I don’t recommend hallucinating shadow demons while your body’s rewriting your DNA.
Trust me, it’s not as fun as it sounds. The moment the Blind Stalker hit the ground, twitching like a broken marionette, I felt something inside me snap. And I don’t mean emotionally though, let’s be honest, that was already a trainwreck. No, this was literal. Like bones shifting without permission. Like my blood decided to throw a rave and forgot to invite my sanity. My head was on fire. Not metaphorically. Like, lava-in-your-skull, microwave-on-your-brain fire. > [Evolution Threshold Reached] [Processing Genetic Recalibration…] Great. The System decided it was the perfect time to update my firmware. I stumbled, nearly face-planting into the cracked concrete. Adrian caught me before I did a full nosedive. “Elias! Yo! You good? You’re turning kinda... zombie-colored, and I mean that in the worst way.” I couldn’t answer him. My mouth didn’t work. My eyes didn’t work. My everything didn’t work. Because then, the world changed. One blink, I was in a ruined city. Next blink void. No ground, no sky, just black. Endless, oppressive, “Oops-you’re-not-supposed-to-be-here” kind of black. I floated or maybe fell? Hard to say when gravity gives up on you entirely. Then they appeared. Figures. Tall, shadowy, shaped like people but absolutely not. Their edges flickered like static, their movements were smoke, and their eyes gods help me their eyes glowed a sickly golden, not fiery or warm. More like radioactive sorrow. They stood in a circle, staring at me like I was the uninvited guest at a very cult-y wedding. One stepped forward. Its voice wasn’t a voice. It was every whisper you’ve ever heard in a nightmare mashed into one sound. It slipped into my skull like a splinter. “You are not ready.” Nice to meet you too. I tried to move, speak, scream something but I was frozen. My limbs refused to budge. It was like being trapped in molasses and fear. “You are incomplete.” That stung. Especially because it was true. I could feel it this gaping absence inside me, like a puzzle piece yanked from my soul. The figure raised a hand. Or… tendril? Smoke-arm? Whatever. It didn’t touch me, not really. It just reached and suddenly pain. Pure, blistering, white-hot pain tore through my chest like a sword made of lightning. My vision exploded. Then....... Darkness. And pavement. And Adrian yelling. “Dude! You’re freaking me out!” I blinked, gasped like I’d surfaced from underwater, and rolled onto my side. My body was trembling, skin clammy, heartbeat way too calm for what I’d just experienced. “I… I saw something,” I rasped. “No kidding. You were just standing there twitching like someone yanked your plug.” I wanted to explain, but how do you tell your best friend you just took a field trip to a cosmic void and got roasted by Creepypasta Watchers? The System didn’t say anything. No updates. No smug comments. Just static silence. But I didn’t need it to tell me I was different again. I could feel it in the way my muscles moved, too fluid, too perfect. The way I could hear birds scuttling hundreds of feet away, or count every individual breath Adrian took like they were thunderclaps. It was terrifying. And addicting. “Let’s keep moving,” I said, mostly to distract myself. Adrian hesitated. “You sure you’re not gonna short-circuit again?” I gave him the best I-could-die-any-second shrug I could manage. “No promises.” We headed deeper into the city, through streets that looked like they’d lost a war to a tornado made of despair. Cars were overturned, windows shattered, the buildings leaning like they were drunk on hopelessness. Adrian pointed to a battered office building draped in ivy and sadness. “Safehouse. Or it used to be. It’s got reinforced walls and maybe working plumbing.” We slipped inside, navigating broken furniture and graffiti-covered walls. The air was stale but still breathable definitely an upgrade from collapsing tunnels. But then something went wrong. Again. Slow clapping echoed through the shadows. Now, unless you’re at a Broadway show, slow clapping is always a red flag. We both froze. And there it was. The Apex Hollowed. The same one from the tunnel. But different. Evolved. It stood in the doorway like a nightmare on pause. Taller than before. Its skin had darkened, plates of armor rippling across