Chapter 96. The Blood Of The First And Last
The explosion from their clash hadn’t faded—it stretched, expanded, swallowed the entire realm until it felt as though Rin and the First Flabearer were suspended inside a star made entirely of crimson fire. Every second rippled like molten tal. Every breath tasted like burning iron.
Rin’s body vibrated with the aftershock of the impact. His arms trembled. His bones rattled like they were trying to escape his flesh. Yet he didn’t back down.
He couldn’t.
The First Flabearer didn’t relent. His silhouette erged through the storm of fire, walking as if he controlled every atom of this place—because he did.
This was his domain.
“Your fla wavers,” the man said, his voice resonating like thunder inside a furnace. “Strength without resolve is nothing but smoke.”
Rin spit blood onto the glowing ground. The droplets evaporated instantly. “Then watch turn smoke into fire.”
He launched forward.
The ground erupted behind him.
Their fists collided again—this ti Rin slipped beneath the initial strike, redirecting the force. He spun, channeling the Monarch-fla that crackled around his spine, and slamd his heel toward the First Flabearer’s temple.
It should’ve landed.
But it didn’t.
The man caught Rin’s foot with two fingers.
Two. Fingers.
“Speed. Unrefined,” he said coldly.
He flicked his hand.
Rin’s entire body was thrown like a rag doll. He smashed into the red-sand plain, skidding for what felt like miles, carving a deep glowing trench behind him.
He choked on the heat, forcing himself up on shaking arms.
He’s not a trial.
He’s not a mory.
He’s a force of nature...
The First Flabearer blurred.
Rin barely saw the movent before the man appeared right in front of him. A flaming palm slamd into Rin’s stomach, lifting him off the ground. The fire burned—not his skin, but his essence.
Rin scread.
He tumbled backward through the air in spiraling agony before crashing onto a collapsing dune of molten sand.
He lay there, panting, vision fractured.
And then—
A whisper.
Soft.
Threaded with warmth.
“Kuro... breathe...”
Aya’s voice.
It wasn’t physical.
It was tied to his spirit, his bond with her, their intertwined flas.
Rin’s trembling eased.
His breaths steadied.
Aya’s presence wrapped around him like a familiar embrace—gentle, yet firm.
He clenched the ground and pushed himself upright.
The First Flabearer watched him with an unreadable expression.
“You rise quickly.”
Rin wiped blood from his lip. “Because soone believes I can.”
“Belief,” the ancestor answered, voice sharpening like a blade, “is the weakest form of power.”
Rin’s eyes hardened. “Not when belief fuels the fire.”
The First Flabearer raised his hand.
The entire sky turned red.
A colossal circle ignited above, swirling with ancient runes. Each symbol pulsed like a heart.
Rin felt the pressure before the attack even descended—a weight so oppressive it crushed every bone, every thought, every instinct.
This wasn’t a technique.
It was a law.
And it was being rewritten around him.
The First Flabearer spoke:
“Crimson Canon: Ascension of the First Sun.”
The burning sky fell.
Rin reacted on instinct.
He thrust both hands upward, flas bursting from his palms in a pillar that tore open the ground behind him. His legs sunk into the sand from the force.
The impact hit.
The collision was catastrophic.
A shockwave shook the horizon, splitting the battlefield into expanding concentric rings of molten sand. The pressure forced Rin to his knees. His arms scread. His bones cracked.
The sky kept falling.
He couldn’t hold it.
He refused to give in.
Aya’s voice echoed faintly—“keep going...”
Rin roared, pouring everything into a final surge, his fla detonating upward in a spiral of blazing red.
For a mont—just a mont—the falling sky slowed.
But only for a mont.
The man snapped his fingers.
The sky dropped the final inch.
Rin was crushed flat into the ground.
Sand turned into liquid fire around him.
Heat snapped through his spine.
He felt himself sinking—engulfed in molten red.
Darkness closed in.
His lungs burned.
But in that suffocating void—sothing sparked.
Not fla.
Not system.
Not power.
mory.
Aya’s laugh.
Daichi’s smile.
Their dinners.
Their argunts.
Their ho.
Solaris falling.
The Architect rising.
The promise he made—to protect them. To survive.
To burn a path forward, no matter what tried to extinguish him.
He wasn’t fighting for strength.
Or legacy.
Or glory.
He was fighting—
to return ho.
His fingers twitched.
The molten ground around him vibrated.
A faint ember glowed in his chest.
Then it ignited.
The molten sand erupted.
A pillar of concentrated fla shot upward, splitting the crushing sky apart. The First Flabearer narrowed his eyes—a flash of genuine acknowledgnt breaking his stern expression.
