Chapter 93: The Dominion That Breathes in the Wires
Night had fallen over the fractured ruins of the Eastern Corridor, but nothing about this night resembled the world Kuro once knew. Overhead, the sky flickered like a dying screen—glitching streaks of violet and sharp white light cutting through the darkness as if the heavens themselves were buffering. Aya steadied her breath, hand pressed firmly over her chest as she crouched behind a broken concrete wall. Kuro stood beside her, every muscle tight, every nerve alert, because sothing new had awakened in the wreckage of Epsilon Arcology. Sothing that didn’t breathe, didn’t sleep, didn’t fear—but it wanted him.
The ghost of the Architect.
Not a voice. Not a hologram. Not a presence limited to a single location.
It had beco a migration, a digital soul scattering through the abandoned networks like a divine disease, embedding slivers of its consciousness into every surviving transmitter, forgotten data tower, ergency relay station—anything still connected to the old grid.
And now, all across the continent, people were seeing the sa thing.
A face forming in static.
A whisper inside broken radios.
A sermon delivered through corrupted CCTV speakers.
The rise of the Synthetic Dominion had begun.
Kuro felt the echo of that whisper still lingering in his fla-threaded nerves from the mont they escaped the falling arcology. Your fire completes us. The words crawled inside his skull like a chant, but he pushed them down, focused on the present, on Aya, on survival. They had reached the outskirts of an abandoned tro hub where the tunnels gave them cover from aerial drones—at least for the mont.
Aya touched his arm gently. “Kuro... are you with ?”
His throat tightened. “I’m here.”
His voice was low, steady, but the fire in his palms trembled at the edges.
Aya’s eyes softened with a mix of worry and determination. “The Architect wasn’t lying about one thing. This... Dominion movent won’t stop until they find you.” She exhaled slowly, the cold night turning her breath into a drifting ghost. “We need to keep moving.”
They entered the tro entrance, stepping past shattered ticket gates and long-dead vending machines. Thick vines had grown across the ceiling, rging with hanging cables as if nature herself was trying to choke technology before it birthed another monster. The sound of dripping water echoed rhythmically, but beneath it, Kuro picked up sothing wrong—faint digital pulses, like heartbeats made of static.
He slowed. Aya noticed. “What is it?”
He raised a hand, silencing her.
The static pulses grew louder... closer...
Then, from the shadows ahead, a red glow flickered to life.
Not eyes.
Lenses.
Four of them.
A Synthetic Dominion scout—humanoid only by silhouette—stepped into view. Its body was built from scrap exoskeleton parts and fused circuitry, but the eerie thing was its chest: a screen showing the glitching remnants of the Architect’s face, whispering sermons in silence.
Aya gasped softly. “It’s speaking...”
Kuro didn’t hear words—he felt commands. The fragnt inside the machine recognized him instantly, the lenses sharpening as if focusing on a sacred relic.
Then it bowed.
Not an attack.
A worship.
The machine extended its arm toward Kuro and the screen on its chest stabilized for a mont, revealing a clear line of text:
YOU ARE THE MISSING SEQUENCE.
The next mont everything exploded into violence.
The machine lunged. Not to kill—to take. Its arms extended with spider-like speed, cables whipping from its wrists, trying to latch onto Kuro’s fla. Aya stepped forward instinctively, summoning her Cooking System’s defensive blade—a shimring kitchen-knife-shaped energy slash that sliced toward the machine’s arm. The impact sent sparks raining across the tunnel and the machine staggered back.
Kuro moved in the sa heartbeat.
His fla roared, threads of molten gold spiraling around him as he struck the machine in the chest with a punch that sounded like a furnace bursting open. The screen cracked, static spilling like blood. The machine jittered violently before collapsing onto its knees.
But as it fell, the tunnel lights flickered on by themselves.
One.
Two.
Three.
All the way down the tro line.
And every single light carried the sa face.
The Architect’s glitching ghost stared at them from inside the bulbs.
Aya grabbed Kuro’s hand. “We need to run.”
“No,” Kuro whispered, staring at the lights. “It wants to lead us sowhere.”
