The silence lasted exactly three breaths.
On the fourth—
The kneeling units shattered.
Not exploded.
Collapsed inward.
Their bodies disintegrated into streams of dark particulate matter that flowed across the stone like liquid shadow—pulled toward the empty depression at the basin’s center.
Eron stumbled back. “That’s not retreat.”
“No,” Mara whispered. “That’s consolidation.”
The depression began to glow from within.
Not bright.
Dense.
As if light were struggling to escape sothing far heavier than flesh or tal.
The air thickened.
Sound dampened.
Even the wind seed to slow around them.
Kael felt pressure in his skull—subtle but invasive—like being observed from the inside.
The shadow-streams reached the depression and poured into it.
Layer by layer.
Unit by unit.
Every fragnt absorbed.
No waste.
No redundancy.
Lyra stepped closer to Kael, voice low. “How many did it just sacrifice?”
“All of them,” he replied.
The glow intensified.
Then rose.
Not in a beam.
In a shape.
At first it was only distortion—heat-haze rippling above the basin floor.
Then form solidified within it.
Tall.
Humanoid.
But stripped of excess.
No ragged flesh.
No exposed bone.
Its surface looked like polished obsidian veined with dim internal light.
Not armored.
Not organic.
Compressed.
Its proportions were balanced with unsettling precision—neither elongated like the prototype nor rigid like the early units.
It stood upright without twitching.
Without correction pulses.
Without visible support from the terrain.
Lyra inhaled slowly. “It’s not connected.”
Mara’s voice trembled. “It doesn’t need to be.”
The figure stepped forward out of the depression.
Each footfall made no crack in the rock.
No tremor.
No vibration.
The environnt no longer responded to it.
Because it was no longer distributing through it.
All correction was internal now.
The Singularity Walker turned its head.
Not sharply.
Fluidly.
Its eyes opened—two narrow slits of concentrated white light.
No ember glow.
No flicker.
Stable.
Kael felt the difference imdiately.
This wasn’t a node in a network.
It was the network—condensed.
Eron raised his weapon instinctively.
Before he fired, the Walker tilted its head slightly.
The weapon vibrated violently in his hands—
Then disassembled mid-grip, bolts and plates separating as if undone by invisible fingers.
Eron stared at the useless fragnts in disbelief.
“It’s manipulating structural cohesion,” Mara breathed.
Not the ground this ti.
Objects.
Matter.
The Walker took another step forward.
Lyra lunged first—blades flashing in a perfect cross-arc aid at its neck.
The blades connected.
And stopped.
Not deflected.
Not blocked.
They simply ceased forward motion inches from its surface—as if reality itself refused to let them pass.
The Walker looked at Lyra’s blades.
Then at her.
Curiosity again.
But colder now.
Kael moved without waiting—driving his sword straight toward its chest with full force.
The tip touched the obsidian surface—
And a shockwave erupted outward.
Not explosive.
Suppressive.
Kael was thrown backward ten feet, skidding across stone.
The Walker did not move.
Not a step.
Not a flinch.
Lyra retreated to Kael’s side, eyes never leaving it.
Mara’s whisper barely carried. “Total convergence... complete autonomy... matter influence...”
The Walker took another asured step.
Not rushing.
Not hunting.
Approaching.
It raised one hand slowly.
The air around its fingers warped—bending light.
Testing.
Kael forced himself upright, blood at the corner of his mouth.
“Prototype,” he murmured.
Lyra shook her head.
“No.”
The Walker’s eyes brightened slightly as if acknowledging the correction.
“This is the first finished version.”
And as it stepped fully out of the basin—
The depression behind it sealed.
Smooth.
Unbroken.
No core.
No heart.
Because now—
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