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Oil and Ash (A LitRpg Adventure)
Chapter Eight: The Merge

Chapter Eight: The Merge

The glowing system notification became impossible to ignore, floating in Joel's vision like an ominous warning he couldn’t shake. He blinked hard, trying to will it away, but it stayed there, counting down relentlessly.

Prepare for heart cards? Prepare for magic? Prepare for monsters?

Welcome?

Beside him, Craig wiped a hand across his grime-streaked face, his eyes wide with disbelief. “Do you... see that?”

Joel nodded, his own heart pounding in his chest. Glancing around, he saw that everyone else in the inflatable raft wore the same bewildered expression. The eerie glow from the rig’s flickering lights reflected off their oil-smeared faces, making them look ghostly in the dim light. No one said much—what could they say? It wasn’t like any of them had an explanation for the sudden, invasive system messaging that had popped into their minds.

It felt like reality itself was splitting open, and they were just along for the ride.

Craig looked to Joel again, his voice a bit steadier, though the fear was unmistakable. “What the hell is a heart card?”

Another survivor, a roughneck named Blake, let out a bitter laugh, though it was more of a nervous bark. “Monsters?” he muttered under his breath. “What the hell is that supposed to mean? We just survived a goddamn explosion, and now this?” His hands shook as he gripped the side of the raft, the tension in the air thick as the smoke still rising from the distant fires.

Joel’s mind raced, trying to piece together what had happened. The explosion, the fire... and then the system. He could still hear the alarms blaring in his memory, the sharp crackle of the intercom shouting for an evacuation. But was this an attack? The chaos wasn’t just from the rig’s collapse—there were always rumors, whispers over the radio, that the mainland had come under siege.

Socialists.

He remembered how the news had broken through the airwaves before everything went to hell, a jumbled mess of half-information about armed attacks. Craig had been the first to mention it, his face drained of color as he’d shouted over the din of the machinery.

“They’re saying the Socialists are attacking! Something’s going down on the mainland!”

Even in the middle of the oil rig, the tension had spiked. Some of the crew had dismissed it—rumors, they said—but others weren’t so sure. Joel had seen it in their faces, the way men glanced nervously at each other, unsure whether the threat was real or just panic-driven paranoia.

Now, huddled in the raft, that fear was back.

"Is it them?” another man asked, his voice shaking. Joel recognized him as one of the mechanics. His face was pale beneath the layers of grime. “The Socialists—are they behind this? The explosions, the system... it’s all connected, right?”

“I don’t know,” Joel said, his voice flat but firm, trying to keep the panic at bay. “But I doubt it. Whatever this is... it’s something else.”

Craig gritted his teeth, staring out at the oily black water. “This whole damn thing doesn’t feel right. First the attacks, now this...”

Joel felt the weight of it too—the uncertainty, the dread crawling beneath his skin. What if it was connected? The attacks, the rig falling apart, and now this system—the strange messages about heart cards, monsters, and a world suddenly altered. It was like the end of days, a nightmare unraveling around them.

Blake cursed, throwing his hands up. “Heart cards? Magic? We’re in the middle of the goddamn ocean, with nothing but wreckage and whatever’s crawling out of that oil!”

Joel turned his gaze back to the horizon, where the rig now sat half-submerged, its skeletal remains casting long shadows over the blackened water. Whatever was happening to the world, it wasn’t just about survival anymore. It was about something far more dangerous, far more unknown. And they were caught in the middle of it.

He couldn’t stop thinking about that creeping black mass, the way it moved with a sinister intelligence. “I don’t think we’re alone out here,” Joel muttered, more to himself than the others.

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Craig swallowed hard, staring at him with wide eyes. “What do you mean?”

Joel shook his head, unwilling to say it out loud. But he couldn’t shake the feeling—that this wasn’t just an ordinary storm of events. There was something darker, more twisted at play. And they weren’t the only ones in the water now.

