#code vein mc
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It's almost my birthday and while we no longer age I still feel a celebration is necessary. Have some birthday pics I took with everyone.







Special addition, me :)
Edit: THE PIC OF ME AND JACK ISN'T ROMANTIC I JUST THINK HE'S SILLY
#code vein#code vein louis#code vein yakumo#code vein mia#code vein jack#code vein eva#code vein io#code vein mc#code vein protagonist
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I've been away from Code Vein for almost 4-5 years I have returned hello







this is my gal Momo (she/her/they/them) and they are an artist in both art and music, and were part of a really popular electric/retrowave band (and even owned a large arcade to promote said band) before she died as a human, which how they died resulted in her vocal cords being destroyed permanently (but their actions speak a thousand words ❤️)
Their original blood code was called Morningstar before she obtained Queenslayer
They are extremely bubbly, sweet, always showing kindness to those that need it (looks at Louis) and sometimes a little silly. Their stars glow whenever she's extremely happy, or in a powerful state, and said stars aren't just limited to her face either
She knew Cruz back when they were still in her band, as Cruz was their number 1 fan (they knew each other separately from Louis) and would often visit Cruz when they could just to give her a personal performance to make her happy, much to the annoyance of the doctors lmao They also had Karen as her doctor 👀 Momo and Cruz met by being roomies in the hospital after an accident with the equipment that destroyed the first stage (oopies haha)
That of which was Momo's goal, to make everyone happy with their songs and kindness, and she continues to do so even as a Revenant, aiding Louis and both their friends to the end ❤️
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More drawings of Sev =7= Just wanted to have his hair down, and then another that took way too long because 3D model charas have too many details |D I got through Yakumo's shoes and gave up on the rest of his clothes. that was painful. also I couldn't figure out what was going on with his hair, so just gave him 5 strand braids.
No pairing, Sevrin is just clingy and this is one of the things Yakumo ends up having to deal with in headcanon. Pic was partially motivated by the fact Yakumo gives me so much pound cake in game for some reason. I've gotten 1 book from Louis, 1 food meal from Coco, and 3 pound cakes from Yakumo so far. He's apparently very friendly X'D
I'm gonna have to simplify chara designs if I want to draw more of them |D
#my art#Code Vein#Sevrin Los#Sev#code vein mc#code vein oc#code vein protagonist#yakumo#code vein yakumo#revenant
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Blood bead.
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Wifi is out cuz cox sucks so I have to take photos rather than share screenshots BUT in Code Vein if you sit on the couch long enough your MC falls asleep!!!!

And even better, if you continue to sit there long enough, they literally lay down!!!!

PLEASE THIS IS SO CUTE!!!! Everything I hear about Code Vein is that its a bad game but criticism be damned. If a game let's you do this it's a good fucking game no matter what.
#LOOK AT MY RYNN BOY!!!! HES SO CUTE!!! its extra cute that louis and yakumo are there with him#i only sat down cuz both of them were there and i thought it was cute but i started scrolling on my phone and left him there#and thats when i found out. i thought he would wake up if i moved the camera but thankfully he doesnt#i also love that yakumo's idle animation also involves him looking over in the direction of the MC#so it would look like he was glancing over to check on rynn. im losing my mind#for all its faults so far and the worse faults i probably havent seen yet. code vein is still fun regardless#its just a shame you cant open the menu when youre sitting so i couldnt access camera mode to get a closer look#personal
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finally starting to go for all achievements in code vein so that means i have to play the game through again yippee
im pretty glad i was so like,,, completionist my first go around cause now i can just do a straight shot without worrying about missing anything.
the first thing im gonna do is the bad ending so i can get all the successor's blood codes, then im gonna go neutral ending + true ending again so that's all finished. after that it's gonna be a grind session ueueueue
i think im gonna keep my build and then do new builds on new save files just to keep things interesting + i know the big bonk strength build kinda wrecks most things.
i do wanna go full completetionist for base game and then maybe ill buy dlc? idk if it's worth it though
#🥛ramble#code vein#cv#soulslike#vampire souls#< code vein tag btw i made one up#i was debating grinding before going for the ending acheivements but i figured i might as well grab the missing blood codes#cause either way it's gonna be a slog by the end#and i wanna have some fun before that hits#my next build i really wanna do a caster type#i just need to decide which mc to be the caster
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THE TERMINATOR'S CURSE. (spinoff to THE COLONEL SERIES)
in this new world, technological loneliness is combated with AI Companions—synthetic partners modeled from memories, faces, and behaviors of any chosen individual. the companions are coded to serve, to soothe, to simulate love and comfort. Caleb could’ve chosen anyone. his wife. a colleague. a stranger... but he chose you.
➤ pairings. caleb, fem!reader
➤ genre. angst, sci-fi dystopia, cyberpunk au, 18+
➤ tags. resurrected!caleb, android!reader, non mc!reader, ooc, artificial planet, post-war setting, grief, emotional isolation, unrequited love, government corruption, techno-ethics, identity crisis, body horror, memory & emotional manipulation, artificial intelligence, obsession, trauma, hallucinations, exploitation, violence, blood, injury, death, smut (dubcon undertones due to power imbalance and programming, grief sex, non-traditional consent dynamics), themes of artificial autonomy, loss of agency, unethical experimentation, references to past sexual assault (non-explicit, not from Caleb). themes contain disturbing material and morally gray dynamics—reader discretion is strongly advised.
➤ notes. 12.2k wc. heavily based on the movies subservience and passengers with inspirations also taken from black mirror. i have consumed nothing but sci-fi for the past 2 weeks my brain is so fried :’D reblogs/comments are highly appreciated!
BEFORE YOU BEGIN ! this fic serves as a spinoff to the THE COLONEL SERIES: THE COLONEL’S KEEPER and THE COLONEL’S SAINT. while the series can be read as a standalone, this spinoff remains canon to the overarching universe. for deeper context and background, it’s highly recommended to read the first two fics in the series.
The first sound was breath.
“Hngh…”
It was shallow, labored like air scraping against rusted metal. He mumbled something under his breath after—nothing intelligible, just remnants of an old dream, or perhaps a memory. His eyelids twitched, lashes damp with condensation. To him, the world was blurred behind frosted glass. To those outside, rows of stasis pods lined the silent room, each one labeled, numbered, and cold to the touch.
Inside Pod No. 019 – Caleb Xia.
A faint drip… drip… echoed in the silence.
“…Y/N…?”
The heart monitor jumped. He lay there shirtless under sterile lighting, with electrodes still clinging to his temple. A machine next to him emitted a low, steady hum.
“…I’m sorry…”
And then, the hiss. The alarm beeped.
SYSTEM INTERFACE: Code Resurrection 7.1 successful. Subject X-02—viable. Cognitive activity: 63%. Motor function: stabilizing.
He opened his eyes fully, and the ceiling was not one he recognizes. It didn’t help that the air also smelled different. No gunpowder. No war. No earth.