its chest. Its eyes no longer red burned gold. And worst? It smiled. Not a feral snarl. A human smile. Like it remembered how. Adrian raised his gun. “Oh, you’ve gotta be kidding me” The Apex’s voice rolled across the room, calm and smooth, like silk dipped in arsenic. “You’ve changed.” Okay. That was new. It spoke. Full sentences. Proper grammar. A Hollowed that passed English class? No thank you. Elias locked eyes with it. “What do you want?” The Apex tilted its head. “You’re still incomplete.” Boom. There it was again. The same exact words from the void. My stomach twisted. It knew. Somehow, it knew what I saw. Adrian didn’t wait for a monologue. He fired. Big mistake. The Apex blurred. That’s the only way to describe it. It didn’t move. It evaporated from one spot and reappeared inches behind me. I spun, instincts screaming, barely dodging a strike that would’ve opened me from neck to hip. It didn’t finish the attack. Instead, it leaned in close. “You’re almost ready,” it whispered. “But not yet.” Then it vanished. Just gone. Like it was never there. The silence that followed was heavier than a mountain. Adrian lowered his gun, panting. “Okay. I’m officially out. Let’s go find an island, build a treehouse, and never speak again.” I couldn’t even joke. Because the truth hit me like a truck full of Hollowed. The Apex was evolving, like me. It was stronger, faster and worse? It remembered. Hours passed. The sun dipped below the broken skyline, casting the city in shades of shadow. Adrian was asleep in the corner, snoring like someone who’d hit his daily trauma quota. I sat against the wall, staring at nothing. The whispers hadn’t left. They were still there, coiled in the back of my skull, humming with anticipation. Like they were waiting. I wasn’t dumb. Something was inside me. Something ancient. Something alien. And I wasn’t sure how much longer I could keep it buried. Then......the System finally returned. > [Genetic Sync: 89% Complete] [Next Phase: Integration] Awesome. Love that for me. Integration sounded suspiciously like “turn into something else.” I looked at my hands. They looked normal. Felt normal. But they weren’t. And neither was I. Adrian stirred. “We need a plan, man.” “I know.” “That Apex freak he’s not like the others. He’s… like you.” Yeah. I knew that too. And here’s the thing. We would meet again. And when we did? Only one of us was walking away.
Latest Chapter
Chapter Nineteen – Shadows of War
If you’ve ever had one of those mornings where the universe seems to have forgotten your existence, let me tell you mine had it beat by a landslide. My ribs ached like they’d been used as a battering ram. The sky looked like it had been scorched by a cosmic blowtorch, and my internal beast the one that wasn’t supposed to be real, let alone awake was pacing like a caged animal, itching to rip something apart. Again. But I wasn’t going to let that happen. Not this time. Adrian stood beside me, jaw clenched and eyes scanning the broken skyline ahead. Smoke billowed from collapsed towers, casting a gray haze that turned the sun into a dim orange eye glaring down at us. The air reeked of sulfur, charred metal, and something far worse blood. Lots of it. We weren’t just in a city under siege we were in the middle of a full-scale apocalypse. Yay. "How many do you think made it out?" I asked, trying to keep my voice level, even though my insides were doing gymnastics. Adrian didn’t answe
Chapter Eighteen – The Labyrinth of Echoes
If I had a nickel for every time I thought, "This can't get any worse," only to be proven spectacularly wrong, I'd have enough to buy a decent therapist. But as I stood before the gaping maw of the underground complex, the remnants of the Scourge's facility smoldering behind me, I realized that the real nightmare was just beginning. The entrance to the labyrinth was hidden beneath a collapsed section of the facility, a narrow shaft descending into darkness. Lex had discovered it while scanning for residual energy signatures. "Are you sure about this?" Adrian asked, peering into the abyss. "Not even a little," I replied, forcing a grin. "But we've come this far. No turning back now." We descended into the depths, our flashlights casting eerie shadows on the damp walls. The air grew colder, heavier, as if the darkness itself pressed against us. The walls were lined with cables and bioluminescent fungus, glowing faintly with sickly greens and blues. The labyrinth was a maze of twist
