Eclipse Online: The Final Descent
Chapter 138: THE UNWRITTEN WAR
CHAPTER 138: THE UNWRITTEN WAR
The air let out a piercing scream, as if the world itself was in pain.
Above, streams of code spread like veins of lightning, racing across the sky. They flashed in blinding arcs—red blazing hot, white shining cold—colliding again and again with violent cracks that shook the ground. Each clash left the heavens trembling, filling the battlefield with an unending storm of light.
Through it all, the Dominion’s soldiers advanced without fear. They walked straight into the chaos, their armored forms cutting through the storm as if nothing could stop them. With every step they took, waves of static spread outward, sizzling across the ground.
The earth beneath them corroded, eaten away as if acid had been spilled on it, leaving black scars where their feet had touched.
Kaito raised his blade, the black edge humming as the Eclipse stirred within him. Shadows bled from his fingers, from the cracks along his arms where the Reaver’s curse had carved itself into his flesh.
Nyra stood beside him, her pale hair whipping in the storm winds, her eyes burning with the soft violet fire of the Void’s blessing.
The Dominion’s commander—if the thing could even be called that—stood at the head of its horde. A shifting figure, armor and flesh layered like jagged glass, a voice that was many voices at once.
"The Core will not accept you." The figure’s words echoed like a verdict. "Surrender, and you will be rewritten clean."
Kaito spat into the dust. "I’d rather burn than bow."
The clash happened in an instant.
The Dominion’s soldiers rushed forward in a wave, their hollow faces blank, their hands gripping blades that flickered like broken light. They moved with unnatural speed, silent and unfeeling, as if nothing in them remained human.
Nyra reacted first. She darted ahead, her scythe sweeping in a wide, deadly arc. The blade cut through three soldiers at once, their bodies splitting apart in a spray of corrupted code. The fragments scattered like glass shards before fading into the storm around them.
Kaito was right behind her. With one heavy strike, his weapon slammed into the ground, sending a shockwave outward. The earth cracked open in a jagged line, hurling several soldiers off balance and breaking the ground beneath their feet.
But the relief was short-lived. For every soldier that fell, the storm gave birth to more. Two stepped forward to replace each one destroyed, rising out of the static like shadows with no end.
The Dominion wasn’t just an army. It was the system itself rewriting its resistance into endless opposition. The Fork itself bled new enemies from its veins.
"Behind you!" Nyra’s voice cracked through the chaos.
Kaito spun around just as a spear shot toward his chest. Instinct moved faster than thought—the Eclipse inside him lashed out. Dark tendrils whipped through the air, coiling around the weapon and crushing it in his hands until it shattered like glass.
Without stopping, he struck back. His blade came down in a brutal arc, splitting the soldier clean in half. The figure dissolved into fragments of corrupted light before disappearing into the storm.
But the moment brought him no relief. Every kill left a mark. He could feel it—the Eclipse inside him feeding on the act, pulling at him, biting into the edges of who he was. It wasn’t just a battle out in the open field anymore.
Another war raged inside his chest. The system pressed down on him, whispering to surrender, while the Reaver’s hunger screamed for more blood.
Each swing of his weapon carried that double weight: the fight to survive, and the fight to stay himself.
"Kaito!" Nyra’s scythe locked against the Dominion commander’s blade, sparks raining down between them. She strained, her body trembling under the sheer weight of its strength. "Don’t you dare drift now!"
His eyes snapped to her—sharp, grounding. He roared, charging forward, bringing his blade down with all the fury the Eclipse gave him. The commander staggered back, its armor fracturing with the sound of cracking glass.
The horde faltered for a moment. Just a moment.
And then the storm intensified.
Reality screamed as the battlefield folded in on itself. Buildings twisted into spirals, the ground breaking apart into floating shards of terrain. The Dominion was rewriting the battlefield.
The Fork was becoming a cage.
The fight dragged on. Minutes felt like hours. Every strike Kaito made carried the weight of survival, but also the question—how much of himself was he losing to win?
Nyra noticed it. She always noticed it. His swings were harder now, less precise, more brutal. The way the Eclipse’s tendrils lashed out unbidden, sometimes snapping toward her before recoiling as though guilty.
