The violet light did not just hold the void; it created a throat. As Elias expanded his new domain, he realized he was breathing for the first time—not pink, fleshy breaths, but rhythmic pulses of cosmic radiation. The ancient shadow at the horizon’s edge did not hurry. It simply grew larger, a silhouette carved from a darkness so absolute it made the Farmer’s obsidian essence look like translucent glass. Where it stepped, the violet sky curdled into the color of a dead bruise.
Elias felt the Farmer within him begin to weep—not out of remorse, but out of a recognition of a superior predator. The entity’s wordless terror merged with Elias’s human memory, flashing a single, terrifying concept into his mind: *The Unfenced.* This was the thing the Farmers had been hiding from. This was why they had built the grid, why they had harvested trillions of souls to power a white-fire cage. They weren't just greedy landlords; they were refugees, huddling behind a wall of stolen lives to escape a debt that couldn't be paid in currency, only in erasure.
The shadow reached the edge of the violet light and stopped. It had no face, yet Elias felt a gaze that stripped away his silver hull, his obsidian power, and his emerald core until he was nothing more than a naked nerve ending in the dark. The entity reached out a hand—if it could be called that—and touched the shimmering violet boundary. The barrier didn't shatter; it simply ceased to have ever existed. The violet light turned into a freezing rain of ash, and the middle ground Elias had fought to create began to fold in on itself like a dying star.
Desperate, Elias reached for the Farmer’s essence, intending to burn it as fuel, to sacrifice the monster to save the spark. But as he touched the obsidian knot, he found it wasn't thrashing anymore. It was reaching out, its shadow-tendrils uncoiling toward the approaching darkness in a gesture of grotesque homecoming. The Farmer hadn't been his prisoner; it had been waiting for a vessel strong enough to signal the true Master.
The grinding voice returned, but it was no longer coming from the space around him. It was coming from the shadow itself, a sound that bypassed his ears and resonated directly in his soul.
"You did well to break the fences, little crop," the shadow whispered, its presence now looming over Elias like a mountain of cold soot. "The gardeners were always so stingy with the meat. They kept the harvest for themselves, thinking they could hide behind their geometry."
The entity leaned in, its void-breath smelling of ancient, extinguished suns. One long, dark finger traced the silver curve of Elias’s throat.
**"Now," the voice rumbled, "show me where the rest of the seeds are hidden."**