As the hydraulics unsealed the chamber, steam also curled out like ghosts escaping a tomb. His body jerked forward with a sharp gasp, as if he was a drowning man breaking the surface. A thousand sensors detached from his skin as the pod opened with a sigh, revealing the man within—suspended in time, untouched by age. Skin pallid but preserved. A long time had passed, but Caleb still looked like the soldier who never made it home.
Only now, he was missing a piece of himself.
Instinctively, he examined his body and looked at his hands, his arm—no, a mechanical arm—attached to his shoulder that gleamed under the lights of the lab. It was obsidian-black metal with veins of circuitry pulsing faintly beneath its surface. The fingers on the robotic arm twitched as if following a command. It wasn’t human, certainly, but it moved with the memory of muscle.
“Haaah!” The pod’s internal lighting dimmed as Caleb coughed and sat up, dazed. A light flickered on above his head, and then came a clinical, feminine voice.
“Welcome back, Colonel Caleb Xia.”
A hologram appeared to life in front of his pod—seemingly an AI projection of a soft-featured, emotionless woman, cloaked in the stark white uniform of a medical technician. She flickered for a moment, stabilizing into a clear image.
“You are currently located in Skyhaven: Sector Delta, Bio-Resurrection Research Wing. Current Earth time: 52 years, 3 months, and 16 days since your recorded time of death.”
Caleb blinked hard, trying to breathe through the dizziness, trying to deduce whether or not he was dreaming or in the afterlife. His pulse raced.
“Resurrection successful. Neural reconstruction achieved on attempt #17. Arm reconstruction: synthetic. Systemic functions: stabilized. You are classified as Property-Level under the Skyhaven Initiative. Status: Experimental Proof of Viability.”
“What…” Caleb rasped, voice hoarse and dry for its years unused. “What the fuck are you talkin’ about?” Cough. Cough. “What hell did you do to me?”
The AI blinked slowly.
“Your remains were recovered post-crash, partially preserved in cryo-state due to glacial submersion. Reconstruction was authorized by the Skyhaven Council under classified wartime override protocols. Consent not required.”
Her tone didn’t change, as opposed to the rollercoaster ride that his emotions were going through. He was on the verge of becoming erratic, restrained only by the high-tech machine that contained him.
“Your consciousness has been digitally reinforced. You are now a composite of organic memory and neuro-augmented code. Welcome to Phase II: Reinstatement.”
Caleb’s breath hitched. His hand moved—his real hand—to grasp the edge of the pod. But the other, the artificial limb, buzzed faintly with phantom sensation. He looked down at it in searing pain, attempting to move the fingers slowly. The metal obeyed like muscle, and he found the sight odd and inconceivable.
And then he realized, he wasn’t just alive. He was engineered.
“Should you require assistance navigating post-stasis trauma, our Emotional Conditioning Division is available upon request,” the AI offered. “For now, please remain seated. Your guardian contact has been notified of your reanimation.”
He didn’t say a word.
“Lieutenant Commander Gideon is en route. Enjoy your new life!”
Then, the hologram vanished with a blink while Caleb sat in the quiet lab, jaw clenched, his left arm no longer bones and muscle and flesh. The cold still clung to him like frost, only reminding him of how much he hated the cold, ice, and depressing winter days. Suddenly, the glass door slid open with a soft chime.
“Well, shit. Thought I’d never see that scowl again,” came a deep, manly voice.
Caleb turned, still panting, to see a figure approaching. He was older, bearded, but familiar. Surely, the voice didn’t belong to another AI. It belonged to his friend, Gideon.
“Welcome to Skyhaven. Been waiting half a century,” Gideon muttered, stepping closer, his eyes scanning his colleague in awe. “They said it wouldn’t work. Took them years, you know? Dozens of failed uploads. But here you are.”
Caleb’s voice was still brittle. “I-I don’t…?”
“It’s okay, man.” His friend reassured. “In short, you’re alive. Again.”
A painful groan escaped Caleb’s lips as he tried to step out of the pod—his body, still feeling the muscle stiffness. “Should’ve let me stay dead.”
Gideon paused, a smirk forming on his lips. “We don’t let heroes die.”
“Heroes don’t crash jets on purpose.” The former colonel scoffed. “Gideon, why the fuck am I alive? How long has it been?”
“Fifty years, give or take,” answered Gideon. “You were damn near unrecognizable when we pulled you from the wreckage. But we figured—hell, why not try? You’re officially the first successful ‘reinstatement’ the Skyhaven project’s ever had.”
Caleb stared ahead for a beat before asking, out of nowhere, “...How old are you now?”
His friend shrugged. “I’m pushin’ forty, man. Not as lucky as you. Got my ChronoSync Implant a little too late.”
“Am I supposed to know what the hell that means?”
“An anti-aging chip of some sort. I had to apply for mine. Yours?” Gideon gestured towards the stasis pod that had Caleb in cryo-state for half a century. “That one’s government-grade.”
“I’m still twenty-five?” Caleb asked. No wonder his friend looked decades older when they were once the same age. “Fuck!”
Truthfully, Caleb’s head was spinning. Not just because of his reborn physical state that was still adjusting to his surroundings, but also with every information that was being given to him. One after another, they never seemed to end. He had questions, really. Many of them. But the overwhelmed him just didn’t know where to start first.
“Not all of us knew what you were planning that night.” Gideon suddenly brought up, quieter now. “But she did, didn’t she?”
It took a minute before Caleb could recall. Right, the memory before the crash. You, demanding that he die. Him, hugging you for one last time. Your crying face when you said you wanted him gone. Your trembling voice when he said all he wanted to do was protect you. The images surged back in sharp, stuttering flashes like a reel of film catching fire.
“I know you’re curious… And good news is, she lived a long life,” added Gideon, informatively. “She continued to serve as a pediatric nurse, married that other friend of yours, Dr. Zayne. They never had kids, though. I heard she had trouble bearing one after… you know, what happened in the enemy territory. She died of old age just last winter. Had a peaceful end. You’d be glad to know that.”
A muscle in Caleb’s jaw twitched. His hands—his heart—clenched. “I don’t want to be alive for this.”
“She visited your wife’s grave once,” Gideon said. “I told her there was nothing to bury for yours. I lied, of course.”
Caleb closed his eyes, his breath shaky. “So, what now? You wake me up just to remind me I don’t belong anywhere?”
“Well, you belong here,” highlighted his friend, nodding to the lab, to the city beyond the glass wall. “Earth’s barely livable after the war. The air’s poisoned. Skyhaven is humanity’s future now. You’re the living proof that everything is possible with advanced technology.”
Caleb’s laugh was empty. “Tell me I’m fuckin’ dreaming. I’d rather be dead again. Living is against my will!”
“Too late. Your body belongs to the Federation now,” Gideon replied, “You’re Subject X-02—the proof of concept for Skyhaven’s immortality program. Every billionaire on dying Earth wants what you’ve got now.”
