The low crackle of burning paper money was a relentless companion. It filled the vast, oppressive silence of the mourning hall, a small, fragile sound battling against the crushing weight of the night.
Each sheet Lin Yue fed into the brazier seed to carry with it a sliver of his attention, a fragnt of his waning focus. The fla, a hungry orange tongue, consud the yellow paper, turning it to ash that drifted lazily upwards, mingling with the heavy incense smoke.
The heat was stifling, a humid, cloying warmth that clung to their skin, making every breath a conscious effort. It was a physical manifestation of the instance’s oppressive grip, a slow, deliberate suffocation. The smoke, thick and acrid, stung Lin Yue’s eyes, blurring the edges of the room, making the silent mourners seem even more indistinct, more spectral. They were just shapes, now, dark figures that shifted in the periphery of his vision, never quite still, never quite in focus.
The first rotation had been a quiet, tense affair. Li Qiang, attempting to maintain so semblance of order, had assigned shifts. He Rong took the brazier first, her movents precise, thodical, betraying no sign of the ntal strain that surely coiled beneath her calm exterior. Sun i followed, her hands trembling as she fed the paper, her eyes darting nervously towards the coffin, then away.
Now, it was Lin Yue’s turn again. The cycle was relentless.
"How long...?" Sun i’s voice was a ragged whisper, breaking the fragile quiet. She huddled near the brazier, drawn to its warmth, yet repelled by its hungry fla. Her gaze was fixed on Lin Yue, a plea for certainty in an uncertain world.
Lin Yue did not look at her. He watched the paper burn, the embers glow, the ash rise.
"Until dawn," he stated, his voice flat, devoid of inflection. It was not an answer she wanted to hear, but it was the only one he had. The words hung heavy in the air, a sentence rather than a statent.
Sun i whimpered softly, a small, lost sound. "But... it’s only... the first night." The implication hung unspoken: two more nights of this, of the smoke, the heat, the unending crackle, the silent, watching eyes.
"It is," Lin Yue confird, his gaze still on the brazier. He fed another sheet of joss paper, watching it catch fire, the transient fla a montary burst of defiant life in the encompassing darkness.
He Rong, who had been observing them from a shadowy corner, stepped forward, her footsteps unnervingly soft on the wooden floor. Her eyes, sharp and assessing, landed on Sun i. "Exhaustion is a weakness, Sun i. You have to control it." Her tone was low, almost a hiss, a warning rather than comfort.
Sun i flinched, shrinking further into herself. "I... I’m trying." Her voice was barely audible.
"Trying isn’t enough," He Rong retorted, her gaze then shifting to Lin Yue. A flicker of sothing unreadable passed through her eyes. "You handle the fire. I’ll keep watch." It wasn’t a suggestion. It was a declaration, a reassertion of control, of purpose.
Lin Yue nodded, a slight, almost imperceptible movent. He appreciated the pragmatic efficiency. Her vigilance ant he could focus on the imdiate, tangible task: keeping the fla alive.
The hours crawled by, each minute stretching into an eternity. The flickering light of the brazier cast their faces in grotesque, dancing shadows, making them appear gaunt, hollow-eyed, like figures in a macabre play.
The silent mourners, previously distant, now seed to press in closer, their forms blurring with the shifting shadows, their presence a cold, palpable weight. When Lin Yue glanced directly at them, they were still, impassive, just folds of dark cloth. But in his peripheral vision, they moved. As if they have been moving all this ti.
Zhang Wei, who had been silent for a long ti, his analytical mind visibly struggling to process the impossible, approached the brazier. His face was etched with a profound weariness, but his eyes, though bloodshot, held a desperate, almost manic intensity.
"The corpse," he began, his voice low, a strained whisper, as if speaking a forbidden truth. "It changes. You said it. We all saw it. It’s Liu Fang, right?"
Lin Yue added another sheet of paper. The fla leaped, briefly illuminating Zhang Wei’s face, highlighting the dark circles beneath his eyes, the fine sheen of sweat on his brow. "It attempts to assu identity," Lin Yue confird, his voice asured.
"But what if... what if it’s not just assuming?" Zhang Wei pressed, his voice gaining a frantic edge, a whisper of revelation. He glanced around, as if expecting the shadows to listen. "What if... it is them? All of them?"
Lin Yue paused, a single sheet of joss paper held between his fingers, unburned. He looked at Zhang Wei, a rare direct gaze, assessing the trajectory of his thought.
Zhang Wei misinterpreted the silence as encouragent, a sign that his theory held weight. "Think about it. Wang Jie and Liu Fang. They’re both gone, erased. And the corpse... it takes on their fleeting impressions. What if... what if that’s where they go? Not just erased, but... absorbed." His voice dropped even lower, almost a conspiratorial murmur. "The corpse... is a compilation. A composite of those who failed. Those who were... replaced."
