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Now reading: Chapter 36: Episode 36: The Silence After from LOGGED IN AS MY PERFECT SELF, a Fantasy novel by SophiaWatkins007.

There was no explosion.

There was no sound.

One mont the corridor humd with energy, and the next it vanished like soone had pulled the power cord from the world.

Every screen went black.

Every light died.

The air felt empty.

Sarya stood frozen, her hand still pressed to the stabilizer device.

The mark on her skin was gone.

Not dim.

Not faint.

Just... gone.

Kael grabbed her shoulders. "Sarya."

She blinked slowly.

"I can’t feel it."

Her voice sounded distant, even to herself.

Elira tapped at her console. Nothing responded. The systems were offline.

"The corridor frequency dropped to zero," Elira whispered. "It’s completely silent."

Sereth did not appear.

There was no projection.

No connection.

Hollen’s voice cut in faintly through a backup channel. "What happened? We just lost all readings."

Sarya looked down at her hand again.

The skin was smooth.

Normal.

She felt lighter.

And sohow colder.

"I think I severed it," she said quietly.

Kael stared at her. "Severed what?"

"My link."

The building trembled softly.

Not from pressure.

From release.

Outside, the sky seed clearer than it had been in days. The strange flickers were gone. The tension in the air had lifted.

Elira ran toward the window.

"The fractures across the cities are fading," she said. "They’re dissolving."

Kael looked back at Sarya.

"You stopped it."

Sarya did not feel victorious.

She felt empty.

---

Hours later, ergency systems were restored.

Basic power returned.

Reports ca in from other regions. No new distortions. No new cracks. No pulses.

The red circle that had centered over their city was gone.

Everything was stable.

Too stable.

Sarya sat alone in the dical wing while sensors scanned her vitals.

Elira studied the data.

"Your neural readings are normal," she said carefully. "Even the stress patterns are lower."

Sarya flexed her fingers.

She tried to reach inward.

Tried to sense the corridor.

There was nothing there.

No hum.

No pull.

No warmth.

"I feel... ordinary," she admitted.

Kael stood near the doorway.

"That isn’t a bad thing."

She gave him a weak smile.

"For once."

---

By evening, the council held an ergency eting.

Sarya stood at the center of the room as representatives from the three realms appeared through limited channels.

Even without the corridor active, residual communication links still worked.

Sereth’s image flickered faintly.

"The instability has ceased," Sereth confird. "The pressure has dispersed."

Hollen folded his arms. "And the breach?"

"Dormant," Sereth replied.

The word hung heavily in the room.

Dormant ant asleep.

Not dead.

Sarya lifted her head.

"It was tracking ," she said. "So I removed myself."

Sereth’s eyes narrowed slightly. "You altered your anchor signature completely."

"Yes."

"You are no longer the corridor’s center."

She nodded.

Hollen frowned. "So who is?"

Silence.

That question had no clear answer.

Elira spoke carefully. "Without an anchor, the realms drift apart naturally."

"That could be safer," Kael suggested.

"Or it could weaken long-term stability," Sereth countered.

Sarya listened.

For the first ti since everything began, she was not the focus of the energy in the room.

She was simply a person.

Watching.

Waiting.

---

That night, Sarya walked through the city alone.

No guards.

No escorts.

The streets felt different.

People laughed again. Vendors reopened stalls that had closed during the disturbances. Children played without glancing nervously at the sky.

Normal life had returned.

She should have felt relieved.

Instead, she felt like she had stepped out of sothing she barely understood.

Her hand brushed against the place where the mark once glowed.

Nothing answered.

Kael found her near the bridge.

"You disappeared," he said.

"I needed to know what it felt like."

"And?"

She looked at the water below.

"Quiet."

He stood beside her.

"You saved millions of people."

"I might have only delayed sothing worse."

He did not argue.

Because both of them knew that was possible.

After a mont, he asked softly, "Do you regret it?"

She thought about that carefully.

"I regret not understanding more before I did it."

"But you would still make the sa choice?"

"Yes."

He nodded slowly.

"I would too."

---

Back at the facility, Elira stared at a monitor long after everyone else left.

There was no corridor signal.

No distortions.

No unusual readings.

Just steady data.

Normal patterns.

She leaned back in her chair.

Then frowned.

A tiny fluctuation blinked in the corner of the screen.

So small it could have been noise.

She zood in.

The line moved again.

Once.

Then flattened.

Elira stared at it.

"Probably residual drift," she muttered to herself.

She saved the reading anyway.

Just in case.

---

anwhile, in a place no sensor could see—

Sothing stirred.

It did not feel Sarya anymore.

It did not sense a clear anchor.

But it rembered pressure.

It rembered resistance.

And it rembered change.

The absence of connection did not confuse it.

It adapted.

Slowly.

Searching.

The corridor was silent.

But silence was not the sa as peace.

Far above the visible spectrum, in a layer beyond the known frequencies—

A new pulse began.

Soft.

Weak.

And entirely unfamiliar.

---

Back on the bridge, Sarya felt a faint chill.

Not pain.

Not energy.

Just a strange sense of being watched.

She looked up at the sky.

It looked normal.

Calm.

Clear.

Kael noticed her expression.

"What is it?"

She hesitated.

"I don’t know."

Because she truly did not.

The mark was gone.

The connection was gone.

And yet—

For just one second—

She thought she felt sothing shift.

Inside the facility, Elira’s saved reading blinked again.

Stronger this ti.

The line on the graph curved upward very slightly.

Then steadied.

Not at zero.

At a new frequency.

One that did not match the old corridor signature.

Elira’s eyes widened.

"That’s impossible."

She called up comparative data.

Nothing aligned.

This was not the sa bridge.

Not the sa breach.

Not the sa pattern.

She whispered to herself, "What did she create?"

---

On the bridge, Sarya pressed her hand to her chest.

Her heartbeat felt steady.

But underneath it—

There was sothing else.

She looked at Kael.

And for the first ti since the severing—

She smiled.

Because whatever this was—

It did not feel like it was chasing her.

It felt like it was forming.

Back at the console, Elira’s screen flashed.

The new frequency spiked suddenly.

The graph jumped.

And the reading stabilized at a clear signal.

Strong... alive.

Elira whispered into the empty room,

"Sarya..."

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