Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 56 — The Shape of Hope from GOD OF DECEPTION, a Fantasy novel by MortalSoul.

Chapter 56 — The Shape of Hope

The Collapse Front reached the forgotten enclaves eight days later.

Humanity t it together.

Not perfectly.

Not heroically.

Not with dramatic speeches or impossible weapons suddenly appearing at the last second.

The Human Network t the approaching darkness the sa way it t everything else—

Through millions of ordinary people refusing to abandon each other.

And sohow—

that changed reality itself.

The synchronization pathways surrounding forgotten enclave space blazed brighter than ever before while evacuation corridors stretched through dinsional space like glowing arteries carrying civilization away from extinction.

Entire worlds moved.

That was the terrifying scale of it.

Cities dismantled themselves into transport modules. Cultural archives uploaded across synchronization networks. Families boarded ships carrying generations of history compressed into mory vaults and old photographs.

The Human Network transford evacuation into collective survival.

No world evacuated alone.

The synchronization architecture adapted dynamically around refugee movent, reshaping pathways in real ti while civilian volunteers from hundreds of civilizations coordinated housing, food systems, education centers, and emotional stabilization networks.

Humanity turned apocalypse logistics into community building.

Honestly?

Still absurd.

And the Watchers hated every second of it.

The black Collapse Front spread across forgotten space projections like living night devouring stars one by one. Entire regions of reality dimd beneath it while synchronization echoes from lost pathways vanished forever.

The Front wasn’t rely destruction.

It was erasure.

Space itself stopped behaving normally near advancing Watcher density.

Stars dimd.

Dinsions destabilized.

Reality beca thinner.

Astra projected the phenonon continuously above First Light’s central coordination plaza.

"Localized existential degradation increasing near Collapse boundaries."

Blue calculations sward around her holographic form.

"Current models indicate the Watchers consu dinsional coherence itself."

Dorian looked exhausted enough to transcend mortality entirely.

"So the apocalypse is literally eating reality."

Astra paused briefly.

"...acceptable summary."

Lyra pointed dramatically.

"Finally. A cosmic horror description with understandable branding."

Fair.

The synchronization pathways trembled overhead continuously while ships from hundreds of worlds crossed them without stopping. First Light beca less a city and more a living convergence point between civilizations.

Every hour new refugees arrived.

And every hour the Human Network sohow found room for them.

Not because resources magically appeared.

Because people kept sharing what little they had.

That part still shocked forr centralized civilizations deeply.

The old systems managed scarcity through rigid allocation structures.

The Human Network managed scarcity through collective sacrifice.

ssier.

Emotionally painful.

But more resilient sohow.

Elena moved through refugee sectors almost constantly now. The saintess stopped sleeping properly weeks ago, though she denied it whenever anyone ntioned concern.

The synchronization architecture reacted to her presence more strongly every day.

Silver resonance patterns spread through emotional stabilization pathways automatically whenever Elena entered overwheld synchronization clusters.

Astra monitored it with increasing fascination.

"Saint-class resonance now integrated into approximately thirty-seven percent of active emotional buffering systems."

Elena looked mildly horrified hearing that.

"I’m not trying to beco infrastructure."

"You already are," Lyra replied imdiately.

Honestly rude.

Accurate.

But rude.

The synchronization pathways pulsed warmly around the refugee districts while children from forgotten enclaves experienced open skies for the first ti through shared atmospheric projections.

That beca another strange Human Network tradition.

Worlds with beautiful skies stread them continuously for displaced civilizations.

Ocean worlds shared wave sounds.

Forest civilizations transmitted rainfall through synchronization sensory systems.

Humanity collectively decided no refugee should forget beauty existed.

The Watchers responded by escalating harder.

Dark distortions spread through synchronization pathways nightly now.

Not massive assaults.

Whispers.

Fear amplification.

Exhaustion.

The emotional pressure beca relentless.

Communities already stretched thin started arguing more frequently.

Resource tensions increased.

Refugee integration beca ssy and painful exactly the way real survival always was.

And every single crisis tempted the Human Network toward centralization again.

