A Fractured Reality
I burst through the front door, my breath ragged, my heart hammering against my ribs. The street outside is bathed in the orange glow of the setting sun, but something is wrong—terribly wrong. The houses stretch in impossible ways, their angles distorted, as if reality itself is struggling to hold form. The air crackles with an energy I don’t understand. I stagger forward, rubbing my eyes. Maybe it's just my mind playing tricks on me. Maybe exhaustion has finally caught up. But then I see it—the old oak tree in Mr. Peterson’s yard, the one I climbed a thousand times as a kid, flickering like a bad signal on a TV screen. Panic tightens my chest. “Hey! Hey, Mr. Peterson!” I call out, spotting him on his porch, rocking back and forth in his favorite chair. He turns toward me, but his face is wrong. His eyes are unfocused, his mouth slightly open as if caught in some kind of trance. A second later, he vanishes, his entire body dissolving into thin air. I stumble backward, my knees nearly buckling. “No, no, no… this isn’t real. This can’t be real.” The street is alive with contradictions. The old bakery on the corner still has the sign from when I was ten. Mrs. Holloway’s house is back to its original brick before she repainted it white last summer. It’s as if pieces of the past and present are colliding, fighting for dominance. I spot a group of people down the road, their silhouettes sharp against the burning horizon. Relief washes over me. Maybe they can tell me what the hell is happening. I move toward them, but something is off. The moment they notice me, their eyes widen. A woman grabs her child and pulls him close, whispering frantically to a man beside her. A young guy in a hoodie takes a step back. One of them, a burly man in his forties, squares his shoulders. “You shouldn’t be here,” he growls. I swallow hard. “What?” “This place isn’t safe for you,” the woman hisses. “Leave. Now.” “Wait. Please, just tell me what’s going on. I—” A sharp, searing pain rips through my skull, and I drop to my knees, clutching my head. A flood of fragmented images crashes over me—memories that don’t belong to me, people I don’t recognize. Shadows stretching, warping. A voice whispering my name in a language I don’t understand. Then it’s gone. The pain, the visions, all of it. I look up, gasping for breath. The group is gone. The street is empty. My pulse pounds in my ears as I stagger to my feet, my whole body trembling. I force my legs to move, pushing forward, searching for something—anything—that makes sense. I turn a corner and freeze. My own house stands before me. But I just left it. And yet, there it is, unchanged. The front door is slightly ajar, light spilling from inside. I take a slow step toward it. The air grows colder. My breath comes out in misty puffs, though the night is still warm. I push the door open. Inside, the house is… wrong. The furniture is the same, but the colors are off. The walls are a shade darker than I remember. The smell of fresh-baked cookies lingers in the air—Mom’s recipe—but she hasn’t baked in years. And then I hear it. A chair scraped against the kitchen tile. I move cautiously, my footsteps silent. I peer around the corner. Someone is sitting at the kitchen table. It’s me. I stagger backward, my stomach twisting into knots. My double lifts his head, meeting my gaze with an expression so familiar it makes my skin crawl. His eyes are darker than mine, his features slightly distorted, as if he were a version of me from a place that shouldn’t exist. “Finally,” he says, his voice a perfect match to mine. “I’ve been waiting for you.” My mouth is dry, my thoughts a jumbled mess. “What… what the hell is this?” He leans forward, resting his elbows on the table, studying me. “You’re waking up. But you don’t understand yet, do you?” My hands clench into fists. “Understand what?” He tilts his head. “That you don’t belong here anymore.” The air thickens around me, pressing against my skin like invisible hands. The walls seem to pulse. My doppelgänger smiles—a slow, knowing curve of his lips. “I need to get out of here,” I whisper to myself, stepping back toward the door. His smile fades. “You can’t run from this. Not anymore.” I bolt. I don’t look back. My feet pound against the floor, my breath coming in ragged gasps. The moment I burst outside, the world shifts again. The sky is no longer the soft blue of twilight. It’s black. Not the black of night—but an emptiness, a void stretching beyond comprehension. The stars are gone. The moon is absent. I spin in place, desperate to anchor myself to something real. But my house, the street, everything is vanishing, dissolving like smoke in the wind. My hands shake. My heartbeat is deafening. Then, from the darkness, a voice—low and commanding. “You were never meant to remember.” A force slams into me, and the world shatters.Related Chapters