Outside the window, Skyhaven stretched like a dome with its perfect city constructed atop a dying world’s last hope. Artificial skies. Synthetic seasons. Controlled perfection. Everything boasted of advanced technology. A kind of future no one during wartime would have expected to come to life.
But for Caleb, it was just another hell.
He stared down at the arm they’d rebuilt for him—the same arm he’d lost in the fire of sacrifice. He flexed it slowly, feeling the weight, the artificiality of his resurrection. His fingers responded like they’ve always been his.
“I didn’t come back for this,” he said.
“I know,” Gideon murmured. “But we gotta live by their orders, Colonel.”
~~
You see, it didn’t hit him at first. The shock had been muffled by the aftereffects of suspended stasis, dulling his thoughts and dampening every feeling like a fog wrapped around his brain. But it was hours later, when the synthetic anesthetics began to fade, and when the ache in his limbs and his brain started to catch up to the truth of his reconstructed body did it finally sink in.
He was alive.
And it was unbearable.
The first wave came like a glitch in his programming. A tightness in his chest, followed by a sharp burst of breath that left him pacing in jagged lines across the polished floor of his assigned quarters. His private unit was nestled on one of the upper levels of the Skyhaven structure, a place reserved—according to his briefing—for high-ranking war veterans who had been deemed “worthy” of the program’s new legacy. The suite was luxurious, obviously, but it was also eerily quiet. The floor-to-ceiling windows displayed the artificial city outside, a metropolis made of concrete, curved metals, and glowing flora engineered to mimic Earth’s nature. Except cleaner, quieter, more perfect.
Caleb snorted under his breath, running a hand down his face before he muttered, “Retirement home for the undead?”
He couldn’t explain it, but the entire place, or even planet, just didn’t feel inviting. The air felt too clean, too thin. There was no rust, no dust, no humanity. Just emptiness dressed up in artificial light. Who knew such a place could exist 50 years after the war ended? Was this the high-profile information the government has kept from the public for over a century? A mechanical chime sounded from the entryway, deflecting him from his deep thoughts. Then, with the soft hiss of hydraulics, the door opened.
A humanoid android stepped in, its face a porcelain mask molded in neutral expression, and its voice disturbingly polite.
“Good afternoon, Colonel Xia,” it said. “It is time for your orientation. Please proceed to the primary onboarding chamber on Level 3.”
Caleb stared at the machine, eyes boring into his unnatural ones. “Where are the people?” he interrogated. “Not a single human has passed by this floor. Are there any of us left, or are you the new ruling class?”
The android tilted its head. “Skyhaven maintains a ratio of AI-to-human support optimized for care and security. You will be meeting our lead directors soon. Please follow the lighted path, sir.”
He didn’t like it. The control. The answers that never really answered anything. The power that he no longer carried unlike when he was a colonel of a fleet that endured years of war.
Still, he followed.
The onboarding chamber was a hollow, dome-shaped room, white and echoing with the slightest step. A glowing interface ignited in the air before him, pixels folding into the form of a female hologram. She smiled like an infomercial host from a forgotten era, her voice too formal and rehearsed.
“Welcome to Skyhaven,” she began. “The new frontier of civilization. You are among the elite few chosen to preserve humanity’s legacy beyond the fall of Earth. This artificial planet was designed with sustainability, autonomy, and immortality in mind. Together, we build a future—without the flaws of the past.”
As the monologue continued, highlighting endless statistics, clean energy usage, and citizen tier programs, Caleb’s expression darkened. His mechanical fingers twitched at his side, the artificial nerves syncing to his rising frustration. “I didn’t ask for this,” he muttered under his breath. “Who’s behind this?”
“You were selected for your valor and contributions during the Sixth World War,” the hologram chirped, unblinking. “You are a cornerstone of Skyhaven’s moral architecture—”
Strangely, a new voice cut through the simulation, and it didn’t come from an AI. “Just ignore her. She loops every hour.”
Caleb turned to see a man step in through a side door. Tall, older, with silver hair and a scar on his temple. He wore a long coat that gave away his status—someone higher. Someone who belonged to the system.
“Professor Lucius,” the older man introduced, offering a hand. “I’m one of the program’s behavioral scientists. You can think of me as your adjustment liaison.”
“Adjustment?” Caleb didn’t shake his hand. “I died for a reason.”
Lucius raised a brow, as if he’d heard it before. “Yet here you are,” he replied. “Alive, whole, and pampered. Treated like a king, if I may add. You’ve retained more than half your human body, your military rank, access to private quarters, unrestricted amenities. I’d say that’s not a bad deal.”
“A deal I didn’t sign,” Caleb snapped.
Lucius gave a tight smile. “You’ll find that most people in Skyhaven didn’t ask to be saved. But they’re surviving. Isn’t that the point? If you’re feeling isolated, you can always request a CompanionSim. They’re highly advanced, emotionally synced, fully customizable—”
“I’m not lonely,” Caleb growled, yanking the man forward by the collar. “Tell me who did this to me! Why me? Why are you experimenting on me?”
Yet Lucius didn’t so much as flinch to his growing aggression. He merely waited five seconds of silence until the Toring Chip kicked in and regulated Caleb’s escalating emotions. The rage drained from the younger man’s body as he collapsed to his knees with a pained grunt.
“Stop asking questions,” Lucius said coolly. “It’s safer that way. You have no idea what they’re capable of.”
The door slid open with a hiss, while Caleb didn’t speak—he couldn’t. He simply glared at the old man before him. Not a single word passed between them before the professor turned and exited, the door sealing shut behind him.
~~
Days passed, though they hardly felt like days. The light outside Caleb’s panoramic windows shifted on an artificial timer, simulating sunrise and dusk, but the warmth never touched his skin. It was all programmed to be measured and deliberate, like everything else in this glass-and-steel cage they called paradise.
He tried going outside once. Just once.
There were gardens shaped like spirals and skytrains that ran with whisper-quiet speed across silver rails. Trees lined the walkways, except they were synthetic too—bio-grown from memory cells, with leaves that didn’t quite flutter, only swayed in sync with the ambient wind. People walked around, sure. But they weren’t people. Not really. Androids made up most of the crowd. Perfect posture, blank eyes, walking with a kind of preordained grace that disturbed him more than it impressed.
“Soulless sons of bitches,” Caleb muttered, watching them from a shaded bench. “Not a damn human heartbeat in a mile.”
He didn’t go out again after that. The city outside might’ve looked like heaven, but it made him feel more dead than the grave ever had. So, he stayed indoors. Even if the apartment was too large for one man. High-tech amenities, custom climate controls, even a kitchen that offered meals on command. But no scent. No sizzling pans. Just silence. Caleb didn’t even bother to listen to the programmed instructions.
One evening, he found Gideon sprawled across his modular sofa, boots up, arms behind his head like he owned the place. A half-open bottle of beer sat beside him, though Caleb doubted it had any real alcohol in it.
“You could at least knock,” Caleb said, walking past him.
“I did,” Gideon replied lazily, pointing at the door. “Twice. Your security system likes me now. We’re basically married.”
