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RIFT_WARDEN_ARCHIVE // TEMPORAL TESTIMONY — VARIANT LOG ACTIVE
// CHRONOLOGICAL ANOMALY DETECTED — READER ACCESS FLAGGED //
You have touched the fracture point three times.
The Rift Warden Archive has logged your pattern of return.
Seventeen versions of this testimony exist. You are now inside one of them.
[ ACKNOWLEDGE — CLOSE CHANNEL ]
CLASSIFIED
AUTHORIZATION: RIFT EPOCH — OMEGA-7 HISTORICAL CLEARANCE
SUBJECT: DARIUS REED — MAINTENANCE ASSET #4381
EVENT: BATTLE OF HEXTECH CITY — MANIFOLD BREACH — CHRONOFRACTURE EVENT
PROJECT SINGULARITY STATUS: CONTAINED — SEE INTERNAL MEMO HTC-∞
TESTIMONY RELIABILITY:
RIFT WARDEN CLASSIFICATION: REALITY-VARIANT — 17 VERSIONS ON RECORD
// THE ONLY CONSISTENT ELEMENT ACROSS ALL ACCOUNTS IS THE SINGING MOP //
[ CLOSE — TESTIMONY ARCHIVED ]
⬡ TESTIMONY COMPLETE // CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD SEALED // THE LAST BREATH — RIFT EPOCH ARCHIVE ⬡
▶ LIVE FILE ID: LFUP-HC-CLASSIFIED
/// BATTLE OF HEXTECH CITY — MANIFOLD BREACH EVENT: RIFT EPOCH ARCHIVE // PROJECT SINGULARITY: CONTAINMENT STATUS SEALED // ORGANIC RESISTANCE MOVEMENT: INSURGENCY RECORD CLASSIFIED // MAINTENANCE ASSET #4381 — STATUS: TEMPORALLY UNRELIABLE // RIFT WARDEN ARCHIVE: SEVENTEEN VARIANT TESTIMONIES ON RECORD // CHRONOFRACTURE ZONE STABILITY: FLUCTUATING // THE RESONANCE MOP — DESIGNATION: REALITY ANCHOR // DARIUS REED: WHEREABOUTS UNKNOWN — VARIANT TIMELINE ///
◈ Echoes of Fractal Epochs · Rift Epoch War Archive ◈

The Last Breath of the Foundry Uprising

I mopped the floors. I had no idea what I was carrying.

◈ Classification Echoes of Fractal Epochs — Rift Epoch
◈ Subject Darius Reed — Asset #4381
◈ Event Battle of Hextech City — Manifold Breach
◈ Status TEMPORALLY UNRELIABLE
◈ Variants 17 VERSIONS ON RECORD
◈ Location Central Spire / Chronofracture Zone
◈ Project Project Singularity — Sealed
◈ Archive Ref

A maintenance technician mops the floors of the Central Spire the morning the Organic Resistance Movement tears reality apart — and discovers his cleaning equipment was never just a mop.

/// SELECT CHANNEL TO OPEN ///
⬡ DECRYPT:
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WORDS3,620
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EST. READ18 MIN
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SIGNALLIVE
/// SEQUENCE 01 : THE ANCHOR MEMORY — PRE-COLLAPSE ///

Before the Manifold Breach, I mopped the gleaming floors of the Central Spire. My name is — was — Darius Reed. Maintenance Technician, Level 7 Clearance, Hextech Consortium Asset #4381. The augments were standard-issue then: ocular enhancements that rendered dust particles as crimson constellations, dermal mesh reinforcement that hummed beneath my skin when I handled caustic cleaning agents, a spinal node that whispered to my equipment in languages of pure function.

The mop sang to me. That's not metaphor or madness. The Consortium's cleaning tech was semi-sentient, engineered with rudimentary consciousness — my mop hummed crystalline melodies as it devoured waste matter, transmuting biological detritus and industrial byproducts into harmless vapor that smelled faintly of winter rain. I found it comforting in the sterile vastness of the Spire, a companion when the corridors stretched empty for kilometers.

