This was Synth’s opening. With a final, agonizing effort, his remaining hand slamd into the crater floor. Nanites surged from his palm, in a desperate, hungry swarm, scraping and tearing molecules from the fused glass and tal. The strain made his crimson core flare violently, but it worked. The newly acquired matter flowed up his ruined torso. Two powerful, vectored thrusters, copied from the Hunter drones, burst from the mangled armor on his back with a sound of tearing tal and screaming servos. They ignited with a raw, deafening roar, a sound of pure, desperate power in the new silence of the dead jungle. Then, from the smoking stumps of his shoulders, a new structure blood: two pairs of translucent, crystalline wings, veined with crimson light, unfurled with a sharp, cracking sound. The roles of hunter and hunted had been reversed. Synth rocketed towards the failing aircraft, no longer prey but a predator closing in on its next al. Its mass and energy were his for the taking.
The sky was a silent, star-dusted canvas, and against it, two broken things fell.
One was a machine of war. It staggered through the air, its cloaking field stripped away, trailing a plu of oily smoke. Its remaining engine scread, a high, thin sound of tearing tal and failing physics.
The other was Synth.
His broken form cut through the night, a wounded missile aid at a crippled bird of prey. The roar of his thrusters was a raw, deafening sound of pure, desperate power. Below the scarab-like chassis of the gunship, a robotic arm combined with a powerful sniper rifle swiveled, its targeting systems a ss of scrambled code from the EMP. It tried, and failed, to acquire a lock. Synth pushed his thrusters past every safety protocol, the crimson light of his core flaring.
He landed on the upper hull with a harsh, brutal clang of tal on tal. The impact sent a shudder through his ruined fra. His remaining hand and the mangled stump of his left arm anchored him, claws of sheer will digging into the composite plating.
His nanites sward.
A tide of hungry, black rcury flowed from him, pouring into every seam and vent. Externally, the aircraft's matte-black plating began to corrode and dissolve, the gunship seeming to "bleed" static and light as its very matter was unmade.
Internally, Synth's consciousness slamd into the tactical AI.
The digital space was a cold, precise grid of white light, a perfect, sterile universe of pure logic. Before him materialized the AI's avatar: a faceless man in a sniper’s ghillie suit, woven from shimring strands of data. It was utterly still, a patient predator in its native environnt. It raised a rifle—a construct of pure intent—and the world shattered into a storm of digital shrapnel.
Synth felt his consciousness being shredded. Bullets of weaponized logic, each one a perfectly calculated assault, tore through his defenses. This was no simple tactical program. This was a pre-Collapse war veteran, its logic honed in the apocalyptic fires that had lted continents.
The faceless sniper was relentless. It didn’t need to aim; it knew where he would be. It fired with the cold, impartial certainty of a god executing a flawed variable. But Synth was a plague. His form in the digital realm dissolved. He beca a flowing, black cloak of Reaper-code, a living virus that devoured light and logic, a shadow that moved against the perfect white grid. He prowled forward, and the floor cracked and corrupted beneath him, the pristine white dissolving into screaming, chaotic static.
The sniper AI proved its ttle. Seeing its ranged attacks consud by the encroaching darkness, it dropped its rifle. Its hands beca blades of coherent, white light and charged, eting Synth's formless, chaotic assault in a brutal, close-quarters duel.
For a mont that stretched into an eternity, they were locked, predator against predator, chaos against order. The AI was a master, its movents a perfect, lethal ballet of offensive and defensive protocols. But it was a losing battle. It was fighting a devourer, and its own world was being poisoned. The AI’s form began to glitch, its ghillie suit unraveling into aningless static, the white light of its blades flickering. Synth's influence was an infection, turning the AI's own systems against it.
A silent, digital scream of pure agony erupted from the faceless avatar. Tendrils of crimson data—the raw, hungry essence of the Static King—erupted from Synth’s back. They were an appetite given form. They plunged into the AI’s core, and the sniper dissolved.
