The silence that followed Lydia’s revelation felt heavier than the chaos outside the planet.
Jayden did not speak imdiately. He stood there in the familiar living room of his family ho in Cloudbridge City, the walls that had once witnessed laughter and argunts now bearing the weight of truths that felt far too large to belong in a place so human. His mind moved quickly, but his heart lagged behind, trying to reconcile the calm woman standing before him with the implications of what she had just said.
"You’re not human," he repeated slowly, not as disbelief, but as confirmation. "Then what are you."
Lydia did not rush to answer. She looked around the room first, at the couch with its slightly faded fabric, at the frad photos on the wall, at the window where the sky outside glowed faintly with distant ergency shields. When she finally spoke, her voice was softer than before, layered with sothing that sounded almost like nostalgia.
"I am a construct," she said. "A programd figure, assembled from Nexus matter and logic. I was not born. I was designed. Every expression, every pause, every smile you saw from was intentional, calculated down to the smallest behavioral detail."
Ethan swallowed hard. "Then... everything you did with us. The shop. The conversations. The advice."
"They were real in function," Lydia replied gently. "Even if my origin was not."
Jayden folded his arms slowly, grounding himself. "Designed for what."
"For you," she said without hesitation. "Specifically for you."
That answer landed harder than any system notification ever had.
"I was sent to Earth before your rise truly began," Lydia continued, her eyes never leaving his. "My role was simple in description and complex in execution. I was to create the conditions necessary for your ascent to begin smoothly, to place the first pieces on the board without revealing the ga itself, and most importantly, to stabilize your morale for monts like this."
Jayden let out a short breath through his nose. "You an you were there to make sure I didn’t break."
"Yes," Lydia said calmly. "Confidence under pressure is not instinctive. It is built. And you needed to believe in yourself long before the universe forced you to act."
Jayden’s gaze sharpened. "Who made you."
For the first ti since she appeared, Lydia hesitated.
The room felt different in that pause, as if sothing unseen had stepped closer, listening. Seconds passed. Then more. Ethan shifted uneasily, glancing between them.
Jayden did not push. He waited.
When Lydia finally spoke again, her voice carried a subtle gravity that had not been there before.
"The sa entity that created The Guide."
Jayden felt sothing click deep in his mind.
The term was not new. That was what unsettled him the most.
The Guide.
He had heard it before, faintly, buried in early system ssages that had felt oddly phrased at the ti, as though translated from sothing more ancient and more deliberate than a simple reward interface.
"The Infinite Wealth System," Jayden said quietly.
"Yes," Lydia confird.
Jayden stared at the floor for a long mont, then looked back up at her, his expression unreadable.
"Then why," he asked, "did it never introduce itself that way."
Lydia smiled, and this ti there was no attempt to hide the sadness in it.
"Because guides are not ant to be worshipped," she said. "They are ant to be followed until the traveler no longer needs them. Nas create attachnt. The system avoided that by design."
Jayden exhaled slowly. Another mystery added to the growing pile he had been carrying for years.
They moved past it because they had to.
Lydia stepped closer, her presence oddly warm despite the truth of her nature, and for the first ti since she appeared, her voice shifted from explanation to sothing far more personal.
"You are standing at the edge of the mont you were built for," she said. "Not by . Not even by the system. But by the choices you made when no one was watching. When power was optional and cruelty would have been easier."
Jayden looked up at her sharply. "You make it sound like a speech."
"It is," Lydia replied gently. "And I will not get another chance to give it."
She spoke at length then, words flowing steadily, encouragent layered with warning, reminding him of every impossible obstacle he had already overco, every ti he had chosen preparation over pride, restraint over ego, vision over imdiate gratification. She told him that Earth did not need a savior who raged, but a ruler who endured. That humanity would survive not because it was innocent, but because it was stubborn enough to fight for itself when given the chance.
"You must save them," Lydia said, her voice firm now. "Not because they deserve it. But because you decided they would."
Jayden clenched his jaw. "From Nexus."
"Yes," she said. "From the army you are facing. From the very structure that created ."
Jayden frowned. "Then answer this. If Nexus created you, and Nexus created the Sovereign Protocols, why are they attacking Earth."
Lydia held his gaze for a long mont.
"I will answer that," she said slowly. "When we et again."
"When," Jayden echoed. "Not if."
Her smile returned, faint but resolute. "When. And by then, I hope you will have done what you were ant to do."
The air around her shimred softly.
Jayden took a step forward. "Wait."
But she was already fading, her form dissolving into pale strands of light that vanished without sound, without spectacle, leaving only emptiness behind.
The house felt colder.
Jayden stood there long after she was gone, the weight of her words settling into his bones. Eventually, he turned away, left the house, and boarded the aircraft waiting to take him back to the island headquarters.
He did not speak during the flight.
When he arrived, he went straight to Charlotte’s office.
She was already standing when he entered, her face pale, her usual composure cracked just enough to be noticeable.
"You need to see this," she said, her voice tight.
The screen behind her showed satellite footage.
Or what remained of a capital.
Franch was gone.
Not damaged. Not partially destroyed. Gone.
Entire districts flattened. Energy signatures scorched into the ground like wounds that would never heal. The destruction had been executed with horrifying efficiency, as if the city had been reduced not out of rage, but out of procedure.
"How long," Jayden asked quietly.
"Hours," Charlotte replied. "Less than a day."
Jayden stared at the screen, his mind replaying Lydia’s calm voice, her certainty, her farewell disguised as encouragent.
So this was what they were dealing with.
Not conquerors.
Not negotiators.
But sothing far worse.
Sothing that erased capitals without hesitation.
Jayden straightened slowly, the shock settling into sothing colder, sharper, more dangerous.
"They’re brutal," he said, more to himself than anyone else.
And for the first ti since the Sovereign Protocols descended on Earth, Jayden Cole fully understood that preparation alone would not be enough.
Because whatever Nexus was, it did not hesitate.
And now, neither could he.
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