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The shaking didn’t stop.

Instead, it grew worse. Each beat of the ground ca slower, heavier, as if the Fork itself was a giant heart struggling to keep up with so ancient rhythm. Dust rained steadily from the cavern roof, falling in soft gray sheets that made the air thick and gritty.

The shadows didn’t move like normal shadows anymore. They snapped and bent in sharp, broken ways, sliding across the walls as if the stone itself was splitting apart from the inside.

Kaito’s hand tightened on his sword until his knuckles popped. He could feel it—this was no ordinary quake. The Abyssal Root wasn’t sleeping anymore. It was forcing itself awake, every pulse of the ground like a drowned creature taking in its first desperate breath after centuries beneath the surface.

"Too late," Nyra whispered. Her voice didn’t tremble from fear—fear was too small for this mont—but from recognition, as though a part of her already knew what would co. "It heard us."

At the center of the cavern, the black mass began to move. Kaito realized then that it had never truly been stone at all. It was sothing different—sothing older and far more alive.

Cracks spread slowly across its surface, like veins splitting open, and from them poured a strange pale fire. The glowing liquid ran down its sides, thick and heavy, almost like lted bone or living marrow.

The long, root-like tendrils that had hung limp suddenly twitched. They shuddered, then pulled back into themselves before stretching outward again, this ti with purpose. Each movent carried a strange grace, like muscles loosening after centuries of stillness.

The shape of the thing was changing. It wasn’t random. It was adjusting, rebuilding itself, as though it was relearning forms it had once known but forgotten long ago.

The air thickened until it felt like the whole cavern was pressing down on them. Every breath ca harder, each one a struggle, as if the air itself had turned solid.

Then sothing else arrived. It wasn’t a normal voice, not sound and not words. It ca like a push against the inside of their bodies, a force that couldn’t be heard but was impossible to ignore.

It was pressure—pure weight—settling deep in their bones, sinking into their marrow, making them feel as though the Root itself was speaking from inside their own flesh.

[WE REMBER]

The syllables weren’t syllables at all, but the idea of them, hamred into flesh and thought alike.

The others staggered under it. Mika clutched her ears even though there was no sound to block out, her bow clattering to the ground.

Kael spat blood as his veins lit with faint, burning lines that traced across his skin like molten script. Even Nyra faltered, shadows slipping from her form and flaring wild, as though the entity’s call tried to overwrite her existence with sothing else.

But Kaito didn’t falter.

He burned.

The sigil carved into his chest—the Reaver’s mark—flared in answer, not in rebellion but in resonance. His heart hamred in ti with the Root’s pulsing core, syncing without his permission.

And that terrified him more than anything else.

"No," he hissed through clenched teeth, his blade trembling as he forced his will down into his body, into his bones, anchoring himself. "You don’t get to decide for ."

The Root convulsed again. A ripple surged through its mass, and from deep within ca a soundless scream, sharper than any blade.

The pale fire flooding its cracks surged upward, lancing into the ceiling. The cavern roared as stone cracked apart, molten seams spidering across the roof.

Chunks of debris thundered down, smashing into the ground with bone-shaking force. Shards of obsidian and stone erupted in sprays, sparks hissing against armor and skin.

"We need to move!" Kael bellowed, his voice raw as he grabbed Mika by the arm and dragged her back from a collapsing ridge.

But there was nowhere to move.

The cavern wasn’t rely collapsing—it was bending inward, as though the world itself bowed under the Root’s reawakening. Each wall folded a fraction closer, stone groaning in protest, until it felt less like a space and more like the inside of a throat, ready to swallow them whole.

Nyra’s eyes snapped to Kaito. The flickering shadows on her body writhed, panicked, almost sentient in their agitation. "If it completes its awakening, it won’t stop with this cavern. It will unravel everything the Fork touches. That ans us. That ans the world."

Kaito’s breath ca sharp, ragged, seared by heat and weight. He raised his blade toward the boiling fissures, its steel trembling in the air as though resisting him. "Then we don’t let it finish."

The Root laughed—if laughter could be made of collapsing stone and splitting sky.

