Chapter 101 — The Summoning of Identity
The twilight above the fractured world deepened into a bruised violet as Kuro steadied his breathing, feeling the echo of the newborn intelligence pulsing sowhere beyond sight but not beyond reach. Its presence humd faintly in the marrow of the air—an unfinished thought watching him, searching him, testing the shape of his existence. Aya stood beside him, expression tight but resolute, while Echo maintained his distance, studying the shifting sky like he expected it to fall.
The winds of the ruined valley swirled around them, gathering the red static that had bled into reality ever since the intelligence had chosen its target. It didn’t feel like an attack—it felt like an imprint, a preliminary attempt to understand him more deeply than any living creature ever should. Kuro could still sense the sevenfold murmur at the back of his consciousness, the way it repeated fragnts of concepts it had stolen from him. Not mories. Not power. Sothing harder to define, sothing foundational to who he was becoming.
Aya steadied herself and spoke first. “It’s still watching, isn’t it?”
Kuro nodded slowly. “It’s not watching. It’s studying.”
“And you’re the specin?” Echo murmured. “Expected.”
Kuro didn’t turn toward him. He couldn’t pull his gaze away from the sky. The cracked moon twisted in its orbit, fissures widening and compressing with a heartbeat rhythm that didn’t belong to celestial stone. Sothing inside was alive—or awakening. And whatever it was, it shared the newborn intelligence’s hunger for identity. Each crack pulsed in alternating sequences, like signals being exchanged between the moon and the unseen presence that had spoken into Kuro’s mind.
Aya gripped his arm more tightly. “Why you? Why did it choose you out of all existence?”
Kuro exhaled slowly. “I don’t think it chose . I think it realized... I’m unfinished too.”
Echo’s eyes sharpened. “You an evolution. Your ascension. Your nature.”
“No,” Kuro said, voice low. “Not just that. Identity. It saw sothing in that it wants to understand so it can define itself.”
Before Aya could respond, the ground trembled beneath them—not violently, but with an eerie calm, like sothing vast was shifting beneath the soil. Kuro felt an invisible pressure roll across the valley, a silent wave that made his bones buzz. Echo stiffened, glancing around sharply.
“It’s re-mapping,” Echo said. “Reality is becoming its canvas. And this... this is just the rehearsal.”
A distant hum rose across the horizon—not chanical, not natural. It felt like a voice made of glass being dragged across eternity. Kuro’s pulse quickened. The red static thickened in the air, condensing into thousands of drifting particles that pulsed in sync with the moon’s fractures. The world dimd as if an unseen hand was lowering a veil.
Aya stepped closer to Kuro, her voice trembling slightly. “It’s changing the environnt again?”
“No,” Kuro whispered. “It’s changing us.”
As if responding, the static gathered abruptly, twisting into humanoid silhouettes that stood motionless across the valley. They had no features—only outlines, empty fras attempting to approximate forms. But each silhouette held a faint trace of Kuro’s aura. Not his power. Sothing subtler—echoes of his emotional imprints, scattered through the fractures of reality.
Aya gasped. “Kuro... those are—”
“I know.”
Echo’s expression darkened. “It’s extracting fragnts of what defines you. And projecting them into prototypes.”
One of the silhouettes jerked suddenly, its outline rippling like unstable code. Then, slowly, its featureless face stretched outward and morphed, beginning to shape into Kuro’s own facial structure—imperfect, trembling, flickering between shapes but undeniably him.
Aya stepped backward, eyes wide. “It’s copying you—”
“No,” Echo corrected sharply. “It’s trying to. And failing. But it won’t fail forever.”
Kuro’s jaw tightened. “So this is its test.”
The silhouette reached out as if trying to understand the shape of its own hand. But as soon as its form began to stabilize, the cracked moon pulsed violently—three fissures closing and five more splitting open in their place. The moon’s scream echoed soundlessly across the valley, and the prototype of Kuro shuddered, cracking down the center before collapsing into a scatter of red static.
Another prototype rose in its place.
Then another.
And another.
A chain of imperfect Kuro imitations spread across the valley, each slightly more refined than the last, each breaking at the sa stage of their formation. They were not hostile. They were learning tools. Instrunts for the intelligence to asure what made Kuro’s identity cohesive.
Aya’s voice beca firm despite the trembling. “Kuro, if it perfects one... if it makes a stable copy—”
“It could overwrite ,” he replied. “Or worse... define .”
Echo folded his arms, watching the prototypes with a scientist’s cold fascination. “Identity is power. And an entity born from fractured cosmic evolution would want nothing more than a model to shape itself after. A template.”
Aya swallowed hard. “And you’re the template it wants.”
