Gao Lin’s fingertips were centiters from the gap.
The air there was not just cold. It was hungry. It felt like a vacuum, pulling at the heat of his skin, drawing the very breath from his lungs.
"There you are," the voice whispered.
It was no longer a plea. It was a recognition. It sounded like a secret shared between two people who had known each other for a lifeti, a tone of intimate, terrifying familiarity. It didn’t sound like it was coming from inside the coffin anymore; it sounded like it was vibrating inside Gao Lin’s own skull.
Lin Yue stood several paces back. He did not move. He did not call out. He watched Gao Lin’s shoulder blades tense, the way the man’s breathing had beco shallow, erratic.
Lin Yue’s mind flickered to the rule. Do not respond to voices from the coffin.
He had seen what happened when players asked questions. He had seen Zhang Wei’s ashes. He had seen the fading silhouette of Liu Fang. He knew the cost of curiosity in this hall.
But Gao Lin was not a man who accepted costs he hadn’t calculated.
Gao Lin’s hand trembled, but he didn’t pull away. He leaned closer, his face nearly touching the black lacquered wood. His eyes were wide, pupils blown, reflecting the oppressive darkness of the coffin’s interior.
"It’s just a voice," Gao Lin whispered, though whether he was talking to the coffin or to himself, Lin Yue couldn’t tell. "It’s a prompt. A trigger. If I can... if I can just get a direct answer, I can find the logic. I can find the pattern."
"Gao Lin," Lin Yue said. His voice was flat. A sign of warning.
Gao Lin didn’t look back. His focus was absolute. He was convinced that the system operated on a set of paraters and that by challenging the prompt, he could find the edge of the map. He believed that a question was not a response—that an interrogation was an act of dominance, not submission.
"A question isn’t a response," Gao Lin murmured, his voice barely audible over the oppressive silence of the hall. "Asking ’who’ isn’t the sa as answering ’yes.’ It’s a request for information. The system can’t punish a request for information if that’s the only way to solve the puzzle."
The voice from the coffin breathed again. "Do you rember ?"
Gao Lin froze. The intimacy of the question was a hook, sinking deep into the subconscious. He felt the pull of a mory that didn’t belong to him, a flicker of a face, a scent of old rain and ozone. He felt the system trying to find a resonance within him, searching for a crack in his skepticism.
He tightened his jaw. He decided to push.
"Who are you?" Gao Lin whispered.
The words were low. A tiny, fragile bridge built of sound.
The mont the last syllable left his lips, the world glitched.
It was not a loud event. There was no crash, no scream, no sudden burst of energy. Instead, the air around Gao Lin rippled. It looked like heat haze rising from asphalt in mid-sumr, a subtle distortion that warped the lines of his body.
The incense smoke, which had been curling lazily toward the ceiling, suddenly froze. Every grey ribbon of vapor stopped mid-air, suspended in a static, unnatural stillness.
The silent mourners, who had been watching with blank intensity, turned their heads in perfect unison. Their movents were synchronized, chanical.
The voice from the coffin stopped.
The silence that followed was not the absence of sound. It was a presence. A heavy, suffocating weight that pressed against the eardrums.
Lin Yue watched Gao Lin.
Gao Lin didn’t look afraid. He looked confused. He looked down at his own hand, the one reaching for the coffin, and his expression shifted to one of profound bewildernt.
His outline beca unstable.
He began to flicker. For a fraction of a second, he was there—solid, breathing, terrified. Then, he was a blur, a smudge of grey and beige against the dark wood of the coffin. He looked like a photograph that had been sared while the ink was still wet.
He didn’t fall. He didn’t dissolve into ash.
He simply... thinned.
His form vibrated at a frequency that the eye could barely track. He beca a transparency, then a ghost, then a re suggestion of a human shape. There was no blood. No sound. No final word.
And then, with a final, subtle ripple in the air, the flicker stopped.
The space where Gao Lin had been standing was empty.
The incense smoke suddenly resud its climb toward the ceiling, as if the pause had never happened. The ripple vanished. The air smoothed over.
The hall beca colder. Not the cold of a draft, but the cold of a void.
Lin Yue stared at the empty spot on the floor. He felt a chill crawl up his spine—not from the temperature, but from the precision of the erasure. Zhang Wei had left ash. Liu Fang had left a lingering, distorted mory.
Gao Lin had left nothing.
For a long minute, no one spoke. The remaining players stood like statues, their gazes fixed on the void.
"What... what just happened?"
The voice belonged to Li Qiang. He sounded breathless, his eyes darting from the coffin to the empty space.
"He’s gone," He Rong whispered. She was leaning against the pillar, her face pale. "He just... he vanished."
"Where did he go?" Sun i asked. She stepped forward, her voice trembling. "Did he fall into the coffin? Did the system teleport him?"
Lin Yue didn’t answer. He was watching their faces.
He saw it happen in real ti.
He Rong frowned. She looked at the space where Gao Lin had stood, and then she looked at Li Qiang. Her expression shifted from horror to a strange, vacant confusion.