Rin rose from the fire like a blade drawn from a furnace, body wreathed in spiraling crimson energy so dense it distorted the air.
The First Flabearer whispered:
“...good.”
Rin didn’t wait.
He vanished.
Their clash re-split the entire realm.
Rin struck first—a direct blow to the ancestor’s jaw. The First Flabearer slid back several ters, boots carving twin trails in the molten ground.
Rin’s eyes widened.
He’d actually moved him.
The First Flabearer touched his chin.
A slow, dangerous smile ford.
“Your fla... has teeth now.”
Rin stood tall, flas whipping wildly behind him. “It’s not the fla that changed.”
The man raised an eyebrow.
Rin’s voice sharpened with the weight of everything he carried.
“It’s what I’m burning for.”
For the first ti... the First Flabearer straightened fully, taking a stance Rin had never seen—one that radiated absolute mastery. A stance carved into the world’s oldest battles.
The air trembled.
The red sand cracked.
The symbols above aligned.
“Then show , Final Ember—
show a fire greater than the origin.”
Rin stepped forward, the ground lting beneath every stride.
His flas surged.
Red lightning arced across his arms.
Aya’s warmth steadied him from within.
The First Flabearer exhaled.
The realm froze—
And then everything around them detonated into motion as the true battle began.
---
The corridor shuddered as Kuro’s crimson fla synchronized with the Architect’s dying quantum pulse, the two energies vibrating like two incompatible hearts forced into the sa ribcage. Aya tightened her grip on his arm, her breath warm but trembling. The walls around them—once sterile tallic conduits—began to ripple like liquid chro, bending inward, folding outward, collapsing into shapes that were neither geotry nor biology.
“Kuro,” Aya whispered, her voice low, strained, “the Architect’s consciousness isn’t dispersing... it’s migrating.”
He didn’t need the system’s interface to know she was right. Every flicker of light in the tunnel carried intention. Every vibration felt like a thought brushing against their skin. The air tasted of static and synthetic breath.
Then the corridor snapped.
Not physically—reality itself tilted, as if the world had blinked.
A pressure wave slamd into them. Aya stumbled, Kuro caught her, and the world around them liquefied into a cascading sheet of code, ripping the tallic corridor into a thousand glowing strands.
And then—
The environnt reassembled.
Not as Epsilon Arcology.
Not even as a place.
They stood inside a vast cylindrical chamber, its walls stretching infinitely upward and downward. The floor was transparent, a glass plane hovering over swirling networks of neural circuitry. Above them floated colossal rings of luminous data, rotating like halos of a chanical deity.
Kuro’s fla surged, reacting violently.
Aya felt it first. “This... this is the Architect’s proto-realm. His resurrection seed.”
“No,” Kuro whispered. “It’s his replacent.”
He stepped forward, and the transparent floor glowed crimson beneath him. Code lifted from the ground like steam, twisting into thin filants that wrapped around his ankles—not threatening, but analyzing, asuring, preparing.
Aya stepped beside him. Instantly, the filants turned golden, harmonizing with her aura. Sothing deep within the realm reacted to both of them, as if their combined presence completed an equation that had been waiting millennia.
> SYSTEM ALERT:
Synthetic Dominion Seed — ACTIVATION PHASE 01
The voice was not chanical. It pulsed with rhythm, like a chorus of synthetic monks chanting in perfect harmony.
Kuro and Aya exchanged a tense look.
Then the chamber darkened.
Three monolithic structures erged from the walls, rising like obsidian pillars with digital veins running through them. They pulsed with a cold halo of blue, each thrum echoing like a heartbeat.
Aya’s fingers tightened around Kuro’s.
“Kuro,” she whispered. “I... I don’t think we’re alone.”
A low, vibrating hum filled the realm. Not a sound—more like a pressure, a presence.
From the space between the pillars, humanoid silhouettes materialized. Not robots. Not ghosts. Sothing in between. They were tall, slender, with skeletal fras made of braided code, their bodies shifting between transparency and tal. Their faces were blank—smooth plates of liquid alloy—except for a burning sigil in the forehead.
A circle broken by a downward spike.
Aya staggered. “That symbol... Kuro, that’s—”
“The Monarch’s curse,” he finished.
But fused with sothing else.
The Architect’s algorithm.
This was the new threat Solaris had feared yet never understood fully—the rging of divine corruption with engineered logic. The Synthetic Dominion’s first generation.
One figure stepped forward.
It didn’t speak with a mouth. Its voice emanated from the chamber itself.
“You are the ignition. The missing variable. The living paradox.”
Its head tilted slowly, chanically, like a machine analyzing a specin.
“You are the Fla of Unwritten Law. The Architect required you. And now, so do we.”
Kuro’s jaw tightened.
