NANITE Novel 179

Novel: NANITE Novel Author: LordTurtlethefirst Updated:
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"He said he could make sure the operation keeps running. Get Marcus his prosthetic replacents. Keep Vera's cover intact. Take care of your people, even if..." She paused. "Even if they can't co here."

"Can't." Johnny's voice was flat.

"This place—it's not for them. It's not for anyone outside this family. Synth made that clear." She squeezed his tal hand. "And he's right. But that doesn't an you have to choose between them and this. Between the life you built and the life you might have."

Johnny stared at their joined hands. The chro of his fingers against the warmth of her skin. His human eye glistened.

"Synth offered to fix ," he said quietly. "Sa treatnt he gave you. Sa treatnt he gave Elara." He gestured at himself with his free hand—the arm, the eye, the body that was more machine than man. "Said he could rebuild . Repair the damage. Give

back what the war took."

"And?"

"I don't know who I am without this." The admission ca rough, torn. "Without the arm. Without the eye. Without the operation. I've been a soldier for so long. A boss. A protector. If I stop..."

He couldn't finish.

Lina squeezed his tal hand tighter. "What's left is us, Johnny. What's left is the man Jas loved like a brother. The man Ray looked up to." She paused. "The man I..."

She didn't finish either. She didn't need to.

They sat in silence, watching the jungle breathe. Sowhere in the facility behind them, life continued—Arty exploring his workshop, Julia wrestling with her own demons, the expedition pushing deeper into the wild.

And here, on this balcony at the edge of the world, two broken people held hands and began, slowly, to imagine sothing other than survival.

* * *

"We've been talking for hours," Alyna realized.

She and Elara had moved from the rest area to a small garden terrace overlooking the lagoon. The sun was high now, the jungle steaming gently in the heat. They'd covered so much ground—Andrew, Elara's brother and Alyna's father, and how he'd changed when he started climbing the corporate ladder. The animal behavior neuromodulatory capsule he'd had implanted in her without her knowledge. The way power corrupted, slowly and then all at

once.

But they hadn't talked about Synth.

Alyna realized this suddenly. They'd let him fall to the side—this impossible being who had saved them all.

"What's your opinion?" she asked. "About Synth?"

Elara was quiet for a mont. Then she pulled up her interface, projecting a ssage into the air between them.

"He sent

this before everyone arrived," she said. "Before I saw him in person." The ssage floated in pale blue light:

Dr. Vance,

Before we arrive, you should know what I am. I am not human. I am in fact a sentient nanite colony that can shapeshift. I will look different than the figure that found you in the bunker.

— Synth

Alyna stared at the words and frowned.

"That's why you weren't surprised," she said slowly. "When he appeared."

"I had a hard ti keeping from smiling." Elara dismissed the ssage with a wave. “After a declaration like that, he shows up dressed like he's heading to a beach party. Cargo shorts. A bright pink t-shirt with a cartoon cat on it.” She shook her head, a genuine smile touching her lips. "He's strange. But I think... I think he's trying. In his own way."

Alyna was quiet. She thought about the owl. The one that had visited her in the night, appearing at her window like sothing from a dream. Soft and warm against her chest. The purr that vibrated through impossible feathers. The way it had listened as she talked, as she cried, as she told it—told him—that she still hated him and that this didn't make them friends.

And then the plushie. Left behind like a gift. Like a promise.

"He ca to

as an owl," Alyna said finally. "A real owl—or what looked like one. Made of nanites. It was him, shapeshifted." She paused, rembering the soft warmth against her chest, the purr that vibrated through impossible feathers. "He purred. Just... sat with

while I cried. Listened."

"And the plushie?"

"He left it behind when he left. In the morning, the owl was gone, and the plushie was there instead." Alyna's voice caught. "Like a promise. Or an apology. I threw it across the room. Then I went and picked it back up."

Elara listened as Alyna told the story—the window, the owl-that-was-Synth, the way it had nudged her hand with its downy head.

"He's not Ray," Alyna said, her voice catching. "I know that. My head knows that. But sotis..."

"Sotis the heart is stupid," Elara finished quietly. "It doesn't run on logic."

They'd had this conversation before—or one like it. In the depths of grief, the words repeated themselves like mantras.

"How did you survive?" Alyna asked, changing the subject. "All those months hiding. The bunker. How did you find it?"

Elara's expression darkened. "I made a deal. With a gang called the Dust Wyrms."

"A gang?"

"Tech raiders. They work the wasteland between the gacities—ambushes, extortion, relic smuggling. Their leader is a woman nad Iman Razeel." Elara's voice flattened. "The Wyrms sold

information—bunker locations, supply caches, routes that avoided corporate patrols. Everything I needed to disappear."

"And the price?"