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 6
Breaking LimitsI take a deep breath, my muscles coiled like springs. The sensation of raw energy hums beneath my skin, an itch I can’t scratch. My body is no longer bound by the same rules. I feel it—every fiber of my being screaming for release, for motion, for something more. I need to push. I need to see how far I can go.The first test is speed. I lunge forward, the wind slicing past me as the world blurs. One moment, I’m at the end of my street. The next, I’m standing on the other side of town, my chest rising and falling in rapid bursts. My heart should be pounding from exertion, but it’s not. The rush of movement fills me with a heady kind of exhilaration.But then, the world twitches.The streetlights overhead flicker, their glow stuttering in odd, rhythmic pulses. The same couple I passed on the sidewalk a second ago reappears in front of me, walking the same path, holding the same conversation, their words eerily identical.I step back, a cold knot forming in my stomach. “W
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 7
Searching for the Past The drive to Darren’s place felt longer than it should have. Maybe it was the unease twisting in my gut or the memories stirring like ghosts in the backseat. Darren Cole wasn’t just an old military buddy—he was the one person who had my back when the world turned against me. If anyone could help me make sense of the chaos unraveling around me, it was him.But when I reached the spot where his house should have been, my breath hitched.There was nothing.No mailbox, no picket fence, not even the cracked driveway where we used to sit and drink beer after deployments. Just an empty lot overgrown with weeds, as if no one had lived there in years.A deep chill crept up my spine. This wasn’t right.I killed the engine and stepped out, my boots crunching against the gravel. The air felt too still, the silence too perfect. I walked to where his front porch should’ve been, kneeling to brush my fingers against the dirt. No remnants of a foundation. No signs of demolition
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 8
Ghost in the SystemI stared at my screen, fingers hovering over the keyboard, my pulse pounding in my ears. Darren had to be here—somewhere. Somewhere in the vast, sprawling veins of the government’s digital infrastructure, his name had to exist.I ran the search again, breathing shallowly and scrolling through the results.No matches were found.The words burned into my vision. My stomach twisted into a tight knot. Impossible. Nobody just vanished, especially not from a system that tracked everything—bank records, medical files, social security numbers, employment history. And yet, Darren was a ghost. A glitch. A name wiped clean from existence.My fists clenched, and before I knew it, I slammed them against the desk. "No. No way."I pulled up my secondary hacking interface, digging deeper. Bypassing firewalls. Scraping encrypted archives. Pulling fragments of forgotten data like a desperate archaeologist clawing through ruins.Nothing.I checked birth records, school transcripts, a
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 9
System Intrusion Detected The screen flickered—one moment, a stream of classified data, the next, a flashing red warning.INTRUSION DETECTED. TRACE INITIATED.A wave of panic hit me. I wasn’t supposed to be here. The system wasn’t supposed to react this fast. My fingers hovered over the keyboard as I searched for a way out. Too late. I had been careless. And now, I was exposed.My phone buzzed sharply in my pocket. Expecting a security alert, I grabbed it—only to feel my heart pound harder at what I heard.A low, mechanical voice whispered one word: "Run."Every muscle in my body tensed. Who was this? How did they know? There was no time to think. Instinct took over. I slammed my laptop shut, pulled out the USB, and jumped up.My apartment, once my safe space, was now a trap. If they had traced me, that meant only one thing—they were already coming. No sirens. No warnings. Just a silent execution.I stuffed my laptop into my backpack and grabbed burner phones, hard drives, and every
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 10
