The aftermath of the mirroring incident hung heavy in Zarek Technologies like a storm about to break. The command center, once bustling with quiet confidence, had shifted to whispers, glances, and tightened patrol schedules.
Lucian sat alone in the scan chamber, stripped of his outer gear, electrodes trailing from his temples and collarbones. His eyes were hollow but alert, fixed on the screen that pulsed faint readings of his vitals.
Outside the glass, Rowan stood with Evelyn and Ava.
"Corruption levels are within normal range," Ava muttered. "But look at this."
She overlaid a scan from the Rift site and matched it to Lucian's waveform.
"They're identical," Rowan said, tension coiling in his gut.
"Not identical," Ava corrected, "But… harmonized. Like two instruments playing the same song in slightly different keys."
Evelyn folded her arms. "So what are we saying? This thing is a clone?"
"No," Ava said. "It's not physical enough for that. It didn't breach containment. It didn't act like an entity that wanted to attack. It acted like an..."
Rowan filled in, "...Echo."
Ava nodded slowly. "An Echo—energy-based remnants that sometimes manifest after prolonged Rift exposure. Most are unstable. They mimic data, behavior, sometimes even memories. But this one isn't just replaying a moment. It's responding."
She tapped another holo-screen, bringing up archived files.
"The last Echo incident was six years ago. Rift Site 27-B. A containment squad encountered a humanoid form mimicking a deceased Esper—down to voice patterns and mannerisms. It lured the team in, then vanished. Left behind a corrupted zone with mirror properties. We lost three agents trying to stabilize it."
Evelyn added quietly, "That Echo didn't make contact. It didn't try to hurt anyone. But it destabilized everything around it just by existing. This one? It's more intact. More… willful."
---
Investigation Wing – Later
Rowan slipped into one of the sealed archives using Evelyn's override access. He traced back Lucian's mission history—looking for anything that might hint at prolonged exposure or missing data.
Back in the archive wing, Rowan worked in silence, eyes locked on Lucian's classified logs. The deeper he dug, the more the sense of urgency twisted in his gut. The figure in the Rift wasn't random—it was calculated. And he needed to know why.
Rowan traced access logs through the encrypted stacks until he came across a restricted file tree marked with scarlet clearance tags: PROJECT VEIL.
The system hesitated, then unlocked under Evelyn's temporary override.
The contents were damaged—he could see scrambled data, blacked-out names, redacted fields. But the key points were clear. A Rift experiment. Lucian listed as one of five Espers. The others marked as MIA.
He scanned further—several logs were completely overwritten with black scribbles. Diagrams of containment chambers. Blurred images of energy signatures spiking out of control. One corrupt photo showed a silhouette strapped to a containment rig, its form convulsing as Rift light surged through it.
And beneath one record, scribbled in someone's handwriting: "The Esper survived. The tether didn't."
Rowan leaned back, hand trembling slightly.
His pulse echoed in his ears. He could still hear Lucian's voice from the night before—quiet and uncertain. The way he said, "It knows me."
Now, Rowan understood why.
This wasn't an accident. Lucian had been exposed—deliberately, brutally—and then silenced by omission. They didn't just bury the mission. They buried what it did to him.
Rowan gritted his teeth and stared at the final image again. The flickering, corrupted silhouette strapped to the resonance rig wasn't just an Esper in pain.
It was Lucian.
And no one had been there to guide him.
Rowan's chest tightened. He reached for the console's edge, grounding himself. He would not let that happen again.
Not while he still breathed.
The logs were sparse. The mission summary listed a Rift testing facility on the southern edge of Aedric's Wastes. Lucian was listed as one of five Espers deployed. The other four were marked as MIA. No final report. Only a closure code: LEVEL 7 — ABANDONED.
"Lucian," Rowan whispered, "what the hell happened to you?"
---
Lucian's Quarters — That Night
Lucian didn't sleep.
When he finally did, the Rift welcomed him.
But it wasn't a nightmare.
It was grief.
It was a place.
He stood on a reflective plain that stretched endlessly. The world was colorless, drenched in grey light, the air silent but crushing. The figure stood across from him—clearer now, horrifyingly clear.
It wasn't just Lucian's face.
It was the exhaustion in his expression, the cold resignation in his posture. The figure looked like a version of him that had stopped fighting a long time ago.
Around them, structures crumbled into ash. And buried in that ash—Rowan's jacket. Rowan's voice. Rowan's pulse.
Lucian fell to his knees in the dream, unable to breathe. He screamed, but the air swallowed the sound.
The figure knelt in front of him, mirroring him exactly. Then it spoke.
