the rain doesn't fall clean here
it drags through the air thick with rust and old smoke, hitting the pavement with a dull, tired patter that never quite stops, like the city itself forgot how to breathe properly, like it just keeps exhaling the same grey breath over and over and calling that living
eidan null stands under a flickering streetlamp that hums more than it shines, shoulders slightly hunched, not from cold but from habit, the kind you pick up when the world keeps taking pieces off you and you stop expecting them back
his interface floats faintly in the corner of his vision, dimmed out of courtesy because there's nothing worth looking at anyway
HP: 37/100 MP: 12/40 Rank: F Save Slots: 1
the last line lingers longer than the others
not because it's rare, not because it's valuable, but because it's wrong
everyone uses their saves
everyone
once a week the system chimes — a soft, pleasant tone like a promise — and people stop what they're doing, tuck themselves somewhere safe, and press it, locking in their lives, anchoring themselves to a moment they can crawl back to if everything goes bad
the rich do it in guarded towers, surrounded by armed escorts and fail-safes stacked on fail-safes, marble rooms where the system's chime sounds expensive somehow, cleaner than the version the rest of the city hears
the poor do it in alleys, behind dumpsters, in broken stairwells that smell like piss and stale bread, crouched and quick and hoping nobody takes their wallet in the three seconds they're technically vulnerable
but they all do it
every age, every rank, every city in every corner of every nation that the system reaches, which is all of them, has been all of them for longer than anyone remembers
except him
his save slot sits untouched, timestamp frozen twenty years in the past, flickering faintly like something the system keeps trying to overwrite but can't quite reach
[Save File 01 — Age: 5 — Status: Stable]
he doesn't open it
he never opens it
because he already knows what's inside
a small house that still smelled like detergent and wood polish, sunlight cutting through the curtains in soft gold strips, his mother's voice somewhere in the kitchen humming off-key, his father laughing at something stupid on the other side of a thin wall, the sound carrying easily, warmly, the way sounds do in homes where people aren't careful about being heard because they have no reason to be
the last normal day
the last real one
before blood turned the floors dark and the system recorded everything as data instead of memory
eidan exhales slowly, breath fogging faintly in the damp air, fingers twitching once at his side before going still again
he could have used it a thousand times by now
should have
there were nights worse than this, jobs that went bad in the specific way that low-rank jobs go bad — not dramatically, just quietly, just a knife you didn't see and a payment you never received and bones that snapped under things stronger than you, moments where death would've been easy, clean, almost welcome
all he had to do was press load
go back
reset
but that would mean touching it, opening that moment, letting the system treat it like a checkpoint instead of what it actually is
a grave
the streetlight flickers harder, buzzing sharp enough to pull him out of it, and somewhere down the alley a man coughs wet and deep, the sound scraping against brick like something trying to claw its way out of a body that's already given up
normal night
normal city
normal kind of dying
he'd taken a job tonight that was supposed to be simple — escort a merchant's cargo three blocks through the low district, rank requirement F, pay enough to cover the week's water ration with a little left over for the kind of food that doesn't taste like the container it came in
the cargo had been people
not in the illegal sense, or not only in the illegal sense, just workers who couldn't afford their own saves and had hired a body to walk beside them so they felt less like targets, which was its own kind of sad, paying someone else's F-rank bones to absorb whatever came their way
nothing came
they made it fine
they always made it fine on the nights he expected them not to, and went sideways on the nights he'd already started to relax, which was the low district's one reliable pattern
he got paid, walked away, ended up here, under this particular streetlamp on this particular corner, the way he always ended up somewhere still and grey after a job, like his body needed a moment to confirm it was still in one piece
his interface dims further, a quiet system suggestion to save before midnight, the little notification he's been ignoring for twenty years with the same small, practiced nothing
and then—
it glitches
not the soft stutter of low mana, not the jitter of damage feedback, not even the slow lag of an overtaxed system node in a district that hasn't had its infrastructure updated since before he was born
something deeper
like the system itself hesitates
