Primordial Awakening: I Breathe Skill Points!-Chapter 71: The March (3)
The column was crossing a section of terrain that looked deceptively stable—solid rock that should have been the safest ground they’d encountered since leaving the transports. The ground here was different from the treacherous, reality-warped earth they’d been navigating, appearing reassuringly mundane with its gray stone surface worn smooth by ages of wind and weather. Several participants visibly relaxed as they stepped onto the rocky expanse, grateful for what seemed like a reprieve from the constant vigilance required by the unstable terrain.
A Level 33 awakened named Cain, according to the shout that followed, was walking in the fifth column when reality simply... tore. He’d been mid-conversation with a companion, something mundane about equipment durability and repair costs, his voice carrying clearly in the relatively open space.
There was no warning. No visible distortion, no indication that anything was wrong. One moment Cain was walking, laughing at something his companion had said, his boots striking solid stone with reassuring solidity. The next moment a spatial tear opened directly through the space he occupied, a line of absolute nothingness that existed for perhaps a tenth of a second.
The sound was horrific—not the tearing itself, which was silent, but Cain’s cut-off scream as the spatial anomaly bisected him instantly, separating top from bottom with perfect geometric precision. Both halves fell in different directions, the spatial tear closing as abruptly as it had opened, leaving nothing but blood spreading across the gray stone and the stunned silence of other awakened who had just witnessed how arbitrary death could be in the Wildlands.
Cain’s companion stood frozen, mouth still open from whatever response he’d been about to make to the conversation that would never continue. His face had gone pale, eyes locked on the spreading blood with the kind of shock that comes from having reality violently contradict your expectations.
"Halt!" Commander Voss’s voice cut through the shocked silence. "Spatial instability detected. All personnel activate spatial awareness skills if available. Those without spatial detection capabilities, maintain close proximity to those who have them."
The mood of the expedition shifted in that moment. The confident energy that had characterized the march, sustained by easy victories against mutated creature packs, evaporated like morning dew under harsh sun. People looked at the ground beneath their feet with new suspicion, realizing that all their levels, all their skills, all their preparation meant nothing against spatial tears that could open without warning and end them before they could even react.
Several participants were visibly shaken, their faces pale and their hands trembling as they gripped weapons that offered no protection against spatial anomalies. The earlier conversations and casual banter died completely, replaced by tense silence broken only by the sound of boots on stone and the occasional muttered prayer.
The march continued, but slower now, with multiple awakened using detection skills to scan for spatial instabilities. Blue, purple, and silver lights flickered across the column as various detection abilities activated. The pace had been cut by more than half, each step now taken with careful deliberation. Zeph didn’t have such skills himself, but his heightened perception let him notice the subtle distortions—places where light bent slightly wrong, where his sense of distance felt off by imperceptible margins.
’Cain wasn’t even in combat,’ Zeph thought as they navigated around the area where the awakened had died. ’Just walking. That’s what makes the Wildlands so dangerous—it’s not the creatures, it’s the environment itself. Reality doesn’t work properly here, and it only gets worse the closer you get to major anomalies like the ruins.’
Two more hours of careful march brought the first visual confirmation of their destination.
The ruins appeared on the horizon like a wound in reality itself.
Even at a distance of several kilometers, Zeph could see that the structure defied conventional understanding of architecture. It rose from the cracked earth as if it had been thrust up from below, a massive edifice that seemed to simultaneously belong to the landscape and violate every principle of natural formation.
As they drew closer, details emerged that made Zeph’s enhanced perception struggle to process the information coherently.
The ruins were constructed from black crystal fused with what could only be described as organic metal—materials that should not and could not exist together, yet somehow formed a cohesive structure. The architecture featured impossible geometry, angles that hurt to perceive directly, as if the human eye and mind weren’t designed to comprehend the mathematical principles underlying the construction.
And most disturbing of all—the structure breathed.
It was subtle but undeniable. The entire massive edifice expanded and contracted in a slow, rhythmic pattern that mimicked biological respiration. The movement was visible even from kilometers away, the black crystal and organic metal swelling slightly, then contracting, in a cycle that suggested something alive rather than a simple structure.
