Loe raamatut: «Echo of the Rift»

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© Zohar Leo Palfi, 2025

ISBN 978-5-0067-1793-0

Created with Ridero smart publishing system

Dear Readers!

You are holding a story about the fragility of our world, about dreamers who, in their quest to reshape reality, found themselves on its very edge. This book is not merely a tale of heroism or struggle. It is a story about people – their fears, losses, hopes, and their desperate will to survive against all odds. As you immerse yourself in this world, I hope you feel like part of this team – sharing their anxieties, pain, and the paradoxes of their choices. But above all, I want this story to remind you of one essential truth: even in the darkest abysses, there is always room for light – in inner strength, in trust in one another, and in the pursuit of redemption.

Thank you for embarking on this perilous journey alongside the characters to uncover the truth about the boundaries of existence and what makes us human.

When I first began writing this book, I could never have imagined how deeply it would resonate within me. This is a story about a world that collapsed under the weight of its own mistakes, about people whose lives were torn apart but who still found the strength to move forward. It is a tale of loss, guilt, hope, and, above all, of how we can find light even in the darkest corners of our hearts.

The protagonists of this book – Kyle, Eva, Lina, and Drake – have become more than just fictional characters to me. They are reflections of our fears, regrets, and most cherished dreams. Their journey through a shattered world, through the Rifts that tear apart not only reality but also souls, is a voyage toward acceptance and the realization that even in chaos, there is room for redemption.

I sincerely hope this story touches your hearts as deeply as it touched mine while I was writing it. May it serve as a reminder that even in the darkest times, we carry within us the strength – the strength to fight, to love, and to believe, bearing the echoes of those we have lost and the hope for a new dawn.

With warmth and faith,

Zohar Leo Palfi

Table of Contents for Echo of the Rift

Prologue: «The Fracture»

A depiction of the catastrophe that marked the beginning of the story – the first Rift.

Chapter 1: «The Last Bastion»

Kyle lives in the «Last Bastion.» He is assigned a mission to scout the Rift «Echo-7.»

Chapter 2: «Shards of Trust»

Team formation: tense relationships between the members of the expedition.

Chapter 3: «On the Edge of the Void»

The team’s first steps into the Wasteland, revealing their vulnerabilities.

Chapter 4: «Voices from the Cracks»

As the team approaches the Rift «Echo-7,» mental intrusions begin.

Chapter 5: «Shadows in the Walls»

A stop at the abandoned bunker «Northern Shield.» The heroes encounter shadows.

Chapter 6: «Echo from the Depths»

The Rift intensifies its attacks, consuming reality and affecting the heroes’ minds.

Chapter 7: «The Rift Within Us»

The Rift exploits the heroes’ fears and guilt, tearing apart their inner worlds.

Chapter 8: «The Point of No Return»

The team reaches the boundary of the Rift’s zone of influence and moves forward, unable to turn back.

Chapter 9: «Voice from the Void»

The Rift’s essence manifests through voices, manipulating the team’s minds.

Chapter 10: «Choice in the Abyss»

The heroes confront the core of the Rift and make a pivotal decision.

Chapter 11: «Shadow Beyond the Edge»

The aftermath of the confrontation with the Rift. Questions arise about what was truly defeated.

Chapter 12: «Calm Before the Storm»

The team temporarily shelters in «Southern Blade,» but the threat remains.

Chapter 13: «Path into Darkness»

A fleeting sense of safety turns into the next stage of a perilous journey.

Chapter 14: «Iron Ruins»

The heroes navigate a ruined industrial complex, uncovering mysterious traces.

Chapter 15: «Voices from the Void»

The heroes begin to understand the true nature of the Rift’s voice and its influence on their fears.

Chapter 16: «Claws of Darkness»

The conflict escalates with physical manifestations of the Rift – tentacles and shadows.

Chapter 17: «Walls of Refuge»

The team reaches «Southern Blade,» but faces suspicion and isolation.

Chapter 18: «Shadows in the Walls»

Even behind the fortified walls of the bunker, the Rift’s essence continues its influence.

