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The silence that followed the announcent was not the silence of pause or hesitation.

It was the silence of a held breath that ten thousand lungs had drawn simultaneously and could not find a way to release.

Lin Yue stood in the doorway of his room, one hand still resting on the fra. Behind him, Bai Wuyin had not moved from the chair. The sketchbook was closed on his lap, and the pencil was still.

In the corridor, every person who had been mid-motion had simply stopped.

A player three doors down had been carrying two cups of water back from the station. Both cups were still raised, suspended between the station and wherever he’d been going, held in hands that no longer rembered their destination.

The chi of the terminal screens continued, faint and indifferent. No one was looking at them.

Lin Yue released the doorfra and stepped fully into the corridor.

"Lin Yue," said Bai Wuyin quietly, from inside the room.

"I heard it," Lin Yue said.

He had heard it the sa way he had heard everything else these past few days—through a layer of new understanding that had not been there before the funeral instance, as though certain frequencies of the world had been tuned to a register his ears could not previously reach. The announcent had not rely delivered information. It had carried sothing underneath the words.

He walked further down the corridor.

Thousands of players, from the desperate E-ranks to the seasoned B-ranks, froze mid-step. The casual conversations, the anxious whispers, the rhythmic hum of the information kiosks—all of it vanished, replaced by a sudden, oppressive vacuum.

Lin Yue felt it first as a change in the air. The atmospheric pressure didn’t just drop; it plumted, as if the Ga Hall had suddenly been plunged into the depths of a midnight ocean. The oxygen felt thin, cold, and tallic.

A newbie player near the water station turned to him—a young man, barely out of orientation, with wide eyes and the particular look of soone whose fear was outpacing their comprehension.

"What’s an Arbiter?" the young man said, his voice cracking slightly.

The veteran standing next to him said nothing. She was staring at the wall with her arms pressed flat to her sides, as though making herself as small as possible. The knuckles of her hands had gone pale.

"The ones who run this," she said, finally. Her voice was very flat. "The ones who run everything."

The young man looked at Lin Yue, as if expecting him to add sothing. Lin Yue did not add anything. He looked straight above them.

The elevated platform.

High above the central plaza of the Ga Hall, a massive, circular platform of obsidian and white light flickered into existence. It had been there since the inception of the hall, a dormant architectural ghost that most players had simply ceased to notice. Now, it blazed with a cold, clinical luminescence.

Seven positions. Seven thrones of varying designs, though none looked designed for human comfort.

Other players, when he’d asked, had said: "No one knows what it’s for. No one has ever seen it open." Veteran players tended to look away when it was ntioned, the way people look away from things that they have decided it is safer not to think about.

Now, a sound began from sowhere deep within the Hall’s structure, a pressure change rather than a frequency. Not audible so much as felt, the way a weather front is felt before it arrives, in the bones, in the small hollow behind the sternum.

Then the lights ca on.

The composite panels that Lin Yue had noted were beginning to separate, moving with the absolute precision of chanisms that had never moved hurriedly in their existence and had no reason to start now.

The platform was opening.

From the main communal floor below ca the sounds of reaction—rapid footsteps, the sudden scramble of chairs, a voice saying they’re assembling in a tone so stripped of affect it was almost unrecognizable as speech.

Lin Yue stood in the corridor with his arms at his sides and watched the ceiling.

He was aware of Bai Wuyin stepping out of the room behind him. The boy ca to stand at Lin Yue’s shoulder, sketchbook under one arm. He tilted his head back at the sa angle. His charcoal-dusted fingers were very still.

"Can you see anything?" Lin Yue asked.

"Not yet," Bai Wuyin said. "But it’s getting heavier."

The pressure.

Lin Yue could feel it now—not the dull, persistent headache that had followed him out of the instance, but sothing structural, sothing that pressed against him. Sothing more fundantal than pain. The sensation of authority made physical.

