FAZER LOGINThey sold me to the Dungeon to save themselves. My own family — my brother Caleb, my mother Anya — fed me to the system like I was nothing. A sacrifice. A liability. The last thing I remembered before the darkness swallowed me whole was the relief on their faces. But I didn't die. I came back. And I came back wrong. Welcome to the ARG — where pocket dimensions bleed into the real world, and only the strong survive. Every player gets a starting ability, gear, a guild, a fighting chance. Every player except me. No ability. No gear. No guild. Just Kiera Vance, standing in a room full of veteran wolves who think I'm dead weight — and one sharp-eyed Alpha named Liam Reed who isn't quite sure what I am. Smart man. They'll call me weak. They'll call me a Luna with no bite. They'll call me crazy. They're only right about the last one. I clawed my way to the top once. I'll do it again — but this time, I won't stop until I've burned the whole system down. My name is Kiera Vance. I was the most feared player in the game. And my Alpha? He's a lunatic. Almost as bad as me.
Ver maisA crimson banner of text bled across the sky outside my window, visible only to those already marked. The global announcement pulsed with a cold, digital heartbeat.
"A-Class Instance: 'Apocalypse Academy' initialized. Five new players randomly selected. Commencement in thirty minutes."
On the muted TV screen below it, a news anchor’s face was grim. "…confirmed. The legendary player known as Gale-001 has been declared deceased within the S-Class Instance 'City of Mists.' The Crescent Guild reports her entire inventory of Artifacts is missing. Sources are reliable."
I barely glanced at the screen. Some top-tier player’s bad luck story. My attention was on the sky. An A-Class dungeon for rookies? Someone at the System had a sick sense of humor. I almost felt sorry for the poor bastards about to get chewed up.
The pounding on my apartment door was frantic, shredding the quiet.
"Kiera! Open up! We know you're in there!"
The voice was familiar in a way that made my skin crawl. A phantom headache sparked behind my eyes. I didn’t remember them, not really. But my body did. It tensed, every instinct screaming threat.
I yanked the door open. Four people stood there, wearing expressions that didn't match their expensive clothes. Panic. Desperation. Calculation.
"What do you want?" My voice was flat.
The woman at the front—Anya, my mother according to the DNA test I never asked for—pushed past me without invitation. The man, my father Silas, followed. Behind them slunk my supposed siblings: Caleb, looking like a kicked puppy, and his twin, Sienna, her gaze sharp and assessing.
They sealed themselves in with me, closing the door like they were trapping prey.
I didn't offer them a seat. I just leaned against the kitchen counter, arms crossed, and waited. The silence was a weapon. Let them break it.
Anya broke first. A single, practiced tear traced her cheek. "Kiera, you have to save your brother."
I raised a brow. Said nothing.
"He's been chosen," she whispered, the words dripping with drama. "The Game. He has to go in."
I looked at Caleb. He wouldn't meet my eyes, his jaw clenched tight. "Congratulations," I said, my tone dry as dust. "Try not to die in the first five minutes."
"That's not funny!" Anya’s mask slipped, revealing raw fear. "Do you know which instance he drew? It's the one up there! The A-Class! A rookie in an A-Class is a death sentence!"
I shrugged, a slow, deliberate movement. "Maybe he'll get lucky."
My indifference was gasoline on their panic. Silas stepped forward, his voice taking on that reasonable, fatherly tone that made my teeth ache. "Kiera, be reasonable. You're the only one who can take his place. The substitution rule—it only works for a blood-related rookie. You're both."
The pieces clicked into place with a cold, final snap. The visit. The tears. The familial concern. It was all just set dressing for a sacrifice.
I let out a soft, humorless laugh. "Let me get this straight. You think Caleb, a healthy young man, will die in there. So your brilliant solution is to send me, a woman with zero experience and a case of amnesia, in his place? How does that math work, exactly? Am I just more expendable?"
Anya flinched. Silas looked at the floor. Their guilt was a tangible thing, but it wasn't enough to stop them.
"You've always been strong, Kiera," Silas pleaded, not hearing the monstrous implication. "Resourceful. You might have a chance. He doesn't."
Sienna chimed in, her voice a sneer wrapped in silk. "Come on, sis. You might not remember us, but family looks out for family. You wouldn't just let him die, would you?"
The rage was a cold, expanding bubble in my chest. I turned my gaze on her, letting every ounce of my disgust show. "If family is so important, sis, why don't you go die for him?"
"I'm not a rookie!" she spat, the silk vanishing.
"Exactly," I said, my smile sharp enough to cut. "You're safe. So this isn't about family. It's about feeding me to the wolves so your precious Caleb stays clean."
Anya reached for my hand. I pulled it back as if burned. "Please, Kiera. The old you… you loved your brother. You'd do anything for him. If you remembered, you'd say yes."
I watched them. The performative grief. The manipulative logic. This was why, even with a blank slate where my memories should be, I’d felt nothing but cold disdain for them. My gut had known. My gut was always right.
"I don't remember the old me," I said, my voice dropping to a deadly calm. "And the current me says no. He made his roll. Let him lie in it."
The facade shattered.
Silas’s face purpled with rage. "You ungrateful little bitch! We never should have brought you back! You were a curse from the day you were born! A cold, emotionless monster!"
