He disengaged the Z-Dragger, the world snapping back to its normal, sluggish pace. He took a breath he didn't need, the habit of a lingering ghost of his humanity.
“Sothing happened to
a week ago, Alyna,” he began, his voice surprisingly steady. “I got jumped by Red Obsidian while delivering a package. They had shot . It was bad. A lot of holes. A lot of blood. I… I almost died. Or maybe I did die. I’m not even sure anymore.” He looked at his hands, turning them over in the dim light. They looked like his hands. They moved when he willed them to. But they weren't. “There’s no more flesh. No blood, no bone. It’s just… them. These nanites. They’re what I am now.”
He tried to find the right emotion for this confession, to match the horror of his words with the feeling they should evoke. Intellectually, he knew he should be terrified. The old Ray would have been paralyzed by fear, by the sheer body horror of it all, a screaming ss on the floor. But now, those emotions felt distant, dulled, like watching a dramatic scene in a movie he’d seen a hundred tis before. The fear was an abstract concept, not a visceral reality. "I know I should be scared," he admitted, his voice a hollow echo of an emotion he could no longer truly feel. "I know this is monstrous. But I just… I feel nothing. Just a kind of… quiet. A stillness."
Alyna was speechless, her hand frozen on his chest, her eyes wide with a mixture of shock, horror, and a dawning, terrible understanding. For a long ti, she just stared at him, her own breathing shallow. Then, she spoke, her voice a fragile whisper, her mind reaching for a concept to process the impossible.
“The Ship of Theseus,” she murmured. “It’s an old thought experint, from before the Collapse. If you have a ship, and you replace every single plank of wood on it, one by one, over years, until no original planks remain… is it still the sa ship?”
She finally t his eyes, a profound, heartbreaking sadness in her own. “But in your case… it wasn’t one plank at a ti, was it? It was all at once.” Her voice broke. “There’s probably not even a boat anymore, is there?”
The accuracy of her taphor hit him with the force of a physical blow. He saw the trust in her eyes, the fragile hope that he would deny it. The logical move was to lie. But the part of him that was tired of the deception, forced the words out anyway.
"It's not just that they healed ," he began, his voice barely a whisper. "They changed . I can shift into things, things that I absorb."
He raised his hand, and his index finger shifted, becoming a small flashlight. A bright, white LED light bathed the dark room, stark and clinical.
And then ca the confession.
“And people are so of those things."
Alyna flinched, pulling her hand back as if his skin had beco molten hot. She didn't just recoil; she scrambled backward on the futon, creating a chasm of space between them. Her eyes, wide with a new kind of horror, stared not at a man, but at a predator.
He watched her retreat, the physical distance a searing confirmation of his monstrousness. "The man who betrayed , Red... the snap in West Line... those are just so that I've killed in this past week. They're.... Their mories, their skills, everything they were is now just... there. It's more than data. They are like different directives. I can close my eyes and be in their skin, think like they thought, be them. Like an archive of dead n in my head." He told her about his override protocol, the monstrous Juggernaut form that took over when he had been critically injured at the fair, a part of himself he couldn't control.
He looked across the newly ford abyss between them, his expression raw, vulnerable. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe there is no ship left. I think… I think the nanites consud
first. That my mind, my personality, was just the first piece of driftwood they found. When I absorb soone else now, their mories are just files added to the drive. But I was the drive itself. If I had been the second person they found… I’d just be another ghost in another man's mory." He took a shaky breath. "I don't know how much of
is still , Alyna. I just know that when I look at you, when I think of my… mom… that part feels real. That part feels like Ray."
He watched her, standing before him, the physical distance a searing confirmation of his monstrousness. The words hung in the air between them, heavy and suffocating. He had laid his soul bare, and the silence that followed was a judgnt, a verdict he was sure he already knew. He was a predator. A machine. A thing to be feared. He braced himself for the inevitable—for the final, clipped goodbye, for the sound of the apartnt door sealing him in with his new, terrible loneliness.
