But for him, for Synth, there was no hate. No disgust. Just a quiet, detached observation. This was the nature of humanity. There would always be a group that hoarded resources to the detrint of others. These towers of green were just sandcastles to him now. With his power, he could build grander structures, create richer ecosystems, in a matter of hours but if it was that simple to make everyone happy, this world would never have ended up the way it is now—scarred by man-made weapons and greedy ambitions.
Twenty minutes later, the illusion of life that was the Verdant Echo was a green sar in the rearview mirror. The Specter left the elevated expressway, its tires crunching on loose gravel as it settled onto the desert floor. The landscape was a monochro canvas of sun-bleached sand and cracked earth, stretching to an empty horizon. Arty pointed to a low, unassuming hill a few hundred ters away.
As they approached, Synth saw it: a small, dark opening in the side of the hill, barely visible, like the entrance to a large animal’s burrow.
“Let’s go inside,” Arty said, his voice a little tight.
With a silent command from Synth, the Specter’s reactive coating shimred, its vibrant teal-green shifting and dulling into a perfect, mottled camouflage of sand and rock. They exited the now-invisible car, the oppressive desert heat hitting them like a physical blow. The entrance was a narrow, claustrophobic tunnel of packed earth. As they squeezed through the tight space, the temperature dropped, the air growing cool and still, thick with the sll of ancient dust and sealed-off ti. Then, the tunnel opened up.
They were in a small, man-made antechamber. Before them stood a heavy, tallic door, set into a fra of cracked concrete and rusted rebar.
Synth stopped, his head tilting a fraction of an inch as his sensors silently scanned the antechamber, mapping every structural weakness and potential threat.
Seeing him hesitate, Arty offered a faint, reassuring smile. “Calm down, dude. There’s been no one here for decades. Except .”
He walked to a control panel set into the wall, wiping away a layer of fine dust to reveal a retinal scanner. “My dad and I found this place by accident,” he explained, his voice softening with the mory. “We were testing a new digger-bot I’d built. The nav-system glitched, and it just… kept digging. Well, until it didn’t.” He leaned in, and the scanner glowed a soft green as it registered his eye. The heavy door hissed, a release of pressure, before sliding open. “Turns out it was the best mistake we ever made.”
“It was like discovering a lost tomb, you know?” Arty said, his voice echoing slightly in the new space. “Dad spent months here, painstakingly disabling all the old security. He was a genius with this pre-Collapse crap. Made sure there were no hidden traps, no dormant auto-turrets waiting to slice us in half." He gestured into the darkness. "Took him forever, but he made it safe for us." They stepped through the doorway. A ladder was bolted to the far wall, descending into a square of perfect, black emptiness.
“After you,” Arty said.
They descended ten ters into the darkness. The air grew cooler, cleaner. At the bottom, Arty hit a switch, and a strip of pale, fluorescent light flickered to life, illuminating a short, plasteel hallway. It was remarkably intact. “Dad did so fixing here and there,” Arty murmured, his hand brushing against the smooth, clean wall.
The hallway opened into a single, large room, and Synth stopped. It was like stepping into a ti capsule, a perfectly preserved diorama of a life interrupted. It looked so much like Arty’s own chaotic apartnt that the resemblance was breathtaking. Shelves overflowed with ticulously assembled robots made from scrap, with action figures from forgotten franchises, with old, worn-out ga consoles and stacks of colorful comic books. The walls were covered in children’s drawings, and on a large corkboard, a collection of faded photographs told the story of a happy family.
There was Arty as a little boy, his bright, mischievous eyes the sa as they were now. Beside him, a man who was an older, more ordered version of him—the sa brilliant smile, but his hair was neat, his clothes practical and straight. He was the sturdy fra to the picture. And then there was his mother. She was an explosion of color and life in every photo, a stark, beautiful contrast. She wore clothes that glowed with their own neon light, and her long, dark locks were intertwined with glowing fiber-optic cables that cascaded over her shoulders like a digital waterfall. But it was her eyes that held Synth’s focus. They were so alive, so full of a boundless, chaotic warmth that in that mont, he understood. This was where Arty’s own vibrant, beautiful soul had been forged.
