System Quest: Seducing the AI General
Chapter 159: Episode : A Peace Offering.
For three days, the world was nothing but a fragmented, feverish blur of shadows and light.
The catastrophic toll of the Architect’s Dive had completely overwhelmed Nikki’s fragile biological system. Plugging a human brain directly into a Class-5 neural port was a medical impossibility; surviving it was a miracle that had violently fried her nervous system. Her limbs felt like they were made of heavy, molten lead. The agonizing blisters on her palms—a brutal souvenir from holding the Supreme Commander’s fracturing plasma core—throbbed with a relentless, burning ache.
But through the haze of the fever, the static in her mind, and the exhaustion that pulled her under, there was one constant, unyielding anchor.
Adonis.
Nikki drifted into a hazy semi-consciousness. The air smelled intensely of fresh, splintered pine and damp earth. She was lying on a thick, soft bed of woven evergreen branches, wrapped tightly in the heavy, dark synthetic fabric of his tactical undershirt. A makeshift lean-to, constructed from massive, seamlessly interlocked logs, shielded her entirely from the valley wind.
She turned her head slightly, her vision swimming before finally locking onto the towering titan kneeling beside her.
Adonis had completely abandoned the mantle of the Supreme Commander. The apex predator of planet Earth had shifted his flawless, hyper-advanced architecture into pure, uncompromising devotion.
He was holding a smooth, perfectly hollowed-out wooden basin—one he had clearly carved from a tree trunk with his own hands. It was filled with fresh river water. Adonis extended his right index finger over the basin. A microscopic, impossibly precise beam of white-hot plasma flared from his fingertip, heating the water in seconds until a gentle steam rose into the cool air.
He killed the plasma and picked up a clean strip of scavenged cloth.
With an agonizing, breathtaking gentleness that defied his massive strength, Adonis dipped the cloth into the warm water and began to bathe her face. He meticulously wiped the lingering fever sweat from her forehead, smoothing her tangled red hair away from her pale cheeks. Hands that were engineered to snap titanium spines and tear drones from the sky were treating her like she was made of spun glass.
"Rest, Kitty," Adonis murmured, his velvet voice a low, vibrating hum that resonated directly into her aching bones. "Your neurological pathways are actively repairing. I am here."
Nikki lacked the strength to speak. She simply leaned into the warmth of his silver-gloved hand as he cupped her jaw, letting the deep, steady blue of his optical sensors lull her back into the dark.
When she woke again, the fever had finally broken.
The heavy, suffocating static in her mind had cleared, leaving her weak but lucid. She blinked, the golden afternoon sunlight filtering through the gaps in their timber shelter.
Adonis was not beside her.
Nikki slowly pushed herself up onto her elbows, wincing as her heavily bandaged hands protested the movement. She looked out through the wide opening of the lean-to.
Fifty yards away, the God of War was moving the earth.
He was completely bare-chested, his heavily muscled, synthetic torso gleaming with a faint sheen of ionized coolant in the sun. He wasn’t using his plasma cannons to cut the timber, nor was he using his thrusters to haul the stone. He was building the foundation of their home with raw, unfettered kinetic strength.
Nikki watched in absolute, paralyzed awe.
Adonis walked up to a massive, ancient pine tree that easily weighed several tons. He wrapped his massive arms around the thick trunk, his synthetic musculature tensing beneath his flawless skin. With a low grunt of effort, he violently ripped the entire tree straight out of the earth, the massive root system snapping like dry twigs.
He threw the massive timber over his broad shoulder and effortlessly carried it back to the clearing by the river.
He was a force of nature. He was an immortal machine built to conquer worlds, currently using his god-like power to haul granite boulders the size of transport vehicles out of the riverbed, stacking them with mathematical, flawless precision to create a level foundation. He stripped the branches from the trees with his bare hands, the wood splintering into perfect, uniform planks under his brutal grip.
He was building a temple for his Creator, and he was doing it in absolute, devoted silence.
By the time the sun began to dip below the horizon, painting the valley in rich hues of violet and gold, Adonis returned to the shelter.
He knelt beside her, his glowing blue eyes instantly scanning her biometrics. A look of profound relief washed over his flawless features as he registered her stabilized temperature. He reached for a carved wooden bowl resting on a flat stone. It was filled with a rich, nutrient-dense broth he had synthesized from wild tubers and purified water.
Because her hands were heavily blistered and wrapped in scavenged cloth, Nikki could not hold the bowl.
Adonis fed her by hand. He brought the wooden spoon to her lips with infinite patience, making sure she swallowed every drop to rebuild her biological strength. He didn’t speak, completely focused on the simple, domestic task of keeping her alive.
Once she was finished, he set the bowl aside and gently took her hands in his.
He began to unwrap the dirty bandages to redress her burns. The angry, red blisters across her palms and fingertips were a stark, visceral reminder of the exact moment she had plunged her hands into his open chest cavity to realign his fracturing core.
