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Eclipse Online: The Final Descent-Chapter 58: WHISPERS FROM THE PAST
Chapter 58: WHISPERS FROM THE PAST
The sun was absent for a long period of time, leaving only the shrouds of twilight to illuminate the desolate wasteland.
Kaito and Nyra trekked across the devastated ground, their steps slow and resolute as they made their way towards a distant line of mountains.
The mood was tense, and though they had escaped one battle, both were aware that the peace they enjoyed at the moment would not endure for long.
A low, almost silent hum resonated through the ground beneath them, causing Kaito’s backbone to shiver. He stood rigid, eyes fixed on the shattered ground. Something was amiss with the vibration, as if the world itself was attempting to get his attention.
"Feel that?" Kaito asked, voice low and defensive.
Nyra did not respond immediately, but her hand instinctively went to the hilt of her own sword. Her posture shifted, becoming vigilant.
"I did," she answered, voice even. "It’s a disturbance in the air. Someone or something is coming.".
Kaito glanced around, scanning the shattered horizon, but there was nothing to be found save the creepy quiet of the barren world. But in his heart he knew that the quiet was not real.
The last war had torn apart the fabric of the universe, and what had been awakened was still boiling beneath the surface.
They continued on, now more alert, as the ground itself trembled with increased force—pulsating with a rhythmic sound, close enough to what a heartbeat had sounded like.
With each thrum, it seemed to resound through Kaito’s chest, echoing the darkness that still lingered within him.
Was it the Abyss again? Or something worse?
"I don’t like this," Kaito muttered, his grip tightening on the hilt of his blade. "I can feel it. There’s something wrong here. Something waiting."
Nyra’s eyes narrowed. "Stay focused. Whatever it is, we’ll face it together."
They covered another hundred paces when the ground heaved convulsively. A rumbling noise was heard beneath, and the earth yawned wide with a blinding crash.
From the open wound emerged a monstrous figure—a colossus shrouded in darkness, its silhouette only a vague shape in the dim light.
The mist around it pulsed with an independent life, writhing and curling, reluctant to take on a defined form.
Kaito and Nyra immediately fell into fighting crouches, ready weapons at the ready, senses tuned.
The creature was monstrous—twice the size of anything they had faced before. Its limbs were long and jagged, formed from shadow and bone, and its face was a shifting mask of eyes and mouths that whispered in languages neither of them could understand.
"You’re too late," a voice boomed from its core—deep, resonant, and chilling. "The Abyss is not finished. It has only just begun."
Kaito’s heart skipped. They had destroyed the physical form of the Abyss. Had it come back already so soon?
"Who are you?" Kaito demanded, his voice strong despite the fear rising up inside him. "What do you want from us?"
The creature’s body convulsed into a laugh, the mist churning wildly around it.
"I am the messenger of the Abyss," it declared. "The one who lurks in the shadows. I have been watching you, Kaito. You think that you have severed your tie to the void, but it remains within you. You carry the seed of destruction."
Kaito gritted his teeth. "No. I’ve won. I’ve resisted. I’m myself."
The creature stretched out before him, and dozens of eyes lit up its body. "You think resistance is purity? You’ve already been transformed, Kaito. The Abyss transformed you. You are marked. You are its vessel."
Kaito stepped back. The words hit too close to the fears he’d kept hidden. His nightmares. His intuition on the battlefield. The black flames that had erupted in the last battle. Had it all been the Abyss working through him?
Nyra fell alongside him, her solidity a soothing presence.
"He isn’t a vessel," she snapped. "He’s a fighter. A survivor. Whatever you are, you’re wrong if you assume we’ll fall here."
The herald’s eyes fixed upon Nyra, and its many mouths opened into a horrid grin. "And you... the broken shadow who came back from nothing. Do you really believe your string was not tampered with? The Abyss stitched you back together. It owns you too."
Nyra’s hold on her sword grew tighter. Her words were icicle steel. "Then we’ll cut the strings."
There was no second warning, and the beast attacked.
Streams of tendrils lashed out from its shape, bearing darkness like black ink spreading in water. Wind screamed as it tore through the air with its bulk.
Kaito shouted a warning as he braced himself with his sword and took the first blow head-on. The impact vibrated through his arms, shoving him back. The force of the blow was appalling.
