Читать книгу: «Echo of the Rift. March 9th, 2239 Year», страница 2

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They nodded, each in their own way. But Kyle felt this fragile, hastily cobbled-together alliance already cracking at the seams. He turned to the exit, hiding the shadow of doubt in his eyes. Somewhere in the depths of his tormented consciousness, behind layers of pain, guilt, and endless fatigue, he heard the echo again. A voice, so much like Ella’s, whispered, “Daddy, find us… you promised…” And he knew that, despite all the risks, despite this motley and unreliable team, he would go into “Echo-7.” Not just to save the world. But for them. For the ghostly hope of the impossible.

Chapter 3: “On the Edge of the Void”
2247. The Fortress City “Last Bastion,” Zone 7, Perimeter.

The final hours before departure resembled the calm before a devastating storm – the very kind that raged within the Rifts, only this calm was internal, heavy, saturated with foreboding. Kyle Rain stood at the very edge of Last Bastion’s perimeter, where the shimmering, flickering protective dome thinned, and the world beyond transformed into primal, irrational chaos. Through the murky, distorting glow of the barrier, he saw the Wasteland – scorched, ravaged earth, littered with the skeletons of old cities, where the ominous fissures of the Rifts glowed like venomous, pulsating veins on the body of a dying planet. The air beyond the dome vibrated with anomalous energy, and even here, in the relative, illusory safety, Kyle felt his skin prickle with static tension, the hairs on his arms standing on end. He knew that once they crossed this invisible boundary, there might be no way back. Or it would be completely different from what they imagined.

The team, if this collection of individuals bound by shared doom could be called that, gathered at the hangar in Sector 7. Awaiting them was an armored transport – the Thunderclaw, a rusty, patched-up remnant of former military might, modified by makeshift methods for survival in the Wasteland. Its hull was covered with scars from past forays, like an old warrior ready for his last battle. Eva Carter, focused and as usual taciturn, made a final check of the exosuit systems, her fingers, covered in small scars and calluses, moving with mechanical precision over the sensor panels. She didn’t look at Kyle, but he physically felt her tension – it stemmed not so much from the dangerous journey ahead as from the invisible barrier that stood between them. The past. Mistakes that couldn’t be corrected. Guilt they shared silently, like a bitter cup, but never dared to discuss aloud.

“Systems at seventy percent,” Eva tossed out, without raising her eyes, her voice dry as the Wasteland sand. “The field generators are barely breathing. If we get hit by a serious gravitational surge or a temporal anomaly, these tin cans might not hold up, and we’ll be smeared across the plating. Are you absolutely sure the Council’s drones didn’t make a mistake with the coordinates of ‘Echo-7’? Because if we get stuck in the heart of the Wasteland, you can be sure, Rain, no one will come for us. We’ll just be written off as another failed expedition.”

“I’m sure,” Kyle replied, though deep down a worm of doubt had long been gnawing at him. The drone data was fragmented, incomplete, and the signals from the Rift itself were distorted beyond recognition. But they had no other choice, no other lead. “We’re sticking to the plan. ‘Echo-7’ is sixty miles out. If we’re lucky, and the Wasteland doesn’t show its teeth too soon, we’ll get there in a day.”

Lina Cyrus, sitting on a dusty box of medical supplies, raised her head. Her face was paler than usual, almost transparent, but in her wide-open eyes burned a feverish, desperate determination. She went through the medkits again and again, checking vials of neuro-stabilizers, injectors, and portable scanners, as if these fragile instruments could protect them from the unspeakable horror that awaited.

“I’ve prepared enhanced neuro-stabilizers,” she said quietly, her voice trembling slightly, but she tried to hide it. “They should help if… if the Rift starts messing with our heads too much. I’ve read all the available reports. The people who came back… the few… they said they saw things. Their deepest fears, nightmares come to life. Unreal, but… too real. Some were never able to distinguish them from reality.”

Kyle nodded briefly, but his thoughts were already far away, there, in the pulsating heart of “Echo-7.” He knew what she was talking about. Illusions. Mental traps. The Rifts didn’t just break physical reality – they penetrated the mind like a virus, pulling out the deepest fears, the most painful desires from its darkest depths, turning them into sophisticated weapons. He himself felt it, every time he heard the ghostly echo of Ella’s voice. But he wasn’t going to talk about it aloud, share this vulnerability of his. Not now. Not with them.

