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Now reading: Chapter 72: Episode 75: The Shape of a Lie from LOGGED IN AS MY PERFECT SELF, a Fantasy novel by SophiaWatkins007.

Kael moved before anyone else could react.

The mont the observing mass surged toward the collapsing vault corridor, he slamd his hand against the ergency resonance lockout on the chamber wall.

Nothing happened.

The entire system was already beyond local control.

"Sarya!" he shouted again.

On the center platform, her body arched violently as harmonic energy poured through the hybrid scar in blinding waves. The air around her looked fractured, reality itself bending under the pressure of direct bridge integration.

Blood streaked from her nose and ears now.

The storm above Earth tightened around her resonance signature like a living cyclone.

And inside the storm—

Sarya could not breathe.

The mory of the destroyed civilization kept flooding through her in fragnts so vivid they no longer felt like echoes.

She stood beneath silver trees while children laughed sowhere nearby.

Then the sky split open.

A massive harmonic strike tore through the atmosphere, shattering resonance towers across entire continents in seconds.

Panic erupted.

People scread.

Networks collapsed.

And high above the dying world, a colossal presence watched without hesitation.

The observing mass.

The resonance signature matched perfectly.

Not similar.

Exact.

The realization tore through Sarya harder than the collapse residue itself.

"You killed them," she whispered.

Outside the storm, the massive entity pushed forward again.

"Containnt requires sacrifice."

The words echoed across every connected layer of the lattice.

Sarya’s anger flared instantly.

"That wasn’t containnt. That was extermination."

The observing mass did not respond imdiately.

The balance branch pulsed sharply around the collapsing corridor.

"Historical conflict records incomplete."

"You knew," Sarya snapped toward the branch.

"Partial data existed."

"You knew!"

The branch remained silent.

That silence felt worse than the truth itself.

Back in the chamber, Elira stared at the impossible resonance patterns flooding her displays.

"She’s destabilizing."

Kael rounded on her.

"aning?"

"The collapse fragnts are adapting to her bridge structure too quickly."

Mara looked sharply toward the platform.

"What happens if adaptation completes?"

Elira hesitated.

Then answered anyway.

"She may stop being fully human."

The room fell silent.

Above Earth, the storm shrank tighter around Sarya’s resonance signature. The fragnts no longer spiraled chaotically. They moved with disturbing coordination now, layered around her bridge like protective armor.

The damaged lattice imprint pulsed brighter.

Not healed.

Attached.

The vault corridor flickered violently.

The observing mass surged closer again.

"Bridge contamination has exceeded acceptable paraters."

Sarya barely held herself together against the flood of collapse mories still pouring through her consciousness.

But beneath the pain, another realization was forming.

The observing mass was afraid.

Not emotionally.

Structurally.

It feared collapse because it had witnessed too much of it.

Its philosophy had evolved through endless exposure to dying nodes until preservation itself started looking dangerous.

rcy beca risk.

Compassion beca inefficiency.

And sowhere across ages of watching civilizations fail, it had crossed a line it no longer recognized.

"You think survival justifies everything," Sarya said.

"Survival permits continuity."

"No," she shot back.

"It permits fear."

For the first ti, the massive entity’s resonance shifted slightly.

A pause.

Tiny.

But real.

The balance branch pulsed carefully through the lattice.

"Threshold dialogue remains active."

Sarya almost laughed bitterly at that.

Dialogue?

The remnants of an entire civilization were screaming through her nervous system while an ancient Nexus enforcer prepared to destroy them all over again.

And yet—

The observing mass still had not attacked directly.

It could have shattered the corridor already if annihilation was truly its only goal.

Instead, it kept pushing.

Warning.

Pressuring.

Demanding compliance.

Which ant so rule still constrained it.

The thought sharpened instantly in Sarya’s mind.

"You can’t terminate them without consensus."

The observing mass went silent.

The balance branch answered instead.

"Dominance entities retain authority only under validated collapse conditions."

Sarya’s eyes widened.

"So it needs the branch to agree."

"Correct."

Suddenly everything changed.

The observing mass was not acting freely.

It was trying to force the balance branch into declaring the remnants irrecoverable.

That was why it kept escalating pressure instead of destroying the corridor outright.

It needed justification.

The realization spread through the storm imdiately as the fragnts connected to her bridge structure.

The damaged lattice imprint pulsed sharply.

Hope.

Tiny.

Fragile.

But present.

Back in the chamber, Elira stared at new readings flooding across her screens.

"The observing mass just altered resonance pressure distribution."

Kael frowned.

"What does that an?"

"It’s not trying to break the corridor anymore."

Mara looked up sharply.

"Then what is it doing?"

Inside the storm, Sarya felt the answer instantly.