But it didn't co.
For what felt like an eternity, Alyna simply stared at him from across the futon, her body coiled tight, her breathing shallow. Her sapphire eyes were wide with a terror that was sharp and real, but beneath it, sothing else was stirring. A deep, profound sorrow. A flicker of the sa fierce, stubborn loyalty that had drawn them together in the first place.
Then, slowly, cautiously, she moved. It was the movent of a small, wild animal approaching a beast it knows could tear it apart in a single heartbeat, yet is compelled forward by a bond that transcends fear. She slid across the mattress, her knees trembling almost imperceptibly, until she was before him again. The chasm was closed, but the space between them still crackled with tension.
She lifted a hand, her fingers shaking, and hesitated for a mont before gently, tentatively, cupping his face. As her warm fingers made contact with his cheek, Ray flinched—not from her touch, but from the sheer, unexpected kindness of it. He had been braced for a blow, for a scream, for the finality of her running away. Her gentle touch was a disarming attack he had no defense against.
"When we were on the bike," she began, her voice a fragile whisper, her eyes not quite eting his, "I leaned my head against your back. I was trying to listen to your heart beat. To calm myself down. It's what I always used to do, rember? I'd listen to the rhythm of it." Her gaze finally t his, her eyes shimring with unshed tears. "But no matter how long I listened, or how hard I pressed my ear against you… there was nothing. Just silence. And you felt so cold, Ray, even through your jacket."
She let out a shaky, half-laugh, a sound thick with pain. "I thought… I thought maybe you'd installed a mod. So kind of internal acoustic dampener. Or that the engine was too loud. I made up a hundred different reasons…" Her voice broke. "This truth feels too impossible. But… you…" Her words trailed off, her mind struggling to form a coherent thought in the face of such a monstrous reality. "I… I don't know what to say anymore, Ray. I don't have the words for this."
Ray’s own mask of calm finally cracked.
“Please don’t be scared of , Alyna,” he pleaded, his voice rough with an emotion he couldn't na but felt with agonizing intensity. “I’m still . I have to be.”
Her thumb gently stroked his cheek, a gesture so full of a sad, tender acceptance that it made his non-existent heart ache. “I know,” she whispered, her voice gaining a sliver of its old strength. “I know you are.” She leaned in, her forehead resting against his, her eyes closing. "I’m not scared of you, Ray. I’m scared for you. For us."
She pulled back slightly, her sapphire eyes searching his. "You’re right. The ship is gone. And maybe what’s left is… terrifying. And broken. And sothing the world has never seen before." A single tear traced a path down her cheek. "But it’s still you. That part, the part that looks at , the part that worries about Lina… that’s not just a ghost in the machine. It’s the anchor. It's the part that matters."
She didn't run. She didn't scream. She looked at the monster he had beco, saw the frightened man still trapped inside, and chose to stay. She wrapped her arms around his neck, pulling him into a fierce, desperate embrace and Ray felt sothing other than the cold, logical hum of his own systems.
It was a distant echo, a phantom sensation, but for a fleeting, beautiful mont, he almost felt human again.
He held her, the warmth of her body a stark contrast to the cold of his simulated skin. The crushing weight of his loneliness eased, replaced by the fragile, terrifying hope that maybe, just maybe, he wasn't entirely lost. He had told her the worst parts of what he had beco, and she hadn't run. She had stayed.
She pulled back just enough to look at him, her sapphire eyes still shimring with a complex mix of sorrow and fierce affection. “So, that night… when you ca ho,” she began, her voice soft, hesitant. “You said you were tired. Was that… was that also a lie?”
Ray’s gaze dropped. The mory of his clumsy rejection, the sha of it, felt sharp and imdiate. He couldn't bear another deception, forcing the words out. He owed her the complete truth.
