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Far outside the outskirts of the Undersider city, an old machine watched from rocky cliffs. He sat, cross legged within the comfort of his hoversled, the roofing reattached, and all his boxes and items returned to their usual spots. The metal canopy above him shimmered, small pulses of occult lazily swirling across.

Inside the metal net, light bent in a confusing manner. Not to the machine, he had already adjusted and developed his own algorithms to correct the distortions. To him, the view was as clear as if he were standing outside. But from the outside, nothing of the sled could be seen.

Before him, the human city stood tall. Battered, but proud. And within it, a most peculiar culture was rumored to have sprung up. The traveler hummed, mechanic throat trilling. Long fingers stretched out, lifting a lantern off the sled floor up to old eyes. “You brought me here.” He said, glowing blue eyes staring deep into the glass plane. “To witness?”

Inside the lantern, all skittering about in one single direction, smaller mites circled the unnatural blue flame at the center, as if exalting in it. They said nothing of course. Mites never spoke to outsiders with any kind of skill. An irony the traveler always found peculiar.

A single mite could create a mountain with enough time, and fill it with life of all kinds. Tiny gods, shaping the world however they wished. And yet it took millions of them banding together to speak even a single word. He pondered the nine he’d been told. So many ways to interpret that. Words were powerful, especially when each had been handpicked by mites.

“Alas, was too slow.” He said to the silent mites crawling around inside the lantern. “Could not be helped. Travel at pace.”

The land before him was filled with scars, testament to the rumored battle between the new demi-gods. The first in centuries since things had quieted down. Indeed a shame he’d missed it by days. The city would do as a consolation prize at least.

To his side, the machine set down the lantern against the old hoversled. It had been his home, his refuge. Fortunately, lending his home for a moment hadn’t seen it wrecked or disrespected. A gamble that had paid off. He’d found it safe and sound, waiting for him, inside the cave he’d dug out.

A clawed hand of white ceramic armor, marred with black lettering, lightly tapped the side of the sled. Tracing the images painted until he found where he had left off last. Finding it, he drew out a small bowl of paints.

Taking his time, the traveler painted a pillar, and filled it with holes before a broken gate. And before that, a smaller figure in blue approached. That would do for now.

The fresh image reminded him of the danger before him.

He always risked true death when walking the lands. And so, he had learned a great deal on how to move silently. A set of rules to follow that minimized chances of being seen. And he was about to break the very first of his rules.

The lantern was picked up again, the old machine gazed inside. The little creatures continued circling the blue flame, ever seeking a way out.

The colony said nothing as usual. He hooked the loop of the lantern to his paddling staff. He liked to believe that the mites appreciated the glass walls, and appreciated a view of the world outside built by their peers. That and the lick of flame he’d added to the center. They didn’t need to be warm of course, it simply pleased him.

The mite container Tsuya had designed was far less artistic than his own interpretation. More to the point and direct. Superior to his cumbersome homemade version in every way. Then again, she was a goddess and he was a simple retired traveler.

She’d made hundreds of seekers, before dispersing them away. While his little lantern remained intact over the years, all her own were gone and broken.

Except for one that had resurfaced. One the mites had stirred and brokered a deal with him for. Something had happened in the world, and the traveler had a hunch it had to do with that human, walking side by side with a Feather.

The human had hidden the seeker well. So many traps. Deadly. Nefarious. A32 would have approved greatly of that human mage, were that cocky bastard still alive.

Recovering that artifact had gone against too many of his rules. Too many traps, too much preparation. Who knows how much more he’d failed to spot. Too much risk. He hadn’t lived until now by taking chances.

The mites were not quite so understanding. So he’d brokered a different deal with them that ended in the same way.

Despite the waste of time it had been to travel all the way to the surface, an interesting experience was an interesting experience. He hadn’t ever gone that far up before. Near there, machines stopped being threats and he’d found the entire place riddled with shallow human-forged caves. Patrolled by danger nonetheless, but of a different kind and breed.

Temperatures here chased off any living being and prying eyes, a perfect place for Tsuya to hide things she didn’t want found. He could have attempted to sulk directly on the surface, hiding among the snow. But Tsuya’s satellites would not have looked down kindly on him. And one of his rules was to avoid being around dangerous things if at all possible.

So he’d stayed lurking among the human made caverns and rooms. Deciding if he should continue or not. Hiding away from the human knights patrolling around in the depths. Dangerous that was.

Nothing like what the humans of old used to wage the first war at least. All of that was long gone, and Relinquished made sure she’d never have to deal with such things ever again. In the past, machines like him were given that job. Today, Feathers were more trusted with such things. The little marionettes dancing around to her strings.