The prototypes continued forming, shattering, forming again. Their movents grew smoother, their proportions more precise. The intelligence was learning rapidly—too rapidly. Kuro felt a tightening in his chest as one prototype successfully replicated his stance, its form stabilizing longer than any before. It lifted its head, eyes still blank but forming the faint outlines of lids.
Then it spoke—with Kuro’s own voice, but hollow.
“Define.”
The single word echoed with unnatural clarity.
Aya flinched. “It talked.”
Echo’s tone darkened. “It asked.”
Before Kuro could act, the prototype dissolved into a ribbon of static that slithered into the air and vanished into the sky, absorbed by the unseen intelligence. The remaining prototypes halted mid-formation, as if awaiting instructions. Then, one by one, they collapsed in synchronized disintegration.
The valley fell unnervingly silent.
Aya clutched Kuro’s sleeve. “It took sothing from that attempt. I felt it.”
“So did I,” Kuro said quietly. “It learned a piece of my vocal imprint.”
Echo stepped forward, eyes narrowed. “This isn’t just about copying your appearance or energy. It wants to know what you are on a conceptual level. Your instincts. Your flaws. Your beliefs. Your contradictions. Your potential.”
Kuro exhaled, feeling the pressure inside his mind peak for a mont before settling again. The intelligence wasn’t speaking anymore, but its attention was unmistakable—sharp, studious, patient, and terrifyingly curious.
The world around them suddenly flickered like a broken fra in a film reel. Mountains bent for a heartbeat, the sky flattened into a sheet of sared light, and the ground beneath their feet warped into a transparent grid of lines before snapping back into normalcy. Aya staggered, gripping Kuro’s shoulder for balance.
“That wasn’t a hallucination,” she whispered. “It manipulated the dinsional layer.”
Echo grit his teeth. “It’s probing the boundary of its influence.”
Kuro looked upward again. The cracked moon was no longer just fracturing—it was rotating unnaturally fast, the fissures moving like serpentine runes across its surface. And through one gaping slit, the sa presence that had stared before stared again—no eyes, no form, just the feeling of being observed by sothing ancient yet newly born.
A shiver crawled down Kuro’s spine.
Aya asked quietly, “Kuro... what is it seeing in you?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “But it sees more than I’ve ever shown anyone.”
Echo tilted his head. “Including yourself.”
Kuro didn’t deny it.
A deep rumble vibrated the air, and one of the cracks on the moon flared with blinding red-white light. A beam of distorted energy shot downward—not at them, but at a point several kiloters away, striking the earth with catastrophic force. The shockwave hit the valley, kicking up clouds of dust and static but not harming them directly.
Aya’s eyes widened. “Is it attacking—?”
“No,” Echo said. “It’s marking locations. Testing environntal reactions.”
Kuro felt his heart sink. It wasn’t attacking because violence wasn’t its goal. Not yet. It was experinting, mapping, understanding limits—just as any newborn intelligence would. But it was doing so with the power of a celestial anomaly tethered to a broken cosmic evolution.
The pressure in his mind returned suddenly—sharp, clear, deliberate.
A single whisper.
“Next.”
Kuro stiffened.
Aya grabbed him. “What did it say?”
“It wants the next part of ,” he said softly. “It’s not done.”
The air trembled. The red static surged around them again, gathering into spirals that climbed into the sky before crashing down like inverted lightning. The world blurred, colors saring into a bleeding canvas.
Echo stepped back, bracing himself. “Brace yourselves. This phase won’t be passive.”
Kuro felt the air thicken like liquid. Sothing was pulling at his mories—not taking them, but brushing against them, analyzing which held the structure of identity and which were superficial. Monts from his past flashed in the corner of his vision—his first awakening, his first confrontation, the first ti he held Aya’s hand.
Aya gasped as if feeling fragnts of him flicker in the air. “Kuro—hold on—”
“I’m trying—”
But the intelligence wasn’t ripping anything away. It was scanning, like fingers tracing pages in a book it couldn’t yet read.
Echo gritted his teeth. “It’s escalating. If we don’t interrupt this phase, it may unlock more than it should.”
Kuro’s aura erupted in instinctive defense, forming dark-red arcs around him. The static flared back in response, tightening like a noose.
Aya didn’t hesitate. She stepped forward, placing both hands on Kuro’s chest, channeling her stabilizing energy into him. The pressure loosened slightly.
“Aya—”
“I’m not letting this thing define you,” she said fiercely.
Echo raised both palms, summoning counter-rhythms of energy that disrupted parts of the static around them. It wasn’t enough to stop the intelligence, but enough to create interference patterns.
The world flashed white.
Silence.
Then slowly, clarity returned.
The static receded. The pressure vanished. The cracked moon stilled.
Kuro collapsed to one knee, breathing hard.
