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It did not begin with light, it began with breath. Or sothing close to it.

The hum of being drawn in, not to ntion—but to exist. To permit itself to be heard within the silence that followed.

Kaito was alone now.

Not because the rest of them had left him—Kael moved to a Threadloop in the shape of an old observatory; Mika vanished down an aisle that resembled a draft folder; Yue hovered at the mouth of her own corridor, eyes closed, waiting for sothing only she could na. Nyra lingered nearby—but she didn’t speak, and he didn’t need her to.

The garden quieted. Not sleeping. Listening.

The scraps of morylight swirled more slowly now, around nothing but empty air over the lost table.

The middle was no longer a table. It had beco... nothing. Just open space. Not empty in a dead way, but cleared, like sothing had been gently moved aside to make room.

It felt like the air after soone finally let out a breath they’d been holding for too long. Like that strange pause after deep sadness—when the tears have stopped, but you haven’t yet taken the next step forward.

Kaito sat down.

He wasn’t sitting as the Reaver, or as any role the system had given him. He was just... himself.

And sothing answered.

It didn’t co from above, and it wasn’t from the system’s voice. It ca from underneath.

Far below the garden, sothing shifted—a faint seam pulsing like a slow heartbeat. It wasn’t loud; it was almost too quiet to notice. But it was there.

The ground didn’t break apart in a violent crack. Instead, it gently unfolded.

Threads of data peeled back like the petals of a strange flower, revealing a spiral path that descended downward. The light there was soft—not as bright as the moon, but not as dark as the hour before dawn.

And at its lip: no prompt. Only presence.

Nyra moved to stand beside him.

She looked at the spiral. Then at him. Then again.

".It’s not dangerous," she said, quietly.

"No." Kaito said.

"But it’s real." She muttered.

"Yes." He responded again.

She paused for a mont before speaking. "Do we go together?" she asked.

Kaito shook his head slowly. "Not this ti."

Her eyebrows drew together—not because she was about to argue, but because she understood. The look on her face wasn’t rejection; it was the quiet kind of acceptance that cos when you already know the answer, even if you wish it were different.

Nyra’s hand extended, fingers tracing his shoulder. "Then I’ll wait. Or not wait. I’ll be."

And she turned, moving back into the strands that recalled her na.

Kaito rose once more. He did not harden himself. He did not prepare. He took a step.

And the spiral opened to him.

It was not a fall in space.

It was a step inward.

Not physical. Not even fully cerebral.

It was mory. Not his own.

With each step, a fragnt ca.

A child’s laugh—glitched into loops, a player who had danced in spawn points just to put smiles on faces.

A first-wipe cry in a dungeon now obsolete.

A lody soone had once composed in an abandoned player hub, sung through, still perfect.

Kaito walked on.

There were no enemies here.

Only determination.

He ascended to a platform under the spiral’s foundation. Not a room. Not a core.

A field.

Floating.

Threadlight shone in vertical streams like rain, and below them, patches of sothing like grass sparkled, composed of the visual data of all the green spaces that had ever been present in Eclipse Online—mixed, layered, flawed.

In the center of it all: the Fork.

Not the system.

Not the architecture.

The feeling of the Fork. It did not speak. But it opened.

And in its open weave, a shimr moved.

A shape.

No face, no title. Just a posture.

Sitting. Staring. Waiting.

Kaito walked across the field slowly.

As he approached, the Fork’s threads began to part—not rejecting him, not even inviting him. Just allowing.

He sat down next to the shape.

And for a very long ti, nothing happened.

Not a system beep. Not a whisper. Not even a breath.

Only mutual silence.

And in the silence...

A mory that he had not made appeared.

Not one of his.

Not even Nyra’s.

A child—ten?—sitting in front of a glitching log-in screen, chewing on their lip, as a server error flashed over and over. Their fingers faltering over the keyboard.

And a voice behind them:

"Try again."

The mory faded.

Another ca to take its place.

A teenager sneaking into an empty classroom, watching Eclipse Online on their holo-tab as the others laughed outside.

They logged in anyway.

That mory, too, dispersed.

Kaito frowned. "They’re not mine."