Drake Holt, as always, stood ostentatiously apart, leaning casually against the cold wall of the hangar. In his hands, he twirled his plasma cutter with lazy grace, its blade gleaming dully in the semi-darkness. His gaze, heavy and unreadable, was fixed on the Wasteland beyond the flickering dome, as if he saw something there inaccessible to the others – or, conversely, was looking for confirmation of his darkest expectations. His smirk, permanent as the ingrained tattoo on his neck, irritated Kyle more than he was willing to admit to himself.

“Messing with heads?” Drake snorted, his voice dripping with open, mocking derision. “Come on, Doc, don’t scare us. Maybe the Rift will show you something really interesting. I’ve heard some people see their dead there. Maybe you’ll meet someone… especially close. Say, someone you couldn’t save on the operating table?”

Lina flinched as if struck, her fingers freezing on the medkit, her face flushing. Kyle felt a wave of icy anger rise within him, but he restrained himself again. Drake deliberately looked for weaknesses, tested their strength, like a predator testing its prey. It was his disgusting game. And Kyle wasn’t going to play it.

“Shut up, Holt,” he growled, stepping closer, his voice low but laced with menace. “If you have something relevant to say, say it. Or keep your dirty mouth shut until we get to ‘Echo-7.’ Your jokes aren’t needed here.”

Drake just laughed loudly, raising his hands in mock surrender, but his eyes, dark and cold, gleamed with something unkind. Kyle turned away, feeling the tension in the team grow with every minute, like a taut, invisible string ready to snap. They hadn’t even left Bastion yet, and they were already ready to tear each other’s throats out.

“Everything’s ready,” Eva interrupted the protracted silence, slamming the exosuit panel shut. The clang of metal against metal sounded deafening in the tense atmosphere. “We can move. But I’ll repeat, Rain, for the especially gifted: if something doesn’t go according to your brilliant plan, I’m not going to die for your ghostly ideas or personal crusades. We have one, clearly defined goal – to find the source. No deviations. No freelancing.”

Kyle didn’t answer. He knew what she was hinting at. His family. His unhealed pain. His desperate, almost insane hope. But that was none of her business. He just nodded, heavily donning his exosuit – cumbersome, but necessary for survival in the Wasteland’s aggressive environment. The metal plates closed around his body with a dull click, and the neural interface on his wrist habitually synchronized with the system, transmitting a faint, barely perceptible hum to his nerve endings. It was a bitter reminder of the old days, when technology seemed like salvation, a universal key to all doors, not a curse that opened the gates to hell.

The team silently loaded into the Thunderclaw. The transport roared to life, its ancient engines coughing from age and lack of quality fuel, but still started, spewing a cloud of bluish smoke. The protective dome of Bastion began to open slowly, with a grinding and groaning, and the cold, acrid air of the Wasteland, saturated with radiation and the smell of decay, rushed in, making Lina cough and Kyle wince. He watched through the thick, scratched armored glass as the world beyond the dome unfolded before them – a boundless, scorched desert, pierced by glowing, bleeding cracks of the Rifts. Somewhere out there, to the north, in the very heart of this agony, “Echo-7” awaited. And perhaps, answers. Or final oblivion.

They had only traveled a few miles when the first, barely perceptible sign of an anomaly appeared. The air in front of the transport shimmered like heat haze, distorting the outlines of distant ruins, and suddenly time seemed to slow down, stretching like molasses. Kyle felt his heart stumble, beating in a strange, disjointed rhythm, and the sounds inside the Thunderclaw – the hum of the engines, the breathing of his companions – stretched, transformed into a low, viscous drone, as if someone was playing an old recording at minimum speed. Lina cried out briefly, her voice low and distorted, as if coming from the bottom of a deep well, and red indicators lit up alarmingly on the dashboard in front of Eva.

“Time jump! Local distortion!” Eva shouted, her fingers, as usual, flying quickly and accurately across the control panel. “Hold on! This should pass in a few seconds! Don’t panic!”