"Considerable. More than money." Her voice flattened. "I gave them data. Research. Things I shouldn't have." A long pause. "I was desperate. Paranoid. Addicted to my own creation. I would have given them anything."

Alyna didn't judge. She understood desperation. She'd run from her father's cage, traded her safety for freedom. The choices you made when cornered weren't always clean.

"Is the debt paid?"

Elara chuckled. "Does it matter? Good luck finding

here.”

"And now?" Alyna asked as a small smile appeared on her face..

"Now I'm here." Elara looked around at the garden, the lagoon, the impossible sanctuary. "Now I have to figure out what that ans."

* * *

Julia found them returning from the garden, their steps slow and easy. Elara's hair was disheveled. She was actually smiling.

Sothing about the woman nagged at Julia's mory. The way she moved. The cadence of her speech. Sothing familiar buried under years and transformation.

"Do I know you?" Julia asked.

Elara tilted her head, studying Julia with a scientist's eyes.

"Corereach," Elara said slowly. "Third year. Organic chemistry."

Recognition flickered. "The girl who blew up the synthesis lab trying to create a faster catalytic reaction."

"The explosion was controlled." Elara's smile widened. "Mostly."

They hadn't been friends. Rivals, if anything—both brilliant, both driven, destined for different paths. Julia had gone into dicine. Elara had gone into neurochemistry. One healed bodies. The other had broken minds.

"We're a long way from Corereach," Julia said.

"We're a long way from a lot of things," Elara agreed.

Alyna watched the exchange with quiet fascination. Her aunt and her... what was Julia, exactly? Extended family? Grandmother figure? The categories didn't fit anymore.

Maybe they didn't need to.

* * *

The sun was setting when the expedition returned.

Max's voice echoed through the corridors first—bright, excited, alive in a way none of them had heard in weeks.

"You should have SEEN it! There were these huge creatures and they LET

TOUCH THEM!"

The adults gathered in the common area, drawn by the sound. Johnny's expression was unreadable. Lina's was soft, hopeful. Julia's smart glasses flickered with data—Max's vitals, his elevated heart rate, his cortisol levels finally dropping to healthy baseline. She blinked, surprised by her own relief.

Synth entered still wearing the pith helt. Elara turned away slightly, her shoulders shaking with suppressed laughter.

Artemis followed, her silver hair catching the dying light. Her ice-blue eyes were different sohow—softer. Less distant. Sothing had shifted.

Selena ca last, tired but peaceful. She caught Arty's eye across the room. He was leaner than he'd been that morning, hollowed by grief and filled back up with purpose. She gave him a small nod. He returned it.

"Sa ti tomorrow," Max said to Synth. It wasn't a question.

"Sa ti tomorrow," Synth agreed.

The family gathered around the great window, watching the jungle transform as the sun sank below the canopy. Bioluminescence blood in waves—blues and greens and soft purples, the forest coming alive with light as the day died.

Not quite comfortable yet, not quite settled. But together.

* * *

Later. Night had fallen. The jungle glowed.

Johnny stood alone at a window, his massive fra silhouetted against the bioluminescent display. In his human hand, he held a worn synth-beer tab—one he'd torn from a can years ago and kept in his pocket ever since. A reminder of the 12-packs he'd left at the VSD morial every year. The ritual that kept Jas's mory alive.

The dog tag he'd worn for fifteen years was gone now. He'd left it at the monunt with the others, during the funeral. Jas's na inscribed in worn tal: JAS CALLEN. A piece of himself given to the earth, to the mory of everyone they'd lost.

He still felt its absence around his neck. A phantom weight.

And elsewhere in the facility, Alyna slept.

The owl plushie was pressed against her chest, its soft gray feathers tucked beneath her chin. Her breathing was slow and even. The grief was still there—it would always be there—but tonight it rested easier than it had in months.

Through the window, the bioluminescent glow washed over her in waves of soft blue-green. The plushie's silver button eyes caught the light, gleaming in the darkness.

In her dreams, she heard wings.

* * *

The polyhedral core rotated between Synth's fingers—a contained anomaly, a puzzle-box he'd designed for his own amusent.

Its panels weren't colored plastic but sothing closer to interface plates: white and gray sections with the sterile calm of lab-grade ceramics, orange facets glowing like trapped plasma, blue nodes hinting at different operational states. Every rotation felt like it might unlock a protocol, reroute energy, or trigger a response. Not sothing designed for comfort or play, but for those willing to manipulate chaos in pursuit of control.

A toy. A toy designed specifically for him.

He sat in a comfortable black armchair, the rest of the room seamless white with a wall of transparent glass that offered a sweeping view of the jungle surrounding the facility. Paint of different colors covered patches of the floor and walls—splatters of crimson, streaks of cobalt, drips of amber. The main culprit for this chaos was currently in the middle of the room, focused on a piece of wet clay oscillating on the rotating table before her.

