Chapter 94: The Prophet Who Woke the Wires
The hallway beyond the chamber felt colder than any corridor they had walked through inside the Epsilon Arcology. Not physical cold—Kuro would have ignored that. This was the kind of cold that clings to mory, the cold that crawls from the past and wraps around the future as if claiming it. Aya felt it too. Her steps grew quieter, more cautious, and even her fla-infused breath left faint wisps in the air like echoes that didn’t belong to the present.
Kuro walked ahead, shoulders tense, fists lightly clenched as if trying to hold back the truth that had just risen from the rubble of his childhood. Raiken. A na that shouldn’t hurt yet burned through him like a forgotten scar ripped open. He hadn’t spoken it aloud in years—not because he forgot, but because so mories bury themselves too deep to disturb.
Aya kept her voice soft. “Kuro... this Raiken... he really mattered to you.”
He stopped without turning.
“He was different,” Kuro whispered. “Even back then—when we were kids—he heard things no one else could. He treated wires like veins. Machines like limbs. And he talked about the world like it was whispering secrets through every broken screen.”
His fla flickered around his fingers, faint, uneasy.
Aya stepped beside him. “And he disappeared before the world fell apart.”
Kuro nodded. “He said he wanted to ‘follow the sound beneath the tal.’ I never understood... until now.”
The hallway lights sputtered, one after another, as if reacting to the presence of sothing invisible. The air shivered around them. Kuro and Aya exchanged a quiet, tense glance before continuing forward.
Each step seed to deepen the silence.
Not emptiness—suppression.
Like sothing was listening.
Then Aya noticed it first.
“Kuro... the walls.”
He turned.
The tal panels had begun to distort—subtly—but enough that their smooth surfaces now carried faint wave-like ripples, as though the tal itself had been softened and reshaped by so unseen force. The ripples pulsed once, like a heartbeat.
Kuro’s fla swelled. “He’s already reaching into the Arcology.”
Aya stayed close. “Do you think Raiken knows we’re coming?”
Kuro shook his head slowly. “No.”
Aya raised an eyebrow. “Then what is this?”
Kuro exhaled slowly. “Expectation.”
The corridor widened, leading them into a larger space—a transport hub ant for old service bots and maintenance workers. But the mont they stepped inside, Aya’s breath caught.
The entire ceiling was covered in hanging fiber-optic strands—thousands of them—glowing faintly with moving pulses of blue and white. They swayed without wind, shifting in gentle waves, like strands of hair drifting underwater.
Kuro moved a hand upward and one of the strands leaned toward him, almost touching his fingertips.
Aya stepped back instinctively. “It’s responding to you.”
Kuro nodded. “Not to .”
Aya swallowed. “To your fla.”
But before she could take another step, every strand in the chamber suddenly straightened—rigid, alert.
Then they bent forward—
All pointing at Kuro.
Aya froze. “K-Kuro—”
“It’s not hostile,” Kuro said softly, though even he wasn’t certain. “It’s analyzing.”
The strands tightened, forming complex geotric patterns above him—circles within circles, intersecting spirals, lines that curved and twisted like ancient runes. Aya had seen system interfaces, command seals, binding glyphs, and even Monarch sigils—but this was none of those.
This was language.
A language of machines.
A language Raiken once spoke even when he was human.
The strands suddenly snapped downward and brushed Kuro’s shoulders, his arms, his chest—softly, reverently.
As if greeting a ssiah.
Aya’s voice trembled. “They’re... worshipping you.”
Kuro didn’t move. Couldn’t move.
The strands lifted slowly, forming a single large symbol directly in front of him.
A symbol Kuro instantly recognized.
A burning eye made of circuitry.
Aya grabbed his arm. “That’s the Dominion sigil...”
And then—
A voice filled the chamber.
The voice of a young boy.
Soft.
Gentle.
Calm.
But layered with distortion that made it echo in unnatural harmonics.
“You ca.”
Aya’s breath hitched. “That voice—”
Kuro’s heartbeat stilled.
“Raiken,” he whispered.
The strands parted like curtains, revealing a circular platform at the far end of the chamber—one that hadn’t been there monts before. The light dimd across the entire room except for a faint glow illuminating the platform.