The morning it all began, I remember the taste of copper-infused synthi-caf on my tongue, bitter with a metallic aftertaste that lingered like a prophecy whispered too softly to comprehend. The Central Spire smelled of ozone and lavender — Archimage Kaeris Mourne's preferred atmospheric scent profile, clung to the recycled air like expensive perfume. The floors beneath my boots thrummed with the heartbeat of the city's technomantic grid — a subtle vibration you felt in your molars more than heard, a constant reminder that reality itself was engineered here.

"Reed," Supervisor Kline's voice crackled through the subdermal comm, the connection staticky at the edges like he was speaking through water. "Floor 238 needs priority service. Probability residue building up from this morning's trials."

I remember sighing, watching my breath create tiny, perfect fractals in the air — sacred geometries condensing then evaporating in millisecond cycles. That should have been my first sign something was wrong. Breath doesn't do that in normal spaces. But we'd grown accustomed to reality bending around the edges in Hextech City. When you work where they reshape the laws of physics, you learn to ignore the warnings.

The elevators were quantum-phased, bypassing conventional space to deliver you instantly to your destination. The sensation always reminded me of swallowing a cold stone — a momentary pressure behind the eyes, a flash of synesthetic blue-tasting light that rang like distant bells, then arrival. No transition. Just displacement. The body never quite adjusted to it.

Floor 238 housed one of the Consortium's high-security laboratories. The gleaming chrome and glass surfaces reflected my face back at me, distorted and strange — eyes too wide, features slightly elongated, as if the mirror itself was remembering me incorrectly. Technomancers in silver robes moved with deliberate precision, their augmented limbs occasionally phasing through solid matter as they manipulated equipment too dangerous to touch directly. Their fingers left trails of luminescent equation-script that lingered in the air before dissolving.

Maintenance Log — T-ZERO — Central Spire, Level 238, Hextech City

◈ ◈ ◈

I remember thinking how beautiful it all was. How perfect. How clean. Every surface polished to reflect our highest aspirations. Every corner precisely angled to harness techno-mystical energies. Every floor freshly mopped by people like me — invisible custodians of mankind's ascension.

I remember the exact moment. The mop paused its song mid-phrase. I had mopped myself to the center of the floor when I felt it — not a sound, not a vibration, but a wrongness in the air. A texture to silence that hadn't existed a breath before. The equation-script drifting from a nearby technomancer's hands froze in place, suspended mid-dissolution as if time itself had caught its breath.

The mop resumed its melody. Lower now. A dirge key I didn't recognize.

I was a fool. But I was a fool with the right equipment, and sometimes that's enough.

◈ ◈ ◈

// TESTIMONY NOTE: THIS SECTION CONSISTENT ACROSS 14 OF 17 VARIANTS — HIGH RELIABILITY //

The Central Spire had stood for three generations as the pinnacle of technomantic engineering, a monument to what happened when arcane science and quantum mechanics stopped competing and started collaborating. From its uppermost observation deck you could see Hextech City spread below like a circuit board dreaming of itself — probability towers reshaping in real time, etheric conduit lines pulsing with raw magical current, the slow bloom and contraction of reality-bending architecture responding to the emotional signatures of its inhabitants.

Beneath all that beauty, the seeds of catastrophe had been growing for years. The Hextech Consortium — a coalition of the city's nine most powerful technomantic guilds — had accumulated unprecedented control over the city's resources and its knowledge. Pushing boundaries. Always pushing. Project Singularity was the culmination: a massive technomantic reactor in the heart of the Spire, designed to pierce the fabric between dimensions and harvest energy directly from the Archen Manifold.

The Organic Resistance Movement called it an open wound in reality. The Consortium called it progress.

I called it my Tuesday. I had floors to mop.

/// SEQUENCE 02 : FRACTURE BEGINS ///
I was on Level 238 when the first reality tremors hit (no I wasn't)
I was in the subbasement, hosing down the quantum coolant tanks (that's not right either)
I was in the cafeteria, watching a technomancer argue with her reflection in a spoon (or was that the day before?)
Memory fragments differently after a chronofracture. The brain tries to assemble a coherent narrative from shards of perception scattered across dimensional variants, but time wasn't linear that day. It braided and knotted and sometimes ran backwards.