"By the awakened gods," someone muttered from nearby. "What the hell were we thinking coming here?"
Zeph couldn’t disagree with the sentiment. This wasn’t a dungeon. This wasn’t even a normal ruin. This was something fundamentally other, something that existed outside the usual rules that governed even the post-Awakening world.
And then he felt it—the egg in his storage ring pulsing faster.
Zeph focused his perception on the artifact, counting the intervals between pulses while simultaneously observing the ruins’ breathing pattern.
52 BPM. The egg was beating at exactly 52 beats per minute.
He counted the ruins’ expansion and contraction cycle.
52 BPM. Identical.
They were perfectly synchronized, the mysterious egg responding to or perhaps communicating with the ancient structure in a rhythm that transcended coincidence. Whatever the egg was, it was linked to the ruins in a fundamental way.
The march continued its final approach, and with each kilometer, the wrongness intensified.
The temperature dropped precipitously—twenty degrees colder within the final hundred meters of the entrance, cold enough that breath misted in the air despite it being midday. The expedition members activated various warming skills or relied on equipment enchantments to compensate, but the cold felt wrong—not natural winter chill but something that leeched heat with almost purposeful malice.
Sound became muffled and distorted. Conversations that should have been clear at ten meters came through as if filtered through water, and the ambient noise of 999 awakened moving together somehow felt quieter than it should, as if the ruins themselves were absorbing sound.
Some participants began reporting auditory hallucinations—distant screaming from inside the ruins, voices calling their names, sounds that had no visible source. One man swore he could hear his dead sister calling for help. A woman claimed to hear music she’d never heard before but that felt achingly familiar. The Authority officials dismissed these as stress responses or minor perceptual distortions caused by the concentrated spatial anomalies, but Zeph noticed how many people were hearing things, how consistent the reports were.
Authority scanners, sophisticated devices designed to analyze mana concentrations and spatial stability, began malfunctioning as they approached the entrance. Readings became nonsensical, showing impossible values or simply refusing to function at all. Several scanners simply shut down, their displays going dark. The technicians maintaining the equipment exchanged worried glances but said nothing, unwilling to add to the growing anxiety.
The surface entrance finally came into clear view as the expedition reached their staging point—a fifty-meter-wide gateway that resembled less a door and more an open maw leading down into darkness that light seemed reluctant to penetrate. The gateway was covered in glowing alien script, symbols that shifted and changed when observed directly, as if the language itself was alive and evolving.
There was no door, no barrier, no mechanism of closure. Just an open invitation or perhaps a trap, leading down into depths that promised answers and death in unknown proportion. Someone tossed a light stone into the entrance—a common practice for testing dungeon entrances—and the stone’s glow simply vanished the moment it crossed the threshold, swallowed by darkness that apparently had strong opinions about illumination.
"Well, that’s not ominous at all," someone muttered. "Next you’ll tell me we have to sign a waiver written in blood."
Despite the tension, a few nervous laughs rippled through the nearby ranks. Gallows humor seemed to be the expedient of choice when facing entrances that ate light.
Commander Voss raised her hand, signaling the expedition to halt. 999 awakened came to a stop, arrayed before the entrance to ruins that had killed thirty-seven people in preliminary surveys and would likely kill hundreds more before this was over.
"All participants!" Voss’s voice carried across the assembly with supernatural clarity. "We establish base camp here for final preparations. Entry begins in two hours. Use this time wisely. Once we go inside, there is no guaranteed return."
The assembled awakened began dispersing to their designated camping areas. Tents materialized from storage rings, equipment was checked and rechecked, people gathered in small groups to discuss strategy or simply to find comfort in familiar faces before descending into whatever nightmare waited below.
Zeph stood there, staring at the gateway and feeling the egg pulse in perfect synchronization with the ruins’ breathing.
52 BPM. A heartbeat. A countdown. A connection to something ancient that waited in the darkness below.
And in two hours, he would walk into that darkness, carrying an artifact that was somehow intrinsically linked to whatever nightmare waited inside.
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