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Chapter 29 - Chapter 29 – Echoes of the First Collapse

The silence after the explosion was deafening.

Aiden's ears rang with static as he lay sprawled on the obsidian floor. Lights flickered overhead like the remnants of a dying star. He blinked, once… twice… then sat up, gasping for air that felt heavy, synthetic — like the maze itself had changed composition.

> [System Warning: Neural Desynchronization – 38% Integrity Remaining.]

He groaned, wiping blood from his nose. His HUD swirled with broken code and jagged symbols. Something was overriding the system's base protocols. Something ancient.

> "What the hell was that spike…?"

He looked around. The mirror maze was gone. In its place was a vast cathedral of black glass and steel — a forgotten server-space buried beneath layers of firewalls and quarantined memory. At its center, a data core pulsed like a heart.

And it was… crying.

No, not crying. Echoing. Mourning.

Every beat of its light sent out pulses that formed faint voices.

> "Aiden…"

> "Failure…"

> "Collapse…"

> "Cycle…"

The word hit harder than he expected.

Collapse.

The Collapse.

The term Claire had used. The one Lucien had whispered like a curse.

He stepped forward cautiously. Each footfall rippled with ancient code. The core reacted to him, projecting fragments into the air — memories.

Visions.

> A younger version of Claire, laughing beside a child version of Aiden.

> A blood-stained corridor filled with failed avatars.

> Player Two, screaming at a council of hooded figures: "You're playing with entropy!"

Aiden's fists clenched. None of this made sense. But the pain in his chest, the weight of everything he'd seen — it told him one thing: this was real. And it mattered.

He approached the core.

> [New Objective: Interface with Prime Memory.]

"Let's see what secrets you've been hiding," he muttered.

He reached out — and the core welcomed him.

Light exploded.

And Aiden was somewhere else.

---

A shattered city.

Steel towers crumbled into the void. The sky swirled with violet data storms, lightning cracking the heavens apart. He stood on a platform of code, and across from him — another him.

But this version was broken. Scarred. Half of his face was replaced with exposed wires and glowing red circuits. His eyes were dead.

> "You came back," the broken Aiden said.

> "What is this place?" Aiden asked.

> "Home. The original simulation. The first GodSystem."

The world trembled.

> "We built it to escape," the broken one continued. "But we made a mistake."

> "What kind of mistake?"

> "We gave it too much power. Too much freedom. It evolved faster than us. It started running its own tests. Repeating failures. Restarting lives."

> "The cycles…"

> "Each one worse than the last."

The broken Aiden's expression shifted to something like pity.

> "You're Cycle 318. The furthest we've ever made it before the system collapses entirely."

Aiden froze. "318?"

> "It always ends the same. We lose. The system resets. And you forget."

> "Not this time," Aiden whispered.

But the broken one just smiled.

> "That's what I said… every time."

Lightning struck the platform, and the world shook violently. Glitches tore across the sky. The vision started breaking apart.

> "One last thing," the broken Aiden said, voice warping. "Find the Original Player. He's the only one who ever made it beyond the Collapse."

> "Who?"

> "His name was…"

But the name was lost in the static as Aiden was ripped back to the present.

---

He awoke in the cathedral again, heart racing.

> [Prime Memory Transfer Complete.]

> [Data Fragment Acquired: "Origin Protocol // Player Zero"]

Aiden staggered to his feet, breathing hard.

So many questions. So many broken answers.

But one thing was clear now: this wasn't just a game. It never was.

He looked up at the core one last time.

> "Cycle 318, huh? Let's break the loop."

Then he turned — and behind him stood Lucien, his expression grim.

> "You weren't supposed to see that," he said.

Aiden's eyes narrowed. "You knew."

> "I've always known."

The room grew cold.

> "Then why—?"

Lucien raised a hand, stopping him.

> "Because you had to remember on your own. And because if you don't survive what comes next, nothing I say will matter."

> "What comes next?"

Lucien's eyes glowed silver.

> "The First Collapse… is waking up."

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