But to Kyle, it seemed to last an eternity. In this distorted, stretched moment, where every second was like a hammer blow on an anvil, he heard it again – the echo. Ella’s voice, soft, distant, almost indistinguishable, but so painfully real that an icy needle pierced him through. “Daddy… I’m here… I’m waiting for you here…” the voice whispered, and Kyle involuntarily, against his will, turned his head to the window, where beyond the armored glass, in the shimmering, iridescent haze, a shadow flickered for a moment. A small, fragile figure, with fluttering pigtails, just like hers. He blinked, desperately trying to focus, and the vision vanished, dissolved, leaving only the desert and the ominous cracks of light.

“Rain!” Eva’s sharp voice snapped him out of his stupor, brought him back to harsh reality. Time returned to normal, the Thunderclaw lumbered forward again, but Kyle felt cold sweat streaming down his back. “Are you alright? You looked like you’d seen the Devil himself. Or something worse.”

“I’m fine,” he lied, quickly turning away to hide his expression. But his hands, gripping the railing, were trembling so much that it was noticeable even in the dim light of the cabin. This was only the first jump. The first, light touch of the Rift. The first warning. And what awaited them closer to “Echo-7”? He didn’t know. But he knew he had to go on, even if this journey shattered his mind into a thousand sharp, bleeding shards. For her. For them.

Chapter 4: “Voices from the Cracks”
2247. The Wasteland, 15 kilometers from “Echo7.”

The Thunderclaw crawled forward, its worn tracks grinding the debris of the old, buried world beneath it. The Wasteland around them was like an unhealed scar on the planet’s body – black, scorched, dead earth, pierced by a network of glowing, pulsating fissures, from which, like death rattles, faint, sickly bursts of anomalous energy occasionally erupted. Kyle Rain sat at the instrument panel, but his gaze was fixed not so much on the flickering sensors showing the exponential growth of reality’s instability as they approached “Echo-7,” but on what was happening beyond the armored glass. The air inside the transport was heavy, stale, saturated with the smell of overheated metal, rust, and that indescribable, almost tangible tension that felt like it could be cut with a knife.

Eva Carter, her teeth gritted, drove the vehicle, her knuckles white on the control levers. From time to time, she cast short, sharp glances at Kyle, full of unspoken questions or veiled reproach, but remained silent. Every muscle in her face was tense, and tiny beads of sweat glistened on her forehead beneath tangled strands of hair. She felt it just as he did – the approach of something ancient, alien, and unimaginably powerful.

Lina Cyrus huddled in the farthest corner of the cramped cabin, clutching her medical backpack as if it were the only island of safety in this mad world. Her face was pale, almost waxen, and her lips moved silently – either whispering a prayer or simply counting to calm her racing heart and resist the panic that gripped her throat with icy fingers.

Even Drake Holt, usually so deliberately relaxed and cynical, looked… different. His legs were still stretched out defiantly, and he mechanically twirled his old, faithful combat knife in his hands, but his usual mocking smirk had slipped from his face, replaced by a tense, predatory grimace. He wasn’t humming his bawdy soldier songs, but silently peered into the murky distance, his fingers gripping the knife’s hilt so tightly that the metal seemed about to bend. Even his feigned, ostentatious calm couldn’t hide the deep, primal pressure that grew with every mile traveled, like an invisible, all-pervading hand squeezing his chest, drawing the last remnants of composure from his soul.

“We should be seeing it by now,” Eva finally said, her voice sounding muffled and strained through the strained roar of the old engines. The silence in the cabin had become so dense that her words sounded like a gunshot. “‘Echo-7.’ The drones detected it visually at this distance. Why are the screens blank? Just static.”

Kyle frowned, checking the data on his neural interface. The screen of his bracelet also showed only a chaotic flicker of interference, as if reality itself around them refused to obey the laws of physics and logic, resisting any analysis. He felt an unpleasant chill run down his spine. This wasn’t just a technical malfunction. It was a warning. The voice of the Rift itself.

“The Rifts distort signals, Eva,” he replied, trying to make his voice sound more confident than he actually felt. “We’re close. Too close to rely solely on technology. We need to keep our eyes open. And listen… listen to our instincts.”