The AttackThe first bullet zips past my ear, so close that I swear I feel the heat of its friction as it slices through the air. My breath catches. My pulse spikes. And then—everything slows.The world stretches into unbearable clarity as my enhanced reflexes take over, a gift I never asked for and a curse I can never escape. The system inside me does what it always does: it calculates. Within the span of a blink, a dozen potential escape routes manifest before my eyes. But before I can even act on them, something fractures in my vision—two versions of the same moment unfolding in tandem.One reality: I move too slow. The bullet finds its mark, ripping through my skull.The other: I roll left, just in time, just barely scraping by with my life intact.I don’t get to choose.The system does.I feel my body react before my mind even processes the decision. The muscles in my torso tighten, and I throw myself to the left, hitting the ground with a force that rattles my bones. The impact
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 11
System EvolutionPain. Deep, burning pain.I gasped and forced my eyes open. Blood dripped down my forehead, mixing with sweat and stinging my skin. My vision was blurry, dark spots dancing at the edges. The air smelled like burnt metal and gunpowder. It was thick and hard to breathe. My whole body ached, every movement like fire running through my nerves.But I was alive. Barely.The agent who had almost killed me lay a few feet away, not moving. His body showed the brutal fight we had just gone through. He still held his gun, his fingers limp around it. I took deep, shaky breaths and scanned the room for more danger. The fight was over, but this war was far from finished.A message flashed across my vision.[System Alert: New Function Unlocked – Combat Assistance]Then another.[Reality Override – Locked]What did that mean? My head was spinning, but I had bigger problems. I had to survive first. I forced myself to stand, wincing as pain shot through my ribs. Breathing hurt—a sharp,
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 12
The Overseers’ FootprintThe dim glow of my laptop screen flickered against the walls as I scrolled through the stolen files. Each document felt like a puzzle piece that didn’t quite fit. Then, a name caught my eye—Project Nexus. The moment I clicked on it, a chill ran down my spine. It felt like someone—or something—was watching me.The text on the screen was distorted, flickering, and rearranging itself as if the file was actively fighting to disappear. Sentences glitched, and whole paragraphs dissolved into static. My heartbeat pounded in my chest.“This isn’t normal,” I muttered.“What’s not normal?” Alex’s voice made me jump. He stood in the doorway, arms crossed, his face half-hidden in the dim light. He had that skeptical look again—the one that meant he didn’t trust my obsession with secrets.I pushed my laptop toward him. “This.”Alex frowned as he studied the screen. “Looks corrupted.”“No. It’s being erased. Someone doesn’t want us to know about Nexus.”His sharp eyes met m
THE ASCENSION SYSTEM CHAPTER 13
No Safe PlaceThe dingy basement reeked of burnt coffee and stale sweat, but it was the only place I could think of that was safe—at least, for now. The hum of old servers filled the space, blinking red and green like a pulse in the dark. I sat across from Elias Reed, a gaunt man with wire-rimmed glasses perched on his sharp nose, his fingers drumming impatiently against the desk."This better be worth my time, Tony," Elias muttered, cracking his knuckles before reaching for his keyboard. "I don't usually deal with ghosts.""I'm not a ghost," I said, though lately, it felt like I was. "Just a man being erased."Elias let out a dry chuckle. "Same thing." His fingers flew over the keys, navigating encrypted files like a surgeon working on open flesh. The glow of the monitors illuminated his face, and for a brief moment, I almost believed this was just another job for him. Just another puzzle.Then his hands stilled. His expression turned rigid."That's... impossible," he breathed.My gu
Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 40