Chapter 19: «Truth and Echo in the Technical Corridors»

The heroes find allies and uncover troubling secrets about the Rift and the «Quantum Dawn» laboratory.

Chapter 20: «Escape from the Bastion of Fear»

The team orchestrates a daring escape from «Southern Blade» in pursuit of the truth.

Chapter 21: «Heart of the Rift»

The team returns to «Echo-7» for a final attempt to confront the Rift’s essence.

Chapter 22: «Echo of Silence»

The aftermath of the expedition: what the heroes lost and what they gained.

Prologue: «Echo of the Rift»
March 9th, 2239. Quantum Dawn Laboratory, Sector 17.

Kyle adored mornings in the station’s habitat module. Ella, his little sunbeam, often woke before Maria and would put on a «morning concert,» singing her simple songs while her toy robot, creaky and well-worn, marched across the table. In these moments, the laboratory, that buzzing hive of advanced technology and hidden risks, seemed a distant, almost unreal world, having nothing to do with their cozy, almost illusory family idyll. Illusory, because the underlying tension of the impending experiment already hung in the air, even if they tried to ignore it.

The air vibrated. Not from heat or cold, but from something deeper, something that was born in the very depths of the reactor, as if reality itself was stretched taut like the string of an ancient, out-of-tune instrument, ready to snap with a deafening dissonance. Kyle Rain stood at the control panel, his fingers, usually flitting confidently over the sensors, frozen above the screen, the pale, anxious light of the indicators reflected in his dilated pupils.

«We’re on the edge, Kyle,» the voice of Eva Carter, his colleague, sounded tense, cracking with metallic notes through the communicator. Even through the interference, he felt her fear, mixed with that steely resolve that had always been her essence. «If we don’t launch the stabilizer now, everything will collapse. Do you hear me? The energy is out of control! We’re losing it!»

On the small holographic window in the corner of the panel, Maria, his wife, smiled restrainedly, but in her eyes, so dear and beloved, a тревога (trevoga – anxiety/worry) splashed, which she so desperately tried to hide from Ella. This smile cut Kyle to the heart more sharply than any shard of glass.

«Daddy, catch!» Ella shouted into the camera, her ringing voice breaking through the hum of the laboratory, lifting her postcard, sparkling with cheap, but so precious glitter, towards the screen. «And you promised! You promised to be back for dinner!»

These words, innocent and demanding, echoed in Kyle’s mind, intertwining with Eva’s cry. Promises. Each one now pulled not just a burden, but a red-hot chain of remorse.

He heard. But he couldn’t tear his gaze away from that small window into another, still living life. They were so close – only three hundred meters away in a straight line, behind armored glass and layers of protective barriers that now seemed thinner than a spiderweb. Ella, five years old, with her funny, tightly braided pigtails that always came undone by evening, held a hand-drawn card with the crooked, yet so sincere inscription «Daddy is a hero.» He promised to be with them in an hour, after the final, triumphant test. An hour that was supposed to change the world for the better.

«Kyle!» Eva barked, her voice almost drowned out by the rising wail of sirens. «The reactor is at 112%! Damn it, Arden was wrong! That initial fluctuation… it wasn’t interference! We should have…»

Her words were drowned out by a low, vibrating hum that rose from the depths of the laboratory, from the very heart of their ambitions and mistakes. The floor beneath his feet trembled with such force that Kyle barely kept his balance, and at the same moment the central screen flashed a blinding red: «CRITICAL ANOMALY. SPATIAL RIFT IMMINENT.» Kyle felt icy sweat trickle down his temple. This wasn’t supposed to happen. They had calculated everything down to the smallest detail. Quantum energy, their brainchild, their hope, was supposed to be salvation, an endless source for a dying planet. But they missed something, something fundamental. Perhaps the very «insignificant interference» that Eva had shouted about.

And suddenly – silence. A moment of absolute, deafening silence, stretching into agonizing eternity. And then – an explosion. Not a sound, not a flash, but a feeling as if the world, the very fabric of being, had split in two, revealing something ancient and monstrously alien.

