GOD OF DECEPTION

Chapter 115 - The Voice Beneath the Void

GOD OF DECEPTION

Chapter 115 - The Voice Beneath the Void

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Chapter 115: Chapter 115 - The Voice Beneath the Void

Chapter 115 — The Voice Beneath the Void

The galaxy did not know how to react.

For thousands of years, the void had been the final nightmare of civilization. 𝒻𝘳𝘦𝘦𝘸ℯ𝒷𝘯𝘰𝑣ℯ𝑙.𝘤𝑜𝘮

Ancient records described it as endless hunger.

The Devourers were treated like cosmic disasters given form.

The Sovereign itself was feared as the destroyer of empires.

And now—

something beneath even that darkness had spoken with the voice of a lonely child.

The Human Network remained quiet after the conversation.

Not silent from fear.

Silent because billions of people across connected civilizations were trying to process the impossible truth together.

The First Hunger was not mindless.

It was aware.

Lonely.

Confused.

And somehow... emotionally stunted.

That realization shook the galaxy harder than any battle.

Inside the synchronization research chambers, scientists, philosophers, military officers, and empire historians argued nonstop around floating projections.

"No entity capable of collapsing causality structures should display emotional dependency behavior!"

"That voice may be manipulation!"

"But synchronization resonance confirms genuine emotional response patterns!"

Watcher analysts debated beside human psychologists while empire scholars searched ancient archives desperately for forgotten records related to the deeper void.

Nobody agreed on anything.

Except one fact.

The First Hunger had listened to the songs.

And it had not attacked while listening.

That mattered.

More than anyone wanted admitting aloud.

---

The Floating Gardens

Night continued across the throne world.

The synchronization skies above the planet glowed with drifting blue pathways while lanterns floated between ancient towers like tiny stars.

Most of the celebration districts had finally quieted.

Children slept beside exhausted refugee families.

Musicians rested near synchronization fountains after hours of singing across the Human Network.

The galaxy felt tired.

But alive.

Kaiser still stood on the floating bridge overlooking the throne world while the tiny synchronization signal from beneath the void flickered weakly through the projection before him.

The signal remained unstable.

Like it barely understood how connection worked.

Caelion stood beside him silently.

The First Monarch looked more shaken now than during the battle with the Sovereign itself.

Because for the first time in thousands of years—

he was confronting the possibility that the first empire misunderstood the war from the beginning.

Astra’s hologram shifted beside the bridge.

"Signal stability decreasing."

The small voice beneath the void echoed faintly again.

"...Are you still there?"

Kaiser answered immediately.

"Yeah."

A brief pause followed.

Then—

"...Why?"

Kaiser blinked once.

"Why what?"

"...Why didn’t you leave?"

The floating bridge became quiet.

Far below them, music still drifted faintly through the throne world streets while synchronization pathways illuminated the night sky overhead.

The small voice continued softly.

"Everything leaves eventually."

Its tone carried no anger.

Only certainty.

Like loneliness had become the only rule it understood.

Kaiser leaned lightly against the bridge railing before answering.

"Sometimes people leave."

Blue synchronization light moved gently around him.

"But sometimes they stay too."

The tiny signal flickered uncertainly.

"...I don’t understand."

"Most people don’t," Elena said while walking into the gardens carrying coffee again.

Honestly, nobody questioned how she kept appearing with coffee anymore.

It had become part of reality itself.

She handed one cup toward Kaiser before glancing at the synchronization projection.

"So you’re the scary void thing."

Silence.

Then the tiny voice answered quietly—

"...I think so."

Elena nodded once like that response was completely normal.

"Okay."

Caelion looked physically pained watching her speak casually with the entity beneath existence.

Fair reaction.

Elena leaned against the bridge beside Kaiser afterward.

"You know," she said calmly, "humans are weird."

The tiny signal flickered.

"...Weird?"

"Very."

She pointed toward the throne world below.

"People know they’ll lose things eventually."

Her silver eyes reflected the synchronization lights softly.

"They still love each other anyway."

