Chapter 427: Chapter 427: Against the Sentinels (9)
[Third Person Pov]
Havoc turned toward Peter, his chest and arms glowing as his body channeled power from the Punch Dinsion. Crimson energy pulsed beneath the seams of his suit, growing brighter with every passing second, building toward a devastating release. The air around him distorted from the pressure alone, small bits of debris lifting off the ground and trembling in anticipation. He raised his arm, fingers curling as he prepared to unleash the attack.
Before he could fire, Kat appeared behind him without a sound and placed a hand gently on his shoulder.
"That’s enough out of you." Felicia grinned, her green eyes flashing with confidence as she activated her bad luck field. Invisible waves of warped probability spread outward from her like ripples in a pond. Havoc’s suit imdiately began to malfunction. Warning lights flickered erratically, seams splitting apart as the delicate systems regulating his dinsional intake failed catastrophically. The energy he had gathered destabilized in an instant, no longer contained, no longer controlled.
It imploded.
The backlash detonated from his own body, the energy collapsing inward before violently exploding outward. Shards of armored plating blasted off in every direction like shrapnel. Havoc was thrown backward by his own attack, his body ragdolling violently across the ground. He bounced, rolled, and skidded uncontrollably before crashing hard against a wall. The impact left a visible crater in the surface as his body slumped forward. He didn’t move again. Blood trickled slowly from the corner of his lips and nose as he lay unconscious.
"Cover !" Peter shouted.
He grabbed Trask by the back of his collar and took off instantly, accelerating to super-speed. The world blurred around him as he moved. There was no ti to slow down, no ti to hesitate. The Sentinels were still being constructed, still being deployed across the globe, and every second that passed ant more of them coming online.
He weaved through the battlefield in a complex, unpredictable pattern, narrowly avoiding incoming Sentinels as they descended or erged from deploynt pods. Several lunged toward him, their sensors locking on, but they were intercepted before they could reach him. The X-n and the Spider-Family struck them down mid-pursuit, tearing through tal bodies with coordinated precision. Explosions lit the battlefield, fragnts of machines raining down like tallic hail.
The only reason any of them were still alive—why no one had died yet—was because of Felicia.
She stood perfectly still amidst the chaos, her eyes closed, her breathing slow and deliberate. In her mind, she could see it clearly. She was standing at the center of an imnse web. Each strand stretched outward endlessly, representing a different probability, a different possible outco. Every action taken by her allies, every movent made by the Sentinels, every choice, every variable, existed as threads she could perceive and influence.
Through those threads, she could see the truth.
Their chances of survival were shrinking.
Felicia moved, she fired webs to redirect falling debris that would have crushed her allies. She opened portals to reposition enemies into disadvantageous locations. She threw herself directly into harm’s way, intercepting attacks that would have been fatal. She twisted, flipped, and spun through the air like a living acrobat, her movents guided by perfect probabilistic calculation. Magic and warped chance flickered from her hands with every motion, bending reality in subtle but critical ways.
Still, it wasn’t enough.
’Things aren’t looking good,’ Felicia thought, panting as sweat soaked her hair and clung to her forehead. Her muscles ached from the strain of maintaining so many probability threads at once. ’If I don’t act soon, everything collapses.’
She clenched her fists. ’If my gamble doesn’t work... we’re all dead.’
Her jaw tightened, then she growled under her breath and shook her head.
"Fuck it," she snarled loudly. "Let’s go gambling!"
She exhaled slowly, steadying herself, "I might use a cat motif... but Mama ain’t raise no pussy."
Power began to concentrate in her palm, condensing into a dense point of warped probability. The air around her hand crackled faintly as the energy discharged in small arcs. The energy twisted, folded, and compressed until it manifested into a physical object—a coin. It spun slowly in the air above her palm, shimring with supernatural weight.
Felicia grabbed it.
"Heads, my control over probability increases," she said calmly, establishing the condition. "Tails, and it decreases."
A binding gamble.
She flicked the coin into the air. It spun upward, tumbling end over end. For a mont, the chaos of the battlefield seed to fade as everything slowed in her perception. The coin rotated in perfect clarity. One side bore the head of a cat, its expression sharp and predatory. The other showed its tail, curled and elegant.
The coin reached its apex.
It fell.
Felicia caught it smoothly and slapped it onto the back of her hand.
She lifted her palm... Heads.
A grin spread across her face instantly, "Fuck yeah, baby! This is why you gamble!!"
Power erupted from her, it exploded outward in a violent surge, distorting the air and space around her. The probabilistic web in her mind beca infinitely clearer, sharper, more detailed. Threads that had been faint and fragile were now bright and solid, completely under her influence.
She leapt into the air, her body shifting mid-motion. Her human form dissolved into shadow and magic, reforming into a sleek black cat. Her fur was darker than night itself, her bright green slit eyes glowing with overwhelming power.
She landed gracefully on all fours.
The battlefield had changed, or rather, she had changed the battlefield.
She ran forward, moving with impossible speed and precision. With every step, she manipulated the probability fields around her, forcing reality itself to align with her desired outcos. Enemy attacks missed. Allies avoided fatal blows by re inches. Sentinels malfunctioned at critical monts. Every movent she made rewrote their chances of survival.