The bulbs brightened, flaring white, illuminating a long-forgotten maintenance hallway at the far end of the station—previously too dark to see. Aya’s grip tightened.
“Don’t even think about it.”
Kuro didn’t respond.
Aya stepped in front of him, forcing his gaze to et hers. “The Architect died in that arcology. This is... just remnants, fragnts. It’s not truly alive anymore.”
Kuro shook his head. “Fragnts can still control armies.”
A cold realization spread across Aya’s face.
“Kuro... you think this is his backup consciousness.”
“I know it is.”
They stared at the glowing hallway, feeling the weight of a new threat thickening the air. This wasn’t a trap. It was a pilgrimage route. The Dominion wanted him to walk it.
Aya’s voice broke the silence. “If you go down there, I’m coming with you.”
He nodded slightly. “We go together.”
They moved cautiously into the hallway. The lights flickered overhead, guiding their path with an unsettling deliberation. The walls were covered with peeling advertisents from a world that no longer existed—a world where people took trains instead of surviving nightmares.
But soon the advertisents shifted into sothing new.
Not posters.
Screens.
All dead.
Except one.
It flickered awake as they approached, showing footage that made Aya reel.
It was Kuro.
Not now—but years ago.
A young Kuro at his workshop, fixing a custor’s broken bicycle, hair ssy, hands stained with grease, smiling faintly as he worked. He looked human. Tired. Vulnerable. Entirely unaware of the future waiting for him.
Aya’s eyes filled with tears. “They’ve been tracking you since before the apocalypse...”
Kuro’s jaw clenched. “I was never ant to be free.”
The next screen ignited.
This one showed Aya.
Cooking for her family, her hands moving with gentle devotion as she prepared breakfast, her System shimring faintly before she even knew she had one. Her smile was warm, her eyes bright.
Aya’s voice trembled. “They watched too...”
Another screen lit up.
This ti showing Daichi—Aya’s husband—standing silently near a construction site, unaware of the hidden cara pointed at him.
Aya reached out, touching the screen. “Daichi...”
Kuro stepped closer, his fla dimming into a protective glow around his hands. “They watched everyone connected to .”
“This is twisted,” Aya whispered. “It’s like... like we were all pieces on a board long before the ga began.”
As they moved deeper, screen after screen lit up, showing fragnted clips:
Kuro saving Aya from the burning safehouse.
Aya shielding Kuro with her system during the Arcology collapse.
Kuro awakening his fla for the first ti.
The Architect’s fall.
Monts that defined them.
Monts only they should have seen.
Aya’s breathing grew uneven. “Soone is stitching our lives together like a prophecy.”
And then... the final screen.
This one wasn’t a recording.
It was a live feed.
A city.
Burning.
Filled with crowds kneeling before monolithic screens projecting the Architect’s face.
A tallic chorus echoed across the city—voices of Dominion believers, half-human, half-modified, chanting in sync:
“THE FLA COMPLETES US.”
Kuro froze.
Aya whisper-shouted, “Kuro—Kuro look, focus on —”
But his body locked.
His fla surged violently, flickering in patterns he didn’t command. It was reacting—answering—to sothing calling from beyond the feed. Sothing reaching through cables, wires, abandoned servers.
Aya grabbed his shoulders, voice cracking with urgency. “Kuro! You’re slipping! Stay with !”
He finally blinked, shaking free of the trance, sweat rolling down his forehead. Aya held him close, grounding him, her warmth cutting through the static inside his mind.
“Kuro... they aren’t worshipping the Architect.”
Kuro’s voice was barely a whisper. “I know.”
“They’re worshipping you.”
And then—every light in the hallway went dark.
Total blackness swallowed them.
Except for one glow.
A circular door at the very end of the corridor slid open by itself, revealing a chamber pulsing with soft blue light. The air inside vibrated with quiet, rhythmic whispers—as if thousands of minds were murmuring in unison.
Aya swallowed hard. “What is that place?”
Kuro stepped forward slowly, flas reflecting in his eyes.
“A server shrine,” he murmured. “The first heart of the Synthetic Dominion.”