He Rong, who had been leaning against a pillar, straightened, her head cocked slightly, listening intently. A flicker of interest, cold and calculating, crossed her features.
Sun i, however, gasped, a strangled sound of horror. "No! That’s... that’s impossible! They wouldn’t... they couldn’t be..." Her words dissolved into a choked sob, the thought too terrifying to fully articulate.
Lin Yue fed the paper into the fla. "Speculation," he stated, his voice even, despite the chilling nature of Zhang Wei’s hypothesis. "Unverifiable."
"But logical!" Zhang Wei insisted, his voice rising, a desperate plea for validation. "It’s the only way to reconcile the mory loss, the physical changes, the constant need for a new identity. It’s a vessel, Lin Yue. A vessel for the departed. And the departed... are us." He made a sweeping gesture, encompassing them all, the living, the terrified.
"If it is a vessel, then it is a trap," Lin Yue countered, his voice still calm, a steady anchor in Zhang Wei’s escalating paranoia. "To assign identity, to recognize a part of another... is to feed it."
"But if we understand it, if we know what it’s made of, then we can... we can fight it!" Zhang Wei argued, his eyes wide, his gaze now fixed on the coffin. It was a hungry, desperate look, the look of a man seeking answers in the heart of the abyss. "If I can see the faces... the fragnts... then I can understand the pattern. I can find the way to break it."
He took a hesitant step towards the coffin, then another. His movents were slow, almost dreamlike, as if drawn by an invisible current. The Brazier, the smoke, the heat, the endless crackle of paper money, all faded into the background. Only the coffin remained, a dark, magnetic void.
"Zhang Wei, no," Lin Yue murmured, a subtle warning, but Zhang Wei didn’t hear him. He was too deep in his own logical labyrinth, too close to the edge of an abyss only he could see.
His eyes were locked on the black lacquered box in the center, on the indistinct form within. He leaned closer, straining, trying to pierce the gloom, to discern the faint, shifting contours beneath the shroud.
He wanted to see Liu Fang. He wanted to see Wang Jie. He wanted to see the ghost of every player who had ever failed, every soul absorbed into this naless, hungry thing.
"I need to see it," he whispered, his breath fogging slightly in the heavy air. "I need to confirm. The composite... the fragnts..."
He Rong watched Zhang Wei with a detached, clinical interest. Her eyes darted from Zhang Wei’s obsessive gaze to Lin Yue’s carefully neutral expression, then back to the coffin. The rule, implicit, unspoken, was forming in her mind: direct, prolonged observation of the corpse, fueled by a desire for identification, was a trigger.
Sun i, on the other hand, buried her face in her hands, whimpering again. "Don’t look... please, don’t look." Her fear was raw, visceral, unburdened by logic.
Lin Yue watched Zhang Wei, a subtle tension coiling in his shoulders. He saw the subtle changes in Zhang Wei’s micro-expressions: the furrowed brow of concentration, the slight tremble of his lower lip, the slow, almost imperceptible widening of his pupils as he stared into the void. It was not just curiosity; it was an obsession, a desperate, irrational need for understanding. And that need, Lin Yue knew, was a weakness the instance would exploit.
Zhang Wei’s face was inches from the coffin now, his breath shallow, ragged. He was so close that the faint, sweet-and-sour scent of decay, barely perceptible before, now enveloped him. He peered into the depths of the coffin, his eyes straining, trying to find the patterns, the fragnts, the composite identities he so desperately sought.
For a mont, he thought he saw it. A fleeting impression of Wang Jie’s wide, terrified eyes. Then, Liu Fang’s gentle, curving lips. They flickered, like images on an old, decaying film, unstable, dissolving, reforming. He blinked, hard, trying to clear his vision, but the images persisted, teasing, taunting, pulling him deeper into the corpse’s silent maw.
He was oblivious to the shift in the air, the subtle drop in temperature around him, the almost imperceptible hum that resonated from the coffin itself, a low, hungry purr. He was lost in the pursuit of his terrible logic.
Suddenly, a small, soft patter of footsteps broke through the suffocating silence.
It was Little Sheng.
The child mourner erged from the deeper shadows, moving with an unnatural grace, his small, incense-holding hand swinging gently at his side. His eyes, dark and unblinking, were fixed on Zhang Wei.
He walked past the silent mourners, who remained as still as statues, their forms lting into the gloom. He walked past Sun i, who was still weeping silently into her hands. He walked directly towards Zhang Wei, who remained oblivious, his gaze still locked on the coffin.