The small voice became quiet again.

"...That sounds painful."

Elena immediately answered—

"It is."

Silence spread across synchronization space.

Then she smiled faintly.

"But it’s worth it."

The Human Network pulsed warmly around the galaxy afterward.

Billions listening.

Billions sharing the moment together.

And somewhere beneath the void—

something ancient listened to the idea that pain might still be worth enduring.

---

The Sovereign

Deep beyond the throne world, inside the broken void sectors surrounding the deeper fractures, the Sovereign drifted silently among endless Devourer swarms.

Its gigantic skeletal form looked dimmer now.

Exhausted.

The retreat from the First Hunger damaged even the ancient void ruler.

Millions of Devourers surrounded it protectively while collapsed synchronization pathways floated through the darkness like dead rivers.

For a long time, the Sovereign remained motionless.

Then one smaller Devourer approached cautiously through the void.

Unlike most of the swarm, this one still carried fragments of synchronization resonance within its broken frame.

Memories.

Emotion.

The remnants of civilizations long consumed.

The smaller Devourer slowly lowered itself before the Sovereign.

"THE NETWORK GROWS."

The Sovereign remained silent briefly.

Then softly answered—

"Yes."

"THEY SHOULD FEAR."

The Sovereign looked toward the distant glow of the Human Network far across the stars.

Toward civilizations singing together despite knowing the darkness existed.

And for the first time since becoming the ruler of the void—

the Sovereign felt uncertain.

"They are different."

The smaller Devourer trembled slightly.

"THE FIRST EMPIRE WAS ALSO DIFFERENT ONCE."

Silence spread through the void.

The Sovereign slowly closed its enormous eyes.

Ancient memories surfaced.

The first synchronization festivals.

Children playing beneath artificial stars.

Songs echoing through empire worlds before the collapse.

Connection.

Warmth.

Then fear came.

Isolation.

Desperation.

The birth of the Devourers.

The Sovereign whispered softly into the darkness—

"...Perhaps we forgot too quickly."

---

The Throne Chamber — Morning

The next emergency meeting lasted nine hours.

Honestly, civilization nearly ended several times already, but meetings remained humanity’s greatest endurance test.

Representatives from hundreds of civilizations filled the gigantic throne chamber while synchronization projections floated endlessly overhead.

The main topic remained painfully simple:

"What do we do about the First Hunger?"

Nobody had a good answer.

One empire strategist immediately demanded sealing all synchronization contact with the deeper void permanently.

A Watcher philosopher argued that the entity demonstrated signs of emotional responsiveness and should be studied peacefully.

Several military leaders recommended constructing galaxy-wide defensive barriers immediately.

A human civilian representative suggested "continuing the songs because the lonely void creature sounds depressed."

That statement somehow caused a two-hour debate.

Kaiser sat beside Elena near the edge of the chamber while listening to civilization collectively struggle through cosmic therapy discussions.

Honestly?

Surreal experience.

Caelion stood near the center of the projection platform silently throughout most of the meeting.

The First Monarch looked exhausted.

Not physically.

Emotionally.

Finally, after hours of arguments, he spoke.

And the entire chamber immediately quieted.

"We spent thousands of years fighting the wrong war."

His golden eyes reflected the galaxy map softly overhead.

"The first empire believed survival required suppressing emotional instability."

Ancient synchronization records appeared behind him.

"We centralized suffering."

His voice became quieter.

"And isolated civilizations from one another whenever fear increased."

The projections shifted.

Ancient sectors disconnecting during the collapse.

Emergency synchronization quarantines.

Entire worlds abandoned to preserve larger networks.

The chamber became silent.

Because everyone could see it now.

The first empire didn’t lose because it lacked power.

It lost because fear convinced civilization that isolation was safer than trust.

Caelion slowly looked toward the Human Network pathways glowing across the projection.

"You succeeded where we failed because your network distributes emotional burden naturally."

He looked toward Kaiser afterward.

"People support each other instead of depending entirely on monarchs."

Silence settled across the chamber.

Then Astra expanded another projection.