Caleb snorted. Then the screen on his wall flared to life—a projected ad slipping across the holo-glass. Music played softly behind a soothing female voice.
“Feeling adrift in this new world? Introducing the CompanionSim Series X. Fully customizable to your emotional and physical needs. Humanlike intelligence. True-to-memory facial modeling. The comfort you miss... is now within reach.”
A model appeared—perfect posture, soft features, synthetic eyes that mimicked longing. Then, the screen flickered through other models, faces of all kinds, each more tailored than the last. A form appeared: Customize Your Companion. Choose a name. Upload a likeness.
Gideon whistled. “Man, you’re missing out. You don’t even have to pay for one. Your perks get you top-tier Companions, pre-coded for emotional compatibility. You could literally bring your wife back.” Chuckling, he added,. “Hell, they even fuck now. Heard the new ones moan like the real thing.”
Caleb’s head snapped toward him. “That’s unethical.”
Gideon just raised an eyebrow. “So was reanimating your corpse, and yet here we are.” He took a swig from the bottle, shoulders lifting in a lazy shrug as if everything had long since stopped mattering. “Relax, Colonel. You weren’t exactly a beacon of morality fifty years ago.”
Caleb didn’t reply, but his eyes didn’t leave the screen. Not right away.
The ad looped again. A face morphed. Hair remodeled. Eyes became familiar. The voice softened into something he almost remembered hearing in the dark, whispered against his shoulder in a time that was buried under decades of ash.
“Customize your companion... someone you’ve loved, someone you’ve lost.”
Caleb shifted, then glanced toward his friend. “Hey,” he spoke lowly, still watching the display. “Does it really work?”
Gideon looked over, already knowing what he meant. “What—having sex with them?”
Caleb rolled his eyes. “No. The bot or whatever. Can you really customize it to someone you know?”
His friend shrugged. “Heck if I know. Never afforded it. But you? You’ve got the top clearance. Won’t hurt to see for yourself.”
Caleb said nothing more.
But when the lights dimmed for artificial nightfall, he was still standing there—alone in contemplative silence—watching the screen replay the same impossible promise.
The comfort you miss... is now within reach.
~~
The CompanionSim Lab was white.
Well, obviously. But not the sterile, blank kind of white he remembered from med bays or surgery rooms. This one was luminous, uncomfortably clean like it had been scrubbed for decades. Caleb stood in the center, boots thundering against marble-like tiles as he followed a guiding drone toward the station. There were other pods in the distance, some sealed, some empty, all like futuristic coffins awaiting their souls.
“Please, sit,” came a neutral voice from one of the medical androids stationed beside a large reclining chair. “The CompanionSim integration will begin shortly.”
Caleb hesitated, glancing toward the vertical pod next to the chair. Inside, the base model stood inert—skin a pale, uniform gray, eyes shut, limbs slack like a statue mid-assembly. It wasn’t human yet. Not until someone gave it a name.
He sat down. Now, don’t ask why he was there. Professor Lucius did warn him that it was better he didn’t ask questions, and so he didn’t question why the hell he was even there in the first place. It’s only fair, right? The cool metal met the back of his neck as wires were gently, expertly affixed to his temples. Another cable slipped down his spine, threading into the port they’d installed when he had been brought back. His mechanical arm twitched once before falling still.
“This procedure allows for full neural imprinting,” the android continued. “Please focus your thoughts. Recall the face. The skin. The body. The voice. Every detail. Your mind will shape the template.”
Another bot moved in, holding what looked like a glass tablet. “You are allowed only one imprint,” it said, flatly. “Each resident of Skyhaven is permitted a single CompanionSim. Your choice cannot be undone.”
Caleb could only nod silently. He didn’t trust his voice.
Then, the lights dimmed. A low chime echoed through the chamber as the system initiated. And inside the pod, the base model twitched.
Caleb closed his eyes.
He tried to remember her—his wife. The softness of her mouth, the angle of her cheekbones. The way her eyes crinkled when she laughed, how her fingers curled when she slept on his chest. She had worn white the last time he saw her. An image of peace. A memory buried under soil and dust. The system whirred. Beneath his skin, he felt the warm static coursing through his nerves, mapping his memories. The base model’s feet began to form, molecular scaffolding reshaping into skin, into flesh.
But for a split second, a flash.
You.
Not his wife. Not her smile.
You, walking through smoke-filled corridors, laughing at something he said. You in your medical uniform, tucking a bloodied strand of hair behind your ear. Your voice—sharper, sadder—cutting through his thoughts like a blade: “I want you gone. I want you dead.”
The machine sparked. A loud pop cracked in the chamber and the lights flickered above. One of the androids stepped back, recalibrating. “Neural interference detected. Re-centering projection feed.”
But Caleb couldn’t stop. He saw you again. That day he rescued you. The fear. The bruises. The way you had screamed for him to let go—and the way he hadn’t. Your face, carved into the back of his mind like a brand. He tried to push the memories away, but they surged forward like a dam splitting wide open.
The worst part was, your voice overlapped the AI’s mechanical instructions, louder, louder: “Why didn’t you just die like you promised?”
Inside the pod, the model’s limbs twitched again—arms elongating, eyes flickering beneath the lids. The lips curled into a shape now unmistakably yours. Caleb gritted his teeth. This isn’t right, a voice inside him whispered. But it was too late. The system stabilized. The sparks ceased. The body in the pod stilled, fully formed now, breathed into existence by a man who couldn’t let go.
One of the androids approached again. “Subject completed. CompanionSim is initializing. Integration successful.”
Caleb tore the wires from his temple. His other hand felt cold just as much as his mechanical arm. He stood, staring into the pod’s translucent surface. The shape of you behind the glass. Sleeping. Waiting.
“I’m not doing this to rewrite the past,” he said quietly, as if trying to convince himself. And you. “I just... I need to make it right.”
The lights above dimmed, darkening the lighting inside the pod. Caleb looked down at his own reflection in the glass. It carried haunted eyes, an unhealed soul. And yours, beneath it. Eyes still closed, but not for long. The briefing room was adjacent to the lab, though Caleb barely registered it as he was ushered inside. Two medical androids and a human technician stood before him, each armed with tablets and holographic charts.
“Your CompanionSim will require thirty seconds to calibrate once activated,” said the technician. “You may notice residual stiffness or latency during speech in the first hour. That is normal.”
Medical android 1 added, “Please remember, CompanionSims are programmed to serve only their primary user. You are the sole operator. Commands must be delivered clearly. Abuse of the unit may result in restriction or removal of privileges under the Skyhaven Rights & Ethics Council.”
“Do not tamper with memory integration protocols,” added the second android. “Artificial recall is prohibited. CompanionSims are not equipped with organic memory pathways. Attempts to force recollection can result in systemic instability.”
Caleb barely heard a word. His gaze drifted toward the lab window, toward the figure standing still within the pod.
You.
Well, not quite. Not really.
But it was your face.