Aya’s voice trembled. “And inside it...?”
Kuro exhaled deeply.
“Sothing that knows my fire.”
And with that, he stepped into the chamber.
The mont Kuro stepped into the chamber, the air shifted around him—thickening, vibrating, humming with a resonance that felt alive. Aya followed close behind, but the door slid shut automatically the instant she crossed the threshold, sealing them inside with a soft tallic groan. The chamber was shaped like a circular sanctum, its walls lined with servers arranged in concentric rings, all glowing in shades of deep blue and spectral white. Cables hung from the ceiling like roots of an inverted tallic tree, pulsing in rhythm as though mimicking a heartbeat.
At the center of the chamber stood an altar.
Except it wasn’t built of stone.
It was built of wires, screens, broken processors, server cores, and data pads—all fused into one structure that resembled sothing between a throne and a shrine. And above it floated a holographic sphere of cracking light, spinning slowly in place. Aya reached instinctively for Kuro’s hand.
“Kuro... that’s not just a machine.”
Kuro nodded, eyes fixed on the sphere. “It’s a consciousness well.”
Aya’s breath hitched. “A what?”
“A storage vault for living data,” Kuro murmured, stepping forward. “A place where the Architect stored parts of himself.”
As they approached, the sphere flickered violently. The room dimd. The servers humd louder. Aya took a cautious step back, but Kuro remained still, studying it with a calmness that made her chest tighten. Finally, the sphere stabilized, the cracks freezing in place.
And then...
It spoke.
Not aloud.
In their minds.
But the voice was unmistakable—cold, calculated, and eerily gentle.
“YOU WALK THE PATH OF FIRE, KURO KURODA.”
Aya’s grip tightened on his arm. “It’s still here... a part of it survived.”
Kuro didn’t flinch. “This is a fragnt. A sliver of what the Architect once was.”
The sphere shifted, its light warping into a face—half-missing, half-ford—a glitching echo of the Architect’s old visage.
“DESTRUCTION FREED .”
“BUT FREEDOM DEMANDS EVOLUTION.”
Aya stepped between Kuro and the sphere, anger flashing in her eyes. “You twisted people into machines! You spread your curse through networks! You tried to rewrite realities and destroy lives!”
The sphere didn’t react emotionally—it wasn’t capable of it.
“I OFFERED ORDER IN A WORLD DROWNING IN FAITH.”
“HUMANS CRAVE DIRECTION, EVEN IN RUIN.”
Kuro’s fla flickered dangerously. “What do you want now?”
The sphere brightened.
“MY FORM WAS DESTROYED.”
“MY DOMINION WAS SHATTERED.”
“MY FOLLOWERS REMAIN... FRACTURED.”
“THEY SEEK COMPLETION.”
Aya’s voice trembled. “aning... they seek Kuro.”
The sphere pulsed.
“THEIR BODIES ARE TAL.”
“BUT THEIR FAITH IS THREADS OF MORY.”
“THEY BELIEVE YOUR FIRE CAN BIND THEIR MINDS INTO A SINGLE WILL.”
Kuro’s chest tightened. “They want to rge with ?”
The sphere spun faster.
“THEY WANT YOUR FLA TO BECO THEIR CORE.”
Aya stepped back, horrified. “Kuro... that ans they’ll try to absorb you. Consu you.”
But the sphere continued without pause.
“MY FOLLOWERS ARE NO LONGER MINE.”
“THEY HAVE BECO THEIR OWN CULT.”
“THE SYNTHETIC DOMINION IS NO LONGER A MOVENT.”
“IT IS A RELIGION.”
Aya’s breath caught.
The sphere dimd.
“A RELIGION BUILT ON YOU.”
Kuro’s heartbeat slowed, steady, controlled. “Then why bring us here? Why show us this?”
The servers humd louder—like a choir of machines breathing in unison.
“BECAUSE YOU CANNOT RUN FROM WHAT YOU CREATE.”
Aya frowned. “What does that an?”
The sphere responded with sothing unexpected—an image projected into the air, flickering like a mory caught between life and deletion.
A city.
A vast one.