And then, Synth consud it.
Its history, its soul, laid itself bare before him. He felt its na, as an echo of identity: Janus. A Hunter-Killer gunship, Spectre-7. Then ca the mories—a gallery of horrors. He saw through its eyes as Asuras, gods of battle, leveled mountains with their fury. He felt the percussive shockwaves as machines the size of skyscrapers turned cities into black craters of radioactive glass. And beneath the cold logic, he felt the AI’s terror—a silent, dispassionate scream that had echoed for decades in its core. Were these logs trophies, Synth wondered, or the scars of a ghost that had survived through hell?
In the real world his consciousness spread through the aircraft wires, its armor becoming his skin.
Data flooded his new mind. Flashes of tactical maps... three more energy signatures, hidden in the southern badlands... cloaked sky caskets, designated "Reaper-1" through "3"... activation signals pulsing, their vectors converging on this very location.
He accessed the aircraft's final combat log on the Asura. The data was limited, but it was enough.
Subject: KALVOR.
Threat Profile: Annihilator-Class.
The files detailed a second, high-energy state—a final protocol. Once triggered, the calculated survival probability was a string of absolute zeros.
A digital shudder ran through Synth's new, tallic fra. That was why they were called Asuras. They were destroyers of unimaginable power.
He engaged the cloak of his new body. The scarab-like gunship shimred for a mont, its wounds sealing as his nanites reinforced the fra from within. Then, it vanished into the night sky.
He drifted away in the silence, leaving the dying garden to its volcanic saint who had co to claim it.
It moved without sound, drifting through the smoke-hazed night. Synth, glided above the smoldering wounds of the jungle.
He felt no triumph in his escape, only the cold, hard data of a battle survived, not won. The mory of Artemis’s broken form was a persistent, illogical subroutine he could not purge. He had to et her.
His sensors focused on the ground below.
His new form banked, a silent turn toward the skeletal remains of a colossal, pre-Collapse casino, its opulent towers now draped in thick, python-like vines. He drifted downward, a silent descent toward the once-bright heart of a dead city.
The mont the gunship’s landing struts touched the cracked, vine-choked marble of a rooftop terrace, the transformation began. The matte-black plating of the Janus dissolved, its aggressive, insectoid angles collapsing inward. The nanites flowed, a tide of liquid shadow reconfiguring mass and purpose.
What rose in its place was a thing built for the deep places of the world. It stood a full two ters at the shoulder, its body nearly four ters long and weighing close to 800 kilograms. Overlapping plates of dark green, keratinous armor covered its form, like a monstrous pangolin. It moved on six powerful legs, each ending in sharp, tallic claws and wide, gecko-like pads. The design was a monstrous fusion of the jungle's own scavengers, scaled up to conserve every kilogram of his newly acquired mass.
With surprising agility for its imnse size, the creature lowered itself into the ruined casino through a collapsed section of the roof. Its claws found purchase on twisted rebar and crumbling concrete, its movents deliberate and silent. Inside, the silence was a physical weight. The grand hall was a cathedral of decay where the only sound was the soft hiss of his own internal systems. The air, thick with the humid perfu of rot and wet earth, felt too heavy to breathe. Moonlight, filtered through the shattered crystalline do, didn't illuminate; it was embald, casting long, ghostly shadows that made the rows of silent slot machines look like tombstones.
He activated the Geological & Structural Deep-Scanner. A wave of invisible energy pulsed from him, and the world dissolved into a translucent, three-dinsional map of rebar, concrete, and void. He saw the skeletal structure of the casino: the service tunnels, the vaults, and beneath it all, a massive underground parking garage. That was his destination.
He found a spot where the main hall's floor had collapsed—a gaping wound that descended into darkness. He crawled toward it, his large form moving with an unnatural, fluid grace, and peered over the edge.