Around them, in the corridor, players were responding to it differently. A woman two doors down had folded quietly to her knees. A man near the end of the hall had pressed himself against the wall and was sliding down it with the glazed expression of soone whose body had made a decision their mind had not yet received. Another player, a veteran with the gold card of B-rank, was still standing upright, but his teeth were pressed together, and the tendons in his neck were taut as wire.

The newbie player from the water station had simply sat down on the floor, cross-legged, staring at nothing. His breathing was shallow. He had gone sowhere else in his head where the pressure could not fully reach.

Lin Yue stood upright.

He was not unaffected. He was very precisely affected—he could feel the weight of it bearing down on each vertebra individually, could feel the instinct in the base of his brain telling him to lower his head, to reduce his profile, to make the gesture of submission that every biological system makes in the presence of sothing categorically larger than itself.

He did not lower his head.

He understood the instinct completely. He simply had no interest in following it.

The first Arbiter arrived without announcent.

One mont, there was an empty platform. Then, the next, a woman appeared.

Bai Lingshuang.

She materialized in one of the seven seats with a stillness that suggested she had always been there, that it was the rest of the world that had been temporarily present without her.

She wore flowing white robes that didn’t drift in the wind, but rather floated in a dium that wasn’t air. Her skin was the color of a winter moon, translucent and chilling. Her silver-white hair spilled around her like a frozen waterfall. Her hands were clasped. Her eyes were open and moving across the Hall below with the thodical attention of soone conducting an inventory.

She did not look at any individual player. She looked at the Hall the way a scientist looks at a sample.

The pressure in the air increased.

"That’s the first," said the veteran with the silver card, from where he had pressed himself against the wall. His voice had gone rough. "That’s Bai Lingshuang. Don’t—don’t et her eyes. Don’t try to—"

He stopped speaking.

Almost imdiately after, a second figure appeared. He was refined, dressed in the attire of a scholar from a forgotten era, holding a thin, leather-bound book. His eyes didn’t look at the crowd; they scanned the air, reading invisible lines of code that drifted like dust.

He Luowen—The Arbiter of Rules

Then, the air began to distort. A figure cloaked in shifting shadows materialized, its form flickering like a corrupted video file. The players nearest to the platform began to twitch, their expressions twisting into masks of sudden, inexplicable terror.

It was Tang Mo.

He stood with his hands loose at his sides, weight balanced with deliberate neutrality, and he scanned the Hall with the calm efficiency of soone with no particular opinion about what he was looking at.

The fourth and fifth arrived almost simultaneously.

Luo Shiye materialized next to Tang Mo. A skeletal figure in dark robes, carrying a lantern that pulsed with a dim, sickly light. Inside the lantern, tiny, flickering sparks drifted—souls, or the remnants of them.

The sll of ozone and old earth filled the air.

Su Qian appeared beside Luo Shiye. An elegant figure, wearing the attire of a high-born rchant, a calm, deceptive smile playing on his lips. His eyes shimred with the rapid movent of unseen numbers.

Ji Xu arrived sixth.

A young man with long black hair tied back with a dark cord appeared. He wore layered robes that shifted in pattern, creating a nauseating sensation of overlapping monts. As he took his place, the sounds of the hall began to echo.

His gaze moved across the floor.

Lin Yue did not look away. He felt his lungs burning, his heart hamring a frantic rhythm against his ribs. He was not kneeling, but his muscles were screaming, his body instinctively trying to fold under the atmospheric weight. He forced his gaze upward, his eyes narrowing. He refused to be a variable that simply reacted. He wanted to see the hierarchy.

The six of them stood in each of their places, their combined presence creating a psychic weight that felt like a mountain resting on the players’ heads. The air was thick with a clinical, detached energy. To them, the thousands of players below were not people; they were a crop, a set of variables, a collection of data points in a grand, cold experint.

Then, the center of the platform buckled.

The light vanished. The temperature stabilized. The distortions ceased. All that remained was a void—a black hole in the center of the platform that absorbed everything. From that void stepped a man in immaculate dark attire.