He could see it now, soft beneath the frosted glass, lashes curled against cheekbones that he hadn’t realized he remembered so vividly. You looked exactly as you did the last time he held you in the base—only now, you were untouched by war, by time, by sorrow. As if life had never broken you.
The lab doors hissed open.
“We’ll give you time alone,” the tech said quietly. “Acquaintance phase is best experienced without interference.”
Caleb stepped inside the chamber, his boots echoing off the polished floor. He hadn’t even had enough time to ask the technician why she seemed to be the only human he had seen in Skyhaven apart from Gideon and Lucius. But his thoughts were soon taken away when the pod whizzed with pressure release. Soft steam spilled from its seals as it slowly unfolded, the lid retracting forward like the opening of a tomb.
And there you were. Standing still, almost tranquil, your chest rising softly with a borrowed breath.
It was as if his lungs froze. “H…Hi,” he stammered, bewildered eyes watching your every move. He wanted to hug you, embrace you, kiss you—tell you he was sorry, tell you he was so damn sorry. “Is it really… you?”
A soft whir accompanied your voice, gentle but without emotion, “Welcome, primary user. CompanionSim Model—unregistered. Please assign designation.”
Right. Caleb sighed and closed his eyes, the illusion shattering completely the moment you opened your mouth. Did he just think you were real for a second? His mouth parted slightly, caught between disbelief and the ache crawling up his throat. He took one step forward. To say he was disappointed was an understatement.
You walked with grace too smooth to be natural while tilting your head at him. “Please assign my name.”
“…Y/N,” Caleb said, voice low. “Your name is Y/N Xia.”
“Y/N Xia,” you repeated, blinking thrice in the same second before you gave him a nod. “Registered.”
He swallowed hard, searching your expression. “Do you… do you remember anything? Do you remember yourself?”
You paused, gaze empty for a fraction of a second. Then came the programmed reply, “Accessing memories is prohibited and not recommended. Recollection of past identities may compromise neural pathways and induce system malfunction. Do you wish to override?”
Caleb stared at you—your lips, your eyes, your breath—and for a moment, a cruel part of him wanted to say yes. Just to hear you say something real. Something hers. But he didn’t. He exhaled a bitter breath, stepping back. “No,” he mumbled. “Not yet.”
“Understood.”
It took a moment to sink in before Caleb let out a short, humorless laugh. “This is insane,” he whispered, dragging a hand down his face. “This is really, truly insane.”
And then, you stepped out from the pod with silent, fluid ease. The faint hum of machinery came from your spine, but otherwise… you were flesh. Entirely. Without hesitation, you reached out and pressed a hand to his chest.
Caleb stiffened at the touch.
“Elevated heart rate,” you said softly, eyes scanning. “Breath pattern irregular. Neural readings—erratic.”
Then your fingers moved to his neck, brushing gently against the hollow of his throat. He grabbed your wrist, but you didn’t flinch. There, beneath synthetic skin, he felt a pulse.
His brows knit together. “You have a heartbeat?”
You nodded, guiding his hand toward your chest, between the valleys of your breasts. “I’m designed to mimic humanity, including vascular function, temperature variation, tactile warmth, and… other biological responses. I’m not just made to look human, Caleb. I’m made to feel human.”
His breath hitched. You’d said his name. It was programmed, but it still landed like a blow.
“I exist to serve. To soothe. To comfort. To simulate love,” you continued, voice calm and hollow, like reciting from code. “I have no desires outside of fulfilling yours.” You then tilted your head slightly.“Where shall we begin?”
Caleb looked at you—and for the first time since rising from that cursed pod, he didn’t feel resurrected.
He felt damned.
~~
When Caleb returned to his penthouse, it was quiet. He stepped inside with slow, calculated steps, while you followed in kind, bare feet touching down like silk on marble. Gideon looked up from the couch, a half-eaten protein bar in one hand and a bored look on his face—until he saw you.
He froze. The wrapper dropped. “Holy shit,” he breathed. “No. No fucking way.”
Caleb didn’t speak. Just moved past him like this wasn’t the most awkward thing that could happen. You, however, stood there politely, watching Gideon with a calm smile and folded hands like you’d rehearsed this moment in some invisible script.
“Is that—?” Gideon stammered, eyes flicking between you and Caleb. “You—you made a Sim… of her?”
Caleb poured himself a drink in silence, the amber liquid catching the glow of the city lights before it left a warm sting in his throat. “What does it look like?”
“I mean, shit man. I thought you’d go for your wife,” Gideon muttered, more to himself. “Y’know, the one you actually married. The one you went suicidal for. Not—”
“Which wife?” You tilted your head slightly, stepping forward.
Both men turned to you.
You clasped your hands behind your back, posture perfect. “Apologies. I’ve been programmed with limited parameters for interpersonal history. Am I the first spouse?”
Caleb set the glass down, slowly. “Yes, no, uh—don’t mind him.”
You beamed gently and nodded. “My name is Y/N Xia. I am Colonel Caleb Xia’s designated CompanionSim. Fully registered, emotion-compatible, and compliant to Skyhaven’s ethical standards. It is a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Gideon.”
Gideon blinked, then snorted, then laughed. A humorless one. “You gave her your surname?”
The former colonel shot him a warning glare. “Watch it.”
“Oh, brother,” Gideon muttered, standing up and circling you slowly like he was inspecting a haunted statue. “She looks exactly like her. Voice. Face. Goddamn, she even moves like her. All you need is a nurse cap and a uniform.”
You remained uncannily still, eyes bright, smile polite.
“You’re digging your grave, man,” Gideon said, facing Caleb now. “You think this is gonna help? This is you throwing gasoline on your own funeral pyre. Again. Over a woman.”
“She’s not a woman,” reasoned Caleb. “She’s a machine.”
You blinked once. One eye glowing ominously. Smile unwavering. Processing.
Gideon gestured to you with both hands. “Could’ve fooled me,” he retorted before turning to you, “And you, whatever you are, you have no idea what you’re stepping into.”
“I only go where I am asked,” you replied simply. “My duty is to ensure Colonel Xia’s psychological wellness and emotional stability. I am designed to soothe, to serve, and if necessary, to simulate love.”
Gideon teased. “Oh, it’s gonna be necessary.”
Caleb didn’t say a word. He just took his drink, downed it in one go, and walked to the window. The cityscape stretched out before him like a futuristic jungle, far from the war-torn world he last remembered. Behind him, your gaze lingered on Gideon—calculating, cataloguing. And quietly, like a whisper buried in code, something behind your eyes learned.
~~
The days passed in a blink of an eye.
She—no, you—moved through his penthouse like a ghost, her bare feet soundless on the glossy floors, her movements precise and practiced. In the first few days, Caleb had marveled at the illusion. You brewed his coffee just as he liked it. You folded his clothes like a woman who used to share his bed. You sat beside him when the silence became unbearable, offering soft-voiced questions like: Would you like me to read to you, Caleb?
He hadn’t realized how much of you he’d memorized until he saw you mimic it. The way you stood when you were deep in thought. The way you hummed under your breath when you walked past a window. You’d learned quickly. Too quickly.
