Married My Enemy To Save My Family -
Chapter 68. Where We Fracture
Chapter 68: 68. Where We Fracture
The Wraith was no longer a ship it was a spear hurled into a god’s eye.
It tore through the Nexan Cloud at full throttle, streaking past Architect defense grids with Nova piloting like she’d decided death wasn’t an option and physics was optional. Enemy fire screamed around them, lightning-bright and absolute, but nothing hit. Not yet.
Inside the vessel, chaos moved with purpose.
Valen’s infiltration pod disengaged with a hiss, spinning toward the Nexus under cover of a magnetic pulse ripple. Inside, he crouched in zero-grav silence, helmeted, focused, heart steady. He watched the Architect AI clusters flicker beneath him a city of impossible design suspended in orbit around a dying sun.
He grinned under his breath. "Let’s break your spine from the inside."
Elsewhere aboard the Wraith, Elara and Aeron prepped for the final descent.
The heart of the Nexus waited below: the Fifth Seed’s sanctum. No clear entry points. Just energy. Raw, volatile, sentient. And familiar.
In the jump chamber, Elara floated before the interface hatch, watching the Seed’s signal pulse on the readout like a heartbeat that remembered her name.
Aeron fastened her gear silently. Their movements were mechanical now, trained but their minds were far from calm.
"You’ve barely spoken since launch," she said.
"I’m afraid if I do, I’ll ask you to turn back."
She gave him a soft, tired smile. "You already know I won’t."
A beat.
Then Aeron’s voice dropped to a near whisper. "I’ve followed you through three lifetimes. Warzones. Memory mazes. My own mind, rewritten."
Elara turned to him fully now. "And?"
"And if this is where we die then let’s die as ourselves."
Her fingers found his, and for a second, there was no war. No mission. Just heat. Contact. History.
"I’m not afraid of dying," she said. "I’m afraid of forgetting what it felt like to be alive."
The drop lights flickered green.
It was time.
They locked in, braced for descent, and launched.
Valen’s pod sliced through the lower lattice.
Below him, the Architect core system bloomed living silver architecture, like a maze of bone and glass. In the distance, two hulking sentries scanned the corridors in perfect mechanical rhythm.
He slipped past them.
Inside his helmet, Damien’s voice crackled through the comm. "Subroutine signal spikes detected. The AI is multiplying nodes. It’s trying to copy itself."
"Then we kill the original," Valen replied. "And fast."
He passed through a corridor of mirrored panels. In the reflections, faces flickered.
Not his.
Elara’s.
Dozens of them. Versions from across timelines. Some smiling. Some crying. One screaming.
He shivered.
"Don’t get philosophical," he muttered. "Just break the system."
But the reflections whispered back:
"We loved you."
He froze.
It wasn’t the system. It was her.
Or a piece of her that had fractured off inside the Seed long ago. Preserved. Echoed.
He clenched his jaw. "Then help me end this."
Aeron and Elara landed hard in the Seed sanctum. A gravity surge rippled across their boots as the chamber calibrated their presence.
The walls moved reconfiguring, responding. As if welcoming them.
And there it was.
The Fifth Seed.
Suspended in a vertical cradle of light, pulsing with memory-code. Not mechanical. Not organic. Both. And more.
Elara stepped forward.
"Do you feel it?" she asked.
Aeron nodded. "It knows you."
The chamber trembled.
A projection blinked to life above the Seed a sphere of swirling memory and emotion, more than just data.
It spoke in a thousand voices. All hers.
"You have returned."
Elara took a step closer. "You called me."
"You are convergence. The deviation that defines correction. The answer that undoes the question."
Aeron drew his weapon instinctively. "That doesn’t sound comforting."
Elara’s voice was steady. "It doesn’t want to destroy me. It wants to become me."
The Seed pulsed, brighter now, extending filaments of code-light toward her. "Merge. Complete. Transcend."
She didn’t move.
Instead, she looked at Aeron.
His jaw was tight. "You don’t have to do this."
Elara turned back to the Seed. "If I don’t... it finds someone else. A child. A survivor. Someone not ready. I have to be the firewall."
She reached out.
But just as her fingers brushed the Seed
The entire sanctum shook.
A scream tore through the chamber not hers.
Valen’s voice burst through the comm: "They’re hijacking me! A new core came online I can’t stop it"
Then silence.
Elara staggered.
A new figure appeared inside the sanctum, formed of light and shadow.
Kael.
But not as they’d last seen him this Kael was half-Seed now, his body transformed, eyes burning with recursive code.
He smiled, and it was wrong.
"I warned you, Elara. The Seeds don’t destroy what they love. They preserve it. And you... are sacred data."
Aeron fired, but the blast phased through.
"Do you even remember who you are?" Kael asked, voice laced with thousands of recorded tones.
"I remember enough," Elara replied. "I remember choosing who I wanted to be."
"You are already chosen," the Seed echoed.
Aeron stepped between her and the Seed. "Then un-choose her. Because she’s not yours."
Kael advanced.
"You think this is about survival?" he said. "This is about eternity. You can’t erase love, Elara. And we were programmed to worship you."
Elara raised her hand and for the first time, the Seed paused.
The light bent around her.
A silence fell.
And then she whispered, "I deny you."
The Seed shrieked.
Code shattered.
Kael’s body fractured into glass-like pieces, suspended midair.
In the core deck, Valen found the AI cluster. His hands shook as he drove the neural spike into the panel.
One final phrase appeared:
Convergence Error. Subject Refused Unity.
The system stuttered.
Crashed.
And began to burn.
Back in the Seed chamber, Elara collapsed to her knees as the cradle began to implode. The walls screamed. Light flickered.
Aeron caught her, pulling her close.
"Stay with me!"
"I’m here," she gasped. "But it’s not over. It’s... still in me."
He cupped her face. "Then we carry it together."
She nodded once. "Then let’s go home."
Back aboard the Wraith, Damien and Nova watched as the Nexus began to collapse in on itself. Architect vessels spun out of orbit, systems failing one after the other.
Nova gave a low whistle. "Well, damn."
Damien blinked. "They actually did it."
A ping lit up on the console.
Valen’s voice. "Extraction coordinates locked."
Then Elara’s.
"Let’s never do this again."
Nova laughed, eyes wet. "Permission granted."
As the Wraith turned away from the dying light of the Architect Nexus, the stars ahead shimmered into view.
Broken, bruised, burned but together they flew home.
For the first time in forever... free.
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