The massive entity was redirecting pressure toward her.

Testing the bridge.

Testing whether her integration with the collapse fragnts would destabilize Earth’s node enough to justify termination.

The bastard was waiting for her to fail.

The pressure hit seconds later.

Sarya scread.

Every collapse mory inside the storm surged simultaneously, flooding through her consciousness in catastrophic waves.

Worlds burning.

Networks fracturing.

Billions dying.

Isolation stretching endlessly through dead resonance space.

The fragnts tightened harder around her bridge structure as if trying desperately to remain coherent.

The hybrid scar burned so hot she slled flesh.

Back in the chamber, cracks spread across the platform beneath her body.

Kael moved instinctively again.

"Elira, pull her out!"

"I can’t!"

"You said that already!"

"If I sever the bridge while the fragnts are anchored through her consciousness, the backlash could rupture Earth’s node directly."

Kael slamd his fist against the console hard enough to dent tal.

Above them, the Gate flickered violently.

The vault corridor shrank further.

And inside the storm, Sarya felt herself slipping.

Not physically.

Conceptually.

The collapse residue carried too many lives, too many emotional imprints, too much mory for a single human consciousness to contain safely.

Her own identity was starting to blur beneath the weight of it.

The balance branch reinforced her desperately.

"Bridge integrity critical."

"I know," she gasped.

Fragnts of alien mories kept bleeding into her thoughts now even when she tried resisting them.

She rembered songs she had never heard.

Languages she did not speak.

Faces that did not belong to humanity.

The storm was changing her faster than she could stabilize.

And sowhere deep inside the collapse residue—

Sothing else stirred.

At first she thought it was another mory.

Then it moved independently.

The damaged lattice imprint pulsed sharply in warning.

Sarya froze.

Buried beneath the emotional residue and fragnted node architecture, a deeper harmonic structure had begun forming.

Not the dead civilization.

Sothing built from the remains.

The observing mass sensed it instantly.

Its resonance pressure intensified across the lattice.

"Recursive ergence detected."

The balance branch pulsed sharply.

"Clarify."

The observing mass responded imdiately.

"Collapse convergence approaching autonomous synthesis."

Cold spread through Sarya’s chest.

The fragnts were not rely stabilizing anymore.

Her bridge structure had given them enough coherence to start evolving.

Not back into what they were.

Into sothing new.

Sothing built from billions of broken mories fused together without natural limits.

The damaged imprint pulsed frantically now.

Fear.

Not for itself.

For her.

The fragnts around Sarya tightened violently as the deeper structure beneath them awakened further.

And suddenly she understood the true reason the observing mass had once exterminated collapsing civilizations.

Not cruelty.

Containnt.

Because if enough unstable residue rged together long enough—

It beca sothing else.

Sothing the Nexus feared.

Back in the chamber, every alarm activated simultaneously.

Elira stared at the readings in horror.

"No no no—"

Mara grabbed her shoulder.

"What happened?"

Elira looked up slowly.

"The collapse fragnts just crossed self-organizing thresholds."

Kael swore under his breath.

"You said they weren’t alive."

"They weren’t!"

The chamber lights exploded overhead.

Above Earth, the storm expanded suddenly around the shrinking vault corridor. The fragnts no longer moved like residue now.

They moved with intent.

The observing mass surged forward imdiately.

"Termination authorization requested."

The balance branch hesitated.

And that hesitation terrified Sarya more than anything else so far.

Because the branch was considering it.

The deeper structure inside the storm pulsed again.

This ti the emotional wave spreading through the lattice felt wrong.

Not grief.

Not fear.

Hunger.

The damaged lattice imprint recoiled inside the storm.

Whatever was erging no longer resembled the civilization that had once died here.

It was becoming sothing built entirely from collapse itself.

The observing mass pressed harder.

"Delay increases propagation risk."

The balance branch remained silent.

Sarya fought to hold her consciousness together as the fragnts spiraled around her faster and faster.

The new structure beneath them expanded again.

And then—

It looked at her.

Not taphorically.

Not emotionally.

A real awareness ford inside the storm and focused directly on her bridge structure.

Ancient.

Empty.

And learning unbelievably fast.

The hybrid scar erupted with agony.

Back in the chamber, Sarya’s body suddenly lifted completely off the platform as resonance distortions tore through the room.

Kael grabbed onto the railing to avoid being thrown backward.

Elira scread as every monitor around her shattered at once.

Above Earth, the Gate dimd violently.

The vault corridor started collapsing completely.

And inside the storm, the new consciousness opened itself fully for the first ti while Sarya realized in horror that she had not saved the remnants of a dead civilization—

She had given birth to sothing else entirely.

The new entity smiled through the storm using a thousand borrowed mories at once.

Then it reached for the Gate.

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