The mont his foot touched the stone, the pressure didn’t just increase—it solidified. It beca a physical barrier. The few players who had been trying to stay upright were slamd into the floor by an invisible force.

Gu Yanchen. The Judge. The First Arbiter.

He was tall, composed, dressed in an immaculate dark uniform that spoke of an authority that predated the System itself. His eyes were two pits of absolute black, absorbing every scrap of light in the room. He did not look at the crowd. He stood in absolute stillness, his void-like eyes staring forward.

The other six Arbiters, who had seed like gods to the players, subtly shifted their positions. They didn’t bow, but they created a space for him, a silent acknowledgent of the hierarchy. Gu Yanchen was not rely one of them; he was the axis upon which their authority turned.

The pressure in the Hall, which had been building increntally through each arrival, did not increase further. It simply beca definite.

The sound of a dozen players fainting echoed through the hall. Others began to hyperventilate, their minds unable to process the sheer scale of the entity standing before them. It was not just power; it was the realization that they were insects being observed by a god who found them mildly inconvenient.

Lin Yue felt the weight press down on his skull, a crushing force that demanded total submission. He felt his knees tremble. He felt the instinct to bow, to hide, to disappear.

The veteran with the gold card lowered his head. His face had gone blank with effort. He was still standing, but the effort of it had taken everything else.

Lin Yue stood with his head level and looked up at the platform.

Then, finally, Gu Yanchen looked at the Hall.

The Hall did not look back.

The Arbiters did not speak imdiately. They stood on the platform, and they looked at the Hall below.

Then Bai Lingshuang turned her head fractionally to her right and said, in a voice that was perfectly clear and carried with no particular effort despite the distance: "Forty-six percent of currently registered players show asurable deviation from projected behavioral paraters. Up from thirty-one percent at the last review interval."

He Luowen said, "The Funeral Instance affected the distribution significantly."

"The Funeral Instance produced six non-survivors and one anomalous completion," Bai Lingshuang said.

"The completion thodology was non-standard," He Luowen continued. "The player identified the replacent chanism in the third phase without access to the intended NPC guidance pathway."

Tang Mo’s flickering form leaned forward, their gaze sweeping over the sea of bowed heads. Suddenly, the shifting shadows converged, and a pinpoint of attention locked onto a specific coordinate in the crowd.

"There," Tang Mo said, the voice now sounding directly in the ears of everyone present, though only one person was the target. "That’s the player from the funeral."

Lin Yue felt the weight of that gaze. It was like a physical probe, an invasive search through his mind. He didn’t flinch. He didn’t lower his head. He remained still, observing the Arbiter of Distortion with a calm, analytical detachnt.

He Luowen finally closed his book with a soft thud. He looked down at Lin Yue, his eyes narrowing.

"The one who solved the replacent ritual," He Luowen noted. "The logic he used to bypass the coffin’s seal was... unorthodox. It didn’t follow the established path of sacrifice. He treated the ritual as a linguistic puzzle rather than a spiritual demand."

Ji Xu, the Arbiter of Ti, shifted. His image blurred, and for a second, he seed to be standing just a few feet away from the platform, staring directly at Lin Yue, before snapping back to his original position.

"Interesting," Ji Xu whispered. The word echoed, repeating three tis in a temporal loop. "Interesting. Interesting."

The word was not particularly delivered. It was simply placed into the discussion, the way a marker is placed on a chart. It added itself to the existing information and waited to see what the existing information would do with it.

"His stability tric has not degraded post-instance," Bai Lingshuang said. She was looking at the Hall again, the sa inventory gaze, but the quality of her attention had shifted very slightly. "Consistent with his entry profile. His stability remains intact."

"Three-day fever," Luo Shiye said. He had not spoken until now. His voice was lower than the others’, and carried a quality Lin Yue couldn’t categorize. "Synchronization error. The System flagged the instance departure as incomplete."

"The System flagged it as Classification Pending," Su Qian said quietly. His voice was the opposite of Luo Shiye’s—clear and light and sohow harder to follow. "That’s a distinction."

