The wind changed by dusk. It carried more than air—sothing faint, tallic, a whisper that crawled between leaves. Buzz felt it before he heard it. The sa hum that haunted the pit now echoed through the forest again, quieter but closer, like breath on the back of his neck.
Zza noticed too. Her antennae twitched. "The gold’s moving again."
Buzz didn’t answer. He didn’t have to. The glow beneath the soil flickered every few steps, tracing faint trails through roots and moss. The infection wasn’t gone. It was following.
When they reached the valley, the coalition waited. Scarabs lined the ridge, their armor patched with silk. Glowbeetles hovered above, casting uneven light over the camp. The Elder stood near the stream, surrounded by new weavers repairing the net. Every strand stretched toward the horizon, anchored to trees that still dripped sap from old wounds.
The mont Buzz stepped into view, silence rolled through the clearing. Every head turned.
The Elder’s eyes narrowed. "You went alone."
Buzz stopped at the edge of the stream. "You would’ve stopped ."
"You almost broke the ridge," the Elder said. "The tremor reached us before your scent did."
Zza crossed her arms. "We stopped sothing worse. The Scarabs were building a shrine. It wasn’t worship—it was bait."
The Elder’s gaze softened, but only slightly. "And the infection?"
"Still there," Buzz said. "Smarter now. Quieter."
A murmur ran through the coalition. One Glowbeetle dipped lower, its light flickering with fear. "It can move through the soil now," it whispered.
Buzz looked around at the faces in the crowd. They were tired, but not broken. They had seen too much to be afraid of ghosts. Still, he felt the tension rising. Fear spread faster than rot.
He raised his voice. "Listen. It’s not about killing it anymore. We can’t. It’s a network—it learns, it adapts, it hides. Every ti we burn it, it rembers the fla. Every ti we cut it, it learns to bleed better. So we don’t kill it. We teach the forest to fight it."
The Elder tilted its head. "You think the forest still listens to us?"
"It listens to pain," Buzz said. "It’s full of it."
Zza stepped forward, silk trailing behind her like a banner. "We build the net wider. We connect every root that still breathes. If the infection wants to spread through the ground, then it’ll have to spread through us too. And we’ll be waiting."
The Elder nodded once, slow. "A living trap."
Buzz t its gaze. "A mory it can’t rewrite."
The coalition started to move again. Glowbeetles took to the air, their lights forming steady lines. Centipedes burrowed into the soil, dragging threads beneath the surface. Scarabs carried roots, stacking them in circles that resembled old nests. The forest itself began to hum in rhythm with their work.
Zza watched it all, her eyes following the weaving. "It feels different this ti."
Buzz nodded. "It should. Last ti we fought to survive. Now we fight to rember."
They worked through the night. By dawn, the first shimr stretched across half the valley, a living net of silk and soil pulsing with faint light. It wasn’t blue like the Weaver’s—nor gold like the Queen’s. It was sothing new. Sothing in between.
Buzz stood at the center of it, claws sunk into the dirt. He could feel it breathing beneath him. The gold in his veins pulsed slower, quieter, almost calm.
Zza approached, her silk damp with dew. "You look like you belong to it."
"Maybe I do," he said. "Maybe that’s the point."
Before she could answer, a sharp tremor shook the ground. The net flickered once, threads stretching taut.
The Elder turned sharply. "What was that?"
A Centipede burst from the soil, gasping. "Sothing moved under us. Fast. Too fast."
Buzz crouched low, pressing a claw to the earth. He felt it instantly—a vibration, smooth and rhythmic. The hum returned, no longer distant.
"It’s not attacking," he said quietly. "It’s listening."
The forest stilled. The hum grew louder, spreading through the roots, echoing between trees. Then, one by one, the lights of the Glowbeetles began to dim—not from fear, but from response. Their bodies shimred faint gold, pulsing to the sa beat.
Zza’s voice cracked. "It’s syncing with them."
Buzz clenched his claws. "Break the rhythm. Now!"
The Elder shot silk threads into the canopy, snapping them like cords. The Centipedes slamd their coils against the ground, breaking the pulse. The forest scread in answer—a deep, aching groan.
The hum faltered. The Glowbeetles’ lights steadied. Then silence.
Buzz straightened slowly, chest heaving. "It’s probing the net. Testing for weak spots."
Zza wiped sweat from her brow. "And?"
He looked at the ground, at the faint glimr still tracing under the roots. "It found one."
The Elder followed his gaze toward the far ridge. "Then we close it."
Buzz nodded. "No. We bait it."
Zza turned on him. "You just barely pulled yourself back from it. You want to face it again?"
He t her eyes. "I want it to co to ."
The Elder’s voice dropped low. "You think it’ll listen?"
"It always has."
Zza’s claws trembled. "And if it doesn’t stop this ti?"
Buzz smiled, small and tired. "Then maybe it’ll finally see what it made."
They stood there as dawn burned across the valley. The forest was quiet again, but not peaceful. Every creature, every thread, every root felt the sa truth crawling beneath them.
The Queen was gone.
But her echo had learned how to walk.
And it was already on its way ho.
The forest didn’t wake to birds or light. It woke to a pulse. Slow at first, almost shy, then louder—spreading through the ground like a drumbeat rembering its own song.