Eva snorted briefly but said nothing, only gripping the control levers tighter. Kyle turned to the armored window, desperately trying to make out something in the murky, shimmering haze of the Wasteland. And suddenly he saw it – not with his eyes, but rather felt it like a punch to the gut. A huge, gaping fissure in the sky, several hundred meters wide, its edges pulsating with a cold, ghostly, unearthly light that seemed to suck all the color from the surrounding world. “Echo-7.” It was larger, more monstrous than he expected, and seemed alive, like a giant, bleeding wound that breathed, oozing darkness and madness. The light emanating from it cast distorted, dancing shadows on the scorched earth, but these shadows didn’t move as they should – they writhed like a tangle of venomous snakes, lengthened and contracted contrary to the laws of optics, and vanished without a trace, as if falling into another reality.

“There it is…” Lina whispered, her voice trembling so much that the words were barely audible. She pressed herself against the cold glass, her eyes wide with a mixture of horror and a kind of perverse, morbid fascination. “It’s… it’s so beautiful. And so terrifying. Do you… do you feel it? Like it’s looking right at us. Into our very souls.”

“Don’t be ridiculous, Doc,” Drake snapped, but there wasn’t a trace of his usual mockery in his voice. He too was staring at the Rift, and his fingers, which had been mechanically twirling the knife, froze. Kyle noticed his feigned smirk finally disappear, replaced by an expression of deep, animal wariness. Even he, with all his bravado and cynicism, couldn’t ignore this place. It was something beyond his understanding of combat and death.

Kyle wanted to answer, to say something to reassure them, or perhaps himself, but his words caught in his throat when the Thunderclaw suddenly and violently shook. Not like from an impact or a bump in the road – this was deeper, more fundamental, as if reality itself beneath them had shifted, rippled. The sensors on the dashboard wailed with a piercing, ear-splitting siren, the screens flashed a blinding red, and at the same moment the air inside the cabin became heavy, almost viscous, as if they were immersed in a thick, invisible syrup. Lina cried out briefly, clutching her head, her face contorted with sudden, agonizing pain, and Eva swore through gritted teeth, desperately trying to maintain control and prevent the vehicle from overturning.

“Gravitational anomaly!” she shouted, her voice barely audible through the growing roar. “A strong one! Hold on! This is much more powerful than the previous jumps!”

Kyle felt his body become unbearably heavy, as if someone invisible had poured molten lead into his veins. Every muscle protested, every movement was incredibly difficult. He turned his head with difficulty to look at the team and saw Lina bent double, her face contorted with unbearable pain, a thin, dark trickle of blood flowing from her nose. Drake, his teeth gritted, tried to get up, but he was literally pinned to the floor, the knife clattering from his weakened hands. Eva, covered in sweat, struggled with the controls, her lips moving, shouting commands or curses, but her voice was barely audible through the low, vibrating hum that seemed to emanate from everywhere and nowhere at the same time, penetrating to the very bones.

But the worst part wasn’t the physical sensations, however agonizing they were. Kyle felt his mind begin to slip, lose its footing, as if someone or something was ruthlessly digging through his memories, pulling them to the surface like dirty, bloody laundry. He closed his eyes, but it didn’t help – the Quantum Dawn laboratory appeared before his inner vision with terrifying clarity, that very day, the day of the universal catastrophe. He saw Maria and Ella again, their beloved faces distorted with mortal fear, and the bottomless, all-consuming emptiness of the Rift pulling them in. But this time they didn’t just disappear. They looked directly at him, their eyes empty as the sockets of a skull, and their voices, merging into one eerie, multi-voiced chorus, whispered directly into his brain: “It’s your fault, Kyle. You betrayed us. You left us here, in this darkness. Find us… or die with us. You must pay.”

“No! Shut up!” Kyle screamed, his voice echoing with terror in the cramped, oppressive space of the transport. He slammed his fist against the metal wall, trying to escape this mental torture, but the physical pain didn’t help. The voices grew louder, more insistent, they sounded inside his head like an air raid siren, tearing apart the remnants of his mind.