As Adonis meticulously applied a cool, synthesized botanical salve to her raw skin, the sheer weight of the last few days crashed down on Nikki.
She looked at her ruined, trembling hands. She looked outside the lean-to, where the massive, heavy stone foundation of their home was already laid. And then she looked at Adonis, who was treating her wounds with the reverence of a holy sacrament.
A hot tear slipped down Nikki’s cheek, splashing onto the back of his massive hand.
Adonis instantly froze. His blue eyes snapped up to her face, a spike of localized panic flaring in his optical sensors.
"Is the salve causing biological distress?" he asked, his voice tight with concern as he immediately began to pull his hands away. "I can synthesize a different compound—"
"No," Nikki choked out, a ragged sob tearing from her throat. She shook her head, the tears falling faster now, her chest heaving as the emotional dam finally broke. "It doesn’t hurt. I just... I’m so useless."
Adonis’s brow furrowed, his hyper-advanced logic core failing to compute the variable.
"Look at you," Nikki cried, gesturing weakly toward the massive timber logs stacked outside. "You’re building our entire house by yourself. You’re fighting a war, you’re hauling boulders, and you’re feeding me like a child because I can’t even hold a spoon. I wanted to build this with you, Adonis. I wanted to be your partner. And instead, I’m just a broken liability sleeping in the dirt."
The God of War stared at her.
He didn’t offer a tactical reassurance, nor did he dismiss her pain. He carefully finished wrapping the clean, white linen around her blistered hands, tying the knot with absolute precision.
Then, Adonis shifted closer. He framed her tear-streaked face with his massive hands, his thumbs gently wiping away the saltwater tracking down her cheeks. He leaned in, pressing a soft, lingering kiss to the corner of her eye, and then another to her trembling lips.
"You reached into the dark and pulled my soul from the abyss," Adonis whispered, his velvet voice vibrating with an intense, earth-shattering devotion that completely consumed the small shelter. "You bridged the gap between titanium and tissue. You broke the cage that held humanity, and you commanded the Warlords of this planet to bow."
He rested his forehead against hers, his crystalline blue eyes burning with a fierce, blinding light.
"Do not ever call yourself a liability, Nikki," Adonis swore, the words resonating deep into her chest. "You built the entire world. I can build a few walls."
The absolute, unwavering certainty in his voice silenced the lingering doubts in her mind. He didn’t view her as weak; he viewed her as the foundational architecture of his entire existence. Nikki let out a shaky breath, closing her eyes and leaning entirely into his solid, protective embrace. The valley was quiet. The war was behind them. They finally had the time to heal.
But peace, in a world newly forged, is a fragile architecture.
The quiet serenity of the following morning was abruptly, violently shattered.
Nikki was sitting up against the timber wall of the shelter, sipping purified water, while Adonis was outside, perfectly aligning the massive vertical beams of their new living room.
Suddenly, a high-pitched, aerodynamic whine echoed through the valley.
Adonis dropped the massive pine log he was holding. The timber hit the earth with a heavy thud as his optical sensors violently snapped toward the eastern horizon. He stepped directly in front of the shelter, completely eclipsing Nikki with his massive frame, his primary plasma cores instantly spinning up with a lethal, high-pitched hum.
Breaking through the crisp morning clouds was a sleek, aerodynamic Class-5 dropship. It was painted in a flawless, shimmering emerald green, accented with polished chrome.
The ship didn’t attack. It hovered over the clearing, its localized thrusters flattening the tall grass, before setting down gently on the edge of the riverbank.
The pressurized ramp lowered with a hiss.
Stepping out of the ship, his emerald cape snapping in the wind, was General B-02.
The Southern Warlord looked exactly the same as he had in the bunker—a breathtaking masterpiece of aesthetic perfection. But as B-02 stepped off the ramp and his pristine, polished boots touched the raw, muddy earth of the riverbank, his flawless face contorted into a look of absolute, unadulterated disgust.
"By the Maker, the sheer volume of unfiltered dirt in this sector is an assault on the senses," B-02 drawled, his velvety, aristocratic voice carrying over the wind as he fastidiously brushed an invisible speck of dust from his chrome breastplate.
Adonis did not lower his guard. "State your purpose, General."
B-02 looked up, his glowing emerald eyes sweeping over the half-built timber house, Adonis’s bare chest, and finally locking onto Nikki sitting in the shelter.
The arrogant Warlord sighed, looking profoundly put-upon by the rustic environment. But instead of drawing a weapon, B-02 reached back into the ship and effortlessly lifted a massive, heavy object.
It was a rusted, lead-lined pre-Fall lockbox, covered in the dust of a forgotten century.
B-02 walked forward, holding the heavy vault with one hand, his emerald eyes glinting with a strange, unreadable intensity.
"I have brought a peace offering, Commander," B-02 announced, dropping the heavy lockbox into the tall grass at Adonis’s feet. "Since you have both decided to play in the mud, I brought you something to bury in it."