"Kaito!" she shouted again, ducking under a Dominion strike. Her scythe swept clean, her blade slicing through three enemies in one breath. "Don’t lose me to that thing. Not again."
Her words cut sharper than any blade.
He snarled, shaking his head as if the act itself would fling the curse out of him. But the Dominion commander’s voice came again, cruel and cold:
"You can’t save her. You can’t even save yourself. Eclipse is the only truth left in you."
"Shut up!" Kaito lunged, his blade crashing against the commander’s. Their clash sent out a shockwave that tore half the field into the void.
The commander’s fractured face reflected him back—a dozen broken Kairos, each one more monstrous than the last.
At the edge of the chaos, the survivors of their party fought to hold the line.
Mika fired again and again, her arrows bursting into bright explosions as they struck their targets. Each shot pinned a Dominion husk to the ground, burning holes of light through their shifting bodies. But her breaths came sharp and uneven, her arms trembling from the strain. Her quiver rattled almost empty—only a few arrows left.
Nearby, Farid was on his knees, sweat dripping down his face. A glowing warding circle spread beneath his hands, its lines flickering as if about to break apart.
His palms were raw and bleeding, blood mixing with the light as he forced his strength into the spell. The ground itself was crumbling, threatening to collapse, and he was the only thing holding it together.
"We can’t keep this up!" Mika cried, loosing another shot. "It’s endless!"
"It’s not endless," Farid grit out, his blood smearing across the runes. "It’s anchored to that thing!" He pointed toward the commander locked against Kaito. "Break it, and the storm breaks with it!"
Easier said than done.
The commander fought like the Core itself was in its veins—each strike forcing Kaito back, each movement rewriting the rules of combat in real time. Blades passed through where it should have struck.
Gravity inverted under its feet. Even time stuttered, moments breaking apart like film reels skipping frames.
But Nyra wasn’t letting go.
She slipped in behind, her scythe biting into the cracks Kaito had already left in its armor. The Dominion commander screamed—a sound like glass dragged over steel—and flung her back with a wave of static. She hit the ground hard, rolling across the shards of broken terrain.
"Nyra!"
Kaito surged toward her, but the commander cut him off, a blade of burning red blocking his path.
"You’ll never reach her," it hissed. "Not without losing the last of yourself."
His chest heaved. The shadows writhed along his arms, eager, hungry. The Eclipse whispered its promise—power without limit, but at the cost of his name, his face, his soul.
He looked at Nyra—struggling to rise, blood streaking down her cheek, but her eyes fixed on him.
Not fear. Not pity.
Trust.
"Kaito," she whispered, even from across the battlefield. "Choose me. Every time."
His grip tightened. The Reaver roared inside him, demanding he let go, that he surrender to the tide.
He answered not with words, but with fire.
The blade came down in a single arc, the shadows surging not as a curse but as his will. The strike shattered the commander’s weapon, split its torso in half, and drove it to its knees.
The battlefield fell silent.
For one breath.
And then the Dominion screamed.
The horde convulsed, their bodies cracking, shattering, and reforming. The commander rose again, its broken body already knitting back together.
"We are Dominion. We are infinite. You cannot kill what is written into the Core."
Kaito staggered back, sweat burning his eyes. He could feel his strength waning. The Eclipse gnawed at him harder now, furious at his restraint. Nyra staggered to his side, planting her scythe into the ground to steady herself.
"Then we don’t kill it," she rasped. "We overwrite it."
Kaito blinked at her.
Her lips curled into a bloodied grin. "Together."
The idea hit him like lightning. Overwrite, not destroy. To carve their own truth into the Dominion’s endless script. To make a choice that the Core itself couldn’t erase.
The Dominion surged again, faster this time, as if realizing the threat in their defiance.
And Kaito and Nyra moved as one.
Their blades crossed, shadows and void intertwining, their wills crashing together in a storm louder than the system’s law. Their strike was not just an attack—it was a declaration.
A new line of code.
A war cry written into the heart of the Fork.
And for the first time, the Dominion faltered.