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Echo Border

wuxiron
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
On the war-torn fringes of the world, the only guideposts are echoes of emotion. Samira possesses a rare and dangerous gift: she can perceive *Echoes*—the intangible imprints left behind by lingering emotions, memories, and unresolved obsessions haunting the world. This ability saved her amidst the chaos of war, yet it also marked her as an outcast in the refugee camp where she sought shelter. When her young brother, Karim—her only family—was lost during their desperate flight, a shattered Samira grasped a faint, achingly familiar cry within the tumultuous *Echo Realm*: the sound of her brother's terror. Karim is alive, but he is in grave danger. His fierce will to survive has inadvertently become a pulsing Echo beacon, guiding Samira towards him. Yet, finding him is perilous. A shadowy organization known as the *Silencers* hunts those like Samira—*Listeners*—viewing their abilities as a threat. Isolated and hunted, Samira encounters *Elias*—a world-weary, fading Listener who understands the peril of the Echoes and the ruthlessness of the Silencers. She is also unexpectedly aided by *Lena*, a pragmatic and kind-hearted volunteer. Lena, initially skeptical of Samira's "delusions," is ultimately moved by her fierce determination. Samira, her cynical mentor Elias, and the grounded Lena form a mismatched yet resolute trio. They must traverse hostile borders, sprawling cities, and corners steeped in painful Echoes, following the trail of Karim's emotional resonance on a harrowing cross-border quest. Samira's gift is their only guide, but each touch of an Echo pushes her closer to the verge of collapse. With the Silencers closing in and Karim's situation growing ever more desperate, Samira must learn to harness her power under Elias's guidance and leverage Lena's real-world resourcefulness to overcome relentless obstacles. Ultimately, she will confront the dark heart of the Silencers and uncover a secret hidden within Karim far more astonishing than she ever imagined. To save her brother, Samira must embrace the full extent of her power, unleashing the torrent of emotion buried deepest within the Echo Realm—a force of destruction and a beacon of redemption.
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Chapter 1 - refugee camp

A grey-dawn like an old bedsheet crumpled and smoothed out over and over again spread across the roofs of the Northern refugee camp. Samira pulled her face deeper into her hoodie; the cold smells of wet mud, disinfectant, and diesel still pricked her nose. *Day two hundred thirty-seven. Day seventy-seven*—she recited the numbers in her mind like a prayer. Outside the wire fence, the morning mist was thinning. The watchtower lights hadn't yet been extinguished, but they couldn't illuminate the sudden ripple that disturbed the puddle at her feet.

That ripple wasn't the wind. Wind has no scent, no sound. Yet she smelled it—charred wood mixed with orange blossom, the scent that clung to her mother's hair after she last lit the stove in their kitchen. Then, she heard her brother's voice, as if rising from deep water, just one sentence: "Sister, I'm cold."

Samira whirled around. Her reflection stared back from the puddle, but now a small hand grasped the leg of her trousers. The reflection had no hand. She crouched down, her fingertips brushing the icy water. The ripples shattered instantly, and the scent of her mother's charred wood was swiftly washed away by the disinfectant. The people around her were still queuing for breakfast; no one looked up.

The pounding of her heart felt loud enough for the whole camp to hear. She thrust her hand into her pocket, finding the little wooden bird wrapped in old bandages—the toy Karim had shoved into her hand at the last moment. Beneath the bandage, one wing of the bird was broken, yet it was trembling, straining to break free from her palm.

"Dreaming again?" came a voice in stiff English from behind her. Lena stood there holding two cups of instant cocoa, thin wisps of steam curling from the rims. She was the youngest volunteer here, her blonde ponytail always escaping the edges of her Red Cross cap like an untimely ray of sunshine.

Samira shook her head, offering no explanation. Explanations only led to more forms and more doctors. She took the cup, pressing her lips to the paper rim, only to hear another voice—this time closer, more urgent, like a child's footsteps running down a hallway— "They locked me in… behind the iron door…"

Iron door. There *was* indeed a row of abandoned shipping containers behind the camp, once a temporary clinic, now locked, the key hanging from a guard's belt. Samira's fingers unconsciously tightened; the wooden bird gave an almost imperceptible crack in her fist.

Lena followed her gaze and frowned. "There's nothing there, Samira."

"Echoes," she murmured in Arabic, because English didn't have the right word.

Before the word fully settled, the coughing rumble of a diesel engine sounded in the distance. An unmarked black van lurched through a puddle, splattering mud onto Lena's boots. Its windows were tinted dark, hiding the interior. The camp's dogs suddenly fell silent.

Samira took half a step back; the wooden bird felt like it would pierce her skin. She remembered this kind of vehicle—three days ago, a Sudanese boy who constantly talked to himself was led into a similar van and hadn't returned. The nurses said he'd been "transferred," but the boy's blanket still hung on the clothesline like a faded flag.

The engine noise drowned out Karim's voice, but it couldn't drown out the scent of burnt orange blossom. It grew thicker, stronger, as if someone had rammed an entire burning tree down her throat. Samira turned and ran. Her hood slipped back, revealing her unevenly cropped black hair. Lena called after her, her voice shredded by the engine's roar.

She wove through the narrow paths between tents, muddy water splashing her calves, her heartbeat accelerating in time with her footsteps. The containers were fifty meters away, their rust-streaked doors secured by a shiny new brass lock. The scent of charred wood abruptly vanished, replaced by the stinging cold of disinfectant.

Samira stopped three paces from the iron door, cold sweat slicking her palm. The wooden bird stopped trembling, as quiet as death.

Then, she heard it—a faint *click* from the lock, as if someone inside had turned the key for her.