"Nyra—left!" he shouted.
She was already in motion, slipping beneath a lurching step of darkness and striking upward. Her sword severed the tendril, chopping it cleanly from her attacker—but instead of falling, the darkness simply reformed itself, wider and more dense than before.
Kaito moved to the beast’s flank, using its mass to his favor. He struck at a jointed leg of darkness, his sword shining brilliant as it bit deep—but again, the shadow will not die. It hissed and churned, the wound closing as if the sword had never fallen.
"We can’t hurt it like that!" Nyra cried.
"It’s not material," Kaito replied above the sound of their rapid breathing. "We have to strike at its center!
The creature emitted another bellow, a sound that tore through the earth like thunder. Tentacles exploded outward, dozens all at once, sending Kaito and Nyra in opposite directions as they scrambled to get away from them.
Kaito rolled to the side, barely dodging a lashing lash of darkness that tore a gash into the earth.
The whispering voices grew louder. Kaito could hear them clearer now—whispers of doubt, of fear, of anger. The darkness inside him started to wake up. The voices spoke his name, understood his fears, his failures. They recalled to him his guilt, the lives he was unable to save.
"You are already falling," the voices sang. "Stop resisting. Accept the reality of what you are."
"No," Kaito growled. "I’m not yours."
He focused, forced the voices to be silent. He remembered Nyra’s words. He was not what was inside him—he was what made him.
He invoked the light inside, the same light he had fought against the Abyss once before, and directed it into his sword.
The sword burst forth a blinding silver glow. With the next tendril lashing at him, he swung—and this time, the light did not only slice the shadow. It burned it. The creature shrieked with agony as a chunk of its shape erupted in white fire.
"It’s working!" Kaito shouted.
Nyra’s expression lit up with understanding. She held up her sword to the sky and summoned her power, the void energy that had served her previously. Her sword blazed with purple flames, its edge singing in a high-pitched whine as it cut through the air.
She and Kaito moved forward as one.
Kaito struck with focused light, purifying each tendril that crept towards them.
Nyra twirled among silhouettes, her blade burning incisions through the mist. Each wound they inflicted lingered, and the herald began to falter, its movements disorganized, its voices growing frantic.
"You do not know what you fight," it sneered. "The Abyss is not a beast. It is a truth. It is the beginning and the end. And you... you are echoes."
Kaito leapt into the air, sword raised. "Then we’ll slash a new future!"
With a bellow, he brought his sword down, its blade in the monster’s center. Light flashed on impact, a cleansing wave that rent the darkness asunder. The herald screamed, its form dissolving into streams of ash and smoke.
It tried to scream one final word—but there was nothing.
There was silence. The monster was defeated.
Kaito sank to the knee, gasping for breath. His eyes fogged over at the periphery as fatigue descended upon him. The ground was scorched where the light had exploded from it, and the air reeked of smoky shadow.
Nyra approached slowly, wiping her sword. Her expression was unreadable for a moment—but then she smiled faintly.
"You didn’t fall," she said to him.
"Neither did you," Kaito replied, smiling faintly.
They stood in the peaceful aftermath, gasping for air. For a moment, the world was still. Then the wind returned once more, cold and soft, and it was as if the world finally exhaled.
Vindication was fleeting.
Kaito gazed out at the horizon, his eyes wide open. "That monster told us the Abyss is not a monster... but a truth."
Nyra’s brow furrowed. "What do you suppose it means?"
"I don’t know," Kaito said. "But I feel like we’ve been only scratching the surface. The Abyss... the wars... maybe they’re all symptoms of something deeper. Something old."
Nyra nodded, her gaze following his path. The mountains in the distance were dark, but their feet something stirred—an ancient power, hidden but felt.
A distant echo, like a heartbeat under stone.
Kaito put his sword back in its scabbard. "We can’t go back now. We must press on. To the source of it all. If the Abyss is only the beginning. then we have to see what comes next."
Nyra was at his shoulder, her expression determined. "Whatever it is, we face it together."
And so they began walking once more, the battlefield fading into the distance behind them. And every step took them further into uncharted lands, but they did not return.
They couldn’t afford to.
The future was unwritten. But the past? The past was on the rise. And it was calling them.