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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — Apocalypse

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Jin woke to the feeling of his heart being torn from his chest.

No—not torn. Gripped.

He shot up from his desk, gasping, hand flying out instinctively to catch himself. His palm connected with his water glass instead. It shattered against the floorboards, and his keyboard—his expensive keyboard—slid off the desk in a cascade of stale coffee and tap water.

"Fuck."

The curse came out ragged. His chest still ached, a dull, thudding pain that echoed in his ribs like a fist pounding against the inside of his sternum. He pressed a hand to his shirt, half-expecting to feel blood.

Nothing. Just sweat.

Jin stared at his ruined keyboard for a long moment, then at the contract review still open on his secondary monitor—the one that hadn't been baptized in caffeine. His eyes burned. His neck felt like someone had replaced his spine with rusted rebar.

Three nights in a row. Three. The law firm didn't pay him enough for this. They didn't pay anyone enough for this. But the bonus for finishing the Morrison merger review was supposed to be substantial, and "substantial" meant he could finally—

His phone buzzed.

Then buzzed again.

Then didn't stop.

He grabbed it from the desk, squinting at the screen. The notifications were stacked so deep he couldn't see his wallpaper anymore. News alerts. Social media. Group chats he'd muted months ago. All screaming the same thing.

[BREAKING: RED FOG WARNING ISSUED FOR ALL DISTRICTS]

[LARGEST FOG EVENT IN RECORDED HISTORY - STATE OF EMERGENCY DECLARED]

[DO NOT LEAVE YOUR HOMES - VISIBILITY ZERO]

Jin scrolled. The messages blurred together—panic, confusion, a handful of jokes that felt hollow even in text. Then he saw the videos.

He clicked one at random.

The footage was shaky, shot from what looked like a twenty-third-floor balcony. Gray-white fog churned below like a living thing, dense enough to swallow the streetlights whole. But above the city—above—there was nothing. Clear sky. Stars.

The fog wasn't rising.

It was contained.

Jin's thumb froze over the screen. That wasn't how fog worked. Fog formed from the ground up, from temperature differentials and moisture. It didn't pool like water. It didn't—

He was at the window before he finished the thought.

The curtains parted with a whisper of fabric, and Jin's breath caught in his throat.

The video hadn't captured it. Couldn't have. The lens flattened everything, made it distant, manageable. But standing there, looking out at the city he'd lived in for seven years, Jin understood why the news anchors had stopped using words like "weather event" and started using words like "anomaly."

The fog was a wall.

A wall.

It encircled everything he could see—buildings, streets, the skeletal framework of the elevated highway, the distant glass towers of the financial district—all of it cupped in a bowl of gray-white mist that rose a hundred meters into the air before curving inward like a lid. Like something had placed a dome over the city while he was sleeping.

And inside that dome, the air was wrong. Not just thick—heavy. Jin could feel it pressing against the glass, against his lungs, against the inside of his skull. The silence was worse. No traffic. No sirens. No wind. Just the low, humming pressure of—

"What the hell is that?"

The voice came from somewhere below. Then another. Then a chorus. Jin pressed his forehead against the cold glass, trying to see what they were seeing.

Then he saw it.

A line of red. Thin at first, like a paper cut against the gray. But it was spreading, bleeding outward across the fog's surface, staining the white-gray with something that looked too vivid to be natural. Too alive.

The line widened. Curled. Became something that made Jin's stomach drop because he recognized it even before it fully formed.

He recognized it the way prey recognizes the shape of a predator in the dark.

The eye opened.

It was massive—impossibly, nightmarishly massive. The red wasn't blood; it was something older, something that had watched before there was anything to watch. The pupil was a vertical slash of absolute black, narrowing as it swept across the sky, and when it moved, Jin felt it. Not just saw it. Felt it.

A pressure. A weight. The same pressure that had been pressing against his chest since he woke up, except now it had a source. Now it had a face.

His body locked.

He couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't do anything except watch as that colossal eye swept over the city, over the buildings, over the tiny specks of humanity frozen in their windows and on their balconies and in the streets below. It wasn't looking at them. It was looking through them.

Then it stopped.

Jin felt the gaze settle on his building. On his window. On him.

The pupil dilated.

The light came without warning.

Red. Pure, blinding red that turned the world into a negative of itself, that burned through glass and walls and flesh like none of it was there. Jin tried to close his eyes, but his body still wouldn't obey. The light poured into him, through him, around him, and somewhere in the chaos of sensation, he felt his heart stop.

Not stop beating—stop being his.

For one eternal second, something else held it. Something that had never been human, that would never understand what it meant to be fragile, to be finite, to be afraid.

Then the light was gone. The eye was gone. The pressure vanished so completely that Jin collapsed against the window, gasping, his body remembering how to move all at once.

He looked down at his hands. They were shaking.

On the back of his left hand, just below the knuckle, a mark was fading from red to black—a symbol he didn't recognize, something that looked like a closed eye inside a circle of thorns. It burned faintly, a cold burn, like frostbite rather than fire.