like something in its processing hits a file it doesn't recognise and instead of deleting it, which is what it does, which is what it has always done, it stops
and tries to read it
the save slot pulses
once
twice
the text distorts, letters stretching and collapsing like they're being rewritten in real time, like something is trying to classify what it's found and running out of categories
[Save File 01 — ERROR — LAYER OVERFLOW DETECTED] [Emotional Residue: UNRESOLVED] [Temporal Integrity: COMPROMISED] [Classification… recalculating… recalculating…]
eidan's breath catches
not sharp, not dramatic, just a quiet interruption in the rhythm he's kept for years, a single missed beat in a chest that had learned to keep very steady time
the system doesn't make mistakes
it corrects them
it erases them
it labels everything it touches and files it away in the correct drawer of the correct cabinet of a structure so vast and self-certain that the idea of it being confused has never in his life occurred to him as a real possibility
but this—
this is something else
the flickering stabilises for a single, heavy second, like the world itself is holding its breath alongside him, like even the rain pauses mid-drop just to see what comes next
and then the final line settles in, clean and absolute
[Classification: SSS-Rank Anomaly]
the rain keeps falling
the man in the alley keeps coughing
the city doesn't notice anything has changed
but eidan does
because for the first time in twenty years, the save file he refused to touch reaches back
and responds
it doesn't come as sound, not exactly — more as pressure, as the sense of something vast becoming aware, the way you feel when you're alone in a dark room and you realise slowly, without being able to say why, that you are no longer alone
something cold and immense brushes against the edges of his mind, not hostile, not kind, just aware, the way an ocean is aware of a stone dropped into it, adjusting without effort, noting the ripple
the keeper stirs
he doesn't know that word yet
won't know it for some time
but the awareness is there, old and patient and for the first time in ten thousand years, genuinely surprised
eidan lifts his head slightly, eyes unfocused, not looking at the street anymore but at something layered underneath it, something older, untouched, like a painting beneath a painting beneath a painting, the original strokes still there for anyone who knows how to strip the surface back
his interface reloads
slower than normal, like it's thinking, like it's choosing its words
[Save File 01 — Status: ACCESSED] [Emotional Residue: partially resolved — 4%] [Layers remaining: unknown] [New function unlocked: RECALL — passive] [RECALL: the user may now perceive residual temporal data embedded in objects, locations, and living beings — fragments of what was, what was changed, what was overwritten]
he stares at the last line
what was overwritten
and then the street changes
not visually, not in any way another person could point to, but underneath the concrete and the grime and the dull ordinary dark there are layers, faint as watermarks, impressions of things that happened here and were then quietly, carefully unmade
a woman who died on this corner three years ago, and then didn't
a building that burned, and then hadn't
small moments, dozens of them, stitched over like patches on old fabric, the seams still slightly visible if you know what you're looking at
he's looking at it
someone has been here, he thinks, not as a feeling but as a fact that arrives fully formed, someone has been moving through this city for a long time, adjusting things, correcting things, and the city doesn't remember but the ground does
his next breath is slow
somewhere at the edge of his RECALL, vast and patient and no longer pretending not to be paying attention, something smiles
it is not a warm smile
it is the smile of something that has been running a game for longer than cities have existed, resetting pieces when they move wrong, rewriting outcomes that disappoint it, building a world that behaves the way it wants a world to behave
and now a piece has looked back at the board
eidan pulls his collar up against the rain, not because he's cold — the cold stopped mattering some years ago — but because he needs to do something with his hands that isn't reaching for the save file again
not yet
there are things to understand first
starting with the patch of overwritten light six feet to his left, still faintly glowing under a puddle like a screen seen through a coat pocket, marking the spot where someone survived something they were never supposed to survive
and ending, maybe, with the question he doesn't quite have the nerve to finish forming yet
if the world has a save file —
— how old is the last load?
he stands in the rain for a long time after that
the streetlamp flickers
the city breathes its grey breath
and eidan null, F-rank, age twenty-five, holder of a single untouched save slot that the system has just decided is the most dangerous thing it has ever encountered, starts walking
not toward anything
not yet
but not away from it either