[WE ARE NOT FINISHED]

The words cracked the air, shaking dust loose from the cavern’s ribs.

[WE ARE BEGINNING]

From its surface, forms began to rise. Not random swellings of mass. Not the aimless flailing of a mindless root. These shapes had intent. Purpose.

Limbs.

Faces.

Mouths.

They pushed outward from the molten seams, half-ford and screaming without sound, as though each was rembering how to exist.

Arms clawed at the air, then sank back into the mass before reerging more refined. The Root was sculpting itself, piece by piece, teaching itself the shape of life again.

Mika’s strangled voice broke the silence between pulses. "Gods above... it’s growing people."

"Not people," Nyra corrected, though her voice cracked under the strain. "Not anymore. Those are mories made flesh."

The Root’s firelight deepened, its glow no longer colorless but tinged with a dozen shifting hues. Flesh and stone blended across its skin until it was impossible to tell where matter ended and living will began.

Kaito realized, in the stillness between one quake and the next, that this wasn’t just a monster.

It wasn’t even just a godlike fragnt of so forgotten age.

The Abyssal Root was an Architect that never died.

And it was waking up hungry.

The cavern shuddered again, and Kaito barely kept his footing. A fissure tore through the ground at his feet, splitting the floor like parchnt. He leapt back instinctively, landing beside Nyra.

The heat pouring from the wound was suffocating, every breath thick with the taste of ash and burning tal.

"Kael!" Nyra shouted over the groaning collapse. "Can you stabilize it?"

The mage’s hands were already raised, blood dripping freely from his palms where his veins glowed with Root-light. "I can’t—! It’s not terrain anymore—it’s rewriting as I speak!"

Another fissure split across the chamber, and from it rose a cluster of pale hands, reaching, clawing. So too many-jointed, others half-ford, fused at the wrist. They grasped blindly at the air until they latched onto stone, dragging themselves upward with strength disproportionate to their form.

One seized Mika’s ankle. She scread, loosing an arrow point-blank into its wrist. The hand didn’t bleed. It shattered into light and fell apart like broken code, only for another to erge in its place.

Kaito’s body moved before his thoughts caught up. The Eclipse surged down his blade, trailing black fire, and he cut clean through the cluster. The cavern flashed white where the strike landed, the afterimage burning his eyes.

The Root did not recoil.

It laughed again, stone and sky splitting in its voice.

[YOU WERE MADE OF US. YOU ARE OURS]

The mark on Kaito’s chest seared so hot he nearly scread. His pulse stumbled, syncing to the Root’s rhythm again, harder this ti, like chains tightening.

Nyra’s hand clamped onto his wrist, shadows wrapping around both of them. Her voice cut sharp, grounding. "Fight it, Kaito! If you let it anchor, you’ll beco part of it."

He gritted his teeth, forcing breath through his burning lungs. The blade shook in his hands, not from weakness but from the war tearing through his body—Root against Reaver, origin against offshoot.

Kael’s voice ca through ragged, desperate. "If it’s an Architect, then killing it—if that’s even possible—might collapse the Fork outright!"

"And letting it live?" Mika snapped, kicking free of another grasping hand. "That ends worse!"

The Root pulsed again. Its surface split wider, revealing not just faces but torsos, ribcages, incomplete spines. Whole half-born bodies clawed toward freedom, rging and splitting in grotesque succession. Each breath it took was a birth scream multiplied, the cavern echoing with the weight of a thousand half-lives.

The air pressed harder, and Kaito’s vision blurred at the edges.

This was no longer just survival.

This was a choice between destruction and sothing far more dangerous—becoming.

Kaito set his stance, his blade raised high, and stared into the Root’s burning mass. His heart still beat to its rhythm, but he forced his own will into the cracks. He would not be rewritten. He would not be consud.

"Then we carve the Architect down to silence," he growled, voice low and furious. "Before it finishes rembering."

The Root leaned forward, and a thousand mouths split into grins.

[TRY]

The cavern collapsed into chaos.

You are reading Eclipse Online: The Final Descent Chapter 143: THE ROOT STIRS II on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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