Font Size
15px

It began in the places nobody visited anymore.

Not because they were locked.

But because players had forgotten that they existed.

Outside on the edges of Eclipse Online, beyond the mapped zones and the raid paths, there were zones that hadn’t been cycled through with patches. No system ssages, no ta events, no loot tables for a run. They’d simply. stayed there. Waiting.

And now, for the first ti in years, footsteps began to return.

Kaito had no quest marker.

The Presence Tree never gave guidance—it never could—but offshoots from it had extended into strange corners of the world, sweeping out into lands he had not visited since the Reaver cycle began.

This one did that to him.

The Hollow Bridge.

It once belonged to a PvP zone—players would clash in infinite battles along the curved expanse, leaping down into the fog below or struggling forward through the mist to the enemy camp. The ta had moved on, the rewards had been cut, and the bridge was still.

Today it stood empty of foe. Only wind, with the glimr of echoes of battles too old for the kill feed to rember.

Kaito stepped onto its planks.

The resonance of his boots was followed by another: not Nyra’s, not Kael’s, not Mika’s or Yue’s. Simply... resonance. As if the bridge itself recalled the feet that had trodden upon it.

Halfway across, he stopped. Looked down.

The mist persisted. Thick enough to hide what lay beneath.

He did not jump.

He dropped to his knees, placed his hand on the worn plank beneath him, and allowed the mont to stay open. Not closed. Not claid. Only... permitted.

The mist shifted.

Not to reveal.

To recognize.

Very far away, Nyra walked a shore she knew well.

This was not the first from her original login. That one had vanished, overwritten with new textures and level caps years ago. This one had been cobbled together from fragnts—sand from a party festival, waves from the threshold of an old dungeon, skybox from a weather test zone.

It wasn’t ant to exist.

But the Fork no longer erased fragnts. It let them rest.

She walked until she found the driftwood.

It was exactly as it had been the previous ti she’d been here.

That ti, she’d waited for Kaito to go online. They were supposed to et here after a raid. He never appeared—wrapped up in so other fight, so other obligation. She’d waited until the sun dipped below the zone’s unseen horizon, then disconnected without comnt.

Now, she sat on the sa driftwood.

And waited again.

But not for anyone.

Just for the tide.

Kael’s trek took him into the Shard Plains.

What was once a hub of world bosses, now nothing more than a grouping of crystal formations humming faintly with code written in a bygone era. Players once fard this place for their chance at rare drops. Now the crystals gave nothing at all—no loot, no XP, not even crafting mats.

Kael ran his fingers over one shard.

It was warm.

A flicker passed through his mind—an old mory of standing here with a stranger, both of them farming the sa boss for hours without speaking, until at so point, they started to.

He could still rember their handle. Not their real na. Not even their voice. Just the way their avatar would always step sideways before an attack.

He wondered if they were still here sowhere.

He wondered if they rembered him.

Mika returned to the Library Below.

Not the grand halls of lore happenings—this was lower, into the stacks in which the system had placed half-broken codices from past cycles. So of them were bug-bitten past readability, text printing sideways off the page.

She took a seat in the corner between two shelves and opened a book.

It wasn’t hers.

It was a cache of patch notes from a player-created area which had been taken out three years earlier. Nothing important. No A-list talent. Just so mob spawn rate tweaking, a ntion of fixing the rain effect.

But the handwriting—because it was handwriting, scanned into the texture—was intentional. Considerate. Soone had taken the trouble to make it look good.

Mika closed the book slowly.

Sotis the small things stayed open the longest.

Yue was once more standing on the Whisper Stairs.

A spiral staircase into the face of a cliff, where every step played back a comnt spoken within the zone’s chat logs.

It wasn’t moderated.

The voices were random.

She started walking.

"Pulling boss now."

"Need healer?"

"brb dinner"

"lol"

"don’t go without "

So were years old. So from weeks ago.

Halfway down, Yue stopped.

The voice that ca back was hers.

"I’m not coming back."

It had been a bad day. She hadn’t ant it. But she’d said it, and then she’d left for months.

Now, standing here, she whispered into the air:

"I did."

The stairs didn’t reply.

But the next step was silent.

And she understood.

None of them had planned to et.

Yet sohow, as if the Presence Tree had guided without guiding, they ended up in the sa place by nightfall.

Not the House. Not the garden.

The Threshold Loop.

It wasn’t a landmark—just a circle of bare ground where six threadlines t.

They didn’t speak right away.

Nyra sat down first. Mika sat next. Kael leaned against one of the threadlines, arms folded. Yue maintained a little space between them. Kaito was last, his boots scuffling against packed earth.

The quiet wasn’t suffocating.

It was the sa kind of stillness that had been accumulating lately—down-to-earth, unyielding.

Then, at last, Kael said, "You’ve walked too."

Kaito nodded.

Nyra tilted her head. "And?"

He hesitated for a very long ti.

"They’re still here," he said quietly. "The places. The monts. They didn’t vanish. We just stopped looking at them."

No one disputed.

Far above them, one of the threadlines glowed.

Not from system code.

From choice.

