Eclipse Online: The Final Descent
Chapter 135: THE LATTICE UNVEILED
CHAPTER 135: THE LATTICE UNVEILED
The world didn’t fall apart quietly.
It broke with a cry, sharp and terrible, like a thousand glass mirrors shattering at once. The sound cut through the air and into her bones, leaving no place untouched.
Nyra flinched back, her sword snapping up on instinct. Before her, the lattice writhed and twisted, as if alive. Light bled into shadow and shadow bled back into light, strands of broken code snapping apart, stitching themselves together, then breaking again—over and over, without end.
Her chest tightened as she watched. The crack spread wider, not like a wound tearing flesh, but like an eye forcing itself open, as though the world itself had decided to look back at her.
And through it—
Kaito.
He stood there, motionless for a moment. His shape wavered in the lattice, chiseled out of shadow and light both, his face half-concealed behind distortion. Yet there was no mistake about him: the set of his shoulders, the way his head dipped forward slightly, the serenity that always seemed to radiate from him regardless of the tempest around him.
Nyra’s throat tightened. "Kaito..."
His gaze lifted, and his orbs burned with twin flames—warm, gentle gold that she recognized, and a cold, unnatural violet that pulsed in rhythm with the lattice.
The sight made Mika exhale involuntarily. Kael swore under his breath. Even Yue, in whom feelings seldom fluttered, braced for the shift in the atmosphere.
Kaito spoke. "You shouldn’t have come."
The words were gentle, but the lattice supported them, resonating through the shattered world until they weighed down all of them like a decree.
Nyra pressed forward in spite of that. Her trembling hands rested on her sword, but she didn’t raise it. "I couldn’t help it. You’re still here. I could feel you."
The dark-light form of her brother cocked his head to one side, as if considering her words. "I am here. And I am not."
Kael growled, his voice low but harsh, "That’s not him now. Look at his eyes."
Nyra twisted her head, glare cutting. "Silence."
But Kael’s jaw was clenched and he put his hand on the hilt of his sword as if he might require it.
Mika’s voice was shaking. "Kaito... are you free? Or the Dominion?"
The lattice twisted and convulsed, strands of code spilling loose like nerves stripped bare. Each thread seemed alive, twitching and pulling apart, unraveling faster than Nyra’s eyes could follow.
Kaito’s body shook within that storm. His face flickered, never holding still—one moment the brother she knew, the next broken like cracked glass, and then something else entirely. Something bigger, faceless, and impossible to name.
When he finally spoke, the sound no longer belonged to him alone. His voice carried another beneath it, deeper and heavier, as though the world’s core itself had decided to speak through his throat.
The two tones pressed together, human and inhuman, until they became one voice that filled the space and left no room for silence.
"There is no Dominion without me. There is no me without the Core. We are... entwined."
The words cut through Nyra like blades.
"No," she gasped, shaking her head. "That’s not true. You’re you still. I know you are. You brought them back. You stopped the Dominion from killing us."
His gold eye faltered, growing dark as the violet burned brighter. "Did I save you? Or did I save myself?"
The question hangs there, an invisible noose.
Yue finally stepped forward, her voice stern against the tension binding the air. "If you’ve merged with the Core, then you’re its anchor. That makes you a threat to all of us."
Nyra wheeled on her, fury burning hot. "Don’t you dare—"
But Kaito interrupted. "She is right."
Nyra remained frozen.
Kaito’s figure edged toward the edge of the lattice, but he didn’t cross. Shadows radiated outward, extending across the earth to her boots. "The Core is disintegrating. The corruption of Dominion seeps through all rifts. If I weren’t there to hold it together, the Fork would be annihilated. You still draw breath because I prevent it from shattering.".
The words would have been relief. Proof that he still fought for them. But the tone—soporific, burdened by destiny—bunched her stomach into knots.
Kael laughed a snort, though it lacked humor. "So what are you saying? That we owe you thanks while you sit there manipulating Dominion strings like some kind of puppet master?"
Kaito’s purple eyes flashed over at him. Kael flinched as if he’d been hit, beads of sweat forming on his temple.