The Overseers’ OfferThe world dissolved around me.One second, I was reaching for Kane, begging her to remember. The next, I was nowhere.Not darkness. Not light. Not even the static void I had grown used to when the system reset itself. This was something else. Deeper. A place between places, where time didn’t flow and space didn’t hold shape.The air was thick, heavy, pressing against my skin like unseen hands trying to crush me into nothing.Then, I saw them.The Overseers.They stood in a line, stretching into infinity, figures draped in shifting code, their bodies flickering between forms—human, machine, something beyond either. Their faces were featureless, but I could feel their eyes on me, studying, measuring.And then I saw them.The frozen figures standing behind them, trapped mid-motion, their bodies flickering with incomplete memories. My heart slammed against my ribs.They were all me.Hundreds. Maybe thousands. Versions of myself, erased, rewritten, trapped in a moment
CHAPTER 39
Kane’s ChoiceThe world was unraveling.It wasn’t just the usual flickers at the edges of my vision, the skips in time that made me question whether I had just blinked or lost an entire second of my life. No—this was different. Bigger. The walls around us pulsed, shifting like waves of data crashing against the fragile shore of reality. The system was reacting, rewriting, adapting.Zero wasn’t moving. Not yet. He stood at the center of it all, watching, waiting. His face was unreadable, but his stance said everything. If I made the wrong move, if I hesitated for even a second, he would end this.I wasn’t sure if I was ready for what that meant.Kane didn’t hesitate. She never did.“Elias,” she snapped, her voice sharp, urgent. “Failsafe. Now.”Elias looked at her, his fingers hovering over the tablet. “Are you insane?”“Do it.”He hesitated, just for a second, just long enough for the weight of what she was asking to sink in. I didn’t know what the failsafe would do, but the look in E
CHAPTER 38
Zero’s BetrayalThe air around us shifted, carrying the faint hum of something unnatural. A disturbance, subtle but undeniable. It crawled beneath my skin, setting every nerve on edge.Kane, ever perceptive, caught it too. Her hand hovered near her weapon, muscles coiled, ready. Elias was already scanning the hallway ahead, fingers twitching against his tablet.Something was waiting for us.Then, the shadows twisted.A ripple ran through the air, distorting the space in front of us like heat bending over asphalt. And from that shifting darkness, he stepped forward.Zero.For a moment, the sight of him made something in my chest tighten—an old reflex, an instinct carved from trust. He looked exactly as I remembered. Same sharp eyes, same knowing smirk, the same way he carried himself like he was always one step ahead.But something was wrong.His movements were too precise. His presence, too still. The flicker of life in his expression was nothing more than a well-crafted illusion.I r
CHAPTER 37
A Code Written in BloodThe vault smelled like cold metal and something else—something rotten, like data that had spoiled. The walls pulsed with dim red lights, stretching into endless rows of glass cases. At first glance, they looked empty.They weren’t.I stepped forward, breath fogging against the glass as I peered inside. A face stared back at me. Eyes wide. Mouth slightly open, like he’d been caught mid-sentence. A man frozen in time.Not dead. Not alive.Just gone.Kane moved beside me, her fingers hovering inches from the glass. “What the hell is this?”Elias was already moving, his bag slung over his shoulder as he pulled out a tablet. “A graveyard,” he muttered, running his fingers over the control panel. “Or a prison, depending on how you look at it.”My stomach twisted. “They’re trapped?”“They’re rewritten.” His voice was grim. “The system didn’t just erase them. It repurposed them.”I forced myself to look again. The man in the glass had no scars, no wrinkles, nothing tha
CHAPTER 36
The Fractured SelfThe road ahead stretched endlessly, a ghost of a world flickering in and out like it couldn’t decide if it wanted to exist. My boots kicked up dust, but even that felt artificial, like it was programmed to react the way I expected. Kane walked beside me, silent, her sharp eyes scanning the ruins ahead. Elias trailed behind, muttering calculations under his breath.I knew where we were going. The Overseers’ domain. A place where reality wasn’t a certainty, where time looped back on itself and people became echoes.But for some reason, I couldn’t remember why we were going there.I frowned, shaking my head. Something was missing—like a word on the tip of my tongue, slipping further away the harder I tried to catch it.Kane noticed. She always did. “What’s wrong?”“I…” I opened my mouth, but hesitation stopped me cold. What was wrong? I couldn’t explain it, but I felt lighter, like pieces of me were missing.“Tony,” she pressed, voice firm but not unkind. “Talk to me.”
