Maya stood at the edge of the ruins, staring into the distance where the horizon shimmered, warped from the battle that had just taken place. Her double was gone, dissolved into the fabric of the multiverse, but the world around her felt fractured. Everything looked the same on the surface—the crumbling stones, the overgrown vegetation, the faint light of a setting sun—but beneath it, there was a sense of wrongness. As though something crucial had shifted.
Leon approached, still holding the device that had disrupted the energy flow. His face was drawn, tired from the fight, but his eyes were alert as he scanned their surroundings. "It feels… different, doesn't it?"
Maya nodded slowly. "Yeah. Like reality is still… adjusting."
Leon wiped the sweat from his forehead, his brow furrowed. "We may have stopped your double, but whatever imbalance she caused—it's still here. We're not done yet."
Maya looked down at her hands, turning them over as if to check for any lingering signs of the energy that had flowed through her during the confrontation. She still didn't fully understand what had happened—how she had resisted the power her double wielded, or why it had passed through her without destroying her. But the questions gnawed at her now, even more intensely than before.
Her double's final words echoed in her mind, chilling her more than the lingering darkness in the air: *You'll never know the truth. You think this world is yours, but it isn't.*
"What do you think she meant?" Maya asked, her voice quiet but insistent.
Leon didn't answer right away. Instead, he crouched down beside one of the cracks in the ground, gently tracing its jagged line with his fingers. The rupture seemed to pulse faintly, as if the energy of the multiverse still lingered, resisting repair. "I don't know," he said at last, standing and dusting his hands. "But if the multiverse is fractured in more places than we realize, we need to find out. We can't afford any more surprises."
Maya stared at the crack in the ground, her thoughts drifting back to everything that had happened since the rift first opened. The alternate worlds, the parallel selves, the impossible choices she had faced. She couldn't shake the feeling that this was all building toward something bigger, something she still didn't fully comprehend.
"What if she was right?" Maya murmured, more to herself than to Leon.
He turned to her, frowning. "What do you mean?"
Maya hugged her arms around herself, the weight of her double's accusations pressing down on her. "What if… this world isn't mine? What if I really don't belong here?"
Leon's eyes softened, and he stepped closer, his voice calm but firm. "Maya, don't let her words mess with your head. You belong here. You're here. That's what matters."
"But what if I'm the anomaly?" Maya's voice wavered. "What if I was never supposed to exist in this reality? If the rift opened because of me—if I crossed over without knowing—"
"You didn't," Leon interrupted gently but forcefully. "There's no way you could've crossed over without us noticing it. You were here, in this reality, when the rift opened. And you've been fighting to protect this world ever since. That's the truth, no matter what she said."
Maya wanted to believe him, but a seed of doubt had taken root in her mind, and it was growing, twisting her perception of everything around her. She couldn't help but think of the brief flashes of memories she had been seeing lately—moments that didn't quite fit with her life as she remembered it. Were they fragments of another version of her, trying to push their way to the surface?
"I just… I don't know what's real anymore," she admitted, her voice barely a whisper.
Leon looked at her, his expression full of concern. "I get that," he said softly. "But right now, we have to focus on what we can control. The rift is still here, and the energy imbalance is growing. If we don't find a way to stabilize it, the multiverse could collapse—and it won't just be us who's affected. Every version of reality could be at risk."
Maya took a deep breath, trying to ground herself in the present moment. Leon was right. She couldn't afford to get lost in the confusion of her identity, not with so much at stake. Whatever doubts she had about her existence, they would have to wait. Right now, the priority was survival—for her, for Leon, and for every version of the world that still had a chance to exist.
"Okay," she said, her voice steadying. "What do we do next?"
Leon pointed to the faint shimmer in the distance, where the fabric of reality still looked fragile and thin. "We follow the distortion. There's a central point—somewhere nearby—where the rift is most unstable. If we can get there, maybe we can shut it down for good."
Maya nodded, feeling a renewed sense of purpose. "Let's go."
The two of them moved carefully through the ruins, their footsteps echoing in the eerie silence that hung over the landscape. As they approached the shimmering distortion, the air grew colder, and the sky above them seemed to ripple, as if it, too, was caught in the unstable energy.
Maya could feel it in her bones now—a pull, like gravity, drawing her toward the center of the disturbance. She glanced at Leon, who seemed to sense it as well. His jaw was set, his eyes focused. They were close.
As they rounded a corner, the ground beneath them gave way to a massive crater. At its center was a swirling vortex of energy, a black hole of crackling light and shadow that seemed to be pulling everything toward it. The rift had grown larger since the last time they had seen it, its power more volatile and dangerous.
"This is it," Leon said, his voice low. "The core of the disturbance."
Maya stared at the vortex, her heart racing. "How do we stop it?"
Leon reached into his bag and pulled out another device, more complex than the one he had used earlier. It was larger, with a web of wires and circuits that hummed with a faint glow. "This is the stabilizer," he explained. "If I can get close enough to the vortex, I can deploy it and seal the rift. But I need time—and it won't be easy."
Maya swallowed hard. "What do you need me to do?"
Leon hesitated, glancing at her. "I need you to distract it."
Maya blinked. "Distract… the rift?"
Leon gave her a grim smile. "It's not just a tear in reality. It's alive, in a way. It reacts to energy—feeds off it. That's how your double was able to tap into its power. If you can keep it focused on you, it won't sense what I'm doing."
Maya felt a surge of fear at the idea of facing the rift head-on, but she knew there was no other option. If Leon didn't succeed, the rift would continue to grow, consuming everything in its path. She nodded, steeling herself for what was to come. "I'll do it."
Leon placed a hand on her shoulder, his expression serious but filled with a quiet determination. "Be careful. Don't let it pull you in."
Maya nodded, then turned to face the swirling vortex of chaos. She took a deep breath and stepped forward, her heart pounding in her chest. The closer she got, the stronger the pull became, tugging at her with invisible hands. She could feel the energy surging around her, alive and hungry.
And then, the rift noticed her.
A wave of force slammed into Maya, knocking her off her feet and sending her sprawling to the ground. She gasped for air, her body trembling as the rift's energy wrapped around her, pulling her closer. But she fought back, summoning every ounce of strength she had left.
She stood, her eyes locked on the heart of the rift, and shouted into the void: "You can't have me!"
The rift roared in response, and the world around her shook. But Maya held her ground, refusing to let the pull of the multiverse's chaos consume her.