The first ti it rained in both Eclipse and the real world at the sa ti, everyone noticed.
It wasn't about the weather. It was the sound. The exact sa rhythm, the sa gentle tap against windows, the sa weight to the drops. In NovaCity, rain pattered on chro rooftops. And in the forgotten ruins of Zone-9 inside the ga, it made the sa soft splash. No lag. No difference.
The system's sync percentage had been ticking up for weeks. That day, it hit 99.99%.
Then the number vanished.
It didn't say 100%. It just… disappeared.
That's when the quiet fear started.
---
Kieran stood in the Aegis Do, watching the main holo-map. Six zones pulsed a steady red. New reports weren't about Rifts or dungeon bugs anymore. They were about rge events.
In so cities, reality was waking up inside the ga. Skyscrapers flickered with lines of code. Streets rearranged into hex-tiled patterns. Animals glitched—birds stuck in three-second flight loops, dogs barking in broken voice lines. In one Seoul market, the entire place hovered six feet in the air for three whole minutes.
And inside Eclipse? Pieces of the real world were popping up. A London bridge. Rooftops from Rio. A broken-down gas station from the middle of nowhere. Players logging in sotis found themselves standing on real soil.
Kieran finally understood. This wasn't a slow bleed between worlds.
They were becoming the sa thing.
---
"Start Phase Two of Parallax."
Kieran's voice was rough. He hadn't slept much. Next to him, Arianna typed commands with one hand and nibbled on a protein bar with the other. Dark circles hung under her eyes.
Phase Two wasn't about fighting. It was triage.
They couldn't stop the rge. But maybe they could soften the crash.
They ford a new unit—Reality Integration Specialists. Squads ard with portable sync stabilizers and Rift-tuners. Their job was simple: go into unstable areas and plant anchors. Keep physics from breaking under the weight of code.
They reinforced hospitals with defensive shields, turned schools into safe zones, started testing people for sync-compatibility at borders. Getting a pod license now required a basic exam, not just credits.
It wasn't enough. But it was sothing.
---
Kieran led a team into Lagos.
The city was half-phased. Buildings looked normal, but their data flickered in and out of Eclipse. Roads blinked off for seconds at a ti. A kid's breakfast cereal kept disappearing unless he stood like he was in combat.
Controlled chaos. But fixable.
They rappelled from a VTOL onto a cracked overpass. The skyline below shimred like a corrupted save file.
"Zone's destabilizing on a forty-second loop," an engineer said, adjusting her visor. "We need a tether point sowhere high, or the whole district goes ghost."
Kieran pointed. "The comms tower. It's already in Eclipse—different zone. Anchor both, they'll steady each other."
They climbed. Lightning flashed—both in the sky and across their interfaces. At the top, the air felt thin, like code and oxygen were competing.
Kieran pressed his palm to the core device. Felt it sync with his pulse.
The tower humd to life.
Below, the flickering stopped. For now.
That was enough.
---
That night, he sat in the dust outside a field hospital in Cairo. The stars looked too sharp. Too perfect.
Arianna dropped beside him, handing over a warm can of sothing vaguely like tea.
"You sleep?"
He shook his head.
She didn't push.
They sat in silence, watching the city. Cairo had rged cleanly—its old digital infrastructure probably helped. So neighborhoods still glitched like mory leaks, but people were alive. That's what mattered.
"You're holding the world together with tape and stubbornness," she said, voice low.
He didn't argue.
"You're doing good, Kieran."
He glanced at her. "That your way of saying I'm still standing?"
"No," she said. "It's my way of saying you don't have to stand alone."
He gave a slow nod.
Then his wrist tingled.
The black crown symbol glowed faintly.
No ssage. No alert.
Just presence.
Adams was still watching.
---
Back in command, a global alert flashed.
rge Surge—coastal Japan. A whole mountain was gone, replaced by an Eclipse raid map: The Garden of Hollowed Wings.
Kieran rembered that place. His team had wiped there ten tis before they cleared it.
Now it was sitting in the real world. Live.
He pinged teams Alpha through Echo.
"I'm taking this one," he said.
Arianna looked up. "Sure?"
"Yeah."
"Want backup?"
He paused. "Send Jack."
She didn't question it.
---
They touched down in under an hour.
The terrain was just as he rembered—black grass, trees of floating glass, giant stone petals hanging in the air. But the wind felt real. The sll of damp earth was real.
Too real.
Jack fell in beside him at the first checkpoint.
"I hate this place," Jack muttered. "Wiped here with a full Mythic party. Felt like getting killed by a sad poem."
Kieran almost smiled. It felt strange. But good.
They pushed inward. The mobs were distorted—old bosses stitched together from mory and code.
Jack's blades moved like light. Kieran cleared their path with sharp, efficient strikes.
They didn't talk much. Didn't need to.
At the center lay the Heartbloom—the raid's core, now pulsing with rge energy.
Kieran placed his hand on it.
It resisted, then synced.
The whole area shimred. Color returned to the trees. The glass softened.
Stabilized.
Another anchor held.
---
Aegis Do registered the update.
rge Stabilization: 3%. Global Integrity Holding.
Parallax was working.
It wasn't saving the world. But it was buying ti.
And in that ti… maybe sothing new could grow.
---
Days later, Kieran stood under the Central Node Gate.
It pulsed differently now. Brighter. Like it knew him.
Arianna ca up beside him.
"Sothing's shifting," she said.
"I know."
She glanced at his wrist. The black crown glowed steadily.
"What happens when it fully activates?"
"I don't know," Kieran said softly. "But I think that's the whole point."
They stood together, watching the gate. Behind it, Eclipse and reality were no longer two things.
Not really.
Not anymore.
---
Far away, Adams stood on a quiet, empty street—sowhere between the world and the ga.
He watched the sky. He watched Kieran.
A faint smile touched his lips.
"Not bad," he whispered.
Then he turned.
And walked into the storm.
Reviews
All reviews (0)