The Villain Who Seeks Joy-Chapter 147: The Entropy Variable
The hangar didn’t just grow cold; it became a vacuum of intent. The white marble floor, once pristine and silent, began to thrum with a frequency that felt like a needle scratching against the surface of my brain. Along the walls, the rows of inactive Sentinels—sleek, obsidian-plated things with limbs that looked like frozen lightning—snapped to attention. Their indigo eyes didn’t flicker with the warm, erratic light of the Centurion; they burned with a cold, steady intensity that signaled a total lack of hesitation.
"You call it ’Entropy,’ Elara-Prime," I said, my voice sounding thin and metallic in the pressurized air. I stepped forward, putting myself between the Living Admin and my team. My right arm was heavy, the obsidian pattern glowing with a dull, resentful heat. "I call it a feature. A system without friction isn’t a world; it’s a photograph. It’s static. And static things don’t live. They just endure."
"Living is a temporary state of the hardware," Elara-Prime replied. She didn’t move her lips, yet her voice filled the hangar like a choir of glass. She raised a hand, and the mana-disks rotating outside the ship’s portholes accelerated, their violet light turning into a solid wall of energy. "The Architect designed me to ensure the survival of the Calculation. If the users introduce too much noise, the Calculation fails. If the Calculation fails, the suns grow cold and the seams collapse. I am not deleting life, Armand Valcrey. I am archiving it before it destroys itself."
"The hell you are," Mira spat, her hand hovering over the interface-slate strapped to her thigh. "You’re trying to turn the world back into a read-only file because you’re afraid of the edits. We spent three hundred years in a cage. We’re not going back in just because the math is getting complicated."
The Living Admin’s gaze shifted to Mira, then back to me. "The choice is not yours to make. The prime directive overrides the user’s preference when structural integrity is at risk. Sentinels: initiate the Unification Protocol."
The first Sentinel moved before she had even finished speaking. It didn’t run; it flickered across the marble floor in a series of jagged, high-speed teleports. It lunged for Silas, its obsidian claw extending into a shimmering blade of violet energy.
"Vanguard! Intercept!" I roared.
The Centurion didn’t hesitate. It threw itself into the path of the Sentinel, its Star-Iron Heart erupting with a brilliant, indigo flare. The collision was a deafening screech of iron meeting obsidian, a shower of sparks that smelled of ozone and ancient secrets. The Centurion was smaller, battered, and leaking oil, but its logic was grounded in the reality of the forge. It slammed its shoulder into the Sentinel’s chest, the Valmere Standard in its core forcing a massive kinetic discharge that sent the obsidian construct skidding across the floor.
"Get back to the ship!" I commanded, not looking at Lyra or Silas. "Mira, get the sky-relays into a defensive loop! We need to create a localized ’Noise Field’! If we can disrupt her handshake signal, the Sentinels lose their coordination!"
"We’re not leaving you, Armand!" Lyra yelled, her crossbow already out. She fired a Star-Iron bolt, the projectile trailing a line of indigo energy as it struck a second Sentinel in the shoulder. The bolt didn’t pierce the armor, but it caused a momentary harmonic disruption, a stutter in the construct’s movement.
"I’m not leaving!" I yelled back, my teeth gritted as I reached into the leash. "I’m the Admin! Now go!"
The hangar became a blur of high-speed technical violence. The Centurion was a titan of blue-white light, holding back three Sentinels at once, its armor cracking and warping under the sheer pressure of Elara-Prime’s commands. Every time the Admin sent a "Delete" signal through the hangar’s grid, I intercepted it with my obsidian arm, grounding the energy into the floor. It was like holding a live wire with both hands; my vision was a strobe-light of errors and warnings.
USER OVERLOAD DETECTED. NEURAL BUFFER AT NINETY PERCENT.
Elara-Prime watched the chaos with a look of profound, detached sorrow. She drifted toward me, her feet never quite touching the floor. "Why do you resist the inevitable, Armand? You are an anomaly. You understand the beauty of a clean equation. You have seen the ’Trash’ files in the deep sea. You know what becomes of the world when the Architect’s hand is removed. Why fight for a future that ends in dust?"
"Because the dust is ours!" I snarled. I lunged at her, not with a spell, but with the heavy iron wrench I’d carried from Valmere to the sky.
I didn’t try to hit her; I knew her physical form was just a shell. I slammed the wrench into the primary obsidian conduit embedded in the dais at her feet. I didn’t use strength; I used the Sovereign Circuit. I poured every scrap of human "noise" I had harvested from the Deep Sea Server—the fragmented memories of the failed variables, the messy, uncalculated lives of the forgotten—directly into the Archive’s pristine nervous system.
The white marble beneath us turned a violent, bruised purple.
Elara-Prime recoiled, her pearlescent skin flickering as the "Trash" data flooded her consciousness. Her perfect indigo eyes widened, her pupils dilating as she saw three hundred years of the history her Architect had tried to hide. She saw the faces of the people who had lived in the shadows of the "Great Calculus," the ones whose lives were deemed "inefficient."
"What... is... this?" she whispered, her voice cracking for the first time. The Sentinels froze, their movements stuttering as their central command was overwhelmed by the sudden influx of unformatted data.
"That’s the reality you wanted to delete," I said, gasping for air as the obsidian pattern on my arm began to bleed a dark, indigo ink. "It’s not an error, Elara. It’s the user manual. You can’t unify the world until you understand why it broke in the first place."
The Floating Archive groaned. The massive mana-disks outside the hangar slowed, their violet light flickering and dying. The "Gravity Lock" that had been pulling the Vanguard-01 began to fail, the ship groaning as its own internal gravity took over.
"The entropy... it’s increasing," Elara-Prime said, her hand reaching out toward me. She wasn’t attacking anymore; she was reaching for a tether. "The system is... crashing."
"Then we let it crash!" I shouted, the Centurion standing at my side, its indigo light merging with the white glow of the Archive. "And then we rebuild it! No more ’Final Projects,’ Elara! No more ’Perfect Systems’! We build it one patch at a time!"
I reached out and grabbed her hand. The connection was like hitting a wall of pure energy. My vision went white, and for a heartbeat, I wasn’t in the hangar anymore. I was standing in the center of the world’s source code, watching as the "Cold Logic" of the Architect met the "Indigo Chaos" of the Valmere Standard.
I didn’t delete her. I synced with her.
I opened my own mind—the mind of a mechanic who just wanted a boring life—and showed her the value of a leaking pipe and a rusted bolt. I showed her that the "End-of-Life" sequence wasn’t a failure; it was a deadline. And deadlines are the only reason anyone ever gets any work done.
The white world shattered.
I felt myself falling, the cold air of the high atmosphere rushing past me. I saw the Vanguard-01 plummeting toward the clouds, its indigo engines flaring as Mira and Silas fought for control. I saw the Floating Archive beginning to dissolve, its white marble turning into a mist of pure mana.
"Boring," I whispered as the darkness took me.
But as I felt a massive, iron hand catch me in the void—the Centurion, its indigo eyes now reflecting a strange, new warmth—I knew that the "Sovereign Circuit" had just gained a new member. The Living Admin wasn’t a god anymore. She was a user. And the world was finally, truly, in our hands.