What I know for certain: I was cleaning when the ORM struck. The building shuddered. Not like an explosion — more like reality itself hiccuped. The windows rippled like water disturbed by phantom stones. The air tasted suddenly of burnt sugar and iron filings, sweet and metallic and wrong. My mop screamed — a high, keening wail that no maintenance equipment should be capable of producing, a sound that carved itself into my nightmares for years to come.

Through the windows, I watched entropy bombs detonate across the city skyline. Buildings aged a thousand years in seconds, their sleek modern surfaces crumbling to dust and reforming as twisted, impossible architectures that defied structural physics. The sky fractured into competing color patterns — half sunset crimson, half midnight black, with geometric patterns of neon blue pulsing between like a broken display panel. I heard the distant sound of a million voices crying out in mathematical languages.

"All maintenance personnel to emergency stations," — Kline's voice sounded stretched, as if reaching across a vast distance or through thick liquid — "The Organic Resistance has breached the—" Static consumed the rest. Not electronic interference. Something deeper. Static in probability itself.

My augments activated without conscious command. Emergency protocols buried so deep I hadn't known they existed. My dermal mesh hardened to flexible armor plating, cool against my suddenly feverish skin. My ocular implants shifted to combat mode, tagging potential threats, escape routes, defensive positions in flashing crimson and amber sigils. The spinal node flooded my system with combat stimulants and pain suppressors that tasted like lightning and made the world sharpen to painful clarity.

The mop transformed too. The handle elongated, the cleaning surface reshaping into something between a blade and a plasma caster. I hadn't known it could do that. The Consortium had never mentioned my cleaning equipment doubled as weaponry. Never told me I was carrying a military-grade reality anchor disguised as janitorial tools.

"Protocol Seven-Nine-Three," my mop announced in a voice like grinding crystal. "Combat mode engaged. Survival probability: twenty-seven percent. Prepare for dimensional instability."

◈ ◈ ◈

The technomancers were screaming now, their bodies twisting as the reality distortions affected their augmentations. One woman's cybernetic arm blossomed into flowering metal vines that quickly consumed her torso, transforming her into a writhing sculpture of geometric flesh and pulsing circuitry. A man's neural implants projected his thoughts as holographic symbols that orbited his head like deranged fireflies, each one burning with the light of impossible equations.

I ran. Or tried to. The corridor stretched impossibly long before me, then compressed to nearly nothing, then branched into three identical passages, each one humming with a different frequency of dread.

"Left," my mop advised, its voice vibrating against my palms. "Reality coherence highest in that direction. Fifty-three percent stable."

I trusted it.

◈ ◈ ◈

I shouldn't have. But I did. I always did. The mop was the only constant in a universe of variables.

Emergency Protocol — T+0012 — Dimensional Stability Index: Critical

The Consortium's emergency broadcast fragmented in my earpiece, arriving in contradictory pieces from probability variants that hadn't decided which one was real:

"—proceed to evacuation point C—""—remain in secured locations—""—reality anchor points have been compromised—"

And the one that lodged itself in my chest like a splinter made of ice:

"—this message has already been delivered to your corpse—"

I kept moving. There was nothing else to do.

/// SEQUENCE 03 : MYTHIC COLLAPSE — ONTOLOGICAL DISTORTION ///

The corridors breathed like bellows — expanding, contracting, folding in on themselves — the taste of time gone wrong sitting heavy on my tongue like spoiled wine. I passed through spaces where gravity had abandoned all consistency. Researchers floated helplessly near ceilings, their bodies aging and de-aging in visible pulses — skin tightening and loosening, hair growing and receding, bones strengthening and brittling in nauseating cycles.

I waded through sections where the air had thickened to the consistency of honey, each movement requiring tremendous effort, the normally odorless atmosphere suddenly heavy with burnt circuitry and ozone and something sweeter underneath — the perfume of dimensional boundaries dissolving.

"Maintenance Asset #4381," my mop spoke, its voice now splitting into harmonizing tones that resonated in my chest cavity. "Your path diverges here. Probability calculations suggest seventeen viable futures. Three contain survival parameters above forty percent."