He wasn’t alone in this hell. Beside him, Eva screamed, her face contorted, she let go of the controls and clutched her temples. “Get out! Leave me alone! It’s not my fault! I couldn’t…” Her words were drowned out by sobs. Kyle saw her eyes fill with terror, reflecting something known only to her – perhaps her own ghosts from Quantum Dawn or from the depths of the Wasteland.

Even Drake, pinned to the floor, emitted muffled, choked groans, his body convulsing, an expression of unspeakable suffering frozen on his face. The Shadow had clearly found his pressure points as well.

“Rain! Eva! Wake up!” Lina’s voice, weak but unexpectedly firm, cut through the cacophony of pain and fear. Staggering, she rose to her feet, blood still flowing from her nose, but her eyes burned with fire. She held an injector in her hand. “This isn’t real! Do you hear me? It’s the Rift! It’s playing with you! It’s trying to break us!”

Kyle opened his eyes with immense effort, feeling cold, sticky sweat drenching his face. The gravitational pressure began to slowly subside, the Thunderclaw was moving again, though its engines coughed raggedly from the overload. Lina, still clutching her head but standing more steadily on her feet, looked at him with concern and a new, unfamiliar respect. Drake, breathing heavily, got up on all fours, picked up his knife, but his face was darker than a thundercloud, and his gaze darted nervously around the corners, as if he was still searching for an invisible enemy.

“I’m… alright,” Kyle forced out, though it was a blatant lie. He felt his heart pounding wildly in his chest, and the voices, though they had subsided for a while, still echoed maliciously at the very edge of his consciousness, ready to return at any moment. He looked at Eva. She sat with her head in her hands, her shoulders shaking slightly. In her eyes, when she finally raised them, he saw not only the remnants of terror, but also something resembling shame. She knew he had seen her weakness. And perhaps she had seen his. This was their shared hell.

“We can’t… we can’t continue like this,” Eva said, her voice quieter, but with a ring of steel. She was already recovering, her engineer’s logic taking over her emotions. “If the anomalies continue to intensify at this rate, we won’t reach the center of ‘Echo-7.’ We’ll just go insane or be torn apart. We need to find shelter, wait until reality stabilizes at least a little. Or at least pretend that we have a clear plan, and not just a desperate dash into the unknown.”

“Shelter?” Drake laughed hoarsely, but the laughter was empty, devoid of any mirth. “Are you serious, Carter? We’re ten miles from this damned crack in the arse of the world, and it’s already crawling into our heads like a worm in a rotten apple! Where the hell are you going to hide? In this radioactive rubble? Or in your vaunted damn logic, which almost kicked the bucket a couple of minutes ago?”

“Shut up, Holt,” Eva snapped, but her gaze was fixed on Kyle. She was waiting for his decision, though deep, long-standing distrust was still readable in her eyes. But now something new was mixed in with it – perhaps the understanding that they were all in the same boat, and this boat was rapidly sinking.

Kyle took a deep breath, trying to piece together the shards of his thoughts. He knew Eva was right – they wouldn’t withstand another anomaly like that without rest and preparation. But stopping meant losing precious time, and every hour of delay brought them closer to inevitable failure. And yet, somewhere in the depths of his tormented consciousness, he felt the Rift calling him. Ella’s voice, even if it was just a cruel illusion, a product of his diseased imagination, pulled him forward like a powerful, irresistible magnet.

“We’ll find shelter,” he finally said, his voice hoarse but firm. “The drones registered the remains of an old military bunker somewhere around here, to the northeast. ‘Northern Shield,’ I think. We’ll wait it out there, check the equipment, try to recover. And decide how to move forward. But we’re not retreating. ‘Echo-7’ is our only chance. Whatever the cost.”

Lina nodded gratefully, her face still pale, but a faint spark of hope flickered in her eyes. Drake just shrugged, muttering something unintelligible under his breath, but didn’t argue further. Eva, after a long, tense pause, silently turned to the control panel, directing the Thunderclaw towards the indicated coordinates. But Kyle felt this was only the beginning. The Rift had already penetrated their minds, and with every step, every meter closer to its heart, it would dig deeper, more ruthlessly. He looked out the window at the distant, venomous, pulsating glow of “Echo-7” and thought that perhaps it wasn’t them going towards it. It was patiently waiting for them, setting its invisible traps.

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200 стр. 1 иллюстрация
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