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The mont broke, but it did not leave , and that was the part that made it dangerous in a way I could not neatly explain or comfortably ignore.

It lingered in the sa place thoughts go when they are not finished, when they have not yet decided what they an, and that unsettled more than anything dramatic ever could.

I exhaled slowly and pressed my fingers against my temple, not because I had a headache, but because it felt like I should be doing sothing physical while my mind tried to catch up with what had just happened.

Recognition was not a word I used lightly, and it certainly was not sothing I expected to feel from sothing that barely held itself together as a form, yet that was exactly what it had been.

Not observation, not reaction, but sothing quieter and far more personal, sothing that implied I had crossed from being an object in its perception to sothing closer to a reference point.

"No," I murmured under my breath, shaking my head once as if I could dislodge the thought before it rooted itself any deeper. "We are not unpacking that. That is a future problem, and future can deal with it when he is more qualified and significantly less confused."

That sounded reasonable, which ant it was probably avoidance, but I was willing to accept that for now because the alternative involved spiraling into conclusions I was not ready to handle.

Instead, I focused on what I could control, which was not much, but it was enough to build the illusion of stability, and sotis that was all you needed to keep moving forward without making things worse.

"Alright," I said more firmly, straightening slightly as I looked at the presence again, eting that steady, patient attention with sothing that resembled intent. "We are establishing boundaries. Imdiately. Before this turns into sothing I cannot walk away from."

The presence flickered in place, unchanged on the surface, yet no longer sothing I could dismiss as passive or random. There was a pattern to it now, a subtle consistency that made it feel less like noise and more like a process, and the fact that I could even think of it that way was already a problem.

"Listen carefully," I continued, fully aware that I had no idea whether it understood language, tone, or anything I was saying, but unwilling to remain silent anyway. "There are going to be rules. Simple ones. Reasonable ones. The kind that prevent situations from escalating into disasters."

I paused briefly, then added in a quieter tone, "Ideally."

The flickering did not change, but I had already learned that a lack of obvious reaction did not an a lack of response, so I pressed on, raising a finger as if the gesture itself would sohow give weight to what I was saying.

"Rule one is very important," I said. "You do not copy anything that matters, and by that I specifically an you do not copy , my actions, my thoughts, or anything that could reasonably lead to you becoming a problem I have to deal with later."

The words ca out more serious than I intended, but that was because the possibility itself had already taken shape in my mind, and I did not like it.

"Rule two," I continued, raising another finger, "we do not repeat what just happened. That mont, whatever it was, is classified as an anomaly, and anomalies do not get repeated until they are understood, controlled, and preferably supervised by soone who knows what they are doing."

I let the silence sit for a second after that, not because I expected an answer, but because it felt necessary to acknowledge the weight of what I had just said.

The presence flickered.

That was all.

No confirmation, no resistance, no indication that any of this mattered in the way I wanted it to, which ant I was either setting boundaries successfully or talking to sothing that operated on an entirely different frawork where the concept of rules was, at best, a suggestion.

I lowered my hand and let out a slow breath.

"Good," I muttered. "We have established a system that may or may not be completely aningless, but at least I can say I tried."

For a mont, I allowed my attention to drift away from it, not out of carelessness but out of necessity, because focusing on it for too long created a strange pressure in my thoughts, like standing too close to sothing that quietly influenced the way you perceived everything else.

That was when I noticed it.

At first, it was not a clear realization, just a faint sense that sothing did not align the way it should have, like a detail that had been moved slightly out of place when I was not looking. The environnt itself appeared unchanged, the sa quiet stretch of space, the sa stillness, the sa lack of movent that had defined this place from the beginning, yet the feeling persisted, subtle but insistent.

"...Sothing is different," I said quietly.

The words were not dramatic, but they carried a certainty that made pay closer attention.

I shifted my gaze toward the direction I had co from, tracing the path in my mind rather than relying on what I could see, and that was when the inconsistency beca clearer. The path still existed, nothing had physically disappeared or transford, yet the idea of returning along it felt less certain than it had before, as if distance itself had beco less reliable, less fixed, sothing that could change without needing a visible reason.

I took a slow step forward, testing the feeling rather than committing to it.

Nothing imdiate happened.

The ground remained steady beneath , the air did not resist, and for a brief mont it almost felt like I had imagined the entire thing.

Then I took another step.

And the sensation returned.

It was not physical resistance, not sothing that pushed against or tried to stop , but sothing more abstract, like the act of moving forward had gained weight, not in effort but in aning, as if each step was being acknowledged by sothing that had not needed to acknowledge it before.

I stopped.

"...That is not normal," I said, my voice quieter now.

