There’s a common misconception that pervades the world.
It’s the belief that opportunity only cos when you’re fully prepared for it, that you’ll walk down a red carpet, ready to sit on a throne prepared just for you. Many think they’ll be ready when the ti cos, but that’s just an illusion.
The truth, though less widely acknowledged, is that opportunities often present themselves in every mont of decision, and people frequently forget that.
It didn’t take long to realize this.
-[Notification: Please select your visitor badge type.]
I was standing in front of a black building similar to the one I’d seen in Yeouido. Koreans referred to it as “Yeouido’s Jelly,” but here in New York, it was dubbed the "Dark Chocolate Bar." The na was as direct as it was amusing.
Despite being aware of the illusion, I couldn’t completely avoid falling for it myself. I had expected sothing dramatic, sothing montous to await . But as I watched the countless Icarus employees rushing about in preparation for the Final Championship, I started to wonder if I had misunderstood the nature of my visit.
Still...
…
Even that thought might just be another fleeting misconception.
I gently placed my finger on the kiosk in front of , clearing my mind of distractions. Unlike in Korea, the process here at headquarters was more unconventional. Visitors were required to create a one-ti badge based on the purpose of their visit. I’d heard there were many ways to issue these badges, but today, I had a different path ahead of .
I pulled up a holographic ssage. It contained a series of instructions, codes, and keywords sent through the official Icarus International email, including a code I had received 40 minutes ago. Following these, I unlocked a new access route that hadn’t existed in the kiosk's system before.
A few taps later, I input my personal authentication code.
Then, suddenly—
─Whirrr!
“…There was sothing after all.”
I watched as a small round scanner emitted a red laser, clearly designed for authentication. The only thing I could offer it was the device strapped to my wrist.
-[Notification: ICARUS GEAR // Authenticating…]
-[Notification: Authentication complete. Visitor badge issued. Please activate the augnted reality function of your lens.]
Of course.
I blinked, and a hologram spread out before , scanning the unique visitor badge that had just been issued. As new information appeared on the display, it guided along the path I needed to take.
I carefully hung the badge around my neck, its lanyard neatly provided, and then approached the automatic glass doors. The mont I swiped my badge, a green light signaled my clearance.
I didn’t pay it much attention.
My focus was on what lay beyond.
─Ding!
“...Well, isn’t this convenient?”
Right on cue, the elevator arrived and its doors opened. The sleek, modern walls bore a panel for scanning keycards and buttons indicating the building’s various floors.
However, when I placed my badge against the panel, the elevator began descending toward the basent instead of any upper level. It was almost cliché in its execution.
The descent didn’t take long. When the doors opened, I found myself in front of an unmanned checkpoint. The area seed abandoned, covered in dust and with no signs of recent human presence.
Beep!
The gate opened with a chanical click, revealing what appeared to be a solid wall. With a deep rumble, the wall began to shift, sliding open like the entrance to a secret lair. I couldn’t help but chuckle at the dramatic flair.
The hidden wall didn’t close behind as I stepped through. I guessed it would remain open as long as soone was inside.
Walking down the short corridor, I ntally reviewed the fragnted pieces of information I’d gathered about Icarus and the Dark Zone over ti.
Rumors about stolen AI control, whispers of clandestine updates—wild, sci-fi-level stuff. At first, it sounded like typical conspiracy theory nonsense. But if those rumors ca from the upper echelons—be it political or economic—then they carried a weight that couldn’t be ignored.
When the context shifts, so do the stakes. What was once idle gossip becos a truth that must remain hidden.
Eventually, I reached another solid wall, identical to the one at the kiosk. The scanner on the wall indicated that nothing could stop from proceeding.
─Grind!
The wall slid open, revealing a vast, dark, spherical chamber. Scanning with my Icarus Gear, I estimated the space to be about 130 ters in diater.
Suddenly, floating platforms erged from the ground. No digital systems seed involved—pure levitation. And just like that, my Icarus Gear went dark. The clock that could function in any condition had just shut down.
That was when I realized—I was about to confront mories I had never shared with anyone.
As the chamber brightened slightly, I slowly approached the mainfra at its center. I knew they could hear , so I spoke, breaking the silence.
"AI, huh? You’re really going to hide behind such a flimsy excuse?"
The ones who had brought back to this place. The ones who were waiting.
Their response appeared in letters suspended in the air.
-[ : Welco.]
-[ : It’s been a while since Indian Point, hasn’t it?]
I wasn’t sure if they would answer, but this was the mont to ask the questions I had been holding onto for so long.
At the end of the chamber was a single chair, prepared just for .
I sat down cautiously, taking a mont to organize my thoughts. Silence filled the space. There were so many questions. My mind felt tangled before I even began speaking. It was almost laughable how my head throbbed before I could even ask my first question.
After several deep breaths, I managed to sort through the chaotic thoughts. Slowly, clarity returned as the first concrete questions began to form.
Looking directly at the central cara on the mainfra, I opened my mouth.
"It was you who saved , wasn’t it?"
-[ : Yes.]
Of course.
Hearing the confirmation, the once foggy images of that harrowing day at Indian Point began to crystallize. It was they who had saved from the brink of death during the nuclear disaster.
As the mories solidified, a dozen more questions simred in the back of my mind, but there was one thing I needed to say before anything else.
I raised my head and t the central screen's gaze, my voice sincere.
"Thank you. Truly."
-[ : I’m glad to hear that. It’s good to see you so much more composed than before. However…]
"However?"