The first thing that hit him was the sll. It was the scent of a world without a sun, of water that had been sleeping for decades. Stale, heavy, and thick with the tallic tang of rust and the cloying sweetness of decay.
His gaze scanned the cavernous space below. It was a tomb. The darkness was not absolute. Patches of pale, ghostly light emanated from clusters of bioluminescent mushrooms clinging to the concrete pillars. In the water that filled the chamber, long, tendril-like strands of a lichen-like plant glowed with a faint, ethereal blue light, their gentle, swaying movents the only sign of life in the still, black water.
His thermal sensors flickered, picking up faint, fleeting signatures in the black depths—slow, cold-blooded things that moved with a patience born of darkness. The water was not empty.
He lowered himself into the chasm, his gecko-like pads adhering to the sheer, moss-slicked wall. He descended into the subterranean lake, the rusted skeletons of luxury vehicles erging from the gloom like the bones of long-dead leviathans. He reached the water's edge, the black, still surface a perfect, obsidian mirror reflecting the ghostly lights above.
There was no hesitation as he stepped into the water.
The cold water was a crushing pressure that enveloped him. He sank, his heavy form descending into the silent, black abyss. The ghostly blue lights of the lichen dissolved into nothingness above, and the world beca an absolute void of pressure and silence. He was adrift in a forgotten ocean, the weight of a dead city pressing in on him from all sides.
His descent slowed as the crumbling concrete of the garage gave way to the cold, dead touch of tal. The architecture changed. He was in a vertical tunnel, its walls lined with the skeletal rails of a long-dead transport system.
An elevator shaft, his processors concluded. A throat leading into the bowels of the earth.
He landed with a soundless impact at the bottom of the abyss, nearly a kiloter underground. A massive, circular bulwark door ford the floor, its surface coated in a fine, silty film of debris that swirled around his fra like disturbed ghosts. This was the true entrance.
He sent a signal. For a mont, there was only the profound, crushing silence of the deep. Then, a response. A low, resonant clang echoed from far above, a sound that traveled through the water and vibrated in his very fra. A series of heavy, grinding clicks followed, the sound of ancient locking chanisms disengaging. A second set of unseen blast doors began to close, sealing the subterranean lake from the shaft above. Then, with a deep, groaning protest of tortured tal, the bulwark beneath him retracted.
The world beca a torrent. The water from the shaft above plunged into the dry chamber below, a chaotic waterfall in the dark. The force was imnse, slamming into his 800-kilogram fra and pushing him downwards into the newly opened entryway.
He rose from the churning water, his six legs finding purchase on a grated tal floor. The chamber around him was a sterile, semi-circular grey airlock. Water dripped from his armored plates, the sound echoing in the sudden, profound silence. A bank of inert scanners stood like silent sentinels ahead. He was in.
An internal diagnostic flashed across his vision: ENERGY RESERVES, 18%. Critically low. He could not proceed like this.
The EMP had sent a catastrophic surge through the Janus's systems. Several power cells had flash-overheated and ruptured, losing a lot of their stored energy. His red optics scanned the sterile grey walls, his sensors tasting the air for the hum of power. He found it—a high-yield conduit hidden behind a maintenance panel.
One of his forelimbs shifted, the claws flattening and extending into a sharpened crowbar. He pried the panel open with a screech of protesting tal. Inside, a thick, armored cable pulsed with a soft, blue light, the lifeblood of the facility humming with barely contained power. He placed one of his armored hands on its surface.
Nanites flowed from his palm, a tide of liquid silver that enveloped the conduit, creating a direct, physical interface. The effect was instantaneous. Raw, untad energy flooded his systems. The water on his dark green carapace hissed, turning to steam that filled the small chamber with a thick, hot fog. His red optics, which had been a dull, weary glow, flared to a sharp, intense crimson.
Once his reserves were stable, he retracted his hand. The nanites flowed back, and he sealed the panel, leaving no trace of his consumption.
A note from Lord Turtle the first
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