Kyle fell to his knees as the glass in front of him, the vaunted armored glass, cracked, covered with a network of silver spiderwebs, and shattered into a myriad of shards. Behind it, in the habitat module, he saw space distort. The walls curved as if made of water, colors mixed into a nauseating cacophony, and then began to tear like worn fabric, revealing a dark, pulsating, internally glowing emptiness. A rift. The First Rift. He saw Maria, his Maria, grab Ella, holding her close, saw her lips silently scream his name, but the sound didn’t reach him, absorbed by this silent horror. The emptiness swallowed them, pulled them into its insatiable maw, leaving only an echo – a strange, low, vibrating hum that now seemed to sound directly in his skull, in his soul.

«No…» his voice broke into an animalistic rasp as he crawled towards the shattered glass, not noticing how the sharp edges cut his palms, leaving bloody marks on the metal floor. «Maria! Ella!»

But where their cozy module had been, now only a crack in reality gaped, radiating a cold, ghostly, unearthly light. Kyle stared into it, into this wound on the body of the world, until deafening sirens drowned out his thoughts, and the laboratory, their temple of science and hope, began to collapse around him, burying under its debris not only his family, but the entire former world. This was the end. And the beginning of an endless nightmare.

Chapter 1: «Last Bastion»
2247. The Fortress City «Last Bastion,» Zone 3.

Kyle Rain awoke to the wail of the siren, piercing and familiar as his own breath. The sound sliced through the damp, heavy air of the metal box that here, in Last Bastion, was proudly referred to as a living room. He lay on a narrow cot, sagging and creaky. The ceiling, covered in layers of rust resembling caked blood, flickered from the dim, uneven light of a single bulb, which seemed to be held together by sheer willpower and a couple of exposed wires. The pervasive smell of dampness, old iron, and ineradicable human despair was a constant companion in Last Bastion – a city that a handful of survivors had built from the wreckage of the old world to shelter from the primal horror that now reigned outside.

Last Bastion rose like a cyclopean fortress on the edge of an abyss – a chaotic, multi-level labyrinth of rusted steel plates, remnants of shattered military equipment, and cracked concrete structures. Lamps powered by the energy of dying, coughing generators emitted a trembling amber glow, like the sick eyes of a beast lurking in eternal darkness. Hope had no place here; it died along with the old world, leaving behind only a bitter taste. There weren’t even proper streets – just low, cramped corridors, covered in graffiti of despair and notices of missing residents, which became the inflamed nerves of the city. In these arteries, one could hear whispers of shadows dancing at the edge of the Wasteland, of voices calling from the Rifts. The oily, acrid smell of old fuel and rotting plastic never disappeared, seeping into clothes, skin, into the very lungs. There was no room for dreams here – only survival, a brutal struggle for every breath of air, for every ration of tasteless food. Sometimes, in rare moments of quiet, Kyle heard rumors of strange cults arising in the darkest corners of Bastion – people driven to the brink, seeking meaning in the madness of the Rifts, worshipping the Shadows or trying to make unthinkable deals with them.

He hadn’t truly slept. Not for eight long, endless years. Dreams, if they dared to come, were worse than wakefulness – endless, agonizing replays of the day everything collapsed. Maria. Ella. Their faces, beloved, distorted with terror, dissolving into the insatiable emptiness of the Rift. Kyle ran a trembling hand over his unshaven, gaunt face, trying to erase these images etched into his memory, but they were burned into his mind like a brand.

«Hey, Rain, are you alive in there, or has a Shadow already claimed your wandering soul?» A rough, smoky voice pierced the thin metal wall, accompanied by a dull thud. «The Council is waiting. They say they have a special assignment for you. Don’t make them nervous, or they’ll cut off your rations again, and you’ll be feeding on the rust from the walls.»