A brief silence.

"The anomaly trace has persisted beyond the safe-zone boundary," He Luowen said. "The isolation protocols did not terminate it."

"The isolation protocols have no category for it," Bai Lingshuang said.

"That’s been established," He Luowen replied, with the precise patience of soone who has noted that sothing has been established and has noted also that noting this is now necessary.

The exchange was brief—a few sentences, a few clarifications—but it had a quality that Lin Yue could feel even from the corridor below, even under the weight of the atmospheric pressure, even with the greater part of his cognitive attention devoted to the effort of remaining on his feet and keeping his head level.

Ji Xu said nothing. He was looking at the floor below with an expression of general assessnt.

Tang Mo said, "The anomaly followed him out. That hasn’t happened before."

"It has," Su Qian said. "Twice. Prior instances, prior players. Neither player survived the subsequent evaluation period."

Another silence.

"He is not those players," Bai Lingshuang said.

"No," Su Qian agreed.

The word settled into the air with a particular finality that Lin Yue noted and filed and did not examine too closely.

He Luowen had been looking at sothing—a notation, sothing available to the Arbiters at their level that was not visible from below. He said, "The psychological architecture is consistent across all available data points. The stability is not performance. It is structural."

"Structural stability degrades," Luo Shiye said. "Under sufficient load."

"This one’s load tolerance is outside the standard projection range," Bai Lingshuang said.

"The question is how far outside," Luo Shiye replied.

Ji Xu smiled. It was a small expression, not directed at anyone in particular, and it was gone before anyone noticed it. He said nothing.

Tang Mo turned his head and looked at Ji Xu. The look lasted exactly as long as it needed to and then ended.

"The replacent ritual’s third chanism," He Luowen said. "The player identified the operative logic without guidance. He identified the NPC’s instructions as deliberately obstructive rather than genuinely directive, and he inverted the thodology."

"He treated the NPC’s contradiction as a puzzle rather than an obstacle," Bai Lingshuang said.

"Yes." He Luowen muttered.

"That’s the relevant variable," she continued. "Not the completion itself. The cognitive framing. Most players who fail the third phase do so because they continue to trust the guidance structure past the point at which trust is productive. This player identified the point."

"At significant cost," Luo Shiye said. "He almost didn’t complete it in ti."

"But he did complete it," He Luowen said. "And he ca back with the anomaly attached. And his stability is intact. These three facts are not unrelated."

Su Qian said, almost to herself, "The Flow has been selecting for this."

It was a quiet sentence. Quiet enough that Lin Yue was not entirely certain it had been said, rather than heard—

But Bai Wuyin’s hand, beside him, tightened fractionally on his sketchbook.

Lin Yue noticed that.

"Enough," said Gu Yanchen.

The word was a landslide. It wasn’t loud, but it carried the absolute weight of the Flow’s law.

The debate stopped instantly. He Luowen closed his book with a sharp thud. Tang Mo stopped flickering. Su Qian’s smile vanished. The other six Arbiters imdiately receded, their presence dimming as they deferred to the First.

The First Arbiter didn’t look at his subordinates. His authority was not based on agreent, but on an absolute, crushing dominance. The discussion ended because he decided it had ended.

For a long mont, Gu Yanchen’s black eyes remained fixed on Lin Yue.

There was no warmth in that gaze, no kinship, and no rcy. But there was sothing else—a recognition. It was the look of a predator who had found a prey that didn’t run, or perhaps, the look of a creator who had found a flaw in his masterpiece that he actually found... acceptable.

Lin Yue didn’t blink. He held the gaze, his mind working through the implications. He had been marked. Not just by the System, but by the entity that stood above the System.

Without another word, Gu Yanchen turned.

As he moved, the other six Arbiters vanished in a synchronized blur of light and shadow. The obsidian platform dissolved, the blinding luminescence fading back into the sterile grey of the Ga Hall.

The pressure vanished as abruptly as it had arrived.