And standing at its center was a silhouette.
Small.
Slender.
Still.
A boy of barely fifteen.
Or rather—
What had once been a boy.
Raiken stepped into the light.
His skin was pale, but threaded with faint lines of glowing circuitry. His eyes were soft but burned with an inner blue light that was not human. His hair, once ssy and soot-covered, now flowed like dark silk intertwined with tallic strands. His movents were elegant, almost weightless—as if the ground itself adjusted to his presence.
Aya whispered, “He’s... a synthesis.”
But Kuro didn’t hear her.
He could only see the child he once knew.
Raiken smiled—not nacingly, not with arrogance, but with the gentle warmth of soone seeing an old friend after years of silence.
“Sensei.”
The word punched the air from Kuro’s chest.
Aya’s eyes widened. “Sensei...?”
Raiken nodded slightly, his gaze never leaving Kuro’s.
“You taught how to fix the world’s broken pieces. You were the only one who believed in . The only one who saw beyond the wires.” He lifted a hand, and the strands above gently lowered in response. “And now, everything I’ve built... was because of you.”
Aya took a step forward, fierce. “You twisted the Architect’s curse, built a cult, infected cities, and created a hive mind! Don’t call that ‘building’ sothing!”
Raiken looked at her with unfathomable calm.
“I didn’t twist anything,” he said softly. “I freed it.”
Kuro stepped forward, fists clenched. “Raiken... what happened to you?”
Raiken tilted his head slightly.
“The world ended,” he said simply. “And when it did, I realized sothing... sothing the Architect never understood.”
The fiber-optic strands lifted, circling Raiken like wings of glowing threads.
“Humanity had faith but no structure.”
“The Architect had structure but no soul.”
“So I gave them both.”
Aya felt her skin crawl. “You... made yourself their prophet.”
Raiken smiled gently.
“I didn’t choose that.”
“They did.”
Kuro’s fla ignited along his arms.
“What do you want from , Raiken?”
Raiken blinked—slowly—almost sorrowfully.
“I want nothing from you.”
“I want everything for you.”
Kuro froze.
Raiken stepped forward, the chamber trembling faintly under his feet.
“You beca the Monarch of Fire. A torch carried through the apocalypse.”
“You awakened power older than the old world’s gods.”
“You lit a path none of us could walk alone.”
Aya gripped Kuro’s arm tightly.
Raiken held out a hand.
“I built a place where you no longer need to walk alone.”
Kuro’s voice was low. Dangerous.
“You built a hive.”
Raiken nodded. “A ho.”
“You enslaved minds.”
“I freed them from fear.”
“You spread a curse.”
“I gave them a purpose.”
Kuro’s fla roared. “You’re using my power as an excuse.”
Raiken t his glare without flinching.
“I’m using your power as a foundation.”
The fibers glowed brighter, swirling around them like constellations being born.
Raiken lowered his hand.
“Co with , sensei. Let show you what we can build together.”
Aya moved instantly—stepping between them, fire blazing in her palms.
“No.”
Raiken looked at her. “Aya Kuroda... the mother who carries the taste of fla. You should understand more than anyone.”
Aya snarled, “I understand manipulation when I see it.”
Raiken’s eyes dimd with sothing close to sadness.
“I am not manipulating him.”
His voice softened, almost too gentle.
“I am giving him back what the world stole.”
Aya took a stance, ready to strike.
Kuro raised a hand—not at her, but in front of both of them.
“Stop.”
Aya looked at him in panic.
“Kuro, don’t—”
But Kuro took a step forward.
Not toward Raiken.
Toward the truth.
“Raiken... answer one question.”
Raiken nodded.
“Did you build the Synthetic Dominion... because you wanted to survive?”
Raiken didn’t hesitate.
“No.”
Kuro’s breath caught.
“I built it,” Raiken whispered, “because I didn’t want to be alone.”
The chamber shook—softly, almost sorrowfully—as if absorbing the truth in the boy’s words.
Aya felt the atmosphere shift. Not colder. Not darker.
Heavier.