Every. Single. Ti.

That was the part terrifying most lately.

The old administrators didn’t beco authoritarian because they were evil.

They beca authoritarian because ergencies made emotional openness feel dangerous.

The Human Network survived by staying emotionally connected—

which also ant civilization carried every wound collectively.

The burden felt enormous.

So nights I stood alone near First Light’s outer synchronization towers just listening to the network.

Not words.

Emotion.

Fear from collapsing outer sectors.

Grief from evacuated worlds.

Hope from newly connected communities.

Loneliness from civilizations still isolated beyond known routes.

Humanity carried all of it together now.

And honestly?

Sotis it felt impossible.

One night Elias found there staring at Collapse projections stretching across the stars.

The old engineer leaned against the synchronization railing beside quietly.

"You’re wondering whether the administrators were right."

Not a question.

I exhaled slowly.

"The Human Network hurts people."

The synchronization pathways dimd softly overhead.

"Everyone feels everything."

Elias nodded imdiately.

"Yes."

No denial.

No comforting lies.

The old engineer looked toward the refugee ships crossing the stars.

"Connection always hurts."

The synchronization architecture pulsed gently around us.

"The administrators weren’t wrong about that."

Silence stretched for a while.

Then I asked quietly—

"So why did they fail?"

Elias closed his remaining eye briefly.

"Because eventually they feared pain more than loneliness."

The synchronization pathways trembled softly.

"The old civilization optimized suffering out of society until people stopped needing each other emotionally."

The old engineer looked exhausted suddenly.

"And isolated civilizations die quietly."

That sentence stayed with for days afterward.

The Human Network wasn’t trying eliminate suffering.

It was trying ensure suffering never happened alone again.

Huge difference.

The Collapse Front reached the first forgotten enclave periter three days later.

Humanity watched it happen together.

Nareth Deep’s outer synchronization satellites vanished one by one beneath spreading darkness while evacuation fleets rushed civilians through unstable pathways barely holding reality together.

The synchronization architecture dimd painfully across connected worlds.

Because this ti—

people knew the worlds being lost personally.

The forgotten enclaves weren’t abstract casualty numbers anymore.

They were communities.

Friends.

Children who asked about sunlight.

Families who spent centuries underground keeping Earth alive through stories.

The Human Network made loss intimate.

And the Watchers exploited that viciously.

Despair surged across synchronization pathways hard enough to destabilize entire regions.

The emotional pressure felt crushing.

You cannot save everyone.

Worlds still die.

Connection only spreads grief further.

The whispers moved through the network continuously now.

Not loud.

Not obvious.

Worse.

Reasonable.

The synchronization pathways flickered heavily beneath spreading exhaustion.

Refugee populations broke down crying openly during evacuation broadcasts.

Communities argued about whether the Human Network actually improved survival or rely made extinction emotionally louder.

The old temptations returned again imdiately.

Restrict synchronization access.

Suppress emotional crossover.

Limit collective trauma exposure.

The sa cycle.

Again.

Always again.

Then sothing unexpected happened.

The civilian networks rebelled.

Not violently.

Emotionally.

People across the Human Network started creating morial pathways voluntarily.

Entire synchronization routes dedicated to preserving disappearing worlds before the Collapse Front consud them.

Artists recorded skies.

Children archived songs.

Communities shared histories across civilizations faster than the darkness could erase them.

The synchronization architecture exploded brighter than Astra’s systems considered theoretically possible.

Astra herself looked stunned.

"Collective cultural preservation activity exceeding all predictive models."

Blue pathways blazed across the stars.

"The Human Network is converting grief into synchronization reinforcent."

The realization spread slowly through connected civilizations.

The Watchers consud isolated worlds partly because isolated worlds disappeared completely when they died.

But the Human Network rembered.

Civilizations lost physical territory—

yet survived culturally through connection.

The Collapse Front could consu planets.

It struggled consuming civilizations carried inside millions of people simultaneously.

Interesting.

Very interesting.

The synchronization pathways strengthened dramatically around evacuation corridors.

Refugees arrived carrying more than survival supplies now.