The sudden return of normal atmospheric pressure was almost as violent as the descent. A collective gasp erupted from the thousands of players. Those who had been kneeling collapsed forward, their muscles giving out. Those who had been frozen began to shake, the delayed onset of terror finally hitting them.

"Is it over?"

"I can’t breathe... I still can’t breathe!"

"Did you hear what they said—they said his na—"

"They were watching the funeral instance—they were watching us all along—"

"What anomaly? What are they talking about—"

"How long have they been doing that—just watching—"

Lin Yue stood in the corridor and listened to the Hall recalibrating, and did not participate in it. The trajectory of the noise was telling him things. The velocity of the rumors was telling him things.

He ca back with the anomaly attached.

The Flow has been selecting for this.

Structural stability.

He pressed two fingers to the bridge of his nose.

He was aware of Bai Wuyin standing beside him. The boy had not moved during the Arbiters’ assembly. He had not lowered his head. He had stood at Lin Yue’s shoulder and watched the platform, and held his sketchbook under one arm and existed within the weight of authority, without reaction, without accommodation, simply present.

Now he was looking at sothing.

Not the platform. The air near Lin Yue’s shoulder.

"Bai Wuyin," Lin Yue said.

"She’s still there," Bai Wuyin said.

His voice was very neutral. The sa neutrality he used for everything, that Lin Yue was beginning to understand was not the absence of feeling but a mode of holding it—a container, rather than an emptiness.

"Even now."

"Even now," Bai Wuyin confird. He paused. Then: "She looked up. When Gu Yanchen spoke."

Lin Yue did not say anything for a mont.

"When he said enough?"

"Yes."

Lin Yue absorbed this. He turned it over with the part of his mind that had not been occupied by the press of authority and the clinical calculus of the Arbiters’ discussion. He turned it over once and then set it beside the other things that did not yet have categories, because the category system was still being built, and building it incorrectly was worse than leaving things uncategorized.

She looked up when Gu Yanchen spoke.

The corridor was loud now. Players moving in both directions, so going toward the main communal floor to compare notes, so going away from it—toward their rooms, toward quiet, toward the particular solitude of processing sothing privately that is too large to process publicly.

The veteran with the silver card had finally detached herself from the wall and was walking in one direction with the focused, slightly chanical gait of soone who has identified an objective for their body to pursue while their mind finishes what it needs to do.

Lin Yue watched her go.

He beca aware, then, of the notification.

It appeared in his peripheral vision first—the specific blue-white shimr of a System interface, but narrower than the Hall-wide broadcast, rendered with a kind of privacy, as though the display itself was aware of the difference between what was ant for everyone and what was ant for him.

He turned his attention to it and read it.

[PRIVATE NOTIFICATION]

[Player: Lin Yue]

[Priority Authorization Confird.]

[Arbiter Gu Yanchen requests a private audience.]

The notification was very still. It did not request acknowledgnt. It simply sat in his vision the way facts sit in the mind, without explanation, in the complete confidence that it would be understood.

Around him, the Hall continued its recovery. Voices overlapped and separated. A terminal three doors down chid through a routine update. Soone dropped sothing else, recovered it, and moved on.

Lin Yue read the notification again.

The notification didn’t offer an ’Accept’ or ’Decline’ button. It was not a request; it was a summons.

The air around Lin Yue suddenly grew cold again, a lingering trace of the void. He looked up at the empty space where the platform had been, and for a fleeting second, he felt as if those black, void-like eyes were still watching him, waiting for him to realize that the ga had changed.

He could hear, in mory, the sound of that single word cutting through the Arbiters’ discussion with the precision of sothing that did not require force because force would have been redundant.

He stood very still in the corridor with the notification hovering blue-white at the edge of his vision, and listened to thousands of players talking about what they had just witnessed, and understood that among everything the Hall was processing and recalibrating and failing to understand—among all of it—

He was the only one reading this ssage.

He was no longer just a player trying to survive.

He had been singled out by the Judge.

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