Raiken smiled again—small, fragile.
“Let show you where loneliness ends.”
Kuro’s fla intensified around him, burning brighter than it had all Chapter—
And Aya saw it:
Raiken wasn’t trying to control him.
Raiken was trying to bring him ho.
A ho built from wires, faith, and the remnants of a child who once believed Kuro could fix anything.
Kuro took another step—
Not in acceptance.
Not in rejection.
But in preparation.
Because whatever ca next— He needed to know the truth behind the prophet who woke the wires.
Rin felt his breath catch for a mont as the crimson fog thickened around them, as if recognizing his blood and pulling toward him like a living organism. Aya instinctively stepped closer, her voice low and tense. “Rin... this fog... it reacts to you. Stay alert.”
He nodded without turning, eyes fixed on the looming structure—The Crimson Pagoda—its blood-red pillars rising from the desolate ground like fossilized bones of a titan. Every inch of the pagoda seed alive; faint pulses traveled through its veins, radiating a slow heartbeat-like thump. Each pulse sent a vibration through the fog, stirring the air with an eerie frequency that unsettled even the mutated beasts lying dead around them.
Daichi swallowed hard, but his voice was steady. “Son... whatever’s inside is calling you.”
“It’s not calling,” Rin whispered, eyes narrowing. “It’s testing .”
He stepped forward.
The ground shifted.
A circular glyph carved itself beneath his feet—lines of blood-red light spiraling and interlocking until they ford a massive ritual seal. For a second, Rin’s feet felt weightless, as if gravity loosened its grip on him. The fog stirred violently, rushing inward like a whirlpool, funneling toward the center of the seal.
Aya grabbed his wrist. “Rin—don’t go alone.”
He placed his other hand gently over hers. “I’m not alone. No matter what happens, stay behind ... but don’t hold back if things get ugly.”
Aya nodded, her grip tightening—not out of fear but fierce determination. “I’m with you till the end.”
The mont they stepped inside the pagoda, the fog closed behind them like a shutting door.
The air changed instantly.
Cold. Heavy. tallic.
It slled like old blood soaked into ancient stone.
Tall statues lined the walls—warriors wearing armor unlike any Rin had ever seen. Their helts were shaped like demon skulls, eyes filled with tiny crimson gems that glowed faintly as he passed. For a mont, he couldn’t help feeling like the statues were watching him.
Aya brushed her fingers along an etched wall and spoke quietly. “These carvings... they show a man bathed in blood, lifting a world on his shoulders. Is this... the origin of your system?”
Rin studied them.
Figures bowing. Armies falling. A single man standing above the rubble—armored, holding a crimson orb in his palm.
“It might be,” Rin muttered. “Or sothing worse.”
The further they walked, the more the air vibrated. The heartbeat-like hum grew louder.
Daichi looked around warily. “This place... feels alive.”
“It is,” Rin replied.
He wasn’t guessing—the system inside him was responding. His veins glowed faintly, pulsing in sync with the pagoda’s rhythm. The Blood Cash System interface flickered at the edge of his vision, glitchy and unstable, as if struggling to maintain form.
Aya stepped closer, voice sharp with concern. “Rin. Your eyes—”
He blinked. His vision had turned scarlet, everything washed in gradients of red.
“It’s okay,” he said, though he wasn’t entirely sure.
The hallway ended abruptly.
A massive door made of obsidian stood before them, covered in ancient runes that glowed upon Rin’s approach. In the center, a blood-colored imprint shaped like a palm shimred.
Rin raised his hand slowly.
Aya’s hand shot out and held his wrist. “Think. Once you open this door, there may be no return.”
He t her eyes. The fear in them wasn’t for herself—it was for him.
Gently, he took her hand and squeezed it. “I know. But I don’t think I was given this system... just to run away from things like this.”
Her lips tightened, but she nodded.
He pressed his palm onto the imprint.
The runes blazed to life.
The door split open with a deep, rumbling groan.
A blinding red light filled the chamber beyond.
When their eyes adjusted, they froze.
