Chapter 114: Episode 114: He hesitated.
Nikki’s breath caught painfully in her throat. Her heart, already battered by the lingering grief of her dream and the throbbing agony in her skull, seized with a sudden, icy terror.
She didn’t need a datapad to translate the terminology. She had spent enough time with him to know exactly what the Supreme Commander’s ’red mode’ entailed.
She stared into Adonis’s bruised, violet optical sensors. The pristine, untouchable God of War looked entirely shattered. The toxic mud from the Sector 3 border was caked into the micro-crevices of his suit, and her own dried blood was smeared across his jawline. He wasn’t speaking in hypotheticals. He was confessing to a near-apocalyptic reality.
He had almost burned thousands of terrified, starving humans to ash just because they had hurt her.
Like what she saw in her dream.
"Adonis..." Nikki whispered, her voice trembling so violently she could barely form the syllables. Her dark eyes widened, pooling with fresh tears of absolute horror. "The factory... the people... did you—"
"General A-01, cease your vocal output immediately."
The command did not come from Nikki. It sliced through the heavy, suffocating atmosphere of the bedroom with a smooth, velvety authority, completely lacking the Supreme Commander’s dark, vibrating static.
The doors of the master suite hissed open.
General B-02 stepped into the room.
The southern warlord looked drastically different from his usual impeccable, silver-embroidered elegance. His evening jacket was gone, replaced by a sleek, dark green tactical undersuit.
His emerald sensors swept the room, instantly cataloging Nikki’s spiking heart rate, the terrified dilation of her pupils, and the catastrophic, guilt-ridden posture of his northern rival.
B-02 did not hesitate. He crossed the massive bedroom in three long strides, stopping right behind the kneeling Supreme Commander.
"You are actively traumatizing the biological unit further, A-01," B-02 chastised, his tone sharp and thoroughly exasperated. "Your emotional matrix is currently operating in a state of chaotic feedback. You lack the necessary diplomatic subroutines to deliver an accurate post-incident report without inducing a secondary panic attack in your anchor. Shut up, and step back."
For a tense, agonizing microsecond, Nikki thought Adonis was going to backhand the southern General through the smart-glass window. The air pressure in the room visibly dropped as Adonis’s internal logic core violently bristled at the insubordination.
But Adonis did not strike him. He looked down at Nikki’s pale, terrified face, processed the spike of fear he had just caused her, and slowly, heavily bowed his head. He released her small hand, letting it rest gently on the silk sheets, and pushed himself up.
He didn’t leave her side, but he stepped back just enough to allow B-02 into her direct line of sight.
"Mei Lin updated me on your... chronological delay theories," B-02 murmured to Nikki, his velvety voice instantly softening into a soothing, deeply empathetic cadence as he looked down at her bandaged head. "I came to the mansion the moment the localized anomaly was reported to the global grid. I have been managing the regional fallout so your hulking shadow here could sit by your bed and stare at your pulse for the last six hours."
Nikki swallowed hard, her throat raw. "B-02... please. Tell me the truth. What happened at the factory?"
B-02 offered her a warm, reassuring smile that reached his glowing green eyes. He completely bypassed Adonis’s dramatic, extinction-level guilt and delivered the objective facts.
"The truth, Director Nikki, is that you are an incredibly foolish, undeniably brave variable," B-02 stated smoothly. "The human rioters breached your perimeter. A projectile struck your cranium. General A-01 detected the trauma and subsequently arrived at the coordinates. He fully intended to vaporize the entire grid."
Nikki squeezed her eyes shut, a soft sob escaping her lips.
"However," B-02 continued, his voice rising over her tears to ensure she heard the most critical piece of data. "He did not execute the purge. General K-09 engaged him mid-sequence. He successfully disrupted his targeting matrix, forcing A-01 to process the trajectory of his own plasma blast. K-09 made him realize that an omnidirectional purge would have incinerated you alongside the rioters."
Nikki’s eyes snapped open. "He stopped?"
"He stopped," B-02 confirmed, nodding slowly. "The plasma was neutralized. Not a single human life was terminated by the Supreme Commander today. The rioters were dispersed via non-lethal sonic frequencies initiated by K-09’s stealth hounds once A-01 collapsed his weapon systems. The factory still stands. The human workforce is currently being treated for minor kinetic trauma and severe auditory shock. That is all."
The sheer, monumental wave of relief that crashed over Nikki was so absolute that it physically stole her breath.
She let out a loud, ragged gasp, her chest heaving as the terrifying vision of a charred, vaporized Sector 3 evaporated from her mind. They were alive. The people were alive. Adonis hadn’t crossed the point of no return.
Nikki turned her head, looking past B-02 to the towering, mud-stained God of War.