Kyle smiled wryly. His neighbor, an old mechanic named Garrett, a grizzled grumbler with golden hands and a caustic tongue, was one of the few who still tried to talk to him without open contempt. Most in Bastion avoided him – some out of primal fear of what he might have brought with him from Quantum Dawn, others out of disdain. «The scientist who killed the world,» they whispered behind his back when they thought he couldn’t hear. He didn’t argue. Maybe they were right. Guilt was his constant companion, his shadow.

He pulled on his worn, patched jacket, automatically checking if his old neural interface was in place – a bracelet that once connected him to the heart of the laboratory, now just a painful reminder of the past, of the days when he believed he could change the world. Then he stepped out into the narrow, dimly lit corridor, where the air was even heavier with the smell of burnt fuel, stale food, and concentrated human despair. Bastion was a veritable labyrinth of steel plates and concrete blocks, hastily cobbled together after the catastrophe. Above, beyond the murky, scratched protective dome, cracks were visible in reality itself – the Rifts, their glowing, pulsating edges twitching like living, hungry wounds. They were everywhere, some small, like scratches from the claws of an unknown beast, others – huge, gaping, like wounds in the sky, from which anomalies sometimes spilled: temporal jumps distorting perception, gravitational failures capable of crushing a person flat, or shadows that moved when they shouldn’t have, shadows that emanated a deathly chill.

Kyle made his way through the sparse morning crowd in the central zone, where people, exhausted, silent, with extinguished eyes, were already lining up for their daily rations. Children, too thin and serious for their age, with an unchildlike sadness in their gaze, stared at him with empty eyes. He looked away. He had nothing to comfort them with. Their future was as gray and bleak as the sky beyond the dome.

The Council building, if you could call this gloomy conglomerate of concrete and steel that, was located in the very heart of Bastion – a former military bunker, now surrounded by several rows of makeshift barricades and silent, tense guards. Kyle passed through the vibrating scanner, ignoring the cold, appraising gaze of the guard, and entered the dimly lit hall, where five figures sat behind a long, roughly hewn table. The Council – the last, self-proclaimed remnants of authority in this dying, agonizing world. At the head of the table sat Commander Riva Stern, a woman with a face carved from granite and eyes that had seen too much death and too little hope. Her short-cropped gray hair and austere military tunic only emphasized her iron will.

«Rain,» her voice was sharp, like the crackle of interference in an old, worn-out communicator, and just as devoid of emotion. «We’ve found a new Rift. Codenamed „Echo-7.“ Drone data, from the few that returned, indicates there might be a source of stable energy inside. Perhaps even capable of closing these damned cracks once and for all.»

Kyle froze, his heart, usually beating steadily and tiredly, skipped a beat, and then pounded harder than usual, sending blood rushing to his temples. Close the Rifts. This was what he had been dragging his existence out for these eight years for. A ghostly, almost insane hope that kept him from completely drowning in the abyss of guilt. But he knew the Council wasn’t calling him just for that. In their voices, in their gazes, there was always a subtext, a hidden price.

«And?» he asked, trying to make his voice sound indifferent, even though everything inside him was screaming. «Do you want me to analyze the data? Or… do you have another suicidal plan?»

«No,» Riva interrupted, her gaze, sharp as a blade, piercing him. «We want you to lead the expedition. Inside „Echo-7.“»

He flinched at the name. «Echo.» This word had haunted him for eight years – like the echo of his daughter’s voice, like the echo of his own shattered life. Now it returned as a chance to atone for everything – or finally lose the remnants of himself.

«You have a week to prepare the team,» Stern continued, not giving him time to recover. «If you refuse, we’ll find someone else. But you know that no one but you, you damned genius, understands the nature of these Rifts better. You spawned them – you deal with them.»

Kyle clenched his fists under the table so hard that his nails dug into his palms. Inside. Into the place where reality breaks, where the mind becomes the worst enemy, where shadows come alive. He had seen what happened to those who returned from the Rifts – if they returned at all. Empty shells, with scorched souls. But in the very depths of his consciousness, somewhere behind thick layers of pain, guilt, and despair, a tiny, poisonous shadow of hope stirred. What if there, inside, in this new «Echo,» he found them? Not just echoes of their voices, but… a trace? A trace of Maria and Ella?