You don’t get it," Kaito whispered. "I don’t control them. They obey me, because I am becoming they. To the Dominion, I am no stranger, no enemy. I am voice. I am will."
The oppressive silence that followed was suffocating.
Nyra’s chest hurt. "You’re not them. You’re my brother.".
His eyes snapped back to hers, and for an instant—just an instant—the gold in his eyes burned brighter. The intensity of it splintered her in two.
"I remember," he said, his voice lower, strained. "I remember you. Our trek through the raid lands. The night we laughed under a false sky. The promise I made."
Nyra’s breath caught. "Then hold to that. Fight it. Don’t let them take you."
But as she spoke, the violet swelled again, absorbing the gold. His face twisted, his form shifting between human and something too big to describe.
"I battle no more," he said. The voice was layered again, resonant, otherworldly. "If I tear myself asunder, the Fork tears asunder. If I remain, I become Dominion. The way breaks no matter where I set my foot."
Mika breathed gently, horrified, "A broken path..."
The name of their Chapter written in his fate.
Nyra’s blade slipped from her trembling hands, clattering against the warped ground. "There has to be another way."
"Hope," Kaito said, voice fraying at its edges, "is what binds you. But hope does not change the code."
He raised his hand, and the lattice around them began to tremble. Light burst out in uneven waves, flashing and stuttering like a broken star. The ground beneath their feet groaned and shook, long cracks splitting wider with every pulse.
From the darkness beyond those openings, shapes began to stir. The silhouettes of the Dominion lingered at the edges, half-hidden, their forms shifting in the shadows. They didn’t attack, not yet. They only stood there—silent, patient, watching.
Kael tore his sword from the earth. "He’s calling them."
"No!" Nyra screamed. "He wouldn’t—"
And even as she said it, she could see the truth in Kaito’s gaze. Not purpose, not ill-will, but necessity. The Dominion answered him as easily as a breath answered lungs.
"They arrive," he said to her. "Not through my desire. Through my presence."
Mika’s hands shook, sparks flying between her fingers. "Then we can’t stay. Not here."
Yue’s gaze roamed the horizon, considering. "If the Dominion mobilizes, the lattice will be their main target. We’ll be swamped."
Nyra’s legs were weakening. "I won’t leave him."
Kaito’s eyes softened for an instant, the gold flashing once again. His voice dipped, only for her.
"Then you choose. Do you fight me... or do you join me?"
The ground split apart with a deafening blast of light and force. Shards of earth flew into the air, and from the jagged cracks, Dominion soldiers clawed their way out. Their bodies stretched and twisted as they emerged, no longer human but warped into terrible shapes. The battlefield dissolved into chaos.
And in that chaos, Nyra’s heart felt as if it shattered too.
The fighting began again.
Kael charged forward without hesitation, his sword cutting through corrupted armor with sharp, heavy swings.
Mika raised her hands, light bursting from her in radiant blasts that tore holes through the advancing wave, though each strike left her dimmer, her strength slipping away bit by bit.
Yue moved like a shadow, fast and silent, her twin blades cutting lives away with barely a whisper.
But Nyra did not move. Her body stood frozen, her sword still at her side. Even as Dominion soldiers closed in, her gaze never left Kaito’s form bound in the lattice.
The clash of steel and the screams of war faded into the background. All she could see was him, caught between breaking apart and becoming something else entirely.
"Kaito!" she cried, voice shattering. "I don’t know what to do!"
Time slowed for an instant. The Dominion halted in mid-blow, heads snapping toward the lattice. Kaito’s figure extended, shadows extending like limbs into her palm.
"You already know," he replied.
Her heartbeat boomed. The tendrils caressed her fingers, icy as nothing, hot as recollection.
If she took his hand, she knew. She would enter the Core with him, into whatever he was becoming. She would not lose him again.
But if she fought back—if she fought him—then maybe the Fork would survive, but she would lose what little family she had left.
The shattered road forked before her, each choice torn, each one slicing into ruin.
Her tears splashed hot on the ash.
And yet, she reached.
The lattice fell apart, devouring all in light.
And the Chapter closed.