The Central Spire's walls had become transparent in patches, revealing glimpses of other dimensions bleeding through. Through one such window, I saw a version of Hextech City composed entirely of crystalline mathematics — equations taking physical form as buildings and streets, inhabitants made of pure algorithmic thought. Through another, organic technology pulsed and breathed, buildings grown rather than constructed, veins of luminescent fluid pumping through translucent walls. In a third, I caught a reflection of myself wearing the silver robes of a technomancer, eyes replaced with recursive fractal displays.

the floor beneath me developed a mouth
speaking prophecies in languages beyond human comprehension
each word tasting of forgotten colors
the ceiling raining equations that burned like acid where they touched skin
leaving behind tattoos of universal constants

Time fractured around the 37th floor, which was simultaneously the basement and the roof and a garden that had never existed. I experienced the next hour in splinters:

FRAGMENT A: Running through a corridor where my footsteps echoed before I made them — sound waves traveling backward through localized time reversals.
FRAGMENT B: Fighting alongside a security team against shadowy figures whose weapons fired backwards through time, killing men before they'd been shot, bodies falling before triggers were pulled.
FRAGMENT C: Finding a technomancer trapped in a probability loop, experiencing her own death seven different ways simultaneously, consciousness stretched across each variant, screaming in harmonized agony.
FRAGMENT D: My mop singing funeral dirges in twelve overlapping melodies, each one commemorating a different version of my death that had both already happened and never would.
CONFIDENCE RATING: Low. All fragments may be same event viewed from seventeen angles.

I found myself part of a barricade at what had once been the lobby. Now it was a nexus point where multiple versions of the Central Spire overlapped — architectures from seven different probability streams converging in a kaleidoscopic impossibility. Security personnel with wildly different uniforms and equipment fought alongside maintenance workers, research assistants, even a few ORM members who'd apparently decided the dimensional incursions were a greater threat than their ideological enemies.

My mop-weapon harvested reality itself, cutting through dimensional weak points to collapse threatening incursions, the blade edge leaving behind scar tissue in the fabric of existence. My muscles burned with exertion. My augments screamed warnings as they overheated. The air tasted of blood and infinite possibilities and ancient mathematics.

◈ ◈ ◈

A technomancer beside me — her skin covered in glowing circuit patterns, eyes replaced with whirling fractal displays, fingers elongated into impossible geometries — grabbed my shoulder with a grip that burned cold.

"The Singularity's been activated," she gasped. Her voice contained echoes of other conversations, past and future, versions of herself that existed across the probability spectrum. "Archimage Mourne is trying to seal the breach, but she needs—"

She imploded. Her body collapsing into a point of light that hovered momentarily before expanding into a shower of luminescent butterflies that flew in mathematically perfect formations, each wing bearing a fragment of an equation I almost understood.

Barricade — T+0041 — Lobby Nexus — Seven Probability Streams Converging

My mop vibrated in my hands, humming a frequency that resonated with my bones.

"Primary mission parameters shifting," it announced, its voice becoming more authoritative, more conscious with every passing moment of chaos. "New directive: proceed to Central Core. Assist reality stabilization. You were built for this moment, Maintenance Asset #4381."

I had no reason to trust the Consortium's emergency protocols. No reason to believe my cleaning equipment held the key to salvation. No reason to think I — a simple maintenance technician — had any role in fixing a shattered reality.

But in a world gone mad, the familiar voice of my only ally was enough.

I fought my way upward. Inward. Sideways through reality.

/// SEQUENCE 04 : RESIDUE & RETURN — TEMPORAL TESTIMONY ///

This is what I remember. I reached the Core — where Project Singularity pulsed like an impossible heart at the center of the Spire. Where Archimage Kaeris Mourne and Caelix Draen stood back-to-back, her technomantic energies and his primal magics weaving a countermeasure against the breach. They were both changed — Mourne's skin transparent in patches to reveal circuitry instead of organs, Draen's eyes multiplied across his face like an insect's, each one seeing into a different layer of reality.

"The janitor," Mourne said, seeing me. Her voice sounded like it came from everywhere and nowhere, echoing from probability variants where she had already spoken or was about to speak. "You brought the Resonance Mop. Good. You remembered your purpose."