Players in distant corners of the map were lighting fires, placing tokens, opening old mail. Each action distorted the weave—not to repair it, not to refresh it, but to keep it open.

The sheen grew.

The Threshold Loop humd once.

And for the first ti, they could all feel it—not the Fork, not the Reaver’s mass, not the buildings.

The presence of every person who had ever tarried.

They didn’t need to decide what to do next.

Not yet.

They stayed around until the threadlines dissipated again, each taking with them the whispered understanding that this—whatever it was—wasn’t finished.

Not the way quests ended.

Not the way raids swept through.

But the way a story could still be revealed, even after you thought the last page had been read.

When they left the Threshold Loop, they went their separate ways.

But the weave lagged behind.

And the abandoned areas began to breathe again.

Not because soone opened them up.

Because soone had walked through them.

And stayed long enough for them to rember.

Night in Eclipse Online no longer fell like it used to.

Before the Fork altered the weave, night had been a fixed event—an environntal toggle, to the minute. The shadows dropped on schedule, the mobs re-spawned punctually.

Now this was different.

Night arrived as it did in the real world—gradually, with ti for things to be seen before they vanished.

It provided options.

Kaito walked along the edge of a cliff overlooking the still-lit section he had just left. From this position, the Hollow Bridge was little more than a wispy arch in the night, the fog below now featuring faint strands of light—no system render, but sothing the weave itself was holding.

He rembered the first ti he’d walked that bridge years ago, when it was contested ground. He’d been a feral kid then, muscling his way in for trivial kills. But there had been a mont, in the battle, when an enemy player had pushed just hard enough to make it possible for him to retreat with 1% HP.

They’d never spoken a word.

He still didn’t know why they’d done it.

Now, watching the mist, he considered that perhaps the answer was not significant. What was significant was that it had happened—and the bridge had rembered.

He stayed until the mist pulsed once in muted acknowledgent, and then left.

Nyra walked along the beach. The sky grew dark, and the tide branded the borne light of the stars.

The driftwood stayed below her, the sa shape, the sa place. But in the darkness, she could discern faint marks drifting in the shallows—shapes of avatars, transparent, about to be forgotten.

She recognized herself among them.

The old her—silent, hesitant, waiting for soone else to tell her where to go.

The presence tree’s branches touched her as well, because that version of her didn’t disappear when she was stronger. It had remained, still sitting on the edge of the tide.

Nyra approached the water’s edge, entered the radiance, and sat next to her old reflection.

Not to supplant it.

To tell it she was still there.

The tide ca and went once before disappearing into complete darkness.

Kael stood again before the Shard Plains.

The crystals, darkened, reflected his shape as broken light.

In the early cycles, he’d been the one always looking forward—new buildings, new bosses, faster clears. He’d paid little heed to the ground he left behind.

But as he drew his hand down the nearest crystal again, a flight of years-old chattext slid across it, too weak for him to catch initially:

"Don’t go too far ahead. So of us like walking."

Not a rebuke. Just a reminder.

Kael stayed until the text disappeared and the crystal shut off, then departed more slowly than he had the first ti.

Mika delved further into the Library Below. These books were not even intact—half-erased docunts, twisted tables, strings of code bare on the page.

And one in particular which she saw: a fight log from one of her dungeon attempts where she had been an ergency healer called in at the last minute. The attempt had been abysmal, all the chanics bungled, all the cooldowns blown too soon.

But the log ended with one line, written in player chat and not system ssage:

"Thanks for trying. We still had fun."

She had totally forgotten about that run.

She shut the book up, and sothing calm settled within her. Not relief. Not pride. Just... presence.

Yue didn’t return to the Whisper Stairs.

She went around the beach instead until the shore curved out into an inlet she had never visited. The water was glass-calm here, and nas floated upon its surface like paper lanterns.

There were so that she recognized. There were so that she didn’t.

Her own na was not among them.

She realized then that she’d spent the majority of the ti on Eclipse Online out of sight—and had learned to do so. But here, she was reminded that being invisible and not being there were two different concepts.

She reached out her arm and put it into the water, and it rippled outward, nudging her reflection into the nas.

She was among them for a mont.

It had darkened by the ti they all returned to the Threshold Loop.

No one asked where the others were.

They didn’t need to.

The weave now was closer to a breath than a map. They could feel where each of them had been, the way heat lingers in a room after soone leaves.

Kaito looked at them all in the dark room.

"This isn’t over," he told them.

Nyra smiled weakly. "It was never supposed to be."

Kael nodded once. Mika glanced upward at the threadlines above. Yue said nothing, but the movent forward of her was reply enough.

The loop struck again.

Not to mark an ending.

But to be left open.

They waited until the first gray line of dawn began inscribing itself into the weave.

Nobody logged off.

Nobody stirred.

Because so spaces weren’t ant to be traversed.

So spaces were ant to be kept.

And thus the night in Eclipse Online did not cease.

It branched out.

A choice horizon—so rembered, so new.

All still here.

You are reading Eclipse Online: The Final Descent Chapter 117: THE PLACES THAT WERE STILL OPEN on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.