"You were supposed to stay."
Lucian tried to move, to crawl toward a voice he could barely hear behind the wind.
"Rowan!" he cried. "ROWAN!"
No answer.
Only silence, and the echo of himself—untouched, unmoved, and alone.
Then everything shattered like glass.
It spoke.
"You were supposed to stay."
Lucian awoke with a jolt, sweat slicking his back. His heart raced. And when he looked beside him, Rowan was already there, hand clasping his tightly.
"I felt it," Rowan said. "Through the bond. Are you okay?"
"No," Lucian breathed. "It knows me. It doesn't just mirror me. It remembers."
---
Zarek Vault: Rift Shard Room
Quinn and Elias stood before the pulsing shard, the room quiet save for the rhythmic hum of containment fields and distant mechanical sighs. The shard floated within its stasis chamber—no longer inert, no longer still.
Quinn glanced at the vitals again, narrowing his eyes. "It's adapting."
Elias took a step forward, his gloves glinting faintly in the low light. "It's not reacting to proximity. It's reacting to presence. Lucian's specifically."
He released a controlled stream of his corrosive field—not to harm, but to test. The energy curled near the shard, then was drawn in like vapor. Not burned. Not resisted. Consumed.
"That's not absorption," Elias said. "That's mimicry."
Quinn nodded grimly. "It's tethered. Like a heart beating outside the body. Still syncing."
There was a long pause before Elias added quietly, "This isn't just a shard anymore. It's a fragment of something larger. Possibly… something still alive."
"It's tethered," Quinn muttered. "Not to just any Rift. To him."
---
Communication Console – Main Command
"We need to try contact," Ava said. "We've triangulated the signal distortion from the Havenfield Rift. If we project an encoded sync-frequency... maybe it'll respond."
Rowan and Lucian stood ready. Monitors flared to life. The Rift shimmered on-screen, the figure standing at its center.
Lucian stepped forward. "If you're me… what do you want?"
Static.
Rowan input a guided resonance pulse.
The figure blinked—but didn't respond.
"Try modulation," Ava said.
Another sync.
This time, the lights flickered.
The figure tilted its head—then disintegrated like smoke.
Monitors went black.
"No response," Quinn said.
"No," Evelyn said slowly, "That was the response."
---
"We've run out of choices," Evelyn said grimly. "If it's not coming through… then someone has to go in."
"You're not seriously considering—" Quinn began.
"We need answers," Evelyn cut in. "That Rift is holding something. Something tied to Lucian. And maybe to all of us."
Silence stretched across the room.
Lucian looked to Rowan.
Rowan nodded. "We do this. Together."
---
The operations bay buzzed with activity. A Rift entry of this scale hadn't been sanctioned in years.
Elias stood near the equipment lockers, methodically securing the fastenings on his lightweight combat vest. Quiet, as always, but his posture was unreadable—whether from focus or something else.
Lucian stood apart from the others, adjusting the cuffs on his reinforced gloves, his eyes locked on the Rift monitor.
Rowan approached with a sealed case of sync boosters and emergency tether bands. "You okay?"
Lucian didn't answer at first. "I'll be fine when we're done."
"Let's make sure we all come back," Rowan replied.
Nearby, Quinn double-checked deployment routes on his digital slate. Ari and Juno sparred playfully in the corner, tension written in the stiff edges of their movements.
Alexander Hawke paced quietly, his eyes constantly sweeping the room.
Twenty-three others gathered: 10 B-class Espers, 5 A-class Espers, 8 B-class Guides. All handpicked. All trained for Rift stability and team sync.
One more figure stood near the edge—her silhouette sharp, her presence calm.
Vespera.
An independent Guide, unaffiliated with any Esper.
Her attire was dark and formal, layered in resistant fabrics and a long shawl marked with synchronist runes. Her dark brown eyes scanned the others with clinical precision.
"Didn't expect her," Rowan said under his breath.
"She requested to join," Evelyn confirmed as she approached. "And her record is too solid to decline. No ties. No liabilities. She's guided over thirty unstable Espers. Alone."
Lucian eyed her warily. "Is she here to observe or intervene?"
"Whichever we need," Evelyn replied. "She's one of our contingencies. If things fracture inside… she's authorized to act."
The room quieted as Ava stepped forward.
"This is not a clean mission. It's not a retrieval or a shutdown. It's exploration. Controlled incursion. Intel first, survival second. We don't know what's waiting, but the Rift knows Lucian. And by extension… it may know the rest of you."
A beat passed.
Rowan looked across the room at Lucian. He nodded once.
"We go together," Rowan said. "And we come back together."