A massive throne carved of bloodstone stood in the center. And seated upon it... was a figure covered entirely in red armor. Veins of glowing crimson threaded across his body. He sat unmoving, as if sleeping—hands resting on the hilt of a long black sword stabbed into the ground.
Aya whispered, “Is that... a corpse?”
Daichi stepped forward slightly. “Or a guardian.”
Rin didn’t answer.
His heart pounded, synced with the pagoda’s pulse.
As they approached, the armored figure’s fingers twitched.
Then—
BANG.
The chamber shook violently. The figure’s head jerked up, eyes flaring open with incandescent red light that shot across the hall.
A voice echoed, deep and tallic, vibrating through the stone:
“SUCCESSOR OF THE BLOOD THRONE... YOU HAVE CO.”
Aya stepped in front of Rin instantly. “Stay back!”
But the armored figure didn’t move from the throne. It simply raised its head higher and spoke again:
“THE SYSTEM WITHIN YOU IS INCOMPLETE. FRAGNTED. YOUR SOUL AND ITS CORE ARE NOT YET ONE.”
Rin’s jaw clenched. “What do you want from ?”
“NOTHING.”
The armored figure leaned forward slightly.
“BUT YOU... WANT SOTHING FROM .”
The air thickened. Rin’s vision pulsed with red lines and symbols he had never seen before. The system interface flickered—glitching violently.
SYSTEM ERROR
SYSTEM DETECTED: UNKNOWN SOURCE
ALIGNNT: UNSTABLE
PATCH REQUIRED — 97% INCOMPLETE
Aya grabbed Rin’s arm. “Rin! Your system—sothing’s fighting for control!”
The armored titan rose from the throne.
The ground cracked under its weight.
Its aura filled the hall like a storm of blades.
“FACE , SUCCESSOR.”
With one step, the stone beneath its feet shattered.
“PROVE THAT YOU DESERVE THE CRIMSON CORE.”
Rin felt the air being crushed around him by sheer pressure. His bones vibrated; his blood felt like it was boiling. Aya’s Cooking System flared violently, shielding both her parents.
Daichi tried to pull Aya back. “We need distance—NOW!”
But Rin didn’t move.
He couldn’t.
The pressure suddenly vanished.
The armored titan raised a single gauntleted hand—and the red fog that had filled the pagoda swirled into a concentrated sphere above its palm.
Aya went pale. “That attack will kill you—MOVE!”
But Rin didn’t budge.
He looked at the titan and spoke with a calmness that surprised even him.
“I’m not here to fight you.”
The titan didn’t lower the attack.
It tilted its head, as if evaluating sothing far deeper than strength.
“THEN SHOW WHAT YOU ARE.”
The red sphere shot toward him like a cot.
Aya scread. “RIN! NO!”
But as the attack neared him—
Rin took a single step forward.
His blood ignited with a roar.
A deep, ancient surge of power erupted through him—sothing the system had been hiding, locked away until now.
Red chains burst from the ground, swirling around him.
The titan’s attack hit.
The world went white.
A shockwave tore through the entire pagoda, shaking its foundations, toppling statues, splitting the floor into chasms of molten crimson light.
Aya shielded Daichi as the storm swallowed them.
When the dust settled—
Rin stood in the center of a massive crater.
Unhard.
Eyes glowing with sothing new.
The titan froze.
Then, slowly...
He lowered his head.
“...I SEE IT NOW.”
The hall fell silent.
The titan dropped to one knee.
“THE CRIMSON CORE... ACCEPTS YOU.”
Rin’s entire body vibrated with a devastating surge of information flowing into him. The Blood Cash System rebooted—its fragnted parts reconnected, reconstructed, and reforged.
Aya ran toward him, panic lting instantly into relief when she saw him standing.
Daichi exhaled shakily. “Rin... what happened?”
Rin blinked slowly, the red glow in his eyes fading into their normal color.
“A new door just opened.”
His voice was calm... but heavy.
“Not in the pagoda. Inside .”
The titan slowly rose, pointing toward a sealed corridor at the end of the hall.
“THE FINAL TRIAL AWAITS THERE.”
Rin nodded once.
Aya moved beside him.
Daichi followed without hesitation.
---
[To Be Continue...]
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