Tг–bb

The letters weren't written by a hand. They were formed by thousands of tiny, metallic insects—nanites—vibrating in a synchronous dance.

Suddenly, his headset crackled. A voice, layered like a chorus of a thousand whispers, spoke through the static. "The Transmission Г– Between Bodies," it whispered.

He wasn’t receiving a signal from the outside. The signal was coming from the station’s own core. TГ–BB

Elias leaned in, his breath fogging the glass. In the old world’s Cyrillic-Latin hybrid scripts, it looked like a stutter. A glitch. He ran a diagnostic, but the system returned a chilling error: Source: Internal.

The terminal hummed, a low-frequency vibration that rattled Elias’s teeth. For three years, his job at the Outpost 7 monitoring station had been to filter the static of a dying world. Most days, it was just the wind or the groan of shifting tectonic plates. But tonight, the screen flickered with four distinct characters: . The letters weren't written by a hand

g., more sci-fi, fantasy, or horror) or focus on a for the characters?

When the morning shift arrived, the station was silent. The dust was settled, and Elias was gone. The only thing left was a faint, glowing inscription on his chair, pulsing like a heartbeat: A voice, layered like a chorus of a

The floor beneath him began to liquefy as the nanites rose, forming a shimmering doorway in the air. The signal wasn't a message for him to read. It was a command for him to step through. "Is anyone there?" Elias shouted into the dark.