He turned to Synth, his eyes shining with unshed tears, a desperate, fragile hope in his expression.
“Cool, right?”
A long, heavy silence stretched between them, filled only with the quiet hum of the bunker’s ancient life support. Synth’s gaze moved from the photos to Arty’s face, taking in the raw, hopeful vulnerability there.
“It’s the coolest thing I’ve ever seen,” Synth said, his voice quiet and heavy with a sincerity that caught Arty off guard. He ant it. He had seen god-machines fight, he had beco a living airship, he had terraford a dead island. But all of that impossible power paled in comparison to the quiet, dusty love that saturated this room. A profound, aching sadness washed over him. This was a gift ant for Ray, not for him. Synth was an imposter, but not for long.
Arty’s fragile smile widened, and he turned to one of the shelves, snatching a ga box. As he fumbled with the worn plastic, ready to pull out the disc, Synth’s hand landed gently on his shoulder. Arty stopped, frowning a little.
“Ray-man, what’s up?” he asked, seeing the sudden, heavy seriousness on his friend’s face.
“I need to talk to you about sothing,” Synth said, his voice quiet.
“Yeah, man, I’m listening,” Arty replied, placing the box back on the shelf with a soft thud.
“I think it’s better if we sit down.”
The last of Arty’s playful energy vanished, replaced by a sudden, cold dread. “Is… is it about Lina? Did she have another seizure?” His voice was a tight, worried whisper. “Last week… when she had… man, it was bad.” Arty ran a hand over his face, the mory still fresh. The scream. The way her eyes, so full of pain, had rolled back in her head. The violent, rigid spasms. The desperate, pained gasps of her trying to call for Alyna.
“No,” Synth said gently. “It’s not about her.”
Arty opened his mouth to ask another question, but then shut it. Ray’s face was a mask of stone. Whatever this was, it was serious. He pointed to a pair of old beanbag chairs, one blue and one green, that sat in the corner. Arty slumped into the green one. Synth took the blue.
Arty watched as his friend leaned forward, his hands clasped together as if in prayer. He closed his eyes for a long, silent mont. When he opened them, they were no longer Ray’s familiar, deep blue. They were silver. A shimring, liquid silver that seed to catch the dim fluorescent light in an unnatural way, the pupils contracting and dilating not in response to the light, but to so invisible flow of data.
Arty stared. The joke he was about to make about Ray’s new, high-end optical mods died on his lips. The eyes were the mirror of the soul, the old saying went, and what he was looking at now... it wasn't just a costic change. It was a fundantal shift, a different light shining from behind a familiar face. A cold, primal instinct, completely devoid of logic, scread at him from the deepest part of his brain: That's not him.
“Whoa. Dude, cool configuration,” he managed, the words thin and fragile.
Synth didn’t smile. He opened his mouth, and began the story. "It all started in a dark alley in the Lower Bastion," he said, his voice a low, steady murmur that seed to absorb the workshop's usual hum, leaving only a heavy silence. "Ray was lying in a pool of his own blood after being ambushed by so Red Obsidians."
Arty frowned, a knot of confusion and fear tightening in his stomach. The playful chaos of the bunker suddenly felt oppressive, the shadows in the corners deeper, more nacing.
"He was dying," Synth continued, his silver eyes fixed on Arty's, holding him in place with an unnerving, analytical calm. "Bleeding out. He knew that was it, that was the night he died. But then, by chance, an injector fell from out of nowhere next to him. He grabbed it, and with the last of his strength, he inhaled the contents."
Synth’s voice was a quiet, relentless river of narrative, and Arty was drowning in it. He told him everything. He spoke of the nanites, of Ray’s desperate, terrified discovery of his new powers, a story of body horror that made the half-assembled robotic limbs scattered around the room seem suddenly, grotesquely organic. He described the people Ray had killed and consud, the nas a quiet, grim litany. And then he spoke of Ray’s final, internal battle, the mont the crumbling statue of the man he was gave way, and he, Synth, was born from the synthesis of all that had been consud.