Buzz opened his eyes before the others. His shell prickled. The gold in his veins stirred, not in pain, not yet, but in warning.
Across the clearing, Zza was already on her feet. Her silk shimred in the half-light, silver streaked with faint gold. "You feel it too?" she whispered.
He nodded, sitting up. "It’s closer."
The Elder appeared from the canopy above, silk threads still hanging from its arms. "The pulse is not random. It repeats every eight counts. It’s sending sothing through the soil."
Buzz rubbed his temple. "It’s calling."
Zza’s antennae twitched. "To what?"
He looked toward the trees that frad the eastern ridge. The sa place the first heartwood nest had burned. "To her remains."
The Elder frowned. "There’s nothing left of her body."
Buzz stood, his voice rough. "There doesn’t need to be. There’s still her code in the roots. The gold doesn’t die—it migrates."
The forest shifted, branches creaking above them. Small insects scurried through the leaves, their shells flecked with gold dust. One by one, they began to hum.
Zza cursed softly. "It’s rewriting them."
Buzz turned to the coalition. "Everyone move. We reinforce the net before it reaches the ridge."
The survivors scattered into motion. Scarabs hamred their claws into the dirt, Glowbeetles wove light through the canopy, Centipedes dug deeper trenches to anchor the silk. The Elder spun fresh threads, weaving them into the living net that stretched across the valley.
Buzz and Zza ran to the ridge together, their claws digging into the damp soil. The hum grew louder with each step. By the ti they reached the top, the air itself shimred gold.
What waited for them wasn’t the Queen. It was worse.
A shape crawled out from the broken ground—part root, part shell, part light. It moved like sothing rembering how to be alive. Its wings were torn, its mandibles cracked, but its eyes glowed with a dim, steady gold.
Zza whispered, "That’s not her."
Buzz’s jaw tightened. "No. That’s her echo."
The creature tilted its head, studying them. When it spoke, its voice wasn’t a sound—it was vibration through the ground. *You kept the forest alive. Good.*
Buzz stepped forward, claws flexed. "You shouldn’t be here."
*I never left.*
The gold in his veins burned hot, and he staggered. The echo smiled without lips. *You carry still. You can’t fight what you are.*
Zza grabbed his arm, but he tore free. "You’re not her," he said. "You’re what’s left when a god forgets what it was for."
The echo tilted its head. *And what are you?*
"Sothing she didn’t finish."
It moved fast—too fast. Gold light flashed, and suddenly it was on him, claws slamming against his shell. He rolled, barely dodging, the ground cracking under his weight. Zza leapt behind it, throwing silk that wrapped around its wings. The creature jerked, tearing half free, but the threads held long enough for Buzz to strike.
He slamd his claws into its chest, gold spraying across his arms. The pain hit instantly—searing, electric—but he pushed harder. "You want your blood?" he growled. "Take it back."
The echo scread, a sound that rattled the forest. Its wings flared wide, burning through Zza’s silk. It grabbed Buzz by the throat and threw him into a tree. Bark splintered, his shell cracking down the side.
Zza dove after him, silk reforming midair. "Get up!"
He pushed off the trunk, gasping. "We need the net."
She nodded, grabbing his hand. They sprinted down the ridge, the echo following close behind, its light spilling through the trees like liquid fire. Every step it took left golden roots bursting through the ground, crawling toward the valley.
Buzz shouted, "Elder! Now!"
The Elder raised its arms, threads glowing blue-white. The coalition pulled tight on their lines, the entire net snapping into motion. Silk wove across the air, sealing the valley like a do.
The echo reached the edge and slamd into it. The web held. Gold sparked where it struck, burning bright.
Zza stood at Buzz’s side, her breath shaking. "It’s trying to rewrite the net."
"Then rewrite it faster," Buzz said.
They both reached forward, hands pressing against the threads. Buzz’s gold t the Elder’s blue, and the net flared with white light. The echo howled, its form distorting, lting and reforming.
Buzz could feel it inside his head again, whispering through the burn in his veins. *You can’t destroy . I live where you breathe.*
He gritted his teeth. "Then choke on it."
The net pulsed once, twice—then snapped tight. The entire valley lit up. The echo convulsed, its body splitting apart into streams of gold that scattered like ash in wind.
When the light faded, the ground stead. Nothing moved.
Buzz dropped to one knee, gasping. Zza caught him before he fell.
The Elder lowered its hands slowly. "Is it gone?"
Buzz shook his head. "It won’t ever be gone. But it won’t rise here again."
Zza looked out over the valley. The threads glowed faintly, alive but calm. "Then we keep the net alive."
Buzz smiled weakly. "We don’t just keep it alive. We teach it to watch."
The forest was silent again. But it was a new silence—watchful, aware. The wind carried no hum, only the rustle of leaves and the faint shimr of silk overhead.
For the first ti since the Queen’s fall, the forest wasn’t praying to survive. It was listening.
Buzz leaned back against Zza, his claws still glowing faintly gold. "It’s learning," he whispered.
Zza rested her head on his shoulder. "Then so are we."
High above them, the web trembled once, catching the first light of dawn. The forest glowed.
And sowhere deep beneath the roots, the echo whispered its first word—quiet, patient, almost tender.
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