CHAPTER 35
A World Outside the SystemThe world around us wasn’t fully formed. Buildings stood half-finished, their structures dissolving into static at the edges. The sky above flickered between shades of gray and deep violet, glitching in and out like a bad signal. It was a place that wasn’t supposed to exist—an abandoned zone, untouched by The Overseers.Kane and I stood in the middle of the street, our breaths visible in the eerie cold air. She kept a tight grip on the device we’d stolen, her knuckles white from the pressure.“This place feels wrong,” she murmured. “Like it’s waiting to disappear.”I agreed. The world here wasn’t stable. It was like standing on the edge of a dream, just before waking up.Then, a figure emerged from the shadows. A man, dressed in a dark, tattered coat, his face partially hidden beneath the hood. He stepped forward with a calculated slowness, his hands raised in a gesture of peace.“I was wondering when you’d find your way here,” he said.Kane tensed beside me
CHAPTER 34
The Core’s CoordinatesThe screen flickered, casting a cold blue glow over Kane’s tense face. Lines of encrypted data scrolled rapidly, filling the air with the soft hum of technology at work. My fingers danced across the keyboard, heart pounding as I decrypted the last layer. Then—Coordinates. A list of possible locations. The Core.Kane exhaled sharply beside me. "This is it." Her voice was quiet, but beneath it, a current of urgency rippled through.I swallowed. "We finally have something real."But before the words could settle, a chill ran through the room. The lights dimmed, not flickering—shifting, like the walls themselves were second-guessing their existence. Kane and I locked eyes. Outside the window, the city moved in ways it shouldn’t. A building that had been across the street was now beside us. People walked in slow, deliberate steps, their faces expressionless, heads subtly tilting in unison."The Overseers," Kane murmured, reaching instinctively for the knife at her b
CHAPTER 33
The Price of RebellionThe air here was heavy, thick with the weight of things that didn’t belong.I could feel it pressing down on my skin, humming through my bones—a silent scream buried in the fabric of reality. Kane and I moved cautiously through the remnants of what had once been someone’s last stand. The place had the same eerie stillness as the hideout before, but worse. This wasn’t just abandoned.It was frozen.A street half-formed, cutting off into an expanse of nothing. A doorway leading to nowhere, hanging in the air like it had been sliced from existence mid-thought. Cars, chairs, even the dust in the air—stuck in a single moment, refusing to move.Like time had decided to give up.Kane ran a hand over a rusted terminal embedded in the wall, her fingers pressing against dead keys. "Whoever they were… they didn’t get far."I crouched near a stack of papers scattered across the cracked pavement. Words scrawled in desperate handwriting, some neat, others jagged and frantic.
CHAPTER 32
The First RemnantI woke to the taste of blood in my mouth.For a second, everything was wrong—blurry, twisted. The world flickered like a broken screen, and shadows stretched in directions they shouldn’t. My heartbeat was loud, too loud, like it was trying to hammer its way out of my chest. Then, just as quickly as it started, the distortion snapped back into place, leaving me gasping on a cold, cracked floor.Kane's voice cut through the haze. "Tony."She was crouched beside me, eyes sharp, body tense. There was dust in her dark hair, and a thin cut ran along her jaw, but she looked intact. Alive."You're okay," she said, like she was trying to convince herself. "I caught you before you hit the ground. Mostly."My head throbbed. I forced myself upright, biting back a groan. "Define 'mostly'?""You didn’t die. You’re welcome."I let out a weak, breathy laugh. "Guess I owe you one."She stood, scanning the room we’d landed in. It was some kind of hideout—low ceilings, metal walls, the