"Who?" He Rong asked.
Li Qiang blinked. "Who who?"
"Who vanished?" He Rong asked. "I an... I know sothing happened. I felt it. But... who was standing there?"
Sun i stopped walking. She looked around the room, her brow furrowing. "I... I rember soone. I rember a voice. Soone was talking about the logic of the system."
"Who was it?" Li Qiang asked.
Sun i opened her mouth to answer. She paused. Her eyes glazed over for a second. "I... I don’t know. I can’t rember the na. Was there soone else with us?"
Lin Yue felt a surge of cold alarm.
The erasure was not just physical. It was cognitive. The instance was scrubbing the record of Gao Lin’s existence from their minds. It was a secondary effect of the response—the punishnt for speaking to the dead was not just death, but the removal of the evidence that you had ever existed.
He felt it too. A subtle tugging at the edges of his own mory.
The image of Gao Lin began to blur in his mind. The sound of his skeptical voice began to fade, replaced by a humming silence. The mory of the man’s grey jacket, his crossed arms, his stubborn jaw—it was all sliding away, like sand through fingers.
No, Lin Yue thought.
He clamped down on the mory with a violent, ntal effort. He didn’t try to "rember" in a passive sense; he began to reconstruct.
Gao Lin, he told himself. His na was Gao Lin. Age twenty-seven. Skeptical. Prone to challenging authority. He wore a grey jacket. He stood three ters from the coffin. He believed a question was not a response. He asked ’Who are you?’ and he disappeared.
He visualized the scene as a series of data points. He mapped Gao Lin’s position in the room. He recalled the exact pitch of the man’s voice. He anchored the mory to the physical evidence—the way the air had rippled, the way the incense had frozen.
He treated the mory like a piece of evidence in a cri scene, docunting every detail before the system could bleach it white.
"I think..." Li Qiang started, his voice sounding distant. "I think we were just... waiting for the next ritual. Right? Why are we all standing here?"
He Rong looked at Li Qiang, then at the coffin. "I don’t know. I feel like I’m forgetting sothing. Sothing important."
"Maybe we’re just tired," Sun i whispered. "The air in here... it makes you lose your train of thought."
"Wait," He Rong said, her eyes narrowing. "How many of us are there?"
They all began to count.
"One, two, three..."
They counted themselves. They counted each other.
"Six," Li Qiang said. "There are six of us left."
"Six," Sun i repeated. "Is that right? I thought... I thought there were more. But I can’t rember how many."
"It doesn’t matter," He Rong said, though her voice was shaky. "We’re still here. That’s what matters."
Lin Yue remained silent. He watched them. He watched the way they looked at one another with a growing, subconscious distrust. They knew sothing was missing. They could feel the gap in their collective history, a phantom limb where a teammate used to be. But the more they tried to find the na, the faster the na vanished.
He looked toward the background of the hall.
The silent mourners.
They were still sitting in their rows, their faces blank, their postures rigid. But as Lin Yue scanned them, he realized the numbers had changed.
There were more of them now.
He didn’t know how many had been there at the start—he hadn’t counted them all—but the rows felt denser. The space between the figures had shrunk.
His eyes drifted to a figure sitting near the edge of the third row.
The mourner was slumped slightly. Their shoulders were pulled forward in a way that felt familiar. The head was tilted at a specific, stubborn angle.
Lin Yue’s heart slowed.
It wasn’t a confirmation. The faces of the mourners were blurred, indistinct, as if they were made of wet clay. But the posture... the specific, arrogant tilt of the head... it mirrored the way Gao Lin used to stand when he was disagreeing with soone.
The system didn’t just erase. It recycled.
It took the identity, the form, and the essence of the failed player and integrated it into the scenery. Gao Lin hadn’t just disappeared; he had beco part of the furniture of the funeral. He had beco another silent witness to the deaths of the people he had once known.
Lin Yue felt a wave of cold clarity.
He turned his gaze back to the coffin.
The lid was still open by a finger’s width. The darkness inside seed deeper now, more saturated.
The difference, Lin Yue deduced, is the trigger.
Zhang Wei had tried to identify the corpse. He had looked too long. He had tried to force a logical conclusion upon a supernatural entity. He had died a "physical" death—his body collapsed, his form disintegrated into ash. He had failed the trial of observation.
Gao Lin, however, had responded. He had entered into a dialogue with the entity. He had acknowledged the voice.
Responding to the dead did not create a corpse. It created an absence.
By answering the coffin, Gao Lin had essentially agreed to be "claid." He had stepped out of the role of the observer and into the role of the participant. And in this instance, the only role for a participant who failed was to be forgotten.
The system wasn’t just killing them. It was erasing the very concept of them.
If you died violently, you left a trace. If you were erased, you left a hole. And the most terrifying part was that the hole closed up almost imdiately.
Lin Yue looked at He Rong. She was staring at him, her expression uncertain.
"Lin Yue?" she asked. "Why are you looking at us like that?"
