The horizon remained still.
For hours the fragnt monolith and the Walker exchanged nothing but quiet pulses—slow waves of light rippling across the ash plains.
No attacks.
No distortions.
Only patterns.
Inside the command shelter, Mara barely blinked as streams of data scrolled across her monitors.
“They’re definitely structured,” she said. “Repeating sequences. Layered modulation.”
Lyra rubbed the dust from her brow. “Translation?”
Mara shook her head. “Not yet. But it’s not random. It’s closer to... mathematics.”
Kael stood silent beside the screen.
“Every intelligent system begins communication the sa way,” Mara continued. “Numbers. Ratios. Universals.”
Lyra frowned. “You’re telling the thing that tried to tear us apart yesterday is now doing first-contact protocol?”
“No,” Kael said quietly.
“They’re testing whether we can communicate.”
Outside, the Walker shifted again.
Its fractures glowed brighter as a broad white wave spread outward across the colony.
The fragnt monolith answered instantly.
A violet pulse traveled across the ground like liquid lightning.
The two waves t above the trench.
Instead of colliding—
they braided together.
Mara’s monitors erupted with new data.
“Oh— that’s new.”
“What?” Lyra asked.
“They’re overlapping resonance fields. Interference patterns.”
Kael narrowed his eyes. “aning?”
“They’re creating shared space.”
Lyra blinked. “You an like... a channel?”
Mara nodded slowly.
“Exactly like that.”
Across the colony, people stepped outside their shelters.
The sky above the trench shimred faintly where white and violet resonance waves intertwined.
It looked almost like an aurora forming in the ash-filled night.
No one spoke.
Even the wind had stilled.
The Walker took another step forward.
Then another.
Until it stood directly at the trench’s edge.
The fragnt monolith responded by brightening—not aggressively, but steadily.
Like a beacon acknowledging a signal.
Lyra’s hand drifted toward the pistol at her belt.
“Tell we’re not about to let that thing walk out there.”
Kael didn’t answer imdiately.
Mara’s voice broke in through comms again.
“The resonance overlap just stabilized.”
“aning?” Kael asked.
“It’s forming a harmonic window.”
“A what?”
“A space where both systems can exchange complex information without interference.”
Lyra muttered, “That sounds like a very fancy word for trap.”
But the Walker stepped forward anyway.
One massive foot crossed the trench.
White fractures blazing like molten glass.
The colony held its breath.
The fragnt monolith pulsed once.
Soft.
Almost welcoming.
Kael felt the pressure in his skull return—not painful this ti.
More like distant vibration.
Mara gasped.
“I’m picking up cognitive echoes.”
Lyra stiffened. “Define echoes.”
“Thought patterns,” Mara whispered.
Kael’s gaze hardened.
“They’re not just talking to each other.”
Another pulse spread across the braided resonance field.
This ti the vibration sharpened.
Kael saw it instantly—
mories flickering at the edge of his mind.
The colony.
The trench.
The war.
But also—
sothing else.
A distant image.
Endless black stone plains.
Thousands of monoliths rising from silent ground.
Ancient.
Dormant.
Waiting.
Lyra staggered slightly.
“You saw that too... didn’t you?”
Kael nodded slowly.
Mara’s voice trembled.
“The resonance channel isn’t just exchanging signals.”
“It’s sharing perception.”
The Walker stood unmoving in the harmonic window.
White light steady.
The fragnt monolith pulsed again.
The vision deepened.
Not a threat.
Not an attack.
A ssage.
Kael felt the realization settle heavily in his chest.
“They’re showing us where they ca from.”
Lyra looked toward the glowing horizon.
“Why?”
Another pulse answered.
Calm.
asured.
Ancient.
Mara whispered the conclusion before anyone else could.
“Because this monolith...”
Her monitors flickered with impossible coordinates.
“...isn’t alone.”
Far beyond the ash plains—
beyond their broken world—
sothing vast had just noticed humanity listening.
And now that the conversation had begun...
It might never end.
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