"Adventures were complicated," Jack replied, his voice steady despite internal conflict. "A lot of political maneuvering, so combat situations that required creative solutions. Nothing that would significantly impact Kaiser Holdings' operations unless you're concerned about my reputation affecting business relationships."
Octavia's expression showed interest; her sharp financial mind was already processing the implications. "Your reputation does the heavy lifting for our business relationships. As long as you're not starting wars with major trading partners, we should be fine."
The conversation was normal, exactly what Octavia would say.
Lady Genevieve moved closer, her maternal instinct overriding the business discussion, and reached toward Jack's face with a gentle gesture.
"Let
look at you properly. You've been gone so long, and I want to make sure you're actually taking care of yourself."
Her hand touched his cheek.
The sensation was wrong.
Room temperature.
Completely neutral, neither warm nor cold, existing in a thermal state that human skin couldn't naturally achieve.
The texture was too smooth, lacking the subtle imperfections and variations of living tissue.
And when Jack's enhanced perception focused on the contact point, he could see that her fingerprints were absent, just as Annabelle's were.
"Mother?" Jack's voice carried uncertainty he couldn't quite suppress.
Lady Genevieve's smile remained warm, maternal affection unchanged by his tone. "You look tired, dear. Have you been resting properly between whatever dangerous situations you've been throwing yourself into?"
The question was exactly what his mother would ask.
But her hand felt like marble.
Jack stepped back, breaking contact with the motion that made Lady Genevieve's expression shift toward concern.
"I'm fine. Just need a mont to process being ho after everything that's happened."
He turned toward the gardens' edge, his enhanced perception sweeping across the entire environnt as his tactical awareness tried to identify what was wrong beyond the individual anomalies he'd been cataloging.
That's when he saw Carl.
The man was standing near the garden's entrance, his presence so natural that Jack's conscious mind had initially filtered him out as background detail rather than a notable elent.
Airport security uniform, the sa outfit Carl had worn during their shared graveyard shifts, checking badges and opening gates for irritated travelers.
Except Carl was dead.
They'd died together when the truck had tumbled down onto the security checkpoint, massive explosion consuming them both in flas and twisted tal that had ended Jack's first life and sohow facilitated his reincarnation into this world governed by System chanics and magical law.
Carl couldn't be here.
He couldn't be standing in the Kaiser Estate's gardens wearing a Kevlar vest and carrying a 9mm sidearm that had no place in a fantasy setting where plate armor and enchanted weapons represented standard protective equipnt.
But the family was treating him like he belonged.
Octavia nodded toward Carl with casual acknowledgnt. "The guard's been very diligent about periter security. Father was impressed with his dedication."
Duke Alaric's slight nod confird the assessnt. "Good man. Knows his duty."
They were seeing plate armor, where Jack saw Kevlar.
An enchanted sword, where Jack saw a modern firearm.
Their perception filtered Carl's appearance through a lens appropriate for Elysium's dieval-adjacent civilization, rather than recognizing the Earth technology that had no business existing in this environnt.
Jack's enhanced vision focused on Carl's face, trying to confirm identity, even as he grew more certain that focusing too intently would reveal sothing his tactical awareness warned him not to see.
The face began to pixelate.
Carl's features were breaking down into digital artifacts, his skin fragnting into squares of color that shifted and reorganized in patterns that hurt to observe.
The visual distortion spread from his eyes outward, consuming his nose, mouth, and ears in corruption.
The dungeon was struggling to maintain a complex mory of a dead man from a different universe while simultaneously projecting the Kaiser family.
Pain spiked through Jack's skull as he continued staring, his perception trying to process visual data that violated every principle of optical physics his brain understood.
The pixelation intensified, Carl's entire head becoming a mass of corrupted data that flickered between multiple states without settling into a coherent form.
Then the radio on Carl's shoulder activated.
Static burst from the speaker, harsh white noise that cut through the garden's ambient sounds with jarring intensity.
But underneath the static, barely audible beneath the electronic interference, Jack could hear screaming.
His own voice.
Carl's voice.
The desperate final seconds before the truck's impact and subsequent explosion had ended both their lives, preserved sohow in an audio recording that shouldn't exist outside Jack's traumatic mories.
The sound of the truck's engine revving, the screech of tires losing traction. Then the impact, screaming, and finally the explosion.
It was looping.
Playing on repeat through Carl's radio with volu that should have been impossible to miss.
"The birds are singing so lovely today," Celeste observed, her tone carrying the sa appreciation she'd always shown for the estate's natural ambiance. "Mother's really outdone herself with the garden this year."
Annabelle's agreent ca in shortly after. "It's beautiful. I was telling Jack how peaceful everything feels."
They were hearing birds.
Cheerful natural sounds are appropriate for an afternoon in well-maintained noble gardens.
They weren't hearing the screaming.
The audio playback of violent death that was emanating from Carl's radio, with a volu that made Jack's enhanced hearing flinch despite considerable noise tolerance.
The disconnect was disturbing.
His family was experiencing a reality completely different from what Jack's enhanced perception was cataloging, their shared illusion filtering out elents that didn't fit the peaceful hocoming narrative.
Jack's mind finally acknowledged what his conscience had been suppressing for hours: this wasn't real.
The Kaiser Estate, the gardens, his family.
None of it was actually happening outside the constructed illusion designed to trap him in comfortable fantasy, while the dungeon accomplished whatever purpose these ntal traps served.
Jack raised his left hand, the limb that shouldn't exist.
The amputation had been a permanent consequence, a physical cost that couldn't be regenerated through normal healing.
But here it was.
Moving in response to his ntal commands with a full range of motion that confird the hand was present despite the impossibility.
Jack's consciousness reached inward, gathering fire.
The elental energy responded to his will, flas manifesting around his left hand with visual confirmation that the technique was activating properly.
He could see the fire.
Orange and red tinges of fla wreathing his fingers, heat shimr distorting the air around his hand in ways that confird magical energy was being properly channeled.
But he couldn't feel the heat.
The sensation was absent.
His nerves reported nothing beyond neutral temperature, no feedback confirming that the flas were actually present beyond visual confirmation from his eyes.
The disconnect was there.
The visual observation of fire, coupled with the absence of tactile sensation, presented a contradiction that would be impossible if the hand were indeed tangible.
Jack's breathing remained steady despite slow dawning horror creeping through his awareness.
The illusion could provide a visual representation of his left hand, could make it respond to motor commands, and could even simulate magical techniques being channeled through the phantom limb.
But it couldn't replicate the internal mana flow that should accompany fire manifestation.
Reviews
All reviews (0)