The battle reached its breaking point, spiraling into a storm that tore through Khatia's surface. Each collision between Forrest and Magzorha sent shockwaves through the sky, rupturing the foundations of the Emperor's ordered world.
Dr. Emma Forrest felt the shift—not just in herself, but in the planet itself. The WoodDust no longer obeyed Magzorha's will, but it wasn't fully free either. It was struggling, erratic, reacting to its master's absence without direction.
She took a breath—and let go.
Golden energy erupted outward, consuming her form, reshaping rather than replacing.
"This is life," she roared, her voice carrying across the battlefield.
She struck.
Her fist met Magzorha's chest with the force of a collapsing star. His armor fractured, his form splitting apart as cracks ran deep through his existence. Light seeped from within him, his carefully controlled reality unable to contain the unpredictable force of life itself.
"No…" Magzorha whispered, his voice now tinged with something approaching disbelief. "I… am… perfect…"
But perfection was an illusion. Life refused to be controlled.
With a final pulse of golden energy, Magzorha shattered. His essence fragmented, dissolving into the void—carried away by winds that had never touched Khatia's sterile surface.
Silence followed. Not of peace, but of uncertainty.
Then the tremors began.
The planet, severed from its master, convulsed violently. Cities collapsed in uneven decay, some sinking into the depths, others tearing apart under conflicting forces.
The WoodDust was not simply reviving Khatia—it was struggling to define what came next.
The Seedkeepers stood amidst the chaos, watching as patches of golden vegetation emerged sporadically across the ruins. Trees burst through steel frameworks, vines wrapped themselves around shattered machinery—but the world was unstable, unfinished, still adapting.
Dr. Forrest descended from the sky, golden light dimming as she returned to herself. Her feet touched the ground—a surface caught between metal and moss, struggling for identity.
Markus wiped blood from his forehead, his body aching. He turned to see Ethan still recovering from Magzorha's earlier attack, clutching his ribs as he forced himself to sit up.
"What… happened?" Ethan murmured, his breath still shallow.
Forrest studied the landscape. It wasn't Khatia, but it wasn't something new yet, either.
"Life found a way," she murmured. "But it's… struggling to find balance."
Chloe holstered her weapons, watching in stunned silence as entire sections of the planet remained in flux—some crumbling, others rebuilding.
"So what happens now?" she asked. "To Earth? To Khatia?"
Forrest knelt beside a fractured metal pillar, brushing away dust to reveal a single glowing seed embedded within. It pulsed with slow, irregular energy—unsure, unstable.
"I don't know," she admitted. "For the first time in centuries, this world has a choice. But that choice… won't come easily."
From the ruins, the surviving K'tharr emerged. Some stood frozen, terrified of the disorder around them. Others reached out hesitantly, their fingers brushing against leaves they had never seen before.
Yet, others looked upon the chaos and began searching for order.
Far beyond Khatia's atmosphere, on Earth, something stirred.
The WoodDust had awakened. And the consequences had only begun.