Slowly, I turned my head and looked back at the presence.

It had not moved.

It was still there, flickering in that sa unstable way, yet sothing about it felt more defined now, not in shape but in presence, like it occupied its place more completely than it had before.

"Did you do sothing?" I asked.

The question hung in the air, simple and direct, but the answer, if there was one, did not co in any form I could easily understand.

The presence flickered.

I exhaled slowly and looked away again, forcing myself to think through the situation instead of reacting to it.

There were possibilities here, explanations that did not imdiately jump to the worst conclusion, and I needed to consider them before deciding what this ant. I could be misinterpreting a subtle environntal effect, or my perception could be shifting due to prolonged exposure to sothing unfamiliar, or...

My gaze drifted back to the presence.

Or my interaction with it had changed sothing more fundantal than I was prepared to deal with.

"I am leaving," I said suddenly, the decision forming with a clarity that cut through the uncertainty.

Because regardless of the cause, staying here without understanding the rules was not a good idea, and I had already pushed far enough for one encounter.

"Do not follow ," I added, not because I believed it would obey, but because saying it felt necessary.

Then I turned and began to walk.

The first few steps felt normal, reassuring in their simplicity, the ground steady, the motion familiar, and for a brief mont I allowed myself to believe that I could simply leave, that whatever had changed would remain contained to that space behind .

I did not look back imdiately.

I kept moving, letting the distance build, step after step, each one reinforcing the idea that I was putting space between myself and sothing I did not fully understand.

Then, eventually, I glanced over my shoulder.

The presence was still there.

Unchanged.

Not following.

A small, quiet sense of relief settled in my chest, enough to make exhale softly as I turned forward again.

"Good," I murmured. "That is good. We are leaving, everything is fine, nothing is escalating into sothing complicated."

I took another step.

And then another.

And that was when the change beca impossible to ignore.

It did not happen all at once, and that was what made it so unsettling, because there was no clear mont where things shifted from normal to wrong. Instead, it crept in gradually, a subtle pressure that built with each step forward, not enough to stop , but enough to make the act of moving feel different from what it should have been.

The air felt heavier, not physically but conceptually, as if it carried awareness, as if my movent through it was no longer sothing that went unnoticed.

I slowed.

Then stopped.

"...No," I said under my breath, the word quiet but firm.

I turned again, more deliberately this ti, my gaze settling on the presence with a sharper focus.

It had not moved.

And yet, it felt closer.

Not in distance, not in any way I could asure or point to, but in relation, as if the space between us had changed its structure without changing its appearance, bringing us into a different kind of proximity that had nothing to do with physical location.

I stared at it, and it flickered back at , the sa as before, and yet not the sa at all.

"We talked about this," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

There was no response.

There never was.

I exhaled slowly and forced myself to think, to step back from the imdiate reaction and look at the pattern instead, because there was one, I could feel it now, subtle but consistent, sothing that connected my actions to the changes I was experiencing.

"...It is not distance," I murmured, more to myself than anything else. "It is sothing else."

I shifted my weight slightly, then took a careful step to the side instead of forward.

The difference was imdiate.

Not dramatic, not enough to fully resolve the pressure, but enough to make it ease, just slightly, just enough to confirm that I was not imagining it.

My eyes sharpened.

"...Direction," I said quietly.

Or movent.

Or intent.

Sothing about the way I was trying to leave was triggering the change, while moving differently altered the effect.

I took another step to the side, slower this ti, paying closer attention to the way the space responded, to the subtle shift in that pressure, the way it adjusted rather than resisted.

"...So this is not about where I am going," I continued, my voice low, thoughtful now despite the situation. "It is about how I am moving through it."

The realization settled into place gradually, not as a sudden answer but as a frawork, sothing I could test, sothing I could work with, and that alone changed the way I looked at the situation.

Because if there were rules, even strange ones, even ones that did not make sense yet, then this was not chaos.

It was a system.

And systems...

Could be understood.

I let out a quiet breath, a faint, almost reluctant smile forming despite everything.

"Alright," I said softly. "I see how it is."

Because if this thing was learning from , then I could learn from it too, and that ant this was no longer just an encounter I needed to escape from.

It was sothing I could study.

Sothing I could figure out.

Sothing I could—

I stopped.

Then sighed.

"...This is exactly how it starts," I said, almost to myself.

Because that shift, that quiet transition from caution to curiosity, from avoidance to engagent, was one I recognized far too well.

I looked at the presence again, still flickering, still watching, still existing in that strange, impossible way that had already begun to change more than I was comfortable admitting.

"...We are going to regret this," I said.

And then, after a brief pause, I added, softer now, but no less certain,

"...just not yet."

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