His hand brushed on the side of the sled, touching the very rear seat. A purple monster with many teeth, tossing a dozen black figures in the air, gobbling them all up. But some still fell by the wayside, scattering away.

She was not all-powerful, and the world was a very large place. Much escaped her purge, like himself. Slipping through the cracks, vanishing away.

A great part of why he was not happy about what the mites were demanding of him. To hide from her sight, one simply needed to be as uninteresting as possible. Even better was to never be noticed or thought of at all.

He raised the lantern up, watching the micro colony inside. Everything that survived the human era, survived by being uninteresting outdated junk. All rotting away in landfills before being gobbled up by the mites, endlessly replicated for their amusement now. Relinquished could only throw a tantrum at that, the mites were beyond her control. Impossible to contain or squash down like humans, and oddly spiteful if pushed. The humans would have had far less armor to run around in if she’d behaved herself when she initially found out what Urs had been up to.

“Perhaps can leave message instead.” He muttered. “No one needs to see. Already showed face once. Is not enough?”

Inside the lantern, they made no change in their path. Mites had no such thing as body language. He wasn’t even sure the mites themselves could command their physical bodies. No more than a human could command their heart.

He did feel a tendril of soul reach out to him from the lantern, sending a pulse of feeling. The colony had heard him. And they did not approve. He’d deviated enough already. There was a plan and he needed to follow it. They had foreseen something. And him walking among the humans was one such image among their vision.

“You want walk? In city? Be known again? Be reasonable, friends. Sanctuary… a long way from here. Much lurks in the dark between. Very dangerous.”

They didn’t answer. Likely they didn’t understand the concept of danger. He sighed, shaking his head. Dealing with mites was a take and give. To gain anything, they had demands. Sometimes those demands would be unworded, a favor for later. If he didn’t do this, the mites would never speak to him again. And he’s lose his keys to the kingdom.

The old machine dipped his staff down, fractals within triggering and rendering the whole thing unseen. A strong push and the sled floated forward, gliding off the cliff and slowly floating down.

The city loomed before him, his pace was constant, rowing across the dead rocks. Soon he would reach the gates.

The mites had spoken to him, brought him out here for a reason. Gave him the gift of nine words, carefully picked. They’d told him his future.

If there were a single time to break his rules, it was now. The end times had begun, the mites playing their games again and for all he knew, they might succeed this time. What that success looked like, that was a question he would need to reflect deeply on before committing.

He didn’t know who would remain after the ash settled. Every piece had to fend for themselves in the game of gods.

The gates loomed before him, his invisible raft gliding silently across the stone ground. He did not yet feel her presence around. Either Tsuya or the mites may be capturing her attention, keeping her gaze away.

But it was only a matter of time until Relinquished noticed the deception.

And then the game would grow ugly.


End of book 3



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Thanks all for your support!

Couple of announcements:

I’ll take a month break before starting book 4. I’ll be turning off patreon payment for that month. Partly because Anime AX is coming up and I planned a week trip there and to try and make a backlog!

Other news, we’ve got a discord channel! This is a community discord shared by about a dozen stories on RR, some you might be familiar with too. The link is here: https://discord.gg/jZ9dxZmnha

Thanks all, see ya all for book 4’s rollercoaster.

Comments

Matthew

Thanks for Book 3! I'm really enjoying how this story is developing. I love the pacing, and the gradual revealing of the world. Enjoy your month off!

ZipZap

have a great time at anime AX!

TroubleFait

Thanks a lot for writing this story, I've had a great time reading you and discovering the world you crafted, the technology and magic you imagined, the characters you made live.

Phantom

Thank you for a great book 3 this story never disappoints!

Pedro Villa

Yes a haitus! As a Hunter x Hunter and Berserk fan, those are the best chapters. (jk, enjoy your vacation, you deserve it, we'll be here when you get back) I'm stoked to find out who this renegade machine is that is as old as dirt. It looks like he might be Toaster Wife's Gandalf, which will be cool. I'd love to see him bedazzle people with smoke rings and fireworks, haha. Although, that might get him killed, so probably no pyrokinetics. Also, if Keith doesn't reverse-engineer those jetpacks, I will be thoroughly disappointed in him.

EU-Nox

damm and i just subscribed

Louis Nel

Just boosted my sub so I could read the finale. I'd have like more closure with K&K and their father but it's been a long journey and they have a lot to get through I suppose . Thanks for a great story and enjoy your break.

MarkArrows

The upfront payment was to catch up to all this, but this month's not going to be billed so nothing lost there! RR will have to also wait a month when their turn comes up.

Geminus

Great ending! Love it!