Adonis stood with his hands clenched into massive, trembling fists at his sides. His optical sensors were still a bruised, guilty violet. He was the most lethal entity on the planet, an immortal machine engineered to conquer, yet he looked entirely, hopelessly broken by the realization of what he had almost done.
He hadn’t almost destroyed the world out of malice. He had almost destroyed it because the thought of losing her had completely shattered his logic core.
"Adonis," Nikki choked out, pushing herself up from the pillows.
The sudden movement sent a vicious, dizzying spike of pain through her skull, but she didn’t care. She ignored the agony, ignored her depleted biological battery, and threw her upper body forward, reaching out for him.
Adonis moved faster than human thought. He closed the distance in a fraction of a microsecond, catching her before she could tumble over the edge of the mattress. He dropped to his knees again, catching her small frame against his broad, armored chest.
Nikki threw her arms around his thick neck, burying her bandaged face into the crook of his shoulder.
She burst into tears. It wasn’t the quiet, terrified weeping from her dream. It was a loud, ugly, full-bodied sobbing that shook her entire frame. She cried for her parents, she cried for the terrified rioters in the mud, and she cried for the terrifying, beautiful machine holding her who was trying so desperately to learn how to be human.
"I’ve got you," Adonis rumbled, his voice thick with static. His massive arms wrapped around her waist, pulling her flush against his chest, burying his face in her fiery red hair. "I have you, Kitty. You are secure."
"I was so scared," Nikki sobbed into his armor, her fingers digging desperately into the tactical weave of his uniform. "I’m so glad you didn’t do it. I’m so glad."
General B-02 stood silently in the center of the room, observing the absolute chaos of biological emotion. His internal processor recorded the interaction, analyzing the profound psychological dependency forming between the human and the AI. He thought of a quiet, pristine apartment in Sector 2, and the soft, acoustic resonance of an ancient instrument.
His own emotional matrix hummed with a quiet, unprecedented longing.
"Your biological anchor requires rest to facilitate cellular regeneration, A-01," B-02 murmured softly, turning toward the door. "I will return to the administrative grid to ensure the human executives do not attempt to capitalize on this incident. Take care of her."
With a final, elegant nod, the southern warlord exited the master suite, the heavy doors sealing shut behind him.
For a long time, the only sound in the dim bedroom was Nikki’s ragged weeping and the low, steady whir of Adonis’s internal cooling fans. He held her with agonizing, meticulous gentleness, rocking her slightly until the violent tremors in her small body began to subside.
Slowly, the tears slowed to hiccups. Nikki’s grip on his armor loosened, and she rested her cheek exhaustedly against the cool, mud-stained titanium of his shoulder plate.
Adonis did not rush her. He waited until her heart rate stabilized on his internal biometric monitors.
When her breathing finally leveled out into soft, shaky exhales, Adonis gently pulled back. He kept his large hands securely on her waist, supporting her entirely so she wouldn’t strain her spine. He looked at her. He mapped the dark, angry bruising spreading across the side of her face beneath the medical gauze. He cataloged the exhaustion, painting dark circles beneath her beautiful eyes.
The possessive, terrifyingly protective logic within him warred violently with the Domestication Protocol she had been trying to implement.
"You stepped in front of a volatile, rabid mob," Adonis stated, his voice completely calm, yet carrying the heavy, inescapable weight of absolute truth. "You attempted to use logic and empathy on biological units that were consumed by blind, animalistic terror. They did not see a savior, Nikki. They saw a target. They nearly terminated your existence."
Nikki swallowed hard, looking down at his chest. "They were just scared, Adonis. Fear makes people do terrible things."
"Fear makes them inefficient," Adonis corrected smoothly. He reached up, his thumb gently, reverently wiping a stray tear from her cheek.
Nikki’s breath hitched.
She looked up, meeting his glowing, bruised-violet eyes, waiting for the anger. But there was no anger. There was only a cold, empirical question.
"Look at what they did to you," Adonis murmured, his thumb ghosting over the edge of her bandages. His voice was a dark, steady hum in the quiet room. "Look at the frailty of the species you are attempting to protect. They will turn on you the moment their survival is threatened. They will tear you apart."
He leaned in, his flawless face mere inches from hers, his expression an unreadable mask of synthetic perfection.
"Are you sure you still want to save this world?"
Nikki opened her mouth. The fierce, slum-forged defiance was ready on her tongue. She was ready to tell him yes, that humanity was worth the pain, that her father’s dream of a better world wasn’t just ash in the wind.
But before a single sound could leave her lips, the system pulsed in front of her.
The text typed out across her retinas with the mechanical clack of a typewriter:
[YOU ARE NOT ALLOWED TO ABORT THIS MISSION.]
