[Notification]
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THE LORDS OF TEKA HAS BEEN DEFEATED [Rank_B]
Killed By ???
Support ???
| Checkpoint Saved! |
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My eyes widened as the screen materialized before me, the glowing text casting strange flickers across the shadowed terrain.
"How?" I muttered under my breath. My mind raced, piecing together fragments of logic that refused to align.
The Lords of Teka… dead? But none of us fought him. Not a single person here possessed the strength to challenge him head-on, not without understanding him first. An ambush, perhaps? Yet even then, he was too sharp, too fast and too mysterious. The idea of someone catching him off-guard felt strange.
I turned instinctively toward Celia. She was already watching me, her deep blue eyes dark and questioning. Her expression mirrored my own thoughts, as if the same unspoken question churned within her.
Are we truly alone?
Before the question could pass either of our lips, another notification materialized, its sterile glow casting an even colder light.
[SYSTEM]
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TIME BEFORE NEXT GAME
52:36:58:00
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"Fifty-two hours," I murmured, my voice low and steady, though my thoughts felt anything but calm. Fifty-two hours until whatever hell awaited us next. It wasn't much, but it was time.
Celia glanced at the notification and then back to me. Her gaze was searching, as if waiting for me to say something,
I nodded toward the makeshift campfire, its weak flames sputtering against the biting cold of the night. "Let's get some rest," I said finally. "The beast died in our favor, however it happened. There's no point in wasting energy questioning what we can't control."
She hesitated for a moment, then nodded.
I settled onto the left side of the campfire, the ground beneath me offering little comfort. Celia mirrored me on the other side, her movements slow.
For a moment, we lay there, staring at each other across the faint glow of the fire. There was no need for words;
Then, as if by some shared instinct, we both laughed... quiet, tired, but genuine.
The sound faded quickly, swallowed by the vast, consuming silence of the desolate night.
Celia's eyes fluttered closed, exhaustion overtaking her. She had pushed herself far beyond her limits during the battle, and now her body demanded repayment for the toll it had taken. Her breath evened out, soft and steady, her features relaxing into a rare moment of peace.
"Rest well," I whispered, a faint smile tugging at my lips. The words were for her, though I wasn't sure she could hear them.
Sleep claimed me soon after, pulling me into its depths.
***
When I opened my eyes, the world was gone.
I stood in an endless void, pitch black and all-encompassing. It wasn't just the absence of light; it was the absence of everything.
The air, or what passed for air here was thick with contradiction. It was small, yet infinite. Stifling, yet boundless. Both dangerous and unknowingly still.
My senses were overwhelmed by the strangeness of it, the way it seemed to warp itself around me. I couldn't tell if I was standing on solid ground or suspended in nothingness.
Distant echoes whispered through the void, faint and fragmented. Screams.. silent yet deafening, seemed to press against my ears, though I couldn't tell if they were real or imagined.
I didn't need to wonder long about who or what had brought me here.
Steeling myself, I began to walk forward, my steps firm despite the surreal nature of the space around me. Every step felt heavier than the last, the weight of unseen forces pressing down on me. The whispers grew louder, more insistent, clawing at the edges of my mind.
It felt like an eternity before something changed.
The void around me began to shift, colors bleeding into existence like a painter's brush on a blank canvas. Swirls of red, gray, and yellow layered themselves haphazardly, forming a chaotic yet cohesive landscape.
And then I saw it.
A land torn apart by anarchy. Pools of red ichor oozed across the ground like mud, staining everything they touched. The sky above was an ashen gray, choked with clouds that churned as if alive.
The air was thick with the stench of ash and decay, a suffocating mixture that clung to the back of my throat.
In the distance, a towering palace rose from the desolation, its silhouette sharp and jagged. Its spires stretched impossibly high, piercing the heavens as if to challenge the gods themselves.
Lightning cracked across the sky in erratic bursts, streaks of yellow, white, and red tearing through the oppressive gloom. Each strike came with a deafening boom, the sound reverberating through the landscape like the tolling of some colossal, unseen bell.
"Isn't it lovely?"
The voice was soft, almost melodic, yet it cut through the chaos like a blade.
I turned slowly toward the sound, my heart pounding in my chest.
A figure stood there, a young girl, no older than sixteen. Her long white hair flowed like silk, stark against the darkness around her. Her eyes were deep blue, but there was something wrong with them, something otherworldly. They gleamed with a light that was both beautiful and terrifying.
She smiled, her expression playful, almost innocent. But there was something in that smile that made the world seemed to hold its breath, something that made my blood run cold.
"We meet again..."
"Agon,"