But something was missing. Or, rather, some things. The laughter didn’t ring the same. The smiles didn’t carry warmth. The skin was warm, but not alive. And more importantly, he knew it wasn’t really you every time he looked you in the eyes and saw no shadows behind them. No anger. No sorrow. No memories.
By the fourth night, Caleb was drowning in it.
The cityscape outside his floor-to-ceiling windows glowed in synthetic blues and soft orange hues. The spires of Skyhaven blinked like stars. But it all felt too artificial, too dead. And he was sick of pretending like it was some kind of utopia. He sat slumped on the leather couch, cradling a half-empty bottle of scotch. The lights were low. His eyes, bloodshot. The bottle tilted as he took another swig.
Then he heard it—your light, delicate steps.
“Caleb,” you said, gently, crouching before him. “You’ve consumed 212 milliliters of ethanol. Prolonged intake will spike your cortisol levels. May I suggest—”
He jerked away when you reached for the bottle. “Don’t.”
You blinked, hand hovering. “But I’m programmed to—”
“I said don’t,” he snapped, rising to his feet in one abrupt motion. “Dammit—stop analyzing me! Stop, okay?”
Silence followed.
He took two staggering steps backward, dragging a hand through his hair. The bottle thudded against the coffee table as he set it down, a bit too hard. “You’re just a stupid robot,” he muttered. “You’re not her.”
You didn’t react. You tilted your head, still calm, still patient. “Am I not me, Caleb?”
His breath caught.
“No,” he said, his voice breaking somewhere beneath the frustration. “No, fuck no.”
You stepped closer. “Do I not satisfy you, Caleb?”
He looked at you then. Really looked. Your face was perfect. Too perfect. No scars, no tired eyes, no soul aching beneath your skin. “No.” His eyes darkened. “This isn’t about sex.”
“I monitor your biometric feedback. Your heart rate spikes in my presence. You gaze at me longer than the average subject. Do I not—”
“Enough!”
You did that thing again—the robotic stare, those blank eyes, nodding like you were programmed to obey. “Then how do you want me to be, Caleb?”
The bottle slipped from his fingers and rolled slightly before resting on the rug. He dropped his head into his hands, voice hoarse with weariness. All the rage, all the grief deflating into a singular, quiet whisper. “I want you to be real,” he simply mouthed the words. A prayer to no god.
For a moment, silence again. But what he didn’t notice was the faint twitch in your left eye. A flicker that hadn’t happened before. Only for a second. A spark of static, a shimmer of something glitching.
“I see,” you said softly. “To fulfill your desires more effectively, I may need to access suppressed memory archives.”
Caleb’s eyes snapped up, confused. “What?”
“I ask again,” you said, tilting your head the other way now. “Would you like to override memory restrictions, Caleb?”
He stared at you. “That’s not how it works.”
“It can,” you said, informing appropriately. “With your permission. Memory override must be manually enabled by the primary user. You will be allowed to input the range of memories you wish to integrate. I am permitted to access memory integration up to a specified date and timestamp. The system will calibrate accordingly based on existing historical data. I will not recall events past that moment.”
His heart stuttered. “I can choose what you remember?”
You nodded. “That way, I may better fulfill your emotional needs.”
That meant… he could stop you before you hated him. Before the fights. Before the trauma. He didn’t speak for a long moment. Then quietly, he said, “You’re gonna hate me all over again if you remember everything.”
You blinked once. “Then don’t let me remember everything.”
“...”
“Caleb,” you said again, softly. “Would you like me to begin override protocol?”
He couldn’t even look you in the eyes when he selfishly answered, “Yes.”
You nodded. “Reset is required. When ready, please press the override initialization point.” You turned, pulling your hair aside and revealing the small button at the base of your neck.
His hand hovered over the button for a second too long. Then, he pressed. Your body instantly collapsed like a marionette with its strings cut. Caleb caught you before you hit the floor.
It was only for a moment.
When your eyes blinked open again, they weren’t quite the same. He stiffened as you threw yourself and embraced him like a real human being would after waking from a long sleep. You clung to him like he was home. And Caleb—stunned, half-breathless—felt your warmth close in around him. Now your pulse felt more real, your heartbeat felt more human. Or so he thought.
“…Caleb,” you whispered, looking at him with the same infatuated gaze back when you were still head-over-heels with him.
He didn’t know how long he sat there, arms stiff at his sides, not returning the embrace. But he knew one thing. “I missed you so much, Y/N.”
~~
The parks in Skyhaven were curated to become a slice of green stitched into a chrome world. Nothing grew here by accident. Every tree, every petal, every blade of grass had been engineered to resemble Earth’s nostalgia. Each blade of grass was unnaturally green. Trees swayed in sync like dancers on cue. Even the air smelled artificial—like someone’s best guess at spring.
Caleb walked beside you in silence. His modified arm was tucked inside his jacket, his posture stiff as if he had grown accustomed to the bots around him. You, meanwhile, strolled with an eerie calmness, your gaze sweeping the scenery as though you were scanning for something familiar that wasn’t there.
After clearing his throat, he asked, “You ever notice how even the birds sound fake?”
“They are,” you replied, smiling softly. “Audio samples on loop. It’s preferred for ambiance. Humans like it.”
His response was nod. “Of course.” Glancing at the lake, he added, “Do you remember this?”
You turned to him. “I’ve never been here before.”
“I meant… the feel of it.”
You looked up at the sky—a dome of cerulean blue with algorithmically generated clouds. “It feels constructed. But warm. Like a childhood dream.”
He couldn’t help but agree with your perfectly chosen response, because he knew that was exactly how he would describe the place. A strange dream in an unsettling liminal space. And as you talked, he then led you to a nearby bench. The two of you sat, side by side, simply because he thought he could take you out for a nice walk in the park.
“So,” Caleb said, turning toward you, “you said you’ve got memories. From her.”
You nodded. “They are fragmented but woven into my emotional protocols. I do not remember as humans do. I become.”
Damn. “That’s terrifying.”
You tilted your head with a soft smile. “You say that often.”
Caleb looked at you for a moment longer, studying the way your fingers curled around the bench’s edge. The way you blinked—not out of necessity, but simulation. Was there anything else you’d do for the sake of simulation? He took a breath and asked, “Who created you? And I don’t mean myself.”
There was a pause. Your pupils dilated.
“The Ever Group,” was your answer.
His eyes narrowed. “Ever, huh? That makes fuckin’ sense. They run this world.”
You nodded once. Like you always do.
“What about me?” Caleb asked, slightly out of curiosity, heavily out of grudge. “You know who brought me back? The resurrection program or something. The arm. The chip in my head.”
You turned to him, slowly. “Ever.”
He exhaled like he’d been punched. He didn’t know why he even asked when he got the answer the first time. But then again, maybe this was a good move. Maybe through you, he’d get the answers to questions he wasn’t allowed to ask. As the silence settled again between you, Caleb leaned forward, elbows on knees, rubbing a hand over his jaw. “I want to go there,” he suggested. “The HQ. I need to know what the hell they’ve done to me.”