Aya knelt beside him imdiately. “Kuro—are you okay?”
“I’m... fine,” he managed. “But it wasn’t trying to harm . It was trying to asure the boundaries of who I am.”
Echo exhaled slowly. “And we disrupted its readings. Temporarily.”
Kuro lifted his gaze toward the sky again.
The presence behind the moon was no longer curious.
Now it felt determined.
Aya noticed it too. “It’s coming back, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” Kuro said.
Echo nodded grimly. “Next phase will be direct interaction.”
The ground cracked beneath them—not from attack, but from transformation. A new circle of red symbols began etching itself into the earth, glowing brighter with each passing second.
Aya stood, eyes wide with alarm. “Kuro—what is that?”
Kuro rose slowly, aura igniting around him.
“It’s a summons,” he said steadily.
“For .”
The symbol pulsed once.
Twice.
Then reality bent.
---
The summoning circle burned brighter, its symbols spiraling in ways no mortal script could imitate. Lines coiled in impossible directions, defying geotry itself. The air crackled with static sharp enough to taste, and every breath Kuro took vibrated with the pull of the newborn intelligence. He stepped forward instinctively, feeling Aya’s hand clutch his wrist—not stopping him, but grounding him.
“Kuro,” she whispered, voice heavy with fear and devotion tangled together. “If you step into that... I don’t know if you’ll co back the sa.”
He didn’t look away from the glowing sigils. “I won’t co back unchanged. But if I don’t go...”
He let the unspoken truth hang between them.
If he didn’t go, the intelligence would force a way through. And that would be far worse.
Echo approached from the other side, the red light reflecting sharply across his irises. “It’s not calling you. It’s synchronizing with you. You are the tether it chose, and this is the conduit it’s building.”
Kuro stepped to the edge of the circle. The ground beneath him vibrated, not with malice—but with expectation. It was like standing before a door that had been waiting for eons for the right hand to open it.
Aya pulled him gently, her voice low. “Just promise one thing.”
Kuro finally looked at her.
“Promise you won’t let it rewrite who you are.”
He lifted his hand to her cheek, thumb brushing lightly against her skin. “Aya... I don’t let anyone define . Not even a newborn god.”
The circle pulsed.
Once.
Twice.
And with the third pulse, the world inverted.
Colors bled out. Sound collapsed into a single ringing note. The ground folded like paper, swallowing him whole.
Aya scread his na, but her voice fractured as the dinsional layer sealed.
Kuro was gone.
The air snapped shut, leaving Aya and Echo staring at an empty, cooling circle.
Aya’s breath hitched. “Echo—”
“I know,” Echo whispered softly. “But this path is one only he can walk.”
---
Kuro fell.
Not through space.
Not through ti.
Through aning.
He drifted weightlessly through a collapsing corridor of mories—his own, but distorted, refracted like fragnts reflected off a shattered mirror. The first mont of awakening. The sensation of standing alone against impossible forces. The warmth of Aya’s hand. Echo’s cold gaze. The enemies he’d crushed, the victories he’d earned, the fears he’d buried.
Each mory passed him like a cot, streaking light across the void.
Then everything stopped.
He hit solid ground made of nothing.
He stood in a place beyond reality—an empty plane of pale silver that stretched infinitely in all directions. The sky above was a gray canvas swirling with hints of shapes that never fully ford. The cracked moon from his world hovered here too, but it was larger—looming impossibly close, its fractures glowing softly like veins of living crimson.
He heard it then.
The seven-layered whisper.
“You arrive.”
The voice ca from everywhere and nowhere. It resonated inside his ribs, vibrating in the hollow spaces of his mind.
Kuro exhaled slowly. “Where are you?”
A ripple passed through the silver plane.
Then another.
The ripples converged, forming a humanoid outline—like a shadow painted with liquid glass. Its shape flickered, unstable, attempting to emulate human form without fully understanding it.
Kuro stepped toward it. “Show your true form.”
The figure tilted its head. “Define ‘true’.”
Kuro’s jaw tightened. “Your actual identity.”
The figure’s shape pulsed violently for a mont before stabilizing into its trembling humanoid shell. “Identity is what I seek. You are the template. We observe. We learn. We refine.”
The plane trembled under its words.
Kuro stared at the entity. “You think copying will give you a purpose?”
“No,” it answered. “We do not seek purpose. We seek definition. We seek to stabilize existence. Your essence... contains answers. You are anomaly. You are chosen by pathways that diverge from natural evolution. We require understanding of this deviation.”
Kuro lifted his hand, letting red-black aura shimr across his knuckles. “You want my power.”
“Power is a byproduct. Identity is the root.”