«I agree,» he said quietly, almost in a whisper, but in that whisper there was steel, forged by years of suffering. «Give me everything you have on „Echo-7.“ All the data, all the resources you can allocate. And I’ll find your source. Or die trying.»

Riva Stern slowly nodded, but in her stony eyes, for a moment, something flickered, resembling long-standing pity. Or maybe it was a warning. Kyle didn’t know which was worse. And, frankly, he didn’t care anymore.

Chapter 2: «Shards of Trust»
2247. The Fortress City «Last Bastion,» Zone 5, Training Sector.

Kyle Rain stood at the edge of the training ground – a vast, echoing space that was once part of a military warehouse, now converted into an arena for honing survival skills. Rusted metal walls, pockmarked with dents from stray shots and energy discharges, closed in overhead, creating the feeling of a locked cage. The air here was thick, saturated with the acrid smell of sweat, ingrained machine oil, and burnt plastic from the makeshift targets that Bastion’s soldiers tirelessly shot at. Above, beyond the murky, grimy dome of the protective field, the uneven light of the Rifts pulsed ominously, a reminder that any safety was a fragile, temporary illusion. Kyle clenched his jaw, his gaze fixed on the three figures the Council, without much ceremony, had assigned to his team. They were his only chance. And, quite possibly, his death sentence.

The first was a woman standing slightly apart, arms defiantly crossed over her chest. Eva Carter. Her face, covered with a fine network of premature wrinkles, looked older than her thirty-odd years, and the long, old scar stretching from her temple to her chin gave her the look of someone who hadn’t just seen too much, but had paid for that knowledge with her own blood. The scar pulsed faintly when she frowned, and Kyle involuntarily recalled the day in Quantum Dawn when a shard of the exploding panel had left that mark… or was it something else, something she never spoke about? She was an engineer, one of the best in Bastion, according to the meager dossier he’d been given. But Kyle knew her from before the catastrophe. They had worked together, side by side, on the project that was supposed to save the world but instead destroyed it. In her cold, appraising gaze, he read not only professional interest, but also the shadow of the past – a hidden resentment, unspoken accusations. Eva knew he blamed himself. And, undoubtedly, blamed him too, though perhaps not only him.

«Rain,» her voice was sharp, like the crackle of static in a broken transmitter, each sound precise and measured. «I hope you don’t think this will be a pleasure stroll in the Wasteland. I’ve seen what the Rifts do to people. And to equipment. If you’re not ready to go all the way, if you have even a drop of doubt left, say so now. I’ll find someone else who won’t be a burden.»

«I’m ready,» Kyle replied, trying not to betray the irritation that always arose in him when communicating with her. Her directness bordered on cruelty. «And you? You were there too, Eva, when it all started. Aren’t you afraid that the past will grab you by the throat again? That your own ’echoes’ will be louder than mine?»

Her steel-colored eyes narrowed for a moment, and the corner of her mouth, untouched by the scar, twitched almost imperceptibly. She remained silent, but that silence was more eloquent than any answer. It was a warning. Kyle looked away, feeling something heavy, like a clot of cold, constricting his chest again. Eva was a problem, complex, multi-layered. But without her unique knowledge of quantum systems and her ability to squeeze the maximum out of any rusty piece of iron, they wouldn’t last a day in the Rift.

Next to her, contrasting with her harshness, stood a young woman, almost a child against the backdrop of Bastion’s weary, Wasteland-scorched faces. Lina Cyrus, a medic, barely older than twenty-five, though she looked even younger. Her light hair, usually gathered in a careless ponytail, now escaped in strands from under a medical bandana, and the clear, almost naive, open gaze of her huge gray eyes seemed out of place, alien in this world of rust, despair, and eternal struggle. She held a worn medical tablet in her hands, its screen flickering with diagrams – probably medical data or notes on survival in anomalous zones. When Kyle looked at her, she smiled faintly but sincerely – and that smile, like a ray of sunshine in a musty cell, made him feel uncomfortable. He had long since become unaccustomed to such unclouded human gestures. He remembered Ella, her equally open smile… He hastily pushed the memory away.

