The wind whispered through the broken towers of Sector Delta-34.
Fade stood still at the edge of what once was a sanctuary—and now, a graveyard of echoes. The moss-cracked concrete, the rusted skeletons of vehicles long swallowed by vines, the glinting leaves of translucent trees that shimmered in unnatural rhythm—it was all familiar. Yet everything felt different. Or perhaps, he did.
Behind him, the others moved silently. Kaela, Darin, Arven... even Zeyna, uncharacteristically quiet, scanned the horizon without her usual smirk.
Fade took a slow breath, feeling the weight of the air press against his skin. It was denser than before, like the world had thickened since their last visit. His fingers brushed against the crystal in his pocket. It pulsed—like a heartbeat. Not his.
"We're back where it started," Darin muttered.
"No," Fade replied quietly. "That place no longer exists."
They followed a familiar path past the circuit-sealed doors of abandoned homes. The Enforcer symbols glowed faintly on rusted surfaces. The same alley where Mirael once traced glowing water now trickled quietly under their boots. But now, the bioluminescence pulsed in a slow, deliberate rhythm.
A heartbeat.
Kaela's scanner flickered. "Energy surge. Ten meters west. It's faint but... stable."
Fade's eyes narrowed. "I'll check it. Alone."
Zeyna tilted her head, about to protest, but stopped. Something in Fade's voice had shifted. It wasn't command. It wasn't cold.
It was final.
He moved alone into the overgrowth, passing under twisting branches and synthetic vines. He reached what had once been a metal wall, now consumed by organic growth and ash-colored bark.
And there, beneath the roots, a cracked mirror lay embedded in the earth.
He knelt.
The crystal in his pocket pulsed again—then vibrated sharply. Fade's hand gripped it instinctively. The ground beneath him hummed.
And then…
Black.
He stood in darkness. Not a void—but a cocoon.
Light shimmered within him, not around him. His veins glowed faintly, tracing the familiar path of the Vantablade markings. But they were changing—twisting—burning. The lines once shaped by shadow now warped with something deeper.
A voice—not the system—echoed.
Not the shadow.
Familiar. Low. Calm.
Like something once loved, buried by time.
"The Trial has seen you. It waits now... not for power, but for permission."
Fade froze. He knew that voice.
But from where?
Then the pain struck—not physical, but ancestral. A memory not his own.
A battlefield drenched in red mist. A woman with burning eyes holding a dying man. A whisper passed from blood to blood: "Protect what you must. Even from yourself."
His hands trembled.
The light in his veins erupted. Merged. Split. Reforged.
Then—
[Genetic Marker Override Detected]
[Dybbuk Lineage Recognized]
[Species Updated: Vantablade / Dybbuk-Blooded]
[New Trait Unlocked: Resonant Synthesis – Passive]
Human side suppressed. Shadow legacy fractured. Eclipse awakening in motion.
Fade gasped as he opened his eyes.
The mirror beneath him was cracked—but in its reflection, his eyes now held violet spirals within the black. His breath steamed in the warm air. Around him, the bioluminescent moss began to swirl as if reacting to his heartbeat.
Footsteps.
Kaela and Zeyna approached. Darin and Arven just behind.
"Fade—are you alright?" Kaela asked, cautiously.
He stood up slowly. His body ached—but not from injury. From change.
Zeyna's eyes narrowed. "Something's different."
Fade didn't answer.
Because how could he explain that a sealed lineage had just awoken? That the whispers in his blood now harmonized with systems and shadows alike?
He could feel it—power not gained, but remembered.
He turned toward the mirror one last time. The cracks seemed to shimmer in acknowledgment.
"Let's move," he said.
As they returned to the group, Fade noticed something strange. The air around him reacted subtly. Insects moved slower. The light around his figure seemed softer—distorted. His presence was... synchronizing.
Not with the system. Not with the shadow. But with the world itself.
The Dybbuk blood had given him more than a title. It had given him connection.
He walked beside Zeyna.
She glanced sideways. "You're quieter than usual."
Fade kept walking. "I'm listening."
"To what?"
He looked up at the translucent leaves above.
"Everything."
Zeyna watched him for a moment longer. Then, almost too softly:
"You're not the same."
Fade didn't look at her. But he nodded once.
She gave a slight, amused breath. "Guess I better keep up, huh?"
Fade paused, then looked at her. His expression unreadable.
"You already do..."
As the group faded into the strange mists of Sector Delta-34, the mirror behind them quietly fractured further, releasing a final pulse of violet light.
Somewhere, beyond vision, a cloaked figure watched from the trees.
He smiled.
"It has begun."