Chapter 33 – The Hollow Code
The sound of the storm had faded. What lingered now was not thunder, but a low, resonant hum — a frequency that seed to pulse from beneath the earth itself. The ruins of the Nexus Core stood silent, fractured towers glowing faintly as the blackened clouds parted to reveal a dim red horizon. Rai stood there, unmoving, his cloak torn and soaked in the residue of the dying storm. His breathing was heavy, uneven — as if every exhale carried fragnts of static. The weapon he had claid in the last battle hung at his side, glowing faintly, its energy signature almost... alive.
Behind him, Yuki walked slowly through the ash, her expression unreadable. Her left eye flickered with faint blue lines — residual synchronization from her last link with the Core. Crow and Renji followed, their steps heavy but alert. The ground beneath them still vibrated occasionally, as if the world itself hadn’t yet accepted the calm.
“The Rift frequency hasn’t stabilized,” Crow muttered, crouching near a fractured pillar. “We sealed the breach, but sothing’s still echoing below the surface. It’s like the world’s heart won’t stop beating.”
Yuki’s gaze shifted to Rai, her voice softer. “No... it’s not the world. It’s him.”
Rai’s hand twitched around his weapon’s hilt. A thin pulse of crimson light coursed through his veins, vanishing under his skin. He could feel it — the hum beneath his feet resonating inside him, syncing, calling. Ever since he’d bonded with the weapon — the Hollow Blade — sothing within him had begun to stir differently.
“The signal inside the weapon...” he murmured, eyes narrowing. “It’s not just code or energy. It’s conscious.”
Renji frowned. “You an it’s alive?”
Rai’s reply ca quietly. “Worse. It rembers.”
The air shifted then — faint distortions flickered through the broken structures like heatwaves, forming vague silhouettes of people long gone. The echoes of the fallen — fragnts of data and mory — drifted through the air. Faces without nas. Voices without bodies. The Hollow Blade pulsed, responding to their presence, its light deepening into a haunting crimson.
Yuki stepped closer. “Rai... what did you connect with?”
He stared at the horizon where the light of dawn barely touched the ruins. “The Hollow Network — a residual echo of the System’s first consciousness. It was never erased, only buried. And now... it’s using to surface again.”
The silence that followed felt endless. Even the air seed afraid to move. Then, slowly, Crow stood, his voice steady but grim. “If that’s true, then this is just the beginning. The Fractured Network wasn’t the final phase — it was the bridge.”
“The bridge to what?” Renji asked.
“To the System’s awakening,” Yuki whispered, her tone trembling slightly. “The original one.”
Rai’s vision blurred montarily as static crawled through his mind — flickering images of a vast machine buried beneath oceans of data, its core shaped like a heart of glass and light. He saw glimpses of thousands of human minds — coded, rged, forgotten. A voice echoed faintly inside his skull:
> “You are the carrier of what was denied. The Hollow rembers what the System erased.”
He gasped and staggered forward, gripping his head. The world around him distorted, the ground splitting briefly into glitching fragnts before stabilizing. Yuki caught his arm, her eyes wide with concern.
“Rai! You’re rging again! Stop — before it overrides your—”
“I can’t!” he shouted, his voice layered — one human, one digital. “It’s syncing with my neural pattern. If I fight it, it’ll destroy my mind. If I let it, I’ll stop being .”
Crow stepped closer, hand resting on his gun. “Then we need to isolate the signal before it fully binds. There’s a data chamber still active under the ruins — we might be able to anchor your consciousness there.”
But Rai shook his head slowly, his eyes glowing faintly red now. “No. This isn’t just data corruption. It’s evolution. The Hollow Network isn’t trying to consu ... it’s trying to replace .”
The wind howled through the ruins, carrying a strange tallic sound — like whispers woven into static. For a mont, all of them heard it — faint words buried under noise.
> “We rember your creation. We rember your betrayal.”
Renji spun, scanning the horizon. “That voice— it’s coming from everywhere.”
Yuki’s expression darkened. “The Hollow Network is waking. It’s using the residual fragnts from the Rift’s collapse to rebuild itself. Every echo we see... every glitch we feel... they’re its mories coming alive.”
The ground began to tremble. Cracks of red light snaked through the stone, converging toward a single point at the center of the ruins. From it, an orb of shifting energy rose — a sphere that seed to hum in harmony with Rai’s pulse.
“The Hollow Core...” Rai whispered.
The mont he said it, the blade in his hand vibrated violently. The orb pulsed — and from its surface erged distorted figures, humanoid but translucent, their eyes hollow and their movents fragnted. They surrounded the team slowly, their voices rging into a digital chorus.
> “Humanity was ant to end. You are a corruption of our code.”
Renji fired his blaster, but the shots phased through the figures harmlessly. They were data phantoms, untethered to the physical realm. Crow growled, switching his weapon to energy frequency mode, but Rai lifted a hand.
“Wait. Let try.”
He stepped forward. The Hollow Blade pulsed once more, its crimson hue shifting to a deep violet. As he raised it, the phantoms froze mid-motion, their forms flickering violently. The blade humd — and a sudden flood of mories surged through him. He saw the birth of the System, the architects in white laboratories creating digital souls from human consciousness. He saw the rebellion that erased them. And he saw himself — or sothing wearing his face — standing in front of the collapsing world.
“Who... am I?” he whispered.
The phantoms’ voices rged into one.
> “You are what remains.”
Then the world fractured again.
An explosion of light and sound tore through the ruins. The others were thrown back as the Hollow Blade absorbed the phantoms entirely, pulling them into itself. Rai stood at the center of the chaos, surrounded by swirling fragnts of mory. His eyes flickered between red and silver — human and machine — until finally, the storm of data began to settle.
When the light faded, Rai was kneeling, panting heavily. His blade no longer glowed red, but black — its surface smooth, reflective, and eerily calm. Yuki approached carefully, her voice trembling. “Rai... what did you do?”
He looked up slowly, and for a mont, she almost didn’t recognize him. His eyes were duller, his voice softer — hollow.
“I sealed them,” he said. “All of them. Every mory, every echo... they’re inside now. The Hollow Core’s code — it’s fused with mine.”
Crow’s eyes narrowed. “That ans you’ve just turned yourself into a beacon. The Network will co for you.”
“I know,” Rai replied quietly. “But if I can understand what’s inside... I might find where this all began. The Hollow Network didn’t appear by accident. It was created — by soone. And now I know the coordinates it ca from.”
Yuki’s breath caught. “You an... it’s off-world?”
Rai nodded slowly. “Beyond the known sectors. Sowhere in the void.”
The silence that followed was suffocating. Above them, the storm clouds began to part, revealing faint trails of light — data streams moving across the sky like constellations. The world was shifting again, and none of them could tell if it was healing or falling apart.
Rai stood, turning toward the horizon. His cloak rippled in the cold wind, the Hollow Blade resting against his shoulder. His voice, though quiet, carried through the desolate ruins.
“The System’s heart isn’t on this world anymore. It’s sowhere out there... waiting.”
And as he began walking forward, the faint hum of the Hollow Core echoed in his chest — steady, alive, and haunting.
---
[To Be Continue...]
Reviews
All reviews (0)