«Dr. Rain,» her voice was soft, almost melodic, but with an unexpected firmness. «I’m glad to be working with you. I… I read your early work. Before… well, before everything. Your theories on spatial fluctuations… they were brilliant. If we really find an energy source in „Echo-7,“ it could save thousands of lives. I believe we have a chance. We must have a chance.»

Kyle just nodded curtly, unable to answer. Her unwavering optimism, her faith in him, the one everyone else considered a monster, was like a knife twisting in an old, unhealed wound. He didn’t want hope. Hope made the pain sharper when everything inevitably crumbled. But Lina seemed oblivious to his silence or his gloomy appearance, continuing to scribble something quickly in her tablet, as if the world around them wasn’t on the verge of final collapse and they weren’t about to walk into the maw of a monster.

The last was a man lounging casually on the edge of a metal bench. In his hands, he twirled a razor-sharp combat knife with a lazy, predatory grace, carving something intricate on a piece of old plastic. Drake Holt. A former special forces soldier, according to rumors, and now a mercenary whose reputation in Bastion was an explosive mixture of animal fear and ill-concealed disgust. Tall, muscular, with close-cropped dark hair and a tattoo of a grinning skull entwined with a crown of thorns on his powerful neck, he looked like a man who wasn’t just used to chaos, but enjoyed it, fed on it. When Kyle met his gaze, Drake grinned predatorily, revealing a row of even teeth, one of which had been replaced by a gleaming metal implant.

«Well, scientist,» he drawled, his voice low and raspy, like metal scraping against glass. «They say you’re the guy who pushed the big red button and arranged this fun apocalypse for all of us. Maybe you can tell us amateurs how to get us into this «Echo’ of yours, and more importantly, how to get out alive? Or are you just another psycho with a god complex looking for a beautiful place to die, taking company with him? I’ve seen those types. They usually end badly. Both for themselves and for those around them.»

«Or maybe you’re looking for something… or someone you lost in there?» Drake added quieter, his grin widening, and his eyes flashed with a malicious glint as he noticed Kyle’s jaw clench.

«Are you only here for this? To be sarcastic?» Eva interrupted sharply, her arms crossed so tightly her knuckles turned white. The scar on her face seemed to darken. «Do you think this is a game, Holt? That we’ve been shoved into „Echo-7“ for someone’s amusement or to see how quickly we’ll tear each other’s throats out?»

«I think none of us are getting out of there alive, sweetheart,» Drake snapped back, his gaze turning icy as he shifted it to Eva. «And you, Carter, seem to be worried about only one thing: can you trust the ’scientist who killed the world’ again. Well, let me tell you: I’d be more worried about what happens if he makes another mistake. One mistake – and we’re all fertilizer for the Wasteland. And I’m not going to become fertilizer because of someone’s ghosts of the past.»

Kyle felt the blood rush to his face, a hot wave of anger and old pain. But he restrained himself, taking a deep breath. Drake was a provocateur, it was clear from the first glance. But his combat skills, judging by the Council’s reports, were phenomenal. The Rifts didn’t forgive weakness, and if anyone could withstand the primal horror that awaited them inside, it was him. Although Kyle was already beginning to suspect that Drake himself might be a greater threat than any anomaly.

«I’m not looking for death, Holt,» he said coldly, his voice even, but with a ring of steel. «And I’m not looking for ghosts. I’m looking for a way to fix what I’ve done. But if you waste time on cheap games and provocations instead of listening and following orders, then maybe you will find your death. Faster than you think.»

Drake laughed, the sound sharp and unpleasant, like a jackal’s bark. He put down the knife, rose lazily, and his shadow almost completely covered Kyle. But Kyle didn’t retreat a step, looking him straight in the eye. The tension between them was almost palpable, like a static discharge before a lightning strike.