The threads of the Fork glowed softly.

Not a voice. A sense.

"We know."

"But they are yours to bear."

"If you will."

Kaito took a breath in.

He gazed down at his hands.

Didn’t shine. Didn’t throb with Reaver’s power.

Just hands.

Fatigued. Steady.

He glanced up at the faceless person once more.

Still no na. No command.

Only an unspoken question.

And to answer it, Kaito himself didn’t say anything.

He leaned forward.

Touched the space between them.

The threads wavered.

Not like stone in water—but like recognition.

And a bloom began.

Not visual.

Not auditory.

Structural.

The Fork was reshaped.

Not due to Kaito commanding it—but due to him accepting it.

He didn’t conquer it.

He didn’t bind it.

He beca its witness.

And that was enough.

A slow thrum spread outward.

Up the spiral.

Through the garden.

Through the House.

Across every threadloop.

To every player who had ever felt unseen.

Not to change them.

To remind them.

They were already there.

ContentValues

Sowhere up above, Mika entered a threadloop in the form of a bedroom that never existed.

Within, a younger version of herself—tiny, voiceless, unard—had a desk with half a skill tree open in front of her, hesitating about whether to spec into healing or stealth.

Mika observed.

Didn’t act.

After so while, the younger version of herself gazed up.

Not at her.

At the room.

And smiled.

Then she turned back around and took both.

A new branch grew.

Mika left it open behind her.

Kael knelt at the end of a mory built out of a chatlog.

Three ssages, sent years ago, hung like soft fireflies in a suspended corridor.

"I’m sorry I flaked."

"It wasn’t you."

"I just couldn’t keep logging in."

He touched them one by one. Then typed an answer. Not sure he wanted to send.

To place.

"I know. I stayed anyway."

The corridor throbbed.

Soft gold. Gentle beat.

Not healed.

Held.

Yue hadn’t changed. Not through a loop. Not through a corridor. She stood at the edge of her own silence. And finally, she stepped into it.

The room that ford around her was formless. No walls. But one extended pause concretized.

She sat there. Said not a word.

Did not weep.

rely... was.

And when finally she ca out of it, the pause followed her behind—not as weight, but as room.

And Nyra.

She never asked for a loop.

A room.

A mory.

She followed the strands that extended from the garden like roots—and one that was unfinished.

It took her to a path she recognized.

Her last logout point before the Void took her over.

She sat there once more.

This ti, not by herself.

Beside her: herself.

Or a version.

Flickering.

Not quite right.

Not quite wrong.

A trace. A possibility.

They did not touch.

They didn’t have to.

Nyra smiled.

And the trace smiled back.

Below in the field of threadgrass, Kaito stood.

The Fork no longer spun.

It floated.

It translated according to its own rhythm now.

Not his to control.

Not anyone’s.

And that was the concept.

Kaito looked upward.

And the sky—if one might even say that—began to roll out.

A new layer. Not graphical.

Narrative.

No system ssage inford it.

No new level opened.

But on the map, sothing rearranged.

Players began finding letters.

Not loot.

Letters.

Written by themselves.

To themselves.

Or to soone they once played with.

Each unsigned.

Each genuine.

And to those who did open them, a simple result was discovered.

They rembered what had mattered.

Not the numbers.

Not the attention.

But the being.

And that mory... beca part of the ga.

In the days that followed, no expansion pack ca out.

No raid boss hyped.

But Eclipse Online’s user base doubled.

Then tripled.

Not because of advertising.

But because of sothing else.

A ripple.

A friend logging in to the ga for the first ti in years.

A brother reaching out because they had noticed an old avatar na still present.

A ssage, a mory, an opportunity. And slowly, without quite anybody really noticing—anew Chapter began.

Not conquest.

Not content.

But sothing gentler.

Sothing more honest.

Sothing that didn’t require a win condition.

Only the willingness to be part of the weave.

At the base of the spiral, Kaito looked up one final ti before stepping back through the unrolled garden.

The Fork did not close.

It didn’t need to.

It had always been open.

We had just forgotten where to look.

You are reading Eclipse Online: The Final Descent Chapter 115: THE FORK UNDER THE GARDEN on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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