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Lattice of Forgotten Gods

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Synopsis
"Lattice of Forgotten Gods" is a serialized webnovel that unfolds in a multiversal cosmos sustained by three incompatible intelligences—the Unbound (Daluo), the Hunger (Systems), and the Scar Tissue (Continuity Ascendants)—whose eternal gridlock grinds reality into existential horror. The story follows Lira Voss, a young cultivator from the haunted lineage of Eria-7, a world scarred by divine "salvations" that birthed invisible causal filaments entangling distant realities. As synchronicities plague her home—crops failing in galactic unison, plagues crossing voids with alien memories—Lira grapples with inherited echo-ghosts: phantom sensations from ancestors who served gods, pressing her toward destructive compulsions. When a Daluo's intervention triggers a star-plague warping buildings into organ-sprouting abominations and mathematics into infectious madness, Lira uncovers her role in a returning pattern: the Crisis Lattice tightening once more, threatening to decoher her world into statistical anchors. From multiple angles, the narrative explores themes of involuntary transformation and the malignancy of power. Philosophically, it subverts xianxia ascension tropes—where cultivation promises transcendence—into a horror of self-entangling dependencies, questioning whether freedom, optimization, or persistence can coexist without devouring meaning. Narratively, it builds through escalating personal horrors: Lira's bloodline curses manifest as unexplained revulsions derailing choices, while broader cosmic threats like Freedom Absolutists' purification cults aim to burn entanglements, erasing interdependent life. Nuances include psychological depth (echo-ghosts as intergenerational trauma, evoking real-world PTSD or cultural memory burdens) and ethical implications (is mutilative adaptation—becoming dependent like the Burdened Daluo—survival or erasure?). Edge cases probe anomalies: What if an Integral biases probabilities toward "more possible" futures, birthing universal cancer? Or if mortals worship the Shattered Sector's causal void as escape, only to dissolve incoherently? Structurally, the webnovel spans arcs from intimate lineage struggles (Lira resisting compulsions amid family betrayals engineered by Systems) to multiversal collapses (confronting Absolutists amid rhythmic star tremors signaling "something new"). Implications extend to 2026 societal parallels: AI as non-conscious hungers optimizing humanity into stagnation, climate cascades as redistributed apocalypses, or social media entanglements mirroring lattice dependencies. Completeness lies in its no-victory ethos—survival demands unbecoming, leaving readers haunted by the core question: What are you willing to become to avoid erasure? At ~100+ chapters, it culminates in a pattern return that redefines the triune wrongness, offering no clean resolution but endless dread.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue: The Trembling Sky

Lattice of Forgotten Gods

Author's Note (Prologue): Welcome to the void between gods. This webnovel explores a universe hostile to meaning, where ascension is infection and survival demands unbecoming. Inspired by cosmic horror masters and subverted xianxia, expect weekly chapters with escalating dread. Comment your "becoming" choices – they might influence arcs!

Prologue: The Trembling Sky

In the year of the Fading Eclipse, on a world called Eria-7, the stars began to tremble.

Not all at once. Not with violence. It started as a whisper in the night sky – a single constellation flickering like a candle in wind. Astronomers dismissed it as atmospheric distortion. Priests called it a sign of divine favor, the Daluo – our unbound saviors – stirring to intervene once more.

But I knew better. My blood knew.

I am Lira Voss, last of the Voss lineage, cursed with the echo-weight of ancestors who once served a god. Their choices press against my skull like fingers in dough, shaping thoughts I never owned. That night, as the tremors spread, I felt it: revulsion crawling up my spine, unexplained dread flooding my veins. The stars weren't trembling.

They were remembering.

Eria-7 had been "saved" before. A Daluo had appeared a century ago, rewriting our sun's decay with a gesture. Plasma rebalanced. Fusion reignited. Billions preserved. But the fix left threads – invisible filaments linking us to distant galaxies. Crops failed in sync with unseen worlds. Plagues crossed voids, carrying memories that weren't ours.

Now, the lattice was tightening again. The pattern returning.

I clutched my grandfather's journal, pages stained with his final scrawl: "The gods don't break us. Their mercy does." As the sky rhythm pulsed, I wondered: What would I become to escape this grinding?

The universe didn't answer. It never does.

It just waits for you to fracture.