The question, raw and unfiltered, tore through the heavy air, a jagged rip in the fabric of silence. "Who died?"
And then, the world stopped.
Madam Luo’s keening wail cut off abruptly, as if a hand had been clapped over her mouth. The rustle of funeral cloth, the faint creak of old wood, the distant, almost imperceptible sounds that had filled the hall – all ceased. The air beca utterly, terrifyingly still. The incense smoke, which had been swirling, froze in mid-air, a grey, silent cloud. The flickering flas in the oil lamps held their breath, unwavering.
Absolute silence descended. A silence so profound, so complete, that it felt like a physical pressure, crushing the very breath from their lungs. It was the silence of a world holding its breath, waiting.
All eyes snapped to Wang Jie. His face was frozen in a mask of terror, his hand still half-raised towards the coffin. He had done it. He had asked the forbidden question. He had spoken the unspoken.
Master Qiu, the Coffin Keeper, remained hunched. But his head, previously bowed, lifted. His eyes, obscured by the wide brim of his hat, were now visible. They were ancient, bloodshot, and filled with a terrifying, singular focus. They were now fixed on the coffin.
The air grew colder. A sudden, sharp drop in temperature made goosebumps prickle on Lin Yue’s skin. The dim light seed to dim further, as if the very atmosphere was drawing inward, suffocating. The shadows deepened, lengthening, twisting into grotesque shapes on the walls.
No one moved. No one breathed. The silence was absolute. A thick, suffocating blanket that pressed down on every player, every NPC. Even the faint crackle of the burning incense seed to cease.
The silence stretched, unbearable. Every player was trapped in it, unable to move, unable to breathe, their eyes locked on Wang Jie, then on the coffin. The faint, almost imperceptible crack in its lid seed to widen, just a fraction. A deeper darkness seed to emanate from within, a silent, hungry void.
Wang Jie’s breath hitched. He wanted to scream. He wanted to run. But he couldn’t. His feet felt rooted to the spot. His limbs were paralyzed by a terror so profound it made his blood run cold. His gaze was drawn irresistibly to the coffin, to the widening crack, to the absolute, consuming darkness within.
Lin Yue felt a familiar, cold detachnt settle over him. His mind, however, was racing. The System had been clear. Do not allow the identity of the deceased to stabilize. And the corollary, implied but now terrifyingly explicit: Do not ask who the deceased is. Wang Jie had done exactly that. He had tried to give identity to the naless. He had tried to break the core chanic of the instance.
The consequences. They were coming.
His gaze flickered to the coffin. The black lacquered box, previously just a prop, now pulsed with a sinister energy. The slightly open lid seed to yawn wider in the deepened gloom. A sliver of deeper darkness, a tear in reality itself.
He felt the Arbiter’s presence intensify. A cold hum, closer now, a vibration in the very fabric of the air, not unlike the tension in the space itself. It was a watchful, analytical presence, devoid of judgnt. Just observation. The System’s enforcer. Here to witness the consequence.
The silence stretched, unbearable. Every eye was on Wang Jie. Every eye was on the coffin. The naless was listening. And now, it had been called.
Then, a sound. Not a scream, nor a whisper, but a sharp, distinct crack. It echoed through the absolute stillness of the hall, impossibly loud, like glass shattering in a vacuum.
Wang Jie’s eyes, already wide with terror, bulged further. His hands flew to his throat, clutching frantically, as if to hold sothing in or push sothing out. A gurgle, wet and horrifying, escaped his lips, quickly cut short. His body stiffened, like a marionette whose strings had been abruptly severed. He swayed, a grotesque dance of fear and agony, then collapsed.
He didn’t hit the floor with a thud. Instead, as his knees buckled, his skin seed to ripple. His clothes, his hair, his very flesh—they all began to fray, to dissolve. It was not blood or bone that erged, but a fine, grey powder. He disintegrated rapidly, like a sand sculpture caught in a sudden gust of wind. In monts, where Wang Jie had stood, there was only a small, swirling pile of ash, settling silently onto the dusty floor. It scattered, catching the dim light, a montary sparkle of what was, then was gone.
The entire process was silent, utterly devoid of any sound save for the initial crack and Wang Jie’s choked gasp. The horror was in the visual, the complete and instantaneous erasure.
As the last speck of ash settled, a low, drawn-out creak echoed through the hall. The black lacquered coffin, previously only slightly ajar, now gaped open a fraction wider. The darkness within seed to deepen, to writhe, as if sothing vast and hungry had just inhaled.
A collective gasp, stifled and ragged, tore through the remaining players. Their faces were ashen, eyes wide with a horror that transcended re fear of death. Wang Jie hadn’t just died; he had been erased. His very existence had been wiped clean, with only an ash remaining by his re existence.
Uncle Ren’s voice, slow and devoid of emotion, broke the renewed, fragile silence. It was a dry, rustling sound, like dead leaves skittering across stone. "The departed... must not be disturbed by questions of identity." His unblinking eyes swept over the terrified faces, lingering for a mont on the spot where Wang Jie had been. "To seek the na... is to offer your own."
