The air outside the lab didn't feel like air anymore. It felt thick, like moving through water, or perhaps like the heavy atmosphere of a high-end rendered game world where the physics engine was struggling to keep up.
Fahim stood on the steps of the Medical Technology building, gasping. The familiar sights of Pabna were there, but they were wrong. The streetlights didn't cast pools of yellow; they projected sharp, geometric shadows that shifted even when nothing moved. The sky wasn't black or even cloudy—it was a deep, flickering indigo, filled with "artifacts," the kind of visual noise you see when a graphics card is about to overheat.
He looked at his watch. 24:12.
"Okay," he whispered, his voice sounding thin and metallic. "Stay grounded. Medical tech. Data. Logic. This is just… a collective hallucination? A chemical leak in the lab?"
He knew he was lying to himself. The "Future-Fahim" in the monitor hadn't looked like a hallucination. He had looked like a man who had seen the end of the world and was trying to mail back the pieces.
He started toward the main gate, his footsteps echoing with a strange, double-tap sound. Every few meters, a fragment would appear in the air—a floating, jagged shard of reality. He walked past one and stopped. Inside the shard, he could see a version of the street where it was broad daylight, but the shops were boarded up and covered in strange, silver moss.
He reached out to touch it, then pulled back. Don't touch the glitches. That was the first rule of any game, and it felt like it applied here.
Suddenly, his phone vibrated in his pocket. It wasn't a call. It was a notification from an app he didn't recognize—an icon that looked like a shattered hourglass.
Fragment Detected: 300 meters.
Type:Structural Memory.
Stability:4%
"It's tracking them," Fahim realized. The phone, his trusty Samsung M21, had been 'synced' during that 25th hour. It was no longer just a phone; it was a Geiger counter for broken time.
He followed the signal toward the bridge. As he neared the intersection, he saw her.
A girl was standing near the edge of a massive, shimmering rift in the middle of the road. She was dressed in a standard student uniform, but she was frozen—not like a statue, but like a paused video frame. Her hair was caught mid-wind, and a textbook was suspended in the air inches from her hand.
Fahim recognized her. She was a fellow student from the pathology department, someone he'd shared a few brief, polite conversations with in the library.
"Riya?" he called out.
She didn't move. But the rift next to her began to hum. It was the "Bridge" Future-Fahim had mentioned. It wasn't a physical bridge of stone and steel; it was a bridge of data—a flickering path of light that stretched upward into the indigo sky, disappearing into a vortex of scrolling code.
Then, the ground beneath his feet shuddered. The clock on his phone jumped. 24:28.
A shadow detached itself from the side of a building. It wasn't a human shadow. It was jagged, made of the same static as the sky, and it moved with a jerky, frame-skipping motion. It headed straight for the frozen girl.
Fahim didn't think. He didn't have a weapon, but he had his bag. He swung it, the heavy medical textbooks inside providing a solid weight. The bag passed right through the shadow.
"Wait," Fahim gasped, stumbling. "It's not physical. It's... digital interference."
He remembered a shortcut he'd used when his YouTube renders would hang—a way to force a refresh. He pulled out his phone, opened the 'Hourglass' app, and saw a "Pulse" button.
"Please work," he prayed. He hit the button just as the static shadow reached for Riya.
A wave of white light erupted from the phone. The shadow recoiled, its form flickering violently like a corrupted file. For a second, Riya's eyes moved. She looked at him, her expression a mix of pure terror and recognition.
"Fahim?" she whispered, her voice echoing as if from the bottom of a well. "The tomorrow... it's not coming, is it?"
Before he could answer, the bridge of light above them flared. The countdown on his screen turned red.
24:30. The Merge Begins.
