Crystalline particles shimred across the battlefield, a deadly web pulsing with strange, interconnected energy. My hypercognition flared, pinpointing each one—a map of bombs suspended in the air. I didn’t know Abdu’s next move, but the advantage was mine now. Sword in hand, I charged, weaving through the glittering haze, my blade aid for his heart.
Then, a jagged pain erupted in my back.
It struck like a razor, slicing deep, tearing through muscle and bone. I stumbled, gasping, the world tilting as blood gushed down my spine. My vision dimd, strength leaking away with every heartbeat. Dropping to one knee, I gripped the crystalline spear embedded in and yanked it free. Blood poured, warm and relentless, pooling beneath .
“You’re in my cage!” Abdu’s voice thundered, thick with triumph. “There’s nowhere left to run!”
Another spear materialized, forged from the particles in an instant, and plunged into my chest. I choked, realization dawning—he’d trapped in a particle bomb cage, a prison of his own making. The air itself was his weapon, unpredictable and everywhere.
Clenching my teeth, I focused inward, calling on 2.0. Warmth surged through my veins as the rapid healing kicked in, flesh knitting together under the serum’s power. But it wasn’t effortless. My body burned through its reserves—proteins, energy, everything—leaving weaker with each nd. Three, maybe four wounds like that, and I’d have nothing left to give.
I staggered to my feet, only for another spear to rip through my chest. Then another. And another. A barrage of crystalline lances tore into from all angles, relentless, as if the particles themselves had turned against . Blood stread from countless gashes, my mind clouding, the battlefield fading to a crimson blur.
Is this it? I thought, knees buckling. The end?
I didn’t want to die. But options were gone.
{
‘rge with !’
2.0’s voice cut through the haze, urgent and sharp.
“rge?” I rasped, confusion battling the pain. “What are you talking about?”
‘I’ve told you—I’m wired into your sensory networks, but you’re still using them too. We’re sharing the sa pathways. If we rge, we can double your sensory speed—reflexes, perception, everything.’
A trap? A trick to seize my body? My thoughts raced.
‘I can hear your thoughts. You’re doubting ,’ 2.0 snapped. ‘But you’re out of choices. We’ll die if this keeps up—you know it.’
He was right. The bastard was in my head, and I couldn’t read his. But death lood closer than doubt.
“Alright,” I growled. “Do it.”
}
A shiver coursed through as our minds fused, like two flas rging into one. My senses sharpened—every sound, every flicker of movent, every breath of air beca vivid, electric. I was still , still in control, but stronger, sohow. The wounds closed faster, though my reserves dwindled dangerously.
I rose, unsteady but defiant. Abdu’s eyes narrowed, suspicion flickering across his face.
“How are you healing so fast?” he snarled, stalking closer, his crystal arm gleaming. “No matter—I’ll shatter you into pieces if that’s what it takes!”
The air shimred, and spears rained down from every direction. I braced to dodge, but my body moved before I could think—twisting, sidestepping, flowing through the onslaught with uncanny precision. Again and again, I evaded, untouched, as if guided by instinct I didn’t own.
{
“What’s happening?” I demanded silently. “Are you controlling ?”
‘Relax,’ 2.0 replied, calm amid the chaos. ‘I’ve hijacked your reflex system, sped it up. You fight and I’ll keep us alive.’
Unease prickled, but it worked. I shoved it aside and advanced, threading through the particle field. Abdu hurled more spears, but I danced past them, closing the gap. My sword flashed, striking his left leg.
He lurched, too slow—his energy spent on the cage, his speed faltering.
“It’s over, Abdu!” I roared, blade poised. “Surrender now!”
Blood poured from the deep gash in Abdu’s leg, a scarlet river staining the ground. Yet his face was a mask of iron—eyes blazing with stubborn resolve, jaw clenched tight. With a sharp flick of his wrist, crystalline shards flared to life, weaving across the wound like a spider’s web of light. The cut sealed shut, leaving a jagged, shimring scar, and he straightened, undeterred by the pain.
Then, as if a switch flipped, he charged—a wild beast cornered and desperate.
His crystal spear slashed through the air with reckless abandon, each thrust fueled by raw fury rather than finesse. Sweat glistened on his brow, his breaths ragged, but he didn’t relent.
I wove through his strikes, my body fluid and precise, untouchable despite his ferocity.
Frustration twisted his features into a snarl. With a guttural roar, he shifted tactics. The earth shuddered beneath us, and jagged crystal walls erupted from the ground—towering, razor-edged prisms that caged in. The air thrumd with their energy, a deadly maze shimring in the dim light. Abdu vaulted from one spire to the next, his right arm morphing into a pointed spear, its tip glinting as it aid for my heart. His speed had faltered, but he was still a blur—too fast to dismiss.
I leapt back, springing from wall to wall, the crystals singing beneath my boots. Our velocities aligned, a lethal ballet in a shifting, three-dinsional battlefield. My sword t his spear in a blinding clash—and with a sharp crack, it splintered into glittering shards. Undeterred, Abdu surged forward, a tempest of violence.
His crystal spear flashed in one hand while his other fist pumled toward , each blow a honed killing stroke. Years as a rcenary had sharpened his skill into a brutal art—every punch, every thrust designed to end . I parried and dodged, but his experience lood like an unbreakable wall.
Yet ti betrayed him. His movents dulled, his once-blinding speed grinding to a halt. His chest heaved, breaths shallow and strained, the fire in his eyes flickering.
I lowered my fists, eting his gaze head-on.
“You’ve damned the world because of your pain,” I said, my voice steady despite the ache pulsing through . “I can’t fathom what you endured, but I’ve seen it too—the light in people’s hearts, how easily it darkens. Death isn’t the answer.”
Abdu’s expression softened, but his voice rasped with bitter conviction. “All my life, I’ve searched for aning. I thought the flaw was mine—until I saw the truth. An endless spiral of suffering, carved into us from ages past. Each generation bleeds for the next, chasing the delusion that our pain buys their peace.” He stepped closer, his eyes hollow pits. “We’re born broken. Evil festers in us all. The only cure is to wipe it clean.”
His words sank like stones, cold and final. Then, in a flash, he lunged—his crystal spear piercing my gut. Pain seared through , white-hot and blinding, as he leaned in, his head resting on my shoulder.
“There’s only one way to kill evil,” he whispered, his breath hot against my ear. “Erase every human soul. That’s my purpose.”
Blood trickled from the wound, my vision swimming, but I refused to break. “This rage...” I murmured back, my voice trembling yet firm, “it’s blackened your soul. You’re blind to everything else.” He pulled back slightly, confusion flickering in his gaze.
“Everything else?” he asked.
“You see only darkness,” I said, “but there’s light too—love, compassion. You can’t rip that from the world.”
The mont stretched, taut and heavy. Then, with all I had left, I drove one of his crystal swords through his chest. The blade plunged deep, piercing his heart. His eyes widened, a fleeting shadow—regret, perhaps—crossing his face before the light snuffed out.
“It’s over, you can now rest in peace.” I said, my voice thick with sorrow. “I swear, I’ll find justice without spilling innocent blood.” He’d been our friend once, but he’d left no choice.
His body slid off my sword, collapsing in a heap. As I watched, it hardened into a crystalline statue—a silent testant to his twisted mission.
My own strength fled, the battle’s toll slamming into like a wave. I dropped to my knees, the world tilting, my muscles numb and useless. Darkness crept in, swallowing whole.
I’d pushed beyond my limits, and now there was nothing left. Before I could grasp another thought, I was gone.
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