As he spoke, a subtle shift occurred in the periphery. The silent mourners, previously indistinct shadows against the walls, seed to stir. Their numbers, Lin Yue noticed with a cold calculation, had indeed swelled. He couldn’t pinpoint how many, but the empty spaces now seed fuller, the shadows deeper, more nurous. Each new figure was just as still, just as silent, as the others, yet their collective presence was heavier, colder. They were there, watching, waiting. Their faces, when glimpsed, were blank, devoid of expression, but their eyes... their eyes seed to hold a flicker of sothing ancient, sothing satisfied.
A sudden, jarring shift in the atmosphere. The air, already cold, dropped several degrees, carrying with it a scent like ozone and old iron. A faint, almost imperceptible shimr rippled through the space directly in front of the coffin. It was like watching heat haze, but cold, distorting the dim light, twisting the shadows into impossible shapes.
Then, he was there.
He simply appeared. No dramatic entrance, no grand gesture. One mont, the space was empty; the next, he occupied it. Tall, impossibly still, dressed in a long, dark coat that seed to absorb the light around him.
Gu Yanchen. The First Arbiter.
His presence was absolute. The air itself seed to compress, to thin, making breathing a conscious effort. He was an entity of sharp lines and cold precision. His face, perfectly sculpted, held no discernible emotion. His eyes, dark and fathomless, scanned the group, not with curiosity or malice, but with the dispassionate gaze of a machine evaluating data.
He looked at the lingering ash on the floor, then at the coffin, its lid now a fraction wider. He seed to register the subtle increase in the silent mourners, the collective terror of the players. His gaze swept over them, individual by individual, until it paused, for a fraction of a second, on Lin Yue. There was no recognition, no hint of a shared history, just a montary, analytical assessnt before moving on.
His voice, when it ca, was a low, resonant hum, utterly devoid of warmth or inflection. It wasn’t loud, yet it filled the entire hall, vibrating in their bones, in the very air.
"Welco, players," he said, the word ’welco’ a cold formality. "To the Endless Funeral."
He paused, his eyes still sweeping over them. "You have witnessed the consequence of transgression. The System’s rules are absolute. They are not suggestions. They are the frawork of your continued existence within this instance."
His gaze sharpened, settling on no one in particular, yet encompassing everyone. "Your primary objective remains: Survive until dawn of the third night. To achieve this, you must complete all funeral rituals correctly. And ensure the coffin is sealed."
A faint, almost imperceptible flicker in the air around him, a montary distortion of light, like a system interface updating. It was gone before most could consciously register it.
"There are other objectives," he continued, his voice unwavering, "less obvious, but equally vital. Do not allow the identity of the deceased to stabilize. Avoid becoming the replacent. The death you have just observed is a direct result of violating the forr."
He gestured, a subtle, precise movent of his hand, towards the spot where Wang Jie had vanished. "Asking, confirming, or attempting to establish the identity of the departed will result in imdiate erasure. This is not a request for respect. It is a fundantal chanic of this instance. Deviation is t with termination."
His voice held no threat, only a cold, undeniable fact. "You are here to observe, to deduce, to comply. Not to question the fundantal nature of the scenario. The System permits analysis of its chanics, but not defiance of its core directives."
He took a single, slow step towards the coffin, his eyes fixed on its dark, yawning crack. "Every action, every word, every thought, holds weight here. The naless is vigilant. It seeks an anchor. Do not provide it. Do not offer your own."
His gaze returned to the players, a chilling finality in his tone. "Understand the rules. Understand the triggers. Adapt, or be erased. There will be no further warnings for this specific transgression. The information has been provided. The consequence has been demonstrated."
He paused, a beat of profound, oppressive silence. Then, without a sound, without a ripple, he simply faded. The shimr that had announced his arrival reversed, and the air returned to its previous, albeit still heavy, state. He was gone. As abruptly as he had appeared, he had vanished, leaving behind only the lingering cold, the scent of ozone, and the crushing weight of his pronouncents.
The silence that followed his departure was different from the previous ones. It was not the expectant, terrifying silence before a strike, but a stunned, hollow void. The players stood frozen, their minds struggling to process the impossible sight of Wang Jie’s disintegration, the cold, inhuman instruction from the Arbiter, and the chilling finality of his warnings.
Then, the dam broke.
A choked sob escaped Sun i, quickly swallowed by a hand clapped over her mouth. Her shoulders shook violently. Gao Lin, stripped of all bravado, stumbled backward, his face a ghastly white. He bumped into the wall, a faint thud, but didn’t seem to notice. His eyes were wide, darting frantically around the hall, as if expecting the Arbiter to reappear, or perhaps, for the naless to reach out from the coffin.
Li Qiang, who had tried to maintain a semblance of leadership, now looked utterly shattered. His face was pale, his hands trembling uncontrollably. He stared at the spot where Wang Jie had been, a profound horror etched into his features. "He... he’s gone," he whispered, his voice barely audible. "Just... gone."
Chen Hao leaned against a wooden pillar, his breath coming in ragged gasps. He pressed a hand to his chest, as if to calm his frantically beating heart. He looked sick, his eyes glazed over with shock.