As the last minute ticked down, the raft drifted away from the last remains of the rig. Joel cast one final glance back. The hulking silhouette of the platform, now mostly submerged, looked more like the carcass of a dying beast. Lights flickered on and off across the structure, growing dimmer with each pulse. Then, with one final sputter, the glow vanished completely, plunging the distant wreckage into darkness.

As the countdown neared zero, the air grew thicker, more oppressive. A strange pressure settled over them, like the calm before a storm. And just as the timer hit zero, Joel felt it—an almost imperceptible shift in the atmosphere. The world itself seemed to hold its breath.

Then, with a deafening crack, reality broke apart.

But that wasn’t all. Joel’s breath caught as he noticed something shifting at the edge of the horizon. At first, he thought it was oil—a slick, black stain spreading across the water. But the longer he stared, the more wrong it felt.

It moved in ways oil didn’t. It twisted and pulsed, thick tendrils rising from the water’s surface and then slipping back beneath the waves as if testing the air.

“What the hell is that?” one of the roughnecks asked, his voice tight with fear.

Joel narrowed his eyes. The black mass seemed alive, creeping slowly towards them like a predator. The tendrils slithered and undulated, growing in size as they neared the remains of the rig. It was as though the darkness itself had come to life, feeding off the wreckage, gaining strength from the oil that had spilled into the ocean.

“Move,” Joel barked, his voice low but urgent. “Paddle faster.”

Craig and the others snapped into action, their exhaustion momentarily forgotten, the paddles hitting the water with frantic strokes. The small inflatable raft, heavy with the weight of five men and their collective fear, lurched forward, but Joel couldn’t take his eyes off the looming mass behind them.

It wasn’t just oil. He knew it in his gut.

The dark, rippling surface moved with purpose, the oily sheen reflecting the faint light from the distant fires of the rig. It wasn’t simply drifting with the currents; it was the current. Each shift in the water felt deliberate, almost like it was hunting them. There was something alive in that darkness—something malevolent, watching, waiting.

The surface undisturbed by the gentle rocking of the rafts, but something sinister stirred beneath it. Joel squinted in the dim light, his gaze fixed on the other lifeboats spread out across the distance. For a brief moment, hope flickered in his chest. Survivors. They weren’t alone out here.

“Faster!” Joel urged, his voice trembling with a mix of frustration and dread. “It’s not—just—oil!”

Craig glanced back over his shoulder, his face slick with sweat and fear. “What the hell is that thing?”

The question hung in the air, unanswered. Joel didn’t know how to explain it, how to make them understand the primal fear clawing at his insides. It wasn’t just the unnatural way the black mass moved, or how it twisted and coiled like a living thing. It was the feeling it gave off—the oppressive, suffocating sense of malevolence. The thing was aware of them. It wasn’t just drifting; it was coming for them.

The others paddled harder, their movements frantic now, but the distance between them and the creeping mass didn’t seem to widen fast enough. Joel could feel his pulse pounding in his throat as he stared at the dark water, watching as small tendrils of the slick substance extended out, curling and searching, like probing fingers testing the air.

His mind raced, memories of the explosion flashing back in fragments. The fire, the wreckage, the deafening roar—it had all been chaotic, but this... this was different. This felt calculated, as if the very essence of the ocean had turned against them. Or, something so alien, it must have come from another reality.

He shook his head, trying to clear his thoughts. “Come on! Push through it!” He gritted his teeth, gripping the edge of the raft, his knuckles white as the tension grew.

The horizon around them seemed to blur as the monstrous blackness inched closer, the tendrils growing bolder, licking at the edges of the sea. It wasn’t just a force of nature—it was a predator, and they were trapped in its territory.

Joel’s heart pounded as he realized, with a sickening certainty, that it wasn’t going to stop. Whatever that thing was, it was relentless. And it was hungry.

The water around them rippled violently, as though the ocean itself had been torn in two. Their true form revealed: creatures. Black, dripping with oil, their forms writhing and morphing into grotesque shapes. They were like monsters pulled straight from some eldritch nightmare, their bodies formless yet terrifying, moving as though they were part oil, part void.

The system had merged. And hell had followed.