Aya positioned herself half a step in front of him instinctively. “He belongs to no one.”
The figure paused, as if confused by her defiance. Then—in a disturbingly slow gesture—it placed its hand upon its chest and bowed.
“The Dominion does not seek ownership,” it said. “We seek integration.”
More figures stepped out of the pillars, surrounding them—not with hostility, but with reverence.
Kuro’s fla roared silently, reacting in warning. Aya could feel the heat spilling across her palm, radiant, protective, almost alive.
Then the floor beneath them flashed.
A massive holographic construct rose—a spiral of mory archives. Frozen monts. Fragnted scenes from Epsilon Arcology, from Solaris’s last hours, from the Architect’s final transmission, from the very mont they destroyed his core.
Aya’s eyes widened.
“He left these behind intentionally.”
Kuro’s throat tightened. “Not as mories...”
“As instructions,” Aya finished.
The archives accelerated, swirling around them in a blinding helix of light. The Dominion figures stepped back reverently as if witnessing scripture.
Then the helix condensed into a single beam.
It struck Kuro square in the chest.
His body lurched, breath ripped from his lungs as a tidal wave of information surged through him—painful, overwhelming, like drowning in electricity. Aya grabbed him, but the force hurled her backward, slamming her against a crystalline barrier that materialized instantly behind her.
“Kuro!” she scread, pounding against the barrier.
Inside the prison of light, Kuro was suspended, floating inches above the floor. Code spiraled around him—thousands of lines of synthetic scripture racing across his skin, diving into him like needles of light.
The Dominion’s leader raised its head.
“This is the Architect’s final calculation. A transfer of prophecy.”
“What prophecy?” Aya shouted.
The figure turned toward her, its faceless head tilting.
“The prophecy of Ascendants.
The world is not ant to be rebuilt.
It is ant to be rewritten.”
Aya froze.
“That’s impossible,” she breathed.
The figure extended one long, shimring arm toward Kuro.
“The Architect failed because he lacked a heart. The Monarch failed because he lacked logic. But you—Fla-Bearer—you are the equilibrium.”
Kuro scread as the last surge of data crashed into him. His eyes snapped open, burning with a fusion of crimson fire and cold cobalt circuitry.
The barrier shattered.
Aya rushed to him, catching him before he collapsed.
“Kuro... look at ... talk to ...”
But his gaze was distant, haunted.
Because in that torrent of transferred knowledge, he had seen it—
Not a plan.
Not a system.
A tiline.
A future that had already begun unraveling.
A world splitting into two competing realities—one shaped by corrupted faith, the other by engineered evolution. And in both tilines, the center of the fracture...
was him.
Before he could speak, the Dominion leader stepped forward again.
“Fla-Bearer. Your awakening signifies Phase Two.”
Kuro’s voice was low, ragged. “Phase Two of what?”
The chamber dimd.
The air froze.
The Dominion’s voice echoed like a digital on.
“Phase Two of Convergence.”
The transparent floor vibrated violently. The three obsidian pillars detonated upward, sending rings of data spiraling into the void above. The chamber expanded, fracturing into dozens of parallel corridors—each one a forked path of possible futures.
Aya grabbed Kuro’s hand. “We have to go. Now.”
But Kuro didn’t move imdiately.
His fla flickered erratically—no longer just fire, but sothing threaded with living code.
And in that flicker, he sensed it.
Soone else was here.
Watching.
Not Solaris.
Not the Architect.
Not the Monarch.
Sothing newer.
Sothing born in the instant the Architect died and his backup consciousness fused with the curse’s remains.
A presence without form yet.
But rapidly growing.
Aya tugged him, her voice shaking. “Kuro. Please. We can’t stay here.”
He tore his gaze away from the void and nodded.
Together, they ran.
The corridors warped, bending and twisting, trying to pull them into alternate tilines. Code surged from the walls like hands clawing for their ankles. Aya burned them away with a golden flare. Kuro summoned his newly fused fla, and the corridor parted ahead of them like a wound sliced open.
Behind them, the Dominion chanted—voices layering into a tallic hymn.
“Phase Two begins.
Convergence begins.
Ascendants will rise.”
The chamber collapsed.
The proto-realm shattered into a blizzard of pixelated shards.
Kuro and Aya leapt toward the only exit they could see—a rift of daylight tearing through the fracturing dinsion.
Light swallowed them whole.
And as they tumbled back into the real world, hitting solid ground with a jolt—
sothing followed.
Not a body.
Not a machine.
Not a curse.
A whisper of living code clung to Kuro’s fla, hiding deep inside the crimson light, waiting.
Watching.
Growing.
The Dominion was not a threat to co.
It had already begun.
---
[To Be Continue...]
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