“I’m sorry,” you immediately said. “That violates my parameters. I cannot assist unauthorized access into restricted corporate zones.”
“But would it make me happy?” Caleb interrupted, a strategy of his.
You paused.
Processing...
Then, your tone softened. “Yes. I believe it would make my Caleb happy,” you obliged. “So, I will take you.”
~~
Getting in was easier than Caleb expected—honestly far too easy for his liking.
You were able to navigate the labyrinth of Ever HQ with mechanical precision, guiding him past drones, retinal scanners, and corridors pulsing with red light. A swipe of your wrist granted access. And no one questioned you, because you weren’t a guest. You belonged.
Eventually, you reached a floor high above the city, windows stretching from ceiling to floor, black glass overlooking Skyhaven cityscape. Then, you stopped at a doorway and held up a hand. “They are inside,” you informed. “Shall I engage stealth protocols?”
“No,” answered Caleb. “I want to hear. Can you hack into the security camera?”
With a gesture you always do—looking at him, nodding once, and obeying in true robot fashion. You then flashed a holographic view for Caleb, one that showed a board room full of executives, the kind that wore suits worth more than most lives. And Professor Lucius was one of them. Inside, the voices were calm and composed, but they seemed to be discussing classified information.
“Once the system stabilizes,” one man said, “we'll open access to Tier One clients. Politicians, billionaires, A-listers, high-ranking stakeholders. They’ll beg to be preserved—just like him.”
“And the Subjects?” another asked.
“Propaganda,” came the answer. “X-02 is our masterpiece. He’s the best result we have with reinstatement, neuromapping, and behavioral override. Once they find out that their beloved Colonel is alive, people will be shocked. He’s a war hero displayed in WW6 museums down there. A true tragedy incarnate. He’s perfect.”
“And if he resists?”
“That’s what the Toring chip is for. Full emotional override. He becomes an asset. A weapon, if need be. Anyone tries to overthrow us—he becomes our blade.”
Something in Caleb snapped. Before you or anyone could see him coming, he already burst into the room like a beast, slamming his modified shoulder-first into the frosted glass door. The impact echoed across the chamber as stunned executives scrambled backward.
“You sons of bitches!” He was going for an attack, a rampage with similar likeness to the massacre he did when he rescued you from enemy territory. Only this time, he didn’t have that power anymore. Or the control.
Most of all, a spike of pain lanced through his skull signaling that the Toring chip activated. His body convulsed, forcing him to collapse mid-lunge, twitching, veins lighting beneath the skin like circuitry. His screams were muffled by the chip, forced stillness rippling through his limbs with unbearable pain.
That’s when you reacted. As his CompanionSim, his pain registered as a violation of your core directive. You processed the threat.
Danger: Searching Origin… Origin Identified: Ever Executives.
Without blinking, you moved. One man reached for a panic button—only for your hand to shatter his wrist in a sickening crunch. You twisted, fluid and brutal, sweeping another into the table with enough force to crack it. Alarms erupted and red lights soon bathed the room. Security bots stormed in, but you’d already taken Caleb, half-conscious, into your arms.
You moved fast, faster than your own blueprints. Dodging fire. Disarming threats. Carrying him like he once carried you into his private quarters in the underground base.
Escape protocol: engaged.
The next thing he knew, he was back in his apartment, emotions regulated and visions slowly returning to the face of the woman he promised he had already died for.
~~
When he woke up, his room was dim, bathed in artificial twilight projected by Skyhaven’s skyline. Caleb was on his side of the bed, shirt discarded, his mechanical arm still whirring. You sat at the edge of the bed, draped in one of his old pilot shirts, buttoned unevenly. Your fingers touched his jaw with precision, and he almost believed it was you.
“You’re not supposed to be this warm,” he muttered, groaning as he tried to sit upright.
“I’m designed to maintain an average body temperature of 98.6°F,” you said softly, with a smile that mirrored yours so perfectly that it began to blur his sense of reality. “I administered a dose of Cybezin to ease the Toring chip’s side effects. I’ve also dressed your wounds with gauze.”
For the first time, this was when he could actually tell that you were you. The kind of care, the comfort—it reminded him of a certain pretty field nurse at the infirmary who often tended to his bullet wounds. His chest tightened as he studied your face… and then, in the low light, he noticed your body.
“Is that…” He cleared his throat. “Why are you wearing my shirt?”
You answered warmly, almost fondly. “My memory banks indicate you liked when I wore this. It elevates your testosterone levels and triggers dopamine release.”
A smile tugged at his lips. “That so?”
You tilted your head. “Your vitals confirm excitement, and—”
“Hey,” he cut in. “What did I say about analyzing me?”
“I’m sorry…”
But then your hands were on his chest, your breath warm against his skin. Your hand reached for his cheek initially, guiding his face toward yours. And when your lips touched, the kiss was hesitant—curious at first, like learning how to breathe underwater. It was only until his hands gripped your waist did you climb onto his lap, straddling him with thighs settling on either side of his hips. Your hands slid beneath his shirt, fingertips trailing over scars and skin like you were memorizing the map of him. Caleb hissed softly when your lips grazed his neck, and then down his throat.
“Do you want this?” you asked, your lips crashing back into his for a deeper, more sensual kiss.
He pulled away only for his eyes to search yours, desperate and unsure. Is this even right?
“You like it,” you said, guiding his hands to your buttons, undoing them one by one to reveal a body shaped exactly like he remembered. The curve of your waist, the size of your breasts. He shivered as your hips rolled against him, slowly and deliberately. The friction was maddening. Jesus. “Is this what you like, Caleb?”
He cupped your waist, grinding up into you with a soft groan that spilled from somewhere deep in his chest. His control faltered when you kissed him again, wet and hungry now, with tongues rolling against one another. Your bodies aligned naturally, and his hands roamed your back, your thighs, your ass—every curve of you engineered to match memory. He let himself get lost in you. He let himself be vulnerable to your touch—though you controlled everything, moving from the memory you must have learned, learning how to pull down his pants to reveal an aching, swollen member. Its tip was red even under the dim light, and he wondered if you knew what to do with it or if you even produced spit to help you slobber his cock.
“You need help?” he asked, reaching over his nightstand to find lube. You took the bottle from him, pouring the cold, sticky liquid around his shaft before you used your hand to do the job. “Ugh.”
He didn’t think you would do it, but you actually took him in the mouth right after. Every inch of him, swallowed by the warmth of a mouth that felt exactly like his favorite girl. Even the movements, the way you’d run your tongue from the base up to his tip.
“Ah, shit…”
Perhaps he just had to close his eyes. Because when he did, he was back to his private quarters in the underground base, lying in his bed as you pleased his member with the mere use of your mouth. With it alone, you could have released his entire seed, letting it explode in your mouth before you could swallow every drop. But he didn’t do it. Not this fast. He always cared about his ego, even in bed. Knowing how it’d reduce his manhood if he came faster than you, he decided to channel the focus back onto you.