Artemis's ice-blue eyes tracked the spinning mass, her silver hair catching the ambient light as her fingers slowly shaped the lump into what might beco a mug. Or a vase. The clay was still deciding.

Synth glanced up as she made a small adjustnt. The whole creation collapsed.

She could have easily run a thousand simulations using her onboard quantum computer and beco a master at pottery in seconds. But she had chosen not to—because she wanted to learn by herself. Just like Max had done with his sculpture.

Create. Destroy. Begin again. Better each ti.

The room was not silent. A sweet, chanical lody drifted from a music box resting on the short table beside Synth. Not Arty's music box. This was a copy Synth had made of the version Arty and Selena had repaired together. A copy of a copy. The original copy, he'd grabbed it before they left Virelia, waiting for the right mont to give it to her. That mont had co after their first expedition through the jungle.

Now it played its pre-Collapse tune, tinny and fragile and achingly beautiful, while Artemis shaped clay and Synth manipulated his impossible puzzle.

Fifteen minutes later, Artemis stopped and pinged him through their private channel.

Synth's gaze moved toward the now-still rotating mass of clay, which resembled a small mug—or perhaps a short vase. Organic. Imperfect. Alive in a way that machine precision could never replicate.

"Good job," he encouraged her, setting the polyhedral cube on the table beside the music box and rising to his feet. "You're getting better at it."

The corner of Artemis's mouth rose slightly. Then she raised her hand.

And brought it down on her creation.

Synth was not surprised. This had beco her ritual since they'd arrived on the island. Everything she created, she destroyed. Then she started again. Each iteration slightly better than the last. A ditation on impermanence. A rejection of the perfection her creators had demanded of her.

A sink erged from the floor, and Artemis washed her hands, clay swirling down the drain like shed skin. She dried them with careful, deliberate movents.

The door opened from the seamless side of the wall.

Synth offered her his arm, which she took. His current configuration was taller than Artemis—a deliberate choice. He'd noticed she relaxed when he was larger, so vestigial human instinct perhaps, the comfort of feeling protected. And he wanted her at ease for what ca next.

They walked through the sohow-silent ho toward the elevator. The facility humd with distant life—the breath of climate systems, the pulse of power conduits—but here, in their private wing, there was only the soft rhythm of their footsteps on warm tal.

* * *

Once inside and descending, Artemis turned to Synth.

"I have sothing on my mind," she started.

Synth placed his hand over hers and looked at her, his attention focused entirely on her face. The elevator's ambient lighting cast soft shadows across her features—features that had been designed for beauty as much as lethality, that porcelain perfection that had once made her a weapon and now made her sothing else entirely.

"After we left Virelia," she continued, "while in the car—Selena ntioned sothing that has remained on my mind since."

Synth rembered that scene. He had witnessed it with his own eyes through the car's caras: Selena, deliberately provocative, testing boundaries as she always did.

"Lovers should share everything," Selena had said.

There was a tense silence between them—strange, coming from Artemis. She was never hesitant. Never uncertain. The last ti she'd been like this was on the simulated rooftop, when they'd danced above a city that didn't exist.

"You know everything about ," she finally said, her voice quieter than usual. "But I know almost nothing about you."

A small, lancholic smile blood across Synth's face as he looked at her. The weight of what she was asking settled over him—not just his history, but his nature. His origin. The ghosts he carried. The terrible power he now held.

"Of course," Synth said, pulling her into an embrace. She stiffened for a mont, then relaxed into him. "I will tell you everything about who I am." He paused, feeling the warmth of her against his chest. "But after we are done with what I have planned for tonight."

Artemis closed her eyes for a mont and nodded in his arms.

The elevator continued its descent—past the subterranean hangar, past the living quarters, past any level he had allowed anyone else to access. Down into the foundations of the island itself, where he had built sothing in secret during the days after their arrival. While the others had slept, while they had grieved, while they had begun to heal—he had been preparing.

The entities he'd glimpsed in Aethercore's archives still burned in his mory. The Cognitive Core's enslaved minds—thousands of human brains reduced to biological processors, their consciousnesses annihilated, their very essence used as fuel for corporate greed. The Nexus's beautiful horror, an artificial Eden hiding unspeakable purpose. And deeper still—references to things even Prophet's century of knowledge couldn't identify. Vast intelligences. Patient. Waiting.

If he was going to protect his family from what was coming, he needed to beco sothing more. Not just a guardian. A power that could face digital gods.

The elevator slowed. Stopped.

The doors opened.

A note from Lord Turtle the first

If you enjoyed this story, consider supporting

on Patreon! I made a mistake a few days ago and accidentally deleted the old Nanite tier—but I've re-added it for 6. For just 6, you'll get access to 34 advanced chapters. Subscribers who join now will keep this price locked in, even when I raise it to 9.

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