They carried stories.

Music.

Art.

Languages.

Traditions imdiately spreading through connected worlds before extinction erased them.

The Human Network transford mory itself into resistance.

And the Watchers reacted violently.

The Collapse Front surged across forgotten space harder than ever before.

Reality distortions spread into evacuation pathways directly.

Ships vanished.

Entire synchronization corridors collapsed under dinsional pressure.

For the first ti since the shrine battle—

actual panic spread across the Human Network.

Raw.

Overwhelming.

Communities scread through synchronization channels as evacuation routes failed in real ti.

The emotional resonance hit like physical pain.

The synchronization architecture trembled dangerously.

Astra’s warnings exploded everywhere.

"Collective emotional destabilization critical."

Blue pathways flickered unstable across multiple sectors simultaneously.

"If synchronization collapse cascades further, large-scale network fragntation becos probable."

The Human Network reached its breaking point.

Not militarily.

Emotionally.

Too much grief.

Too much fear.

Too many worlds dying at once.

And suddenly—

the terrifying possibility erged clearly.

Maybe decentralized civilization couldn’t survive existential pressure after all.

Maybe the administrators centralized humanity because no emotionally open society could withstand extinction-level trauma.

The synchronization pathways dimd toward collapse.

People disconnected from channels voluntarily to stop feeling collective pain.

Communities withdrew emotionally.

Isolation instincts resurfaced everywhere.

The Watchers pushed harder.

The Collapse Front accelerated.

And humanity started fracturing.

Then—

children from the forgotten enclaves began singing.

The synchronization pathways froze strangely.

A small evacuation ship drifting through collapsing reality broadcasted the sound accidentally at first.

A simple underground song passed through generations of isolated civilizations.

A song about stars.

About sunlight.

About Earth.

One child sang.

Then another joined.

Then entire refugee ships.

The synchronization architecture brightened faintly.

The song spread across synchronization pathways.

Other civilizations recognized the lody sohow.

Not intellectually.

Emotionally.

Humanity answered instinctively.

Voices joined from hundreds of worlds.

Different languages.

Different species.

Sa song.

The synchronization pathways erupted.

Not taphorically.

Reality itself responded.

Blue light exploded across evacuation corridors brighter than ever before while collapsing synchronization routes stabilized violently against impossible pressure.

Astra stared at the calculations in visible disbelief.

"Collective emotional synchronization has exceeded historical administrator thresholds."

The holographic AI sounded almost afraid.

"Dinsional cohesion increasing."

The Collapse Front actually slowed.

Not slightly.

Visibly.

The black darkness pushing against evacuation routes trembled beneath the overwhelming synchronization surge.

Because suddenly—

humanity wasn’t rely sharing fear or grief.

Humanity shared identity.

Not empire.

Not hierarchy.

Belonging.

The forgotten enclaves carried Earth through darkness for five hundred years using stories.

Now the Human Network carried entire civilizations the sa way.

The Watchers scread across reality itself.

The synchronization pathways blazed like stars.

And for the first ti in recorded history—

the Collapse Front stopped advancing.

You are reading GOD OF DECEPTION Chapter 56 — The Shape of Hope on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

MAGUS INFINITE cover
Same genre

MAGUS INFINITE

BRICKTRADER ·Fantasy

ElricVossissixteenyearsold,tworanksaboveuseless,andhewakesuponehourbeforeeveryonearoundhimdies.TheCaelithMourneexpeditionhascampedatthebaseofasky-f...

Book of The Dead cover
Same genre

Book of The Dead

RinoZ ·Fantasy

Withonetouchofthestone,TyronreceiveshisClassandhislifechangesforever.Inan...Readmore Withonetouchofthestone,TyronreceiveshisClassandhislifechangesf...

MILF Paradise System cover
Trending now

MILF Paradise System

BeingOtaku ·Fantasy

[Warning:MatureContentR-18]LotsofMelons.OnlyNTRNetori-NoNetorare.Alexwasnineteen,acollegestudent,andapparentlytheuniversedecidedtocursehim…withasys...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.