"Like what?" Lin Yue asked. His voice was a monotone.
"Like you know sothing we don’t," she whispered. "You’ve been... very quiet. Even for you."
"I’m just observing," he replied.
"Observing what?"
Lin Yue looked at the empty space where Gao Lin had been. "The silence."
He Rong shivered. "I hate this place. I want to leave. Why can’t we just leave?"
"The rules," Li Qiang reminded her, though he sounded like he was reciting a script he no longer fully understood. "We have to survive until the dawn of the third night. We have to finish the rituals."
"Which rituals?" Sun i asked. "I can’t rember which ones we’ve already done."
Lin Yue closed his eyes for a second.
The basic rituals. Bowing. Incense. The paper money. The morning approach.
He realized that the mory erasure wasn’t just targeting the players who died. It was leaking. It was a cognitive contagion. The more players were lost, the more the overall "stability" of the group’s mory decayed.
The instance was slowly stripping them of their identities, preparing them all to beco the replacents.
If they forgot who their teammates were, it would be a very short step before they forgot who they themselves were.
And once you forgot your own na, once you forgot your own history, you would be the perfect vessel for the coffin.
Lin Yue opened his eyes. He felt a sudden, intense need to ground himself. He reached into his pocket and gripped a small, sharp piece of tal he had found in the first instance—a fragnt of a broken watch. He pressed the edge of it into his palm, letting the sharp sting of pain anchor him to the present.
My na is Lin Yue. I am twenty-four. I am a player of this instance. I am not part of this funeral.
He looked at the other five players. They were huddled together now, a small island of fragile humanity in a sea of silent, blurring figures. They looked smaller than they had an hour ago. More diminished.
"We should move," Lin Yue said. "The next ritual will start soon."
"How do you know?" Li Qiang asked.
"Because Uncle Ren is coming," Lin Yue replied.
From the corridor, the slow, asured footsteps returned. Uncle Ren appeared, his stooped fra casting a long, distorted shadow across the wooden floor. He was carrying a fresh tray of offerings, his eyes as blank and unblinking as ever.
He stopped in the center of the hall. He didn’t look at the players. He didn’t look at the empty space where Gao Lin had stood.
"The midday offering," Uncle Ren announced. His voice was a dry rasp. "The departed requires sustenance for the journey. The bowls must be filled, the lids placed precisely. Do not let the bowls tilt."
He set the tray down.
Lin Yue noticed sothing.
Uncle Ren’s eyes flickered toward the third row of mourners. For a fraction of a second, there was sothing like recognition in the old man’s gaze. Sothing like a weary, habitual acknowledgent.
Uncle Ren knew.
He knew exactly who was missing. He knew exactly where they had gone. He watched the players vanish, one by one, with the detached interest of a gardener watching leaves fall in autumn.
He wasn’t just a guide. He was a witness.
"Who goes first?" Li Qiang asked, his voice trembling.
"I’ll do it," He Rong volunteered, though she looked like she wanted to vomit. "Just... let’s just get it over with."
As He Rong stepped forward, moving toward the coffin with her eyes cast low, the hall fell back into that oppressive, heavy silence.
Lin Yue stood back, his hand still gripping the tal fragnt in his pocket. He watched as He Rong approached the black lacquered wood. He watched the way the air around the coffin seed to shimr, as if it were breathing.
Then, after a long, agonizing silence, the whisper returned.
It didn’t sound like the multi-layered voice from before. It didn’t sound like a plea for help.
It was a new voice.
It was a voice that sounded familiar—terrifyingly so. It had the cadence of soone who liked to argue. It had the pitch of a skeptic. It had the specific, arrogant inflection of soone who thought they could outsmart the system.
But the voice was distorted, as if it were being spoken through a mouthful of ash and cold earth.
"Who are you?" the coffin whispered.
He Rong froze.
She didn’t respond. She didn’t whisper back. But she stopped dead in her tracks, her eyes widening as she stared at the narrow gap in the lid.
"That voice..." she whispered. "Why does that sound like...?"
She trailed off.
Her brow furrowed. She looked confused. She blinked, and the mory vanished.
"Like what?" Li Qiang asked from behind her.
"I... I don’t know," He Rong said, her voice sounding hollow. "I don’t rember."
Lin Yue watched her, and for the first ti since entering the Flow, he felt a genuine shiver of dread.
The coffin wasn’t just calling to them. It was using the voices of the erased to lure the survivors. It was using the ghosts of their friends to build a bridge.
And as he looked at the silent mourners in the background, Lin Yue realized they were all leaning in. They were all listening.
The number of mourners had increased again.
He didn’t count them this ti. He didn’t want to know how many of them were now staring at him.
He simply stood in the cold, grey light of the hall, clutching the piece of tal in his hand, and prayed that he could rember his own na until the dawn of the third night.
The coffin breathed.
The silence pressed in.
And from the darkness behind the lid, the voice whispered again—a voice that no one in the room could quite rember, but which everyone felt in the marrow of their bones.
"There you are."
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