“Yes and no,” he admitted, his voice barely a whisper. “I wasn’t tired. But… the nanites… they fixed everything, but they broke so things too. They took away the pain, the fatigue… but they took other feelings with them.” He couldn’t quite et her eyes, his own focus fixed on a stray thread on the futon. “No matter how hard I tried… how much I wanted you… I couldn’t get an erection. I’m… impotent.”
The confession hung in the air, heavy and humiliating. “I was so afraid I’d disappoint you,” he continued, the words tumbling out now. “So I went out and bought a ‘Bolt-On Bravado’ from a shop in Slickrow. I felt so… embarrassed. Like a failure.”
The silence stretched for a mont, and Ray braced himself for pity, or disgust. Instead, he heard a sound he hadn’t expected: a soft, suppressed chuckle.
He looked up, surprised. A gentle, teasing smile was playing on Alyna’s lips, her eyes sparkling with a warmth that chased away the shadows.
“You know,” she said, her voice laced with amusent, “you were a little more eager than I was used to. I just thought you were really happy to see .” She reached out, her finger tracing the line of his jaw. “I understand now. You were compensating. But you shouldn’t be embarrassed, Ray.”
Her expression softened, her humor giving way to a profound sincerity. “Our connection isn't just... hardware. It's the software, the shared code we've been writing together since we were kids. This... this is just a peripheral. We can work around a faulty peripheral.”
She leaned in and kissed him, a soft, reassuring press of her lips against his.
He managed a small, crooked smile. “Rember when we first t? In that grimy library?”
Alyna’s own smile widened at the mory. “How could I forget? You were trying to hotwire a datapad to get access to a pre-Collapse ga, and the whole corner of that library slled like ozone and burnt plastic from where you'd shorted the power converter. And you almost electrocuted yourself.”
“I was fourteen!” he protested, a genuine laugh escaping him for the first ti in what felt like a lifeti. “And you were the condescending thirteen-year-old who told
I was grounding the motherboard incorrectly.”
“I wasn’t condescending, I was correct,” she shot back playfully. “And then I fixed it for you. And in return, you bought
that terrible synth-noodle soup from the vendor outside.”
“It was all I could afford,” he said, his smile softening.
“I know,” she whispered, her hand finding his again, her fingers lacing through his. “And it was the best al I’d ever had. We sat on that rusty bench for hours, just talking about building things, about getting out of Virelia, about seeing other parts of this world.”
Their past was a shared language, a foundation built on more than just physical intimacy. It was built on quiet support, shared dreams, and surviving a world that was designed to break them.
She leaned her head on his shoulder, her voice dropping to a near-whisper. “We’ll figure this out, Ray. Together. We always have.”
He looked down at their joined hands, her warmth a steady, grounding presence against his own cold, simulacrum skin. He was a monster, a machine, a ghost haunted by the lives he’d consud. But in her eyes, he was still just Ray.
The first hint of dawn, struggling to breach the ever-present smog, painted the gray city in shades of lavender and bruised orange. Alyna hadn’t slept. At least, not in the traditional sense. Instead, she had drifted for hours in that quiet space between exhaustion and revelation, her head resting on his chest, their hushed conversation a low murmur that had mapped out the new, terrifying borders of their world. She had listened, processed, and grieved for the boy she had known, while stubbornly refusing to let go of the man—the thing—he had beco.
When the light finally grew bold enough to chase the last of the shadows from their new, sterile apartnt, Ray rose from the futon. His movents were silent, economical and lacking the small, unconscious sounds of a human body waking up—the groan, the sigh, the stiff crack of a joint. He moved with the quiet, unnerving grace of a machine. Alyna watched as his skin shifted, the texture and color changing seamlessly, becoming clothes. The sa clothes he had worn last night. A pair of grey sweatpants and a black t-shirt.
Ray’s gaze t hers, and her wide eyes fluttered as she was snapped out of her trance. She quickly rose and dressed.
A note from Lord Turtle the first
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