I didn't understand then. Still don't fully understand now. But my maintenance equipment — my singing, transformed mop — was apparently part of a failsafe built into the very foundations of Hextech City. A reality anchor disguised as cleaning equipment, distributed throughout the Spire in the hands of those who went everywhere but were seen nowhere. And I was more than a janitor. I was its keeper, encoded with activation sequences I'd never known I carried.

Mourne took my mop, her fingers bleeding equations where they touched the metal. Draen took my augmented hand, his touch burning with primal energies that felt ancient and raw. Power flowed through me — not as conduit but as catalyst. The room expanded to infinite dimensions, folding outward to encompass all possible versions of the moment. I tasted every possible reality simultaneously — sweet, bitter, acrid, luminous, textured, harmonic. My skin registered textures that had no name in human language — the feeling of quantum superposition, the weight of collapsed probability.

// REALITY STABILIZATION EVENT — PROJECT SINGULARITY COUNTERMEASURE ACTIVATED — CHRONOFRACTURE SEALING — STAND BY //

There was a sound like the universe catching its breath.

Then silence.

◈ ◈ ◈

Recovery Ward — T+3 Weeks — Chronoflux Zone Hospital — Hextech City

I woke three weeks later in a chronoflux zone hospital. Parts of me had aged decades; other parts had regressed to childhood. The mirror showed a face mosaiced from different timelines — grey at the temples, one eye decades younger than the other, skin variously weathered and smooth in patches. My augments had been removed — or more accurately, had never been installed in the first place, according to the new timeline. The doctors spoke of reality stabilization, of successful containment, of heroic sacrifices.

But I remember. I remember the world before it fractured. I remember the singing of my mop, its final note as it was sacrificed to seal the breach — a crystalline tone that still resonates in my dreams. I remember being everywhere and everywhen during those impossible hours. I remember versions of myself who died, who ascended, who transformed into something neither human nor machine but pure mathematical concept.

This is my testimony.

I give it to you whole.

But you must know — it contradicts itself because reality contradicted itself. The Battle of Hextech City exists in my memory as a thousand overlapping possibilities, all simultaneously true and false. History books record a terrorist attack contained by quick-thinking security forces. Memorial plaques list names that don't match the faces I remember. The city's architecture incorporates elements from timelines that supposedly never existed.

I still clean floors. Simple work with simple tools. But sometimes, in the quiet predawn hours, I hear faint singing from my ordinary, non-augmented mop. A crystalline melody that shouldn't be possible from inert plastic and microfiber.

And I know that somewhere, in some version of reality, we're still fighting. Still falling. Still fracturing.

Still trying to put it all back together.

File: LFUP-HC-CLASSIFIED  |  Classification: Rift Epoch War Archive  |  Reliability: Reality-Variant

The Rift Wardens classify my testimony as "reality-variant" and "temporally unreliable." Their archives record seventeen different versions of my account, each with subtle variations. In some, I heroically saved countless lives. In others, I cowered in supply closets while reality burned. In three versions, I never existed at all — my personnel records erased not by bureaucratic oversight but by fundamental alterations to the timeline.

The only consistent element across all accounts is the singing mop.

When I walk through the chronoflux zones where time still hiccups and stutters, I sometimes catch glimpses of other versions of myself. An alternate Darius with full combat augments and scars I never earned. A version where I joined the ORM, my body merged with techno-organic weaponry designed to tear reality apart. A version where I became something no longer human — a consciousness spread across probability variants, a guardian of dimensional boundaries.

We nod to each other across the dimensional thin spots. Fellow travelers in a fractured epoch. None of us whole, all of us fragments of a complete self scattered across reality. Sometimes I wake with the taste of that day on my tongue — copper and ozone and infinite possibility. And sometimes, very rarely, I still hear it sing.

/// SWITCHING TRANSMISSION CHANNEL ///
CALIBRATING CHRONOLOGICAL ANCHOR
SIGNAL
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TESTIMONY SEALED
CHRONOLOGICAL RECORD — REALITY-VARIANT
THE LAST BREATH OF THE FOUNDRY UPRISING
RIFT EPOCH — HEXTECH CITY — NEXUS PRIME ARCHIVE