There it was. The truth they’d painted over with family photos and forced dinners. A monster. Maybe he was right.
"Finally, something we agree on," I said, my voice eerily pleasant. I slammed my palm down on the cheap IKEA coffee table between us. "I am a monster. And monsters eat their young. Get out. Now."
The sound wasn't a slam. It was a crack.
A spiderweb of fractures erupted from under my hand, racing across the laminated surface. Then, with a groan of surrendering particleboard, the entire table collapsed into a heap of splinters and shame.
We all stared at the wreckage.
My hand didn't even hurt.
Caleb stumbled back, pointing a shaking finger at me. "See! She's insane! A fucking lunatic! Let's go! I'll find another way!"
He herded his parents toward the door. Sienna shot me a look of pure venom over her shoulder. "They were right about you. You're not human."
Something snapped. A red haze tinged the edges of my vision. I didn't think. My hand closed around the handle of the chef's knife on the counter. I didn't throw it at her. I just hurled it, point first, to stick, quivering, in the doorframe an inch from her retreating head.
Her scream was satisfying. The slam of my door was a period on the whole ugly sentence.
Alone. The silence was a balm and a void. I started picking up the pieces of the table. These people were a closed chapter. A mistake my amnesiac self wouldn't make again.
Then, a searing heat bloomed in the pocket of my hoodie.
It wasn't warmth. It was a brand. Before I could react, a voice, crystalline and utterly inhuman, spoke directly into the core of my brain.
"Player identified. Commencing transport to A-Class Instance: 'Apocalypse Academy.' Prepare for entry."
The path ahead finally brightened, the oppressive void dissolving into the familiar, humid air of the jungle’s edge. The candle in my hand sputtered and died, its wax cool against my skin.I looked at the stub, less than a third left. A damn shame. A good artifact, but a finite one. Every use brought me closer to losing it. I tucked the remnant away, the loss a quiet sting.We were out. Behind us, the bone-path lay quiet and still, looking utterly, deceptively normal under the moonlight.“We’re out,” Spark breathed, the tension sloughing off her shoulders. “I thought we were trapped there forever.” She looked like she wanted to collapse.I didn’t answer. My eyes scanned the perimeter. Night had fallen here, too. I’d half-hoped the darkness in that pocket dimension was just an illusion, or that time moved differently. No such luck. The island’s real night was here, thick and hungry.“Don’t celebrate yet,” I said, my voice cutting through her relief. “Move. Get to your huts. This place
We didn’t move. Panic was a luxury we couldn’t afford. Liam pulled a small device from his jacket—a compass, maybe—but the needle inside spun wildly, a frantic, useless dance. He cursed under his breath and shoved it back.That’s when the singing started.It wove through the absolute dark, a low, melodic hum that raised every hair on my arms. It was beautiful, in a way that made my skin crawl.“The song,” I said, my voice low. “It’s wrong. Be ready.”Liam and Spark nodded, their faces grim in the non-light. We’d all heard the stories. The island’s night-song. No one ever said what happened if you listened, but in the Game, nothing beautiful comes without a price.We stood back-to-back, a tense triangle in the void. The song grew louder, wrapping around us.And then… it wasn’t terrifying anymore. A wave of pure, soothing warmth washed through me. The deep ache in my muscles from using the Primal Force faded. The gnawing hunger quieted. It felt like sinking into a hot bath after a marat
The power that surged up my arm wasn't a thought. It was a reflex, a deep, forgotten instinct screaming to be used. As the idol’s stone head loomed, I didn'tt swing my fist. I unleashed the coiled thing inside me.My knuckles connected with the center of its grotesque face. Not with a crack, but with a deep, resonant BOOM that felt like the world itself had been struck.The recoil was brutal. It tore me from the statue’s side and hurled me through the air. I hit the bone-littered ground hard, skidding, the breath knocked from my lungs. But my eyes were locked on the point of impact.The stone head didn’t just crack. It exploded. Fractures spider-webbed out from my fist-print at a sickening, impossible speed, consuming the entire side of the idol in a heartbeat. The stone limbs connected to that half shattered in a chain reaction, crumbling into gravel and dust.Spark, who had been trapped in their grasp a second before, dropped to the ground in a heap of torn clothes and stunned silen
A-grade healing potion. The real deal.Spark’s eyes went wide. In the Game, you lived and died by your supplies. Every player stocked healing items—for injuries, for exhaustion, for that one desperate chance to survive. The C-grade sludge she’d choked down earlier was her usual budget option. What Liam had just handed her was liquid gold.This was top-shelf. The kind of potion that cost more points than she made in a dozen Instances. The kind normal players could only dream of.Her excitement flickered, replaced by a cold, sinking dread. She looked at Liam, her voice small. “I… I can pay you back. In installments?”Five thousand points. The number was a mountain. She’d be in his debt for years.“Whatever,” Liam said, his attention already fixed ahead. He wasn’t looking at her.Relief, sharp and guilty, washed through her. She took a careful sip. The effect was immediate—a warm, potent surge that knitted torn muscle and refilled the hollow ache of spent energy. She could breathe again.


















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