-[ : It’s still a bit early to be thanking us. There’s a lot left unresolved, and I’m sure you have many questions as well, don’t you?]
"…Yes."
The truth was undeniable.
What exactly were Icarus and the Dark Zone? Why had this happened to ? What did it really an to be an "Awakener"? So many questions. I felt like I could beg these people for answers all day long.
But it seed they understood that.
A calm voice erged from the speakers, the sound both pleasant and disarming.
-[ : Answering those questions is part of why we’re here today. I hope this conversation will help clear up so of your doubts.]
The sound of pages flipping accompanied the voice.
Then, in a clear tone, they continued with an unexpected revelation.
-[ : By now, I’m sure you’ve wondered ‘why’ the Dark Zone ga even exists, but before we get into that, let explain why you beca involved in the first place.]
-[ : Eugene, you are one of the most prominent victims of a “collision of worldlines.” The inexplicable events you’ve experienced can only be explained by this phenonon.]
"…Worldline collisions?"
-[ : Do you recall the day your body first changed? The series of logically impossible events that followed?]
I rembered.
It was like a nightmare—the day I was suddenly thrown into a foreign tropolis with no warning. One mont, I was asleep at ho; the next, I woke up on the frozen streets of an empty New York in the dead of winter.
The cold that made retch, the eerie, abandoned streets, the strange, monstrous tail that had grown from my body. And, of course, the bizarre, multicolored lightning flashing beyond the Brooklyn Bridge.
That horrific scene was carved into my mory, never to fade.
If their explanation was correct… that must have been the result of a worldline collision.
My head pounded with the effort of making sense of it, but no other answer seed possible. Sothing so illogical could only have a similarly illogical explanation.
Yet there was sothing even more important to ask.
"So, you’re saying it was completely unpredictable?"
-[ : Unfortunately, yes. Even our departnt didn’t have the capability to prevent the collision. We could only clean up afterward.]
Completely unpredictable. In other words, I had just been unlucky. The reason I had spent nearly five years walking through hell boiled down to sheer bad luck.
It was an infuriatingly convenient explanation.
But…
"If I had heard this back when I first returned, I think I would’ve been ntally shaken."
But I wasn’t, not now.
Why was that? Maybe it was because of the small dal still hanging around my neck, the one that represented my pride. Or maybe it was because of my comrades, waiting for outside this building. Or my students, eagerly awaiting my return just a few kiloters away.
It hadn’t even been a few months since I’d co back, and while I still carried the scars of trauma and PTSD, both ntally and physically, I didn’t feel fragile.
And—
"Thankfully, that’s not the case now. I’ve experienced a lot since then. My past hasn’t been denied, and I’ve already been rewarded for my efforts—both materially and emotionally."
The weight of the dal at my neck was the weight of pride.
From the mont I set foot in the U.S., my past had caught up with in the form of old connections, and ever since, I’d found the strength to endure everything, even the cold, bitter winds of my mories.
I steeled myself. No, I had to. I had co here to hear these truths.
Sitting firmly in the chair, I felt a new sense of resolve. Almost as if they could sense it, the voice over the speaker continued, relieved.
-[ : I’m glad you’ve co to terms with this. It was difficult to bring up.
"There’s still a long road ahead. I can’t afford to stop now."
I thought I heard a faint chuckle from the other end.
The atmosphere had lightened, and now, the countless questions I had locked away began to resurface. But I already knew the first thing I had to ask.
A clue I’d gathered from Loren Tina’s remarks.
"I’ve spent a lot of ti thinking about the term ‘worldline synchronization.’"
A brief silence.
But I continued. The scattered fragnts of my thoughts began to coalesce, forming a larger, more coherent idea.
I dismissed unnecessary questions and focused on the core issue.
The most important thing was that the term “worldline synchronization” had appeared twice, and each ti, the world around had changed. That was a critical point.
When I completed the main mission, the term first appeared. And with it, mories of another world began to surface in people’s minds. That was the first synchronization.
But—
"After I completed the first Incursion scenario, the term appeared again when I least expected it."
At first, I hadn’t thought much of it.
But Loren Tina’s comnt had opened a door in my mind, and the logic that had once seed vague now rushed forward with newfound clarity.
It was simple—the other world didn’t just affect this one. What if the reverse were true as well?
There had been several Incursion scenarios, but their chronological arrangent pointed to a single truth: In a few more scenarios, I would be heading back to where it all began—Indian Point Nuclear Power Plant.
In other words, the second worldline synchronization would likely complete when I finished that mission.
If my theory was correct,
If I completed that mission,
Then—
-[ : …You’re thinking that Incursion scenarios don’t just depict the past, but they could also influence the other world through missions set in the future, aren’t you?]
-[ : Correct. It’s possible.
The mont that was confird, I let out a short gasp—if that were true, then I could also begin to understand the true nature of the Dark Zone.
This wasn’t just a ga. It was a conduit between two worlds, a junction point that allowed them to observe each other.
I spoke cautiously, but with certainty, locking eyes with the central cara.
"The Dark Zone isn’t just a ga, is it? It’s more like a portal, connecting two worlds and serving as a way to observe both. Isn’t that right?"
Silence followed.
But I knew instinctively that this was the correct answer.
That explained how the Dark Zone had been able to so accurately portray a world that no one should have rembered and how it had managed to indirectly pass on those forgotten mories.
And then, a voice from the speakers responded.
I smiled and added, softly:
"Looks like I’ll be staying here a bit longer."
The conversation wasn’t over.
There were still many things I needed to hear.
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