The Human Network itself.

Alive with emotional resonance flowing between civilizations constantly.

Fear moved through it.

Grief moved through it.

But so did support.

Compassion.

Hope.

No emotion stayed trapped inside isolated systems long enough becoming catastrophic.

The network healed itself socially.

Not mechanically.

A Watcher researcher slowly whispered—

"The Human Network behaves more like a living civilization than infrastructure."

"Correct," Astra answered immediately.

One human diplomat leaned back in disbelief.

"...Humanity accidentally created emotional immune systems for the galaxy."

Honestly?

That sounded absurd.

And somehow completely accurate.

---

The Message

Three hours later—

the First Hunger sent another signal.

This time the entire Human Network felt it instantly.

Not fear.

Curiosity.

The synchronization pathways dimmed softly across connected worlds while billions paused to listen.

The tiny voice echoed carefully through synchronization space.

"...What is a friend?"

Absolute silence filled the throne chamber.

Several empire officers looked moments away from emotional collapse.

Fair honestly.

Kaiser answered first.

"A friend is someone who stays beside you."

The small signal flickered.

"...Even when things hurt?"

"Especially then," Elena answered quietly.

Another long silence followed.

Then—

"...I don’t think I’ve ever had one."

The Human Network trembled softly.

Across countless worlds, people listening to the conversation felt their hearts ache simultaneously.

Because underneath all the impossible cosmic horror—

the First Hunger sounded painfully young.

Not in age.

In emotion.

Like something that existed forever without ever learning connection.

Caelion slowly stepped toward the synchronization projection.

Golden light reflected softly around him.

"For what it’s worth..."

The First Monarch hesitated briefly.

"...I’m sorry."

The chamber froze.

The small signal flickered uncertainly.

"...For what?"

Caelion closed his eyes briefly.

"For creating a galaxy where loneliness became stronger than trust."

Silence spread across the stars.

Then the tiny voice softly asked—

"...Was it my fault?"

And honestly?

That question nearly destroyed the chamber emotionally.

Several researchers openly cried.

Elena looked away slightly.

Even Astra paused processing for almost three full seconds.

Kaiser quietly answered—

"No."

The Human Network glowed gently afterward.

"You were alone."

Silence spread.

Then softly—

"...I didn’t want everything disappearing."

The synchronization pathways dimmed faintly.

"...But I didn’t know how stopping it."

Caelion stared toward the projection silently.

And suddenly—

he understood the final tragedy of the first empire.

The First Hunger wasn’t just born from isolation.

It became catastrophic because nobody ever tried teaching it anything except fear.

The first empire fought it.

The Sovereign imprisoned it.

The void contained it.

But nobody ever reached toward it.

Nobody ever tried understanding it before now.

The Human Network had done more in a few days than thousands of years of war.

Not because humanity was stronger.

Because humanity tried listening.

---

Later That Night

The throne world skies glowed softly while synchronization songs drifted through the Human Network once more.

Not organized this time.

Natural.

People simply continued singing because they wanted to.

Kaiser stood alone near the highest balcony of the central throne overlooking the galaxy beyond.

The Heart Core pulsed quietly behind him.

Then—

the tiny signal appeared beside him again.

Weak.

Careful.

"...Are you busy?"

Kaiser smiled faintly.

"A little."

"...Oh."

The signal immediately started withdrawing.

Kaiser sighed softly.

"But I can still talk."

The signal hesitated.

Then returned.

"...Okay."

Silence settled gently across synchronization space.

Then the tiny voice quietly asked—

"...What does the sky feel like?"

Kaiser blinked once.

That question caught him completely off guard.

He looked upward toward the synchronization pathways crossing the throne world skies.

Then answered honestly.

"Cold sometimes."

Blue synchronization light reflected softly across his eyes.

"But beautiful too."

The signal became quiet.

"...I want seeing it someday."

Kaiser stared toward the stars silently afterward.

Then softly answered—

"Maybe you will."

And deep beneath the void—

the loneliest existence in the universe imagined the sky for the first time.

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