The gamble had paid off.
Peter kicked the door open with enough force to tear it off its hinges. The tal slab slamd into the wall with a deafening crash, echoing through the massive chamber beyond.
Peter kicked the door open with force, the tal fra bending inward from the impact. He stepped through without slowing, his focus locked entirely on his objective—until he froze.
In the center of the massive chamber sat sothing enormous.
It dwarfed every Sentinel he had seen so far. Its body was colossal, easily several tis larger than the others, its armored fra reinforced with thicker plating and layered defensive systems. It wasn’t standing. It was seated upon a raised platform that resembled a throne, as if it were so kind of chanical monarch presiding over its domain. Thick cables and conduits extended from its back and limbs, connecting it directly into the surrounding infrastructure. Energy pulsed through those connections in steady, rhythmic waves.
Peter didn’t need an introduction, "Master Mold..." he muttered, imdiately recognizing what stood before him.
The progenitor.
The source.
The father of every Sentinel.
"Spider-Man," Master Mold replied, its deep, chanical voice reverberating throughout the chamber. Its head tilted slightly, optics focusing directly on him. "I have been observing—"
"Yada, yada, yada, blah, blah, blah," Peter interrupted casually as he walked forward. "Too long. Don’t care."
He reached the central computer terminal connected to Master Mold and imdiately grabbed Trask’s limp hand. The scientist groaned weakly but couldn’t resist as Peter pressed his palm against the biotric scanner.
The system beeped.
Access granted.
Peter let Trask’s body drop unceremoniously to the floor like discarded trash. His hands moved instantly, fingers flying across the keyboard at superhuman speed. The screen flooded with code, lines of data scrolling faster than any normal person could perceive.
Master Mold’s optics narrowed slightly. "I have been observing you and your allies," it continued, its voice calm and cold. "And your aningless struggle."
"Voyager," Peter shot back absentmindedly, not even looking at it. His eyes darted across the screen, tracking patterns, identifying pathways, vulnerabilities. His fingers never stopped moving, injecting commands, probing defenses, testing responses.
"I do not require complete analysis to conclude your probability of success is negligible," Master Mold stated. "The extermination of humanity is inevitable."
Peter paused briefly, tilting his head slightly, "Where’s the mute button on this thing?" he muttered, typing another command.
Master Mold continued without pause, "How childish. Humor used as a defensive chanism to mask fear and insecurity. Your behavior aligns with previously observed psychological profiles. It is irrelevant. We have evolved beyond your ability to destroy. We were remade to be unkillable. Unstoppable. Your actions are futile."
Peter nudged Trask’s unconscious body with his foot, "You built the most sophisticated murder machine on the planet," Peter said dryly, "and didn’t think to add a mute button. Sha on you."
Behind his mask, his expression hardened, ’Damn it,’ he thought. ’Even its coding is adapting.’
Every pathway he tried to shut down rerouted itself. Every vulnerability sealed itself the mont he found it. The system wasn’t static. It was alive in its own way, evolving in real ti to counter him.
’I’ll need to create sothing adaptive,’ Peter realized. ’A virus that evolves faster than its source code.’
His fingers accelerated even further, moving so fast they beca a blur, ’Shouldn’t be too hard,’ he thought.
He paused briefly, ’Hopefully.’
Master Mold was fully aware of Peter’s intrusion. It monitored every command, every attempted override, every injection. It recognized the strategy imdiately.
And imdiately dismissed it, Peter’s efforts were insignificant. Predictable. Futile. Master Mold had already simulated millions of scenarios. It had modeled every conceivable form of resistance. Conventional warfare. Nuclear escalation. Global annihilation events. In every simulation, one outco remained constant.
The Sentinels endured, they adapted, they survived, humanity did not.
Peter’s efforts were no different than watching ants struggle beneath an approaching foot.
"AHHHHH—!!"
The scream tore from Master Mold’s speakers without warning. Electricity surged violently through the cables connected to its body. Its entire system spasd as Peter’s virus burrowed deep into its core.
Its visual interface glitched violently.
Static flooded its sensors.
Error ssages cascaded across its systems faster than it could suppress them.
A spider symbol appeared at the center of its vision. Then another window opened, and another, and another.
"Are you seriously watching porn all by yourself?" a notification echoed mockingly.
More windows appeared, pop-ups, advertisents.
"LOCAL MILF 5 KM AWAY."
"SINGLE MOMS WANT TO ET YOU."
Porn windows multiplied uncontrollably, flooding its interface.
Its processing power diverted involuntarily, its adaptive systems overwheld—not by destruction, but by distraction.
Peter leaned casually against the terminal, crossing his arms. "Uh huh," he said with a smirk. "Looks like soone forgot to clear their search history."
Master Mold’s body convulsed as its systems spiraled out of control. Its adaptive protocols struggled to compensate, but the virus itself adapted faster, multiplying, evolving, consuming processing resources faster than Master Mold could reclaim them.
With a violent motion, Master Mold tore the cables from its own body.
Sparks exploded outward as the connections snapped, it fell forward from its throne. The impact shook the entire chamber.
Its red eyes flickered. Once. Twice. Then dimd.
The glow faded completely, turning into lifeless grey. Its massive fra went still.
Inactive.
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