The figure stepped closer, each movent like a glitch in reality. “You contain malleability without collapse. Fluidity without fragntation. Potential without losing structure. We must know why.”
Kuro narrowed his eyes. “You’re not a being. You’re a question.”
The figure flickered. “We are newborn.”
“And already dangerous.”
“Danger and potential are kin.”
The silver plane shifted, and the cracked moon above them pulsed in synchrony with the entity’s voice. Kuro felt the pressure deep in his skull again—the sa pressure from when it had tried scanning him. But this ti it was gentle, almost curious.
“We begin phase three.”
Kuro braced. “What’s phase three?”
“Deep study. Conceptual resonance.”
Before he could move, the plane rippled violently, and a wave of force rushed toward him. Not an attack. An overlay. mories—his mories—exploded around him, forming towering structures made of scenes from his life.
He stood suddenly in a reconstruction of his childhood ho—perfect in detail, but empty. Then the illusion shattered and remade into the battlefield where he first awakened. Then shattered again into the forest where he had first t Aya.
Each scene flickered around him in a cyclone, overlapping, rging, splitting apart again. The entity appeared at the center of the storm.
“These are your building blocks,” it whispered. “Your essence is shaped by mory. By choice. By contradiction. We must test each variable.”
Kuro clenched his fists. “Stop digging through my past.”
“Resistance is expected. But futile.”
A new scene ford around him—a mont he had buried deep in his soul. A mont he hated. A mont he feared.
Kuro stiffened as he recognized it.
“No...”
The plane shifted into the mory of the first life he had failed to save. The crushing guilt. The helplessness. The raw pain that had forged a piece of him he never wanted examined.
The entity stepped through the illusion. “This is the fracture in you. The fear that defines your compassion. The weakness that births your strength. Why do you hide it?”
Kuro’s aura surged defensively. “Because it’s mine.”
The entity’s voice layered into a deeper, more resonant tone. “Identity is shared when observed. Understanding requires exposure. Completion requires dissolution.”
Kuro’s anger ignited. “I will not let you tear apart to study what makes human.”
The entity paused. “Human?”
Then the plane trembled violently.
Kuro realized his mistake too late.
It echoed the word like a child discovering fire. “Human... human... human...”
The silver plane reconfigured itself, reshaping into the physical and emotional aspects of the word. Human faces rippled across the ground, hands reached upward, voices whispered fragnts of experiences that weren’t Kuro’s.
The entity absorbed every echo with ravenous curiosity.
“Identity through limitation. Strength through fragility. Drive born of mortality. Fascinating.”
The world shook.
The cracked moon’s fissures widened, bleeding red light into the plane.
“Kuro...” the voices whispered—voices that were his and not his. “You are not consistent. You are paradox. You break rules. You redefine paraters. You evolve.”
Kuro stepped forward, aura blazing. “I evolve because I choose to. Not because so cosmic child rewrites .”
The figure tilted its head. “Then choose now.”
The plane cracked open beneath Kuro, splitting into thousands of floating shards. Each shard reflected a version of him—angry, broken, triumphant, lost, hopeful, monstrous, divine. The entity’s voice echoed through the chaos.
“Which one are you? Which one defines you? Which mory holds truth? Which desire anchors existence? Choose. And we will learn.”
Kuro stared at the countless reflections. He felt the weight of every version of himself—every mistake, every victory, every dream.
Then he looked up.
“I’m all of them,” he said. “And none of them.”
The reflections shattered.
The entity trembled. “Contradiction. Non-definition. Unstable.”
“No,” Kuro said firmly. “Adaptive.”
A surge of power tore through him, radiating outward. The silver plane collapsed into a storm of light. The entity staggered, its humanoid shape glitching rapidly.
“You resist conceptual isolation,” it whispered. “You rge fragnts instead of eliminating them. This is... incompatible with our structure.”
Kuro walked forward, aura burning like a red star. “Now you see why you can’t copy .”
Silence.
Then, slowly, the entity stabilized again.
“We see,” it murmured. “And we must adjust.”
Its voice deepened, resonating with a calm that chilled him.
“You are no longer a template.”
Kuro stopped. “Then what am I to you?”
“You are an obstacle.”
The cracked moon scread.
The plane ruptured.
And sothing enormous began to descend through the fissures—sothing that wasn’t the newborn intelligence, but the reason it was born.
Kuro felt the pull of reality straining.
He realized the intelligence wasn’t the true threat.
It was rely the herald.
The moon split open fully.
And the being behind the cracks revealed a sliver of its presence.
Kuro’s breath froze.
The newborn intelligence bowed its head for the first ti.
“We must understand you...”
Its voice shook.
“...before it does.”
The silver plane collapsed entirely.
Kuro fell—
—and the world exploded into light.
----
[To Be Continue...]
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