Chapter Seventeen – Lab Rats and Lightning Fists
If there’s one thing I’ve learned from this whole mess, it’s that walking into your own origin story is a lot less cool than it sounds. Especially when the origin story involves bioengineered monsters, a morally bankrupt mega-corp, and a whole lot of lightning. We stood at the edge of the quarantine zone, the air thick with tension and the sharp scent of ozone. Thunder rolled overhead like the sky was warning us to turn back. The compound loomed beyond the fence, a twisted blend of high-tech science and post-apocalyptic decay. Lights flickered behind grimy windows. Something inside that place pulsed alive, watching, waiting. Adrian adjusted his gear, the straps on his tactical vest creaking under the strain. “You sure about this, Elias?” I nodded, though my stomach was doing Olympic-level gymnastics. “As sure as I am that this place holds the answers we need.” Lex tapped her tablet with rapid precision, her eyes scanning the encrypted schematics she’d hacked on the way here. “Secu
Chapter Sixteen – Shadow Games and Blood Vows
Let me just say this: if you ever find yourself in a smoke-choked, Hollow-infested city with a ragtag team of rebels, a half-activated apocalypse beast inside you, and a secret organization trying to shove you into their idea of salvation... just turn around. Go back. Pick another apocalypse. Too late for me, though. We were pinned down behind a half-destroyed tram station, the reinforced columns giving us just enough cover from the aerial drones patrolling above. Adrian crouched beside me, one eye scanning the skies and the other on the pulse scanner in his hand. The screen flickered with a flurry of red dots. Not good. “How many?” I asked, though I wasn’t sure I wanted the answer. He grimaced. “Too many. And they’re closing in.” “Great,” I muttered. “Guess now’s not the time for a group hug and a sing-along.” “I don’t suppose your inner monster wants to clock in for the night shift?” I felt it like an itch in my veins, the beast just beneath the surface, watching, waiting. It
Chapter Fifteen – The Hollowed Truth
If I had a dollar for every time I woke up in a strange place with a pounding headache and no memory of how I got there, I’d have… well, more dollars than I’d like to admit. This time, though, the situation was different. The air was thick with the scent of antiseptic and something else,something ancient and powerful. The walls were lined with strange symbols that pulsed with a faint blue light, casting eerie shadows that danced across the room. I tried to sit up, but my body protested with a chorus of aches and pains. My limbs felt like they’d been steamrolled, and my brain was doing somersaults trying to piece together the chaos from the night before. Memories flashed blood, screams, the metallic tang of fear, and me, not quite myself. I remembered the transformation, the loss of control, and the terrifying realization that I had become the very monster I swore to fight against. "You're awake," a voice said, smooth and unfamiliar. I turned my head, wincing at the movement, to see
Chapter Fourteen – Monsters, Mayhem, and a Seriously Bad Hair Day
If you’ve never sprinted through a collapsing skyscraper while half-mutated, half-naked, and being chased by genetically enhanced murder-beasts, I highly recommend not trying it. "Left!" Adrian shouted. I veered left. "Right!" I veered right. "Up!" I looked up. "Seriously?" I muttered, ducking just in time. "Nice dodge," Adrian said, panting. "Thanks. " We skidded to a halt in front of a massive chasm that had opened up in the street. "Great," I said. "A pit of doom. Just what I needed." Adrian looked at me. "You can jump that, right?" I raised an eyebrow. "Do I look like a kangaroo to you?" He shrugged. "You've got the beast thing going on. Maybe you've got hops." I took a deep breath, backed up a few steps, and ran. Adrian followed, less gracefully but successfully. "See?" he said, brushing himself off. "Kangaroo." I glared at him. "Don't push it." We continued through the ruined city, the sounds of battle echoing around us. Suddenly, a voice crackled in my
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