«Enough!» Eva intervened, her tone brooking no argument. She stepped between them, her small figure unexpectedly radiating authority. «If we’re going to survive in this hell, we need to at least pretend we’re a team, not a pack of dogs ready to tear each other’s throats out. Rain, do you have a plan? Or did the Council really just throw us to the slaughter, hoping for a miracle?»

Kyle inhaled deeply, feeling the acrid air scratch his throat. He pulled his old, faithful neural interface from his pocket, connected it to the battered projector on the warehouse wall, and displayed a three-dimensional map compiled by the drones. The flickering hologram showed Rift «Echo-7,» pulsing ominously sixty miles north of Bastion, in an area where the very fabric of reality was particularly unstable, torn. The glowing fissure, surrounded by a ring of gravitational and temporal anomalies, looked like an unhealed, festering wound on the body of a mutilated world.

«This is our target,» he said, pointing to the flickering center of the image. «„Echo-7.“ Data shows a powerful, stable energy signal inside, which, theoretically, could be the key to closing the Rifts. But getting to it won’t be easy. The drones are recording extreme time distortions, gravity traps, and… something else. Something they can’t classify. Something that destroyed three out of five reconnaissance probes before they could transmit the data.»

«Shadows?» Lina asked, her voice trembling, her fingers nervously clutching the tablet. «I’ve heard stories… from those who returned. People talk about creatures that move, but aren’t there. About voices that whisper from nowhere. Is it true, Dr. Rain?»

Kyle hesitated. He knew about the shadows. He had seen them himself, in the first, most terrifying years after the catastrophe, when he desperately tried to understand what had happened, what he had unleashed. They were like reflections in a broken mirror, but alive, and their presence evoked a primal chill that penetrated to the very bones, freezing the will. But he didn’t want to frighten Lina any more. Not yet. Her faith, however fragile, might prove more important.

«Maybe,» he said evasively. «The Wasteland is full of illusions, Lina. Our minds are easily tricked, especially there. But our task isn’t to study them, but to find the source. We go in, take what we need, and come back. If everything goes according to plan, in a week we’ll be here, and maybe the world will be a little safer. If not…» He didn’t finish, but everyone understood. In the Wasteland, «if not» meant only one thing.

Drake grinned again, his eyes gleaming predatorily with a strange, unhealthy anticipation. Eva stared at the map, her face impassive as a mask, but Kyle noticed her knuckles whiten as she clenched her fist. Lina, on the contrary, seemed even more determined, though her hands trembled slightly as she put the tablet away in her bag.

«Then get to work,» Kyle said, turning off the projector. The room plunged into semi-darkness, lit only by the dim light from the street. «We have three days to prepare. Eva, check all the equipment down to the last screw, paying special attention to the exosuits and life support systems. Lina, gather everything we might need for first aid and neutralizing… mental effects. Drake, you’re responsible for weapons and combat readiness. And no antics. No surprises. Clear?»

€44,19
Vanusepiirang:
18+
Ilmumiskuupäev Litres'is:
21 mai 2025
Objętość:
200 lk 1 illustratsioon
ISBN:
9785006717930
Allalaadimise formaat:
Audio
Средний рейтинг 4,2 на основе 964 оценок
Audio
Средний рейтинг 5 на основе 13 оценок
Mustand
Средний рейтинг 4,5 на основе 96 оценок
Audio
Средний рейтинг 4,8 на основе 5176 оценок
18+
Tekst, helivorming on saadaval
Средний рейтинг 4,7 на основе 51 оценок
Tekst
Средний рейтинг 4,9 на основе 55 оценок
Mustand
Средний рейтинг 4,9 на основе 355 оценок
Tekst, helivorming on saadaval
Средний рейтинг 4,7 на основе 1753 оценок
Mustand
Средний рейтинг 4,7 на основе 18 оценок
Tekst
Средний рейтинг 0 на основе 0 оценок
Tekst
Средний рейтинг 0 на основе 0 оценок