He Rong had retreated into herself, hugging her arms tightly across her chest, her eyes squeezed shut. She swayed slightly, murmuring sothing inaudible, a desperate prayer perhaps, or a plea.
Liu Fang and Zhang Wei stood side-by-side, their faces grim. Zhang Wei, the man of logic, now had a haunted look in his eyes. The intellectual curiosity that had driven his earlier questions had been replaced by a chilling understanding of the System’s brutal efficiency.
He looked at the ash, then at the coffin, then at the increased number of silent mourners. His lips moved, forming silent words, as if attempting to categorize the horror, to find a frawork for the impossible. But his usual analytical detachnt seed to have deserted him.
Xu Ning, ever sharp, stared at the residual ash on the floor. Her gaze was intense, dissecting. She then looked towards the coffin, its lid now undeniably wider, a deeper, hungrier void visible within. Her eyes narrowed as she recalled the Arbiter’s words, turning them over in her mind.
"Do not allow the identity of the deceased to stabilize. Avoid becoming the replacent. The death you have just observed is a direct result of violating the forr." The words were cold, precise, outlining a terrifying chanic. Wang Jie hadn’t just died; he had been consud, his identity erased, perhaps to feed the naless.
Lin Yue remained outwardly calm. His breath was steady, his gaze clear. He absorbed the collective panic, the individual horror, but did not allow it to touch him. His focus was on the data. Wang Jie’s death was a clear data point. The Arbiter’s appearance and pronouncents were further data.
Death trigger: Asking or confirming the identity of the dead.
Consequence: Instantaneous erasure, body converted to ash.
Implied secondary consequence: The coffin lid opens further, and the naless gains sothing.
The Arbiter’s warning about "stabilizing identity" and "becoming the replacent" resonated with Xu Ning’s earlier grim deduction. This wasn’t just about avoiding a question; it was about preventing an event. The rituals, the continuous incense, the bowing – they were not re acts of respect, but acts of containnt. They were anchors, holding down the naless, preventing it from manifesting, from claiming an identity.
Lin Yue’s mind worked with chilling efficiency. The System, through the Arbiter, had confird the core chanic. The instance was a delicate balance. Their actions, their very thoughts, could tip it. The naless entity within the coffin was not a passive object of mourning; it was an active, predatory void, seeking to establish itself, to gain a na, to exist. And if it couldn’t get its own, it would take one. It will take their own identities.
He glanced at the silent mourners, their increased numbers a chilling testant to Wang Jie’s demise. Were they previous players? Or constructs created by the instance to fill the void? He registered the subtle, almost imperceptible shift in their collective stance, a fraction of a degree, a slight leaning towards the coffin.
His eyes drifted to Madam Luo, still kneeling by the coffin. Her weeping, which had ceased during the Arbiter’s appearance, now resud. It was softer this ti, a mournful hum that seed to weave itself into the fabric of the hall, a sound of profound, ancient sorrow. It was a constant, unsettling background noise, a reminder of the pervasive grief that perated this place.
Lin Yue understood. The horror was not just in the sudden, brutal deaths, but in the insidious nature of the instance itself. It preyed on fear, on curiosity, on the very human need for understanding and connection. By asking "who died," Wang Jie had offered a potential identity, a point of entry for the naless. His erasure was the System’s violent correction, a reassertion of the instance’s core rule.
He scanned the faces of the other players. Panic was palpable. Fear was a corrosive agent, eating away at their composure, their rationality. This was precisely what the System wanted. Emotional instability led to errors, to transgressions. It made them predictable.
But Lin Yue, a lifeti of emotional detachnt, remained a steady, cold point in the roiling sea of terror. He didn’t feel the panic. He felt the cold air, the lingering scent of ozone, the weight of the Arbiter’s words. He felt the hum of the System, closer now, a low thrum beneath his feet, a silent observation of their reactions.
The Arbiter’s presence, though brief, had been a stark reminder of the larger forces at play. A cold, impartial judge, enforcing rules that transcended human morality. And Lin Yue, the anomaly, was being watched. Not judged, not punished, but observed. The detached analysis in the Arbiter’s eyes, even for that fleeting second, had been unnerving. It was the gaze of a scientist studying a specin, not a predator sizing up prey.
[System feedback: Anomaly detected. Behavioral deviation within paraters. Continued observation.]
The thought, unbidden, flickered through his mind, a detached piece of self-analysis. He was a variable. And the System, through its Arbiter, was interested in how he would react.
He looked at the ash on the floor, then at the coffin, then back at the terrified faces of the remaining players. Eleven had beco ten. The rules were clear. The stakes were absolute. Survival ant strict adherence, detached observation, and a complete suppression of the very human impulses that had just cost Wang Jie his existence.
The incense continued to burn, a thin, grey plu rising into the stagnant air. Madam Luo’s weeping intensified, a strange wave of sadness washing over the players nearest to her. It was not their own grief, but an invasive, oppressive sorrow, seeping into their minds, weighing down their spirits. The naless, even without a na, was a powerful presence. And it was listening.
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