his teammates.
His experimental comms unit hummed faintly, the company-boosted technology responding to the emptiness itself. Four points of light flickered in his awareness: Sarah, Avery, Elijah, and himself—tiny worlds suspended in the dark between worlds.
Brief flashes returned—needles, monitors, voices explaining that the experiments were for human advancement. Not full memories yet. Only fragments.
"The experiments made me able to do this," he thought, learning to navigate the consciousness-space that had no physical reference. "If I can boost the signal enough, I can reach them."
Then the transition came. Kaden materialized in the voxel world, his new form settling into geometric lines that felt both natural and deeply wrong. The void-enhanced comms began to cut through the interference.
"I am not in the void," he said aloud, tasting the stone air. "I am the void. And now… I am in this world too."
---
The face that looked back was neither one thing nor the other. A hybrid of two existences fighting for the same space—features shifting between smooth human skin and precise geometric edges that refused to settle. Rook's body flickered, unstable but alive.
His scanner surged with signal near the lattice scars, the experimental device responding to something vast. Brief memory-floods washed through him—two lives, two timelines—demanding to be real. Not detailed yet. Only the overwhelming pressure of dual existence.
Something pulled him forward through the ancient passages. The lattice scars glowed brighter. Then the portal appeared: a stable anomaly shimmering like heat above invisible flame.
Rook stepped through and emerged face-to-face with two figures who looked exactly like the missing members of his team.
"Didn't you just enter that portal?" the man asked, eyes wide. Beside him, the surveyor reached automatically for his survey slate.
Rook's voice came rough. "You look… exactly like them. But you're not them, are you?"
The man exhaled. "Our Rook went into that portal and never came back."
The surveyor made a careful mark on his slate. Subject emerged claiming alternate origin. Hybrid characteristics noted. Portal behavior inconsistent.
Rook felt the truth settle. "If your Rook disappeared into that portal… and I came out of it… then it is a bridge."
---
"Kaden, can you hear me?" Rook's enhanced scanner sliced cleanly through the interference. "Your experimental comms might cut through this."
The reply arrived clear and immediate. "Rook! Clear as day. The void is boosting your signal."
Kaden relayed without pause: "Dr. Sarah Chen, I have Rook. He has found a stable portal."
Sarah's voice answered through static, relief cutting through the hiss. "Kaden—thank God. Ask him if it is safe."
---
"Sarah wants to know if it is safe," Kaden relayed.
Rook made the decision. "Tell her I just went home and back. Watch this."
He stepped through the portal, vanished for three measured seconds, then returned through the same shimmering surface. The transition was seamless.
"Tell Sarah it is perfectly stable."
Kaden's voice carried the coordination: "Rook tested it. It is safe. He went to the real world and back."
"Tell Dr. Avery Chen we are moving toward the signal," Sarah instructed, her tablet already tracing the route. "We are monitoring all four points. Elijah is out there—we will find him."
"They are converging," Kaden observed, monitoring the four points of light.
---
The team had a way out. A clear plan. A stable portal. A communication network held together by Kaden's unique position. They were moving toward one another.
Then the warning came.
"We have a way out," Kaden said, voice tightening. "But something just found Elijah."
Through their devices the others saw it: a shape moving behind Elijah with deliberate purpose. Dr. Sarah Chen, Dr. Avery Chen, and Kaden watched in silence as the form closed in on their isolated teammate.
Elijah continued forward, completely unaware of what approached from behind.