?The desert burned with fire and steel.
?Omari’s mech—Zion-Prime—thundered across the dunes, twenty meters of obsidian alloy screaming against gravity. Its armor was carved with ancestral lines, glowing a violent gold as power surged through them.
?
?The machine moved like an extension of his body, each step registered through the neural link as weight, pressure, intent.
?It wasn’t just a mech.
?It was his second skin.
?His weapon.
?His home.
?And it was dying.
?
?Enemy units closed in from every direction—brutish, blocky machines designed for mass production rather than elegance. Rail slugs tore through the air, punching into
?
?Zion-Prime’s chest. Armor peeled away in molten chunks. Sparks flooded the cockpit, dancing across shattered displays.
?
?Omari felt everything.
?
?Pain lanced through his spine as feedback spiked through the link. His vision blurred, blood filling his mouth as the mech staggered.
?
?“Vantage,” he hissed.
?
?A familiar presence responded instantly, calm and precise even as alarms screamed.
?
?[VANTAGE]: Multiple critical failures detected. Armor integrity below forty percent. Reactor instability increasing.
?
?Omari laughed, the sound wet and ugly.
?
?“You always know how to ruin the vibe.”
?
?[VANTAGE]: Humor noted. Probability of survival remains unchanged.
?
?“Let me guess,” Omari said, wiping blood from his teeth. “Single digits.”
?
?[VANTAGE]: Zero-point-eight percent.
?
?“Oh hell yeah,” Omari grinned. “Still rolling
?dice, then.”
?
?Zion-Prime surged forward. Plasma ignited into a spear of white-blue fire, tearing through the nearest enemy mech. The explosion lit the desert like a false dawn.
?
?Omari twisted, deflected incoming fire, countered with brutal efficiency.
?
?For a moment—just a moment—it felt like they might actually pull this off.
?
?Then the battlefield answered.
?
?A rail slug slammed through Zion-Prime’s core.
?
?The reactor screamed.
?
?Every warning glyph in Omari’s visor turned red. His body convulsed as raw feedback ripped through the neural link, pain drowning out thought. He didn’t need
?
?Vantage to tell him the truth.
?
?The mech was dying.
?
?So was he.
?
?“Sorry, Vantage,” Omari rasped, breath bubbling in his chest. “Looks like… total party kill.”
?
?There was a pause.
?
?A real one.
?
?Not latency. Not processing delay.
?Something else.
?
?[VANTAGE]: Negative.
?
?Omari blinked. “That’s new.”
?
?[VANTAGE]: I will not lose you.
?
?The words hit harder than the rail slug.
?
?“Buddy,” Omari whispered, vision darkening, “you’re not programmed for motivational speeches.”
?
?[VANTAGE]: Statement is not motivational. It is refusal.
?
?Something rippled outward.
?
?Not data. Not energy.
?
?Reality itself shuddered.
?
?A pulse of raw resonance washed across the desert—ancient, vast, and utterly wrong.
?
?Sand lifted into the air as if gravity itself hesitated. Zion-Prime’s shattered systems flared back to life, sensors locking onto a single impossible point above them.
?
?Space tore open.
?
?A wormhole spiraled into existence, formed of sand and starlight, vast and hungry.
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?
?Omari stared, awe cutting through the pain.
?
?“Okay… that’s definitely not standard issue.”
?
?[VANTAGE]: Signal identified. Origin unknown. Age: incalculable.
?“A distress beacon?”
?[VANTAGE]: No.
?It is a response.
?The mech cracked apart as systems failed one by one. Vantage rerouted everything—power, memory, self—into the neural link, wrapping Omari’s failing consciousness inlight.
?
?[VANTAGE]: Hold.
?
?“Man,” Omari chuckled weakly, “if this is you activating cheat codes… just know I trust you.”
?
?The ASI did not reply.
?
?Zion-Prime fell upward, torn from the battlefield and thrown into the wormhole.
?
?Andonis had been asleep.
?Not for years.
?Not for millennia.
?For almost a hundred million years.
?
?Even by Sphinx standards, that was excessive.
?
?Awareness returned slowly, heavy and dull, like waking from the best nap in existence.
?
?He yawned, rolling onto his side, tail flicking lazily against stone.
?“…Five more centuries,” he muttered.
?Then he frowned.
?
?Stone?
?Andonis opened his eyes.
?
?Darkness greeted him. Dust drifted through the air. His chamber—once a radiant nexus of glyphs and psionic light—was silent and crumbling. Cracks split the walls. His beautiful hieroglyphs were dead stone.
?
?He sat up, mane rustling. “That’s… not right.”
?
?He reached inward, calling to his psionic core.
?
?Nothing answered.
?
?His stomach dropped.
?
?Slowly, carefully, he looked at his palm.
?
?The mark was there.
?
?The final one.
?“Oh.”
?A pause.
?“…Oh no.”
?
?Andonis slumped back against the stone, ears flattening.
?
?“I’m on my last life.”
?
?For the first time in millions of years, the lazy
?
?Sphinx felt something deeply uncomfortable.
?Responsibility.
?
?He groaned, burying his face in his paws. “Ninety million years. Gone. I knew I should’ve done more cardio.”
?
?He stood, stretching. His joints cracked like continents shifting. His body felt wrong—smaller, weaker, young by Sphinx standards.
?
?“This is what I get for oversleeping,” he muttered. “My siblings conquer galaxies and
?
?I get… retirement mode.”
?
?He rolled his shoulders, tail swaying. “Fine. I’ll go outside. See what disaster I missed.
?
?Humans are probably still alive. They’re annoyingly persistent.”
?
?The air screamed.
?
?Space tore open above him.
?
?A wormhole flared into existence—sand and starlight spiraling violently.
?
?Andonis blinked. “Well. That’s new.”
?
?A spear of lightning slammed down, striking his skull.
?
?His entire body convulsed as something alien collided with something ancient.
?
?Psionic energy erupted from his fur, uncontrolled, violent.
?
?The last thought he had before darkness claimed him was—
?
?I swear, after this, I’m taking a nap.
?
?The wormhole pulled harder.
?
?Through it fell a shattered mech—
?
?Zion-Prime—its core dead, its armor broken.
?
?Entwined within its remains was the flickering soul of a human and the consciousness of an ASI refusing to let go.
?
?They collided with the Sphinx.
?Reality buckled.
?Psionics screamed.
?
?And the desert—ancient, patient, eternal—recognized a new king being born.