Lin Yue felt a familiar chill, a cold tendril of dread that snaked through the humid air. The temperature around Little Sheng seed to drop several degrees, a localized pocket of unnatural cold. The scent of ozone, faint but distinct, pricked at Lin Yue’s senses. It was the mark. The Inheritor.
Little Sheng stopped, directly beside Zhang Wei, so close their shoulders almost brushed. Zhang Wei did not flinch, did not react. He was utterly consud by the coffin, by the terrifying puzzle it presented.
The child stood there, silent, still. His gaze, unblinking, unwavering, was fixed on Zhang Wei’s profile, then slowly, deliberately, it shifted. It moved down Zhang Wei’s face, lingered on his chest, then his stomach, his legs. It was an inventory, a silent, chilling assessnt.
Then, slowly, Little Sheng’s small, pale hand, still clutching the smoking incense stick, rose. His index finger, unnaturally straight, unnervingly precise, extended.
It pointed directly at Zhang Wei’s chest.
A gasp, sharp and sudden, tore from Sun i’s throat. Her head shot up, her eyes wide with fresh horror, fixed on Little Sheng’s pointing finger. She had seen this before. She knew what it ant.
He Rong, her face a mask of carefully controlled neutrality, watched Little Sheng’s movent, then her gaze flickered to Lin Yue. A silent acknowledgent passed between them: the mark of the Inheritor.
Lin Yue felt it too. A subtle shift in the oppressive atmosphere, a new weight settling, a cold, invisible hand pressing down. It was the presence of the Inheritor, unmistakable, its energy now focused, concentrated, radiating from Little Sheng’s small form like a silent, predatory hum. It was no longer a general, diffuse presence. It had found its target.
But why Zhang Wei? What had he done?
Lin Yue’s mind, despite the exhaustion, raced. He replayed Zhang Wei’s actions, his words. The logical deduction. The desperate stare into the coffin. The desire for identification. The hunger for understanding.
"I need to see it... I need to confirm... The composite... the fragnts..."
Lin Yue rembered Zhang Wei’s whispers. He rembered the intensity of his gaze, the way he had ignored all else, consud by the need to identify the corpse’s components.
Do not assign identity. The rule was clear. But Zhang Wei hadn’t assigned an identity in the traditional sense. He hadn’t nad the corpse. He had rely tried to confirm the identities he believed were already there. He had tried to dissect the corpse’s composite nature.
And in doing so, he had focused on it too long. He had given it his full, undivided, identifying attention. He had tried to break down its generic nature into its specific parts.
Lin Yue’s gaze flickered from Little Sheng’s unmoving finger to Zhang Wei’s face. Zhang Wei was still staring into the coffin, completely oblivious to the child at his side, to the silent, chilling declaration that had just been made. His eyes, bloodshot and frantic, still sought answers in the shifting shadows of the coffin’s depths.
Sun i began to weep openly, a raw, choking sound. "No... not again... not him..."
Li Qiang, who had been trying to distance himself from the horror, stumbled forward, his face pale. "What... what is it? What does he want?" His voice was thin, reedy, filled with a primal terror. He looked at Little Sheng, then at Zhang Wei, then back at the child’s pointing finger.
He Rong, however, remained still. Her eyes, sharp and intelligent, were fixed on Little Sheng, then on Zhang Wei’s unmoving form. She analyzed and processed the situation.
Little Sheng was a tell. A harbinger. His actions were a direct consequence, a marker. Zhang Wei had been chosen. But for what? The specifics remained elusive, but the pattern was undeniable. She glanced at Lin Yue, a silent question in her eyes: Do you see it too?
Lin Yue t her gaze with a brief, almost imperceptible nod. He saw it. The rule was not just about verbalizing an identity. It was about ntal identification. About focusing on the corpse with the intent to recognize, to understand its specific nature. The very act of attempting to identify the constituents of the corpse, of trying to break down its generic facade, was a trigger. Prolonged, analytical observation, fueled by a desire to know its identity, even a composite one, was a direct violation.
The instance preyed on their intellect, their need for understanding. Zhang Wei, the logical one, had fallen into his own trap. He had sought truth, and the truth had marked him.
Little Sheng’s finger remained pointed, unwavering, at Zhang Wei’s chest. The incense stick in his hand continued to smoke, a thin, ethereal plu rising into the oppressive air. The Inheritor’s presence, cold and ancient, settled deeper, a suffocating blanket.
And the oblivious Zhang Wei continued to stare. His eyes, fixed on the coffin, held a desperate, unyielding need.
The first night was nearing its end, but Zhang Wei’s gaze remained locked on the coffin—unnaturally still, unnaturally focused—while the faintest distortion flickered across his face, as if sothing had already begun to take hold.
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