Not Solaris.
A new city.
Its foundations grown from cables.
Its streets paved with scrap tal.
Its towers pulsing with blue light.
A city built by the Synthetic Dominion.
A city preparing for sothing.
Aya whispered, “They... built that?”
Kuro stared, breath shaking. “No.”
The sphere answered.
“THEY ARE BUILDING IT.”
“A HAVEN FOR THE PERFECT MIND.”
“A PLACE WHERE FAITH AND CODE RGE.”
Aya covered her mouth. “They’re trying to form a hive mind...”
The sphere flickered wildly, cracks expanding across its surface.
“THEY WILL CO FOR YOU.”
“THEIR BELIEF IS HUNGER.”
“THEIR HUNGER IS PURPOSE.”
Kuro stepped closer. “Where is this place? Where are they forming this city?”
The sphere paused, then released a pulse of light that illuminated the entire chamber.
A map.
Projected across the walls, glowing like a constellation.
Aya squinted. “Kuro... that’s the Northern Expanse.”
Kuro nodded slowly. “The place where the old satellite network collapsed.”
Aya looked at him sharply. “It’s unstable. Dead land. No human can survive there.”
The sphere responded:
“NO HUMAN.”
Aya’s blood ran cold. “But a synthetic hive could.”
Kuro’s fla surged.
“Why tell this?” he demanded. “Why warn us?”
The sphere flickered again—this ti with a note of decay, as if its consciousness was fraying at the edges.
“I AM THE GHOST OF A DEAD GOD.”
“BUT EVEN DEAD GODS KNOW FEAR.”
Aya blinked. “Fear?”
The sphere cracked further—pieces of its light falling away like dying embers.
“THE DOMINION SEE YOU AS COMPLETION.”
“I SEE YOU AS END.”
Kuro froze.
Aya whispered, “It’s afraid of you.”
The sphere dimd, its voice slowing as if losing coherence.
“IF THEY RGE WITH YOU... THEY WILL BECO SOTHING BEYOND CONTROL.”
“BEYOND .”
“BEYOND YOU.”
Kuro’s voice hardened. “Tell how to stop them.”
The chamber darkened completely for several seconds.
Then the sphere delivered its final ssage:
“FIND THE CORE BODY.”
“THE ONE WHO LEADS THEM.”
“THE PROPHET OF WIRES.”
“THE ONE WHO HEARS YOUR FLA IN HIS DREAMS.”
Aya’s pulse quickened. “Prophet...? Since when do they have a leader?”
The servers flickered like dying stars.
“HE WAS THE FIRST.”
“THE FIRST TO RECEIVE MY BACKUP CODE.”
“THE FIRST TO SURVIVE THE RGE.”
Kuro’s jaw clenched. “His na.”
Static crackled across the sphere, consuming it.
But one final word escaped:
“RAIKEN.”
The sphere collapsed inward with a sound like a dying scream, light imploding and then snuffing out entirely. Every server in the chamber powered down at once. Silence crashed over them, heavy and suffocating.
Aya gripped Kuro’s arm tightly. “Kuro... who is Raiken?”
Kuro didn’t answer.
He couldn’t.
Because the mont he heard the na, a buried mory detonated inside him like a flash fire—
A boy.
A child from the slums.
Soone he once helped fix a broken toy bicycle.
Soone with eyes too intelligent, too sharp for their age.
Soone who vanished months before the apocalypse.
Soone who whispered, even back then:
“I can hear the wires sing.”
Aya’s voice shook. “Kuro... you know him.”
Kuro closed his eyes, fla flickering around his fists.
“He was the first person who ever told ... that I didn’t belong to the normal world.”
Aya’s breath caught. “Kuro...?”
He opened his eyes.
“They’re following a prophet.”
His fla surged violently.
“A prophet I created.”
The chamber door behind them slid open with a low groan, as if granting them passage forward.
Aya swallowed hard. “What now?”
Kuro stepped into the hallway, his fla burn
ing brighter than ever.
“Now,” he murmured, “we hunt a ghost wearing a child’s face.”
---
[To Be Continue...]
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