By the ti he was finished, the vibrant colors of Arty's bunker seed to have leached away, leaving only shades of gray. Arty was pale, a sickly, ashen pallor under the fluorescent lights. His hands trembled as he slowly rubbed his eyes, as if trying to wipe away the horrifying, impossible story he had just heard, to scrub it from his mory.
"I am sorry for deceiving you," Synth stated, his voice quiet, the words a simple, devastating, and utterly inadequate conclusion.
Tears, hot and sudden, started to trace paths through the gri on Arty's cheeks. He looked at the being wearing his best friend’s face, at the silver eyes that held no flicker of the Ray he knew, and the last of his denial crumbled, shattered into a million pieces. A choked, guttural sob tore from Arty’s throat, a sound of pure, animalistic grief. He curled in on himself on the green beanbag, his arms wrapping around his stomach as if he’d been physically struck. Synth watched him, his silver eyes reflecting Arty's grief. He raised a hand, but he let it fall back to his side. There was nothing he could do. This was a wound that not even he could heal.
The silence that followed the explosion was absolute, a profound, ringing void where the world used to be. A hot, dry wind, slling of ozone and superheated glass, whispered across the newly ford crater, the only sound a low, mournful hiss as it cooled the still-glowing rock. In the center of the half-kiloter wound of black, shimring obsidian, under a moon that seed too small and too far away, two figures stood.
They were no longer gods of destruction. The monstrous, ultimate forms had receded, leaving behind the battered shells of their humanoid fras.
On one side, Seth, stood, his fra venting steam and ozone. Half his faceplate was missing, revealing the complex, beautiful machinery beneath. His crystalline scales, once scintillating with an inner light, were now dull, scorched black in places. He looked at the ruin of his own body, then across the crater.
Kalvor was barely standing. The plasma had lted through his obsidian plating, revealing the scarred, grey chassis beneath. His horned, bone-white helt was cracked down the middle, and the magma glow that was his lifeblood was now a faint, dying ember in the fissures of his armor. He swayed on his feet, a pillar of destruction on the verge of collapse.
Seth took a slow, deliberate step forward, the crunch of his crystalline heel on the fused sand the only sound in the dead world. He walked across the crater, each step an act of will against the screaming protests of his own damaged systems. He stopped before his rival, the silent monk of annihilation.
For a long mont, they simply stood, two kings in a ruined kingdom of their own making. There were no more challenges, no more tests. They had thrown galaxies at each other and both were still standing.
Then, Seth extended a hand.
Kalvor’s glowing eye-slits fixed on the offered hand, then lifted to et Seth’s sapphire optics. He did not speak. He never did. But in that silent, shared gaze, a universe of understanding passed between them. A profound, terrifying, and absolute respect, forged in the heart of a shared apocalypse.
Slowly, deliberately, Kalvor reached out and took Seth’s hand. Seth pulled, his own damaged fra straining, and helped the silent warrior to a more stable footing. They stood for a mont, shoulder to shoulder, two old rivals looking out at the devastation they had wrought. It was the stance of comrades surveying a hard-won battlefield.
The distant growl of an engine cut through the silence.
Headlights crested the edge of the crater, and a rugged, military-grade 4x4, its tires chewing through the loose, black sand, slid to a halt a few ters away. The passenger-side door swung open.
“Hop on!” a voice shouted from the driver's seat, rough and familiar. “Let's clear the area before the vultures arrive.”
Seth looked at Kalvor and gave a single, almost imperceptible nod toward the vehicle. Kalvor, without hesitation, turned and began the slow, pained walk toward the waiting 4x4. Seth followed..
They climbed inside, the vehicle’s interior spartan and functional.
The vehicle roared to life, turning and rushing away from the crater, leaving the silent, smoking ruin behind them, three old friends driving off into the quiet dark.
The Specter flowed into the river of light that was the expressway, a silent vessel in a torrent of silent machines. Outside, the sun bled out across the horizon, staining the chro and glass towers of Virelia in hues of bruised purple and dying orange. Every reflection seed to stretch and distort, pulling the world out of shape. Synth’s gaze drifted from the road to the figure beside him, a heavy, hesitant motion. He was almost afraid of what he might see.
A note from Lord Turtle the first
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