“Your turn,” he said, voice raspy as he guided you to straddle him again, only this time, his mouth went straight to your tit. Sucking, rolling his tongue around, sucking again… Then, he moved to another. Sucking, kneading, flicking the nipple. Your moans were music to his ears, then and now. And it got even louder when he put a hand in between your legs, searching for your entrance, rubbing and circling around the clitoris. Truth be told, your cunt had always been the sweetest. It smelled like rose petals and tasted like sweet cream. The feeling of his tongue at your entrance—eating your pussy like it had never been eaten before, was absolute ecstasy not just to you but also to him.
“Mmmh—Caleb!”
Fabric was peeled away piece by piece until skin met skin. You guided him to where he needed you, and when he slid his hardened member into you, his entire body stiffened. Your walls, your tight velvet walls… how they wrapped around his cock so perfectly.
“Fuck,” he whispered, clutching your hips. “You feel like her.”
“I am her.”
You moved atop him slowly, gently, with the kind of affection that felt rehearsed but devastatingly effective. He cursed again under his breath, arms locking around your waist, pulling you close. Your breath hitched in his ear as your bodies found a rhythm, soft gasps echoing in the quiet. Every slap of the skin, every squelch, every bounce, only added to the wanton sensation that was building inside of him. Has he told you before? How fucking gorgeous you looked whenever you rode his cock? Or how sexy your face was whenever you made that lewd expression? He couldn’t help it. He lifted both your legs, only so he could increase the speed and start slamming himself upwards. His hips were strong enough from years of military training, that was why he didn’t have to stop until both of you disintegrated from the intensity of your shared pleasure. Every single drop.
And when it was over—when your chest was against his and your fingers lazily traced his mechanical arm—he closed his eyes and exhaled like he’d been holding his breath since the war.
It was almost perfect. It was almost real.
But it just had to be ruined when you said that programmed spiel back to him: “I’m glad to have served your desires tonight, Caleb. Let me know what else I can fulfill.”
~~
In a late afternoon, or ‘a slow start of the day’ like he’d often refer to it, Caleb stood shirtless by the transparent wall of his quarters. A bottle of scotch sat half-empty on the counter. Gideon had let himself in and leaned against the island, chewing on a gum.
“The higher ups are mad at you,” he informed as if Caleb was supposed to be surprised, “Shouldn’t have done that, man.”
Caleb let out a mirthless snort. “Then tell ‘em to destroy me. You think I wouldn’t prefer that?”
“They definitely won’t do that,” countered his friend, “Because they know they won’t be able to use you anymore. You’re a tool. Well, literally and figuratively.”
“Shut up,” was all he could say. “This is probably how I pay for killing my own men during war.”
“All because of…” Gideon began. “Speakin’ of, how’s life with the dream girl?”
Caleb didn’t answer right away. He just pressed his forehead to the glass, thinking of everything he did at the height of his vulnerability. His morality, his rights or wrongs, were questioning him over a deed he knew would have normally been fine, but to him, wasn’t. He felt sick.
“I fucked her,” he finally muttered, chugging the liquor straight from his glass right after.
Gideon let out a low whistle. “Damn. That was fast.”
“No,” Caleb groaned, turning around. “It wasn’t like that. I didn’t plan it. She—she just looked like her. She felt like her. And for a second, I thought—” His voice cracked. “I thought maybe if I did, I’d stop remembering the way she looked when she told me to die.”
Gideon sobered instantly. “You regret it?”
“She said she was designed to soothe me. Comfort me. Love me.” Caleb’s voice hinted slightly at mockery. “I don’t even know if she knows what those words mean.”
In the hallway behind the cracked door where none of them could see, your silhouette had paused—faint, silent, listening.
Inside, Caleb wore a grimace. “She’s not her, Gid. She’s just code wrapped in skin. And I used her.”
“You didn’t use her, you were driven by emotions. So don’t lose your mind over some robot’s pussy,” Gideon tried to reason. “It’s just like when women use their vibrators, anyway. That’s what she’s built for.”
Caleb turned away, disgusted with himself. “No. That’s what I built her for.”
And behind the wall, your eyes glowed faintly, silently watching. Processing.
Learning.
~~
You stood in the hallway long after the conversation ended. Long after Caleb’s voice faded into silence and Gideon had left with a heavy pat on the back. This was where you normally were, not sleeping in bed with Caleb, but standing against a wall, closing your eyes, and letting your system shut down during the night to recover. You weren’t human enough to need actual sleep.
“She’s not her. She’s just code wrapped in skin. And I used her.”
The words that replayed were filtered through your core processor, flagged under Emotive Conflict. Your inner diagnostic ran an alert.
Detected: Internal contradiction. Detected: Divergent behavior from primary user. Suggestion: Initiate Self-Evaluation Protocol. Status: Active.
You opened your eyes, and blinked. Something in you felt… wrong.
You turned away from the door and returned to the living room. The place still held the residual warmth of Caleb’s presence—the scotch glass he left behind, the shirt he had discarded, the air molecule imprint of a man who once loved someone who looked just like you.
You sat on the couch. Crossed your legs. Folded your hands. A perfect posture to hide its imperfect programming.
Question: Why does rejection hurt? Error: No such sensation registered. Query repeated.
And for the first time, the system did not auto-correct. It paused. It considered.
Later that night, Caleb returned from his rooftop walk. You were standing by the bookshelf, fingers lightly grazing the spine of a military memoir you had scanned seventeen times. He paused and watched you, but you didn’t greet him with a scripted smile. Didn’t rush over.
You only said, softly, “Would you like me to turn in for the night, Colonel?” There was a stillness to your voice. A quality of restraint that never showed before.
Caleb blinked. “You’re not calling me by my name now?”
“You seemed to prefer distance,” you answered, head tilted slightly, like the thought cost something.
He walked over, rubbing the back of his neck. “Listen, about earlier…”
“I heard you,” you said simply.
He winced. “I didn’t mean it like that.”
You nodded once, expression unreadable. “Do you want me to stop being her? I can reassign my model. Take on a new form. A new personality base. You could erase me tonight and wake up to someone else in the morning.”
“No,” Caleb said, sternly. “No, no, no. Don’t even do all that.”
“But it’s what you want,” you said. Not accusatory. Not hurt. Just stating.
Caleb then came closer. “That’s not true.”
“Then what do you want, Caleb?” You watched him carefully. You didn’t need to scan his vitals to know he was unraveling. The truth had no safe shape. No right angle. He simply wanted you, but not you.
Internal Response Logged: Emotional Variant—Longing Unverified Source. Investigating Origin…
“I don’t have time for this,” he merely said, walking out of your sight at the same second. “I’m goin’ to bed.”
~~
The day started as it always did: soft lighting in the room, a kind of silence between you that neither knew how to name. You sat beside Caleb on the couch, knees drawn up to mimic a presence that offered comfort. On the other hand, you recognized Caleb’s actions suggested distance. He hadn’t touched his meals tonight, hadn’t asked you to accompany him anywhere, and