And in the back of his mind, something new had taken root.

A presence. Waiting.

He didn't have time to process it.

Crack.

The sound came from the hallway, sharp and wet, like bones being bent the wrong way. Followed by another. And another. A rhythm of breaks and snaps that made Jin's skin crawl because they weren't random. They were purposeful.

Something was reshaping itself out there.

Jin moved on instinct. His hand closed around the fruit knife he'd left on his desk three days ago—stainless steel, ten centimeters, not a weapon but better than nothing. His feet carried him to the door, silent on the carpet. He pressed his ear against the wood.

Breathing. Thick and wet, like something was trying to remember how lungs worked.

He cracked the door open. Just a sliver. Just enough to see.

The hallway was dark. The emergency lights that usually ran twenty-four hours had died with everything else—no power, no signal, no nothing. But Jin didn't need light to see what was standing in the living room.

It had been Yang Tian.

It wasn't anymore.

The thing that wore his roommate's clothes was longer than it should have been. Yang had been average height, average build, the kind of guy who disappeared in a crowd. This thing—this thing—had arms that hung past its knees, fingers that had become claws, a spine that curved and twisted in ways that made Jin's eyes water just to track. Its skin was the color of spoiled milk, stretched thin over bones that had rearranged themselves into something efficient. Something predatory.

Its hair lay in clumps on the floor. Its face—

Jin almost closed the door then. Almost ran. But some part of him—the part that had survived three years of contract law, that had learned to see the trap clauses before they triggered—made him watch.

The thing's face was turned away, but he could see the side of its neck. Purple veins stood out against white skin, pulsing with something that might have been blood. Its shoulders rose and fell with each breath. It was learning. Adapting. Remembering how to be a body.

Then it stopped.

The breathing stopped. The cracking stopped. Everything went silent, and Jin knew—knew—that it had heard him.

It turned.

He saw its face for less than a second. That was enough. The eyes were the worst. Yang's eyes had been brown, unremarkable, the kind of eyes you forgot the color of five minutes after meeting him. These eyes were pale. Milk-white. But the pupils—the pupils were there, tiny pinpricks of black that fixed on the crack of Jin's door with an intelligence that didn't belong.

It sees me.

The thing's mouth opened. A sound came out—not a roar, not a scream, but something in between. Recognition. Excitement. Hunger.

It moved.

Jin slammed the door. The lock caught a second too late—the thing's claws hooked the edge, splintering wood, and the door shuddered under an impact that sent vibrations through Jin's arms and into his chest. He threw his weight against it, feet braced, every muscle screaming.

The door opened three centimeters. Then five. A pale arm forced itself through the gap, fingers stretching, reaching, wanting.

"Closeclosecloseclose—"

Jin planted his shoulder against the door and pushed. The arm retracted an inch. Then two. The thing was strong—stronger than any human had a right to be—but the door was solid oak, and Jin had spent four years of high school wrestling at a weight class thirty kilos above his natural size. He knew how to hold ground.

But he couldn't hold forever.

The arm came through again, claws scraping the doorframe, and Jin saw his opening. He let the door give—just a fraction, just enough to let the thing commit its weight—and then he threw himself sideways, trapping the arm against the frame.

The thing screamed.

Jin stabbed.

The knife went into the wrist, then out, then in again. He didn't aim. Didn't think. He just moved, driving the blade into whatever he could reach—fingers, forearm, the soft meat above the elbow. The thing thrashed, claws gouging furrows in the door, but Jin didn't stop.

The eye.

He remembered the eye in the sky. The way it had looked through him, through everything, like he was nothing. Like he was prey.

He wasn't prey.

He drove the knife into the thing's face.

Once. Twice. Three times. He lost count. The blade struck something hard—bone, maybe—and slipped, slicing his own palm open, but the pain was distant, unimportant. What mattered was the way the thing's thrashing slowed. The way its arm went slack. The way the pressure against the door finally, finally stopped.

Jin pulled the knife free and stumbled back.

The thing slid down the doorframe, leaving a smear of dark blood on the wood. Its pale eyes stared at nothing. Its chest didn't move.

For a long moment, Jin just stood there, breathing. His hand was bleeding freely, dripping onto the carpet in fat red drops. His shoulder felt like it had been dislocated. His ears were ringing.

[Zombie slain. Initiate Blood Contract?]

The words appeared in his vision—not on a screen, but in his vision, red text burning against the darkness of the hallway. He blinked. They stayed.

[The Crimson Book recognizes your claim. Would you bind this creature as a Summon?]

Jin stared at the dead thing at his feet. At the text floating in front of his eyes. At the mark on his hand, which had begun to glow faintly again—pulsing, like a heartbeat.

He thought about the eye in the sky. The fog that wasn't fog. The thing that had been his roommate, twisted into something that looked at him with hungry milk-white eyes.

He thought about what came next.

What else was out there.

[Y/N]

Jin wiped the knife on his shirt and reached for the door.

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End of Chapter 1

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