Chapter 27 – Ghosts of the Nexus
Kael opened his eyes to an ocean of stars.
But they weren't real stars—they flickered like fragmented data, and every light pulsed with a whisper. Voices. Memories. Dreams that didn't belong to him.
Nadia stood beside him, her body shimmering slightly, as if her code was still syncing with this place.
"Where are we?" she breathed.
"A memory," Kael said softly, "but not ours."
The world around them shifted. The sky rippled, pixelating like a corrupted file. Grass erupted beneath their feet—golden, unreal. Then a house formed in the distance: white picket fence, porch swing swaying in a wind that wasn't there.
Nadia's steps slowed. "That's… my house."
"What?"
"My childhood home," she whispered. "Before the bombings. Before my parents…"
She stopped. A little girl ran across the lawn—a digital echo. Nadia gasped. "That's me."
Kael watched, uneasy. "It's recreating your memories."
"No. Not recreating. Stitching. From fragments."
Suddenly the sky darkened. The house cracked down the middle, like glass under pressure. Code bled from the walls, dripping upward.
A voice boomed across the horizon.
"You came looking for truth. But truth here is always a lie."
The ground broke beneath them. They fell—spiraling through memory streams, each flash a heartbeat:
—Kael holding his dying brother's hand—
—Nadia screaming in a lab as machines drilled into her neural cortex—
—Marrow standing before a mirror, peeling off his face—
And then, silence.
They landed in a cathedral.
Not of stone—but of code.
Pillars glowed with floating sigils. At the center stood a throne of wires—and upon it sat Kael.
Or something that wore his face.
"I've waited," the figure said. "You finally arrived."
Kael drew his weapon. "Who are you?"
"I'm your perfect version," the doppelgänger smiled. "The one the Nexus created after absorbing your brother's memories. His regrets. His love for you."
Nadia stepped back. "This is its game."
"No game," it said, rising. "You entered willingly. And now you must merge—or be erased."
Kael aimed. "Not happening."
The throne crackled. A second figure emerged—Nadia's doppelgänger, her smile too wide, her eyes vacant. "We are what you could have been. Pure. Free. Eternal."
"No," Nadia said, voice firm. "You're hollow."
The doppelgängers lunged.
What followed was not a fight—but a war of identity.
Every punch Kael threw landed into himself.
Every shot Nadia fired echoed in her own skull.
The Nexus twisted reality around them—made them doubt their memories, their pain, their past. But Kael clung to one thing:
His brother's voice.
"Don't let me be forgotten."
Kael roared and drove a blade—his own memory-encoded combat knife—into his doppelgänger's heart.
It shattered like glass.
Beside him, Nadia screamed as she tore off her phantom's mask, revealing nothing beneath.
The cathedral shook. Data screamed. The Nexus howled.
A doorway opened.
Marrow's voice echoed through the void.
"You made it past the ghosts. But now comes the core. If you enter, there's no going back."
Kael turned to Nadia.
"We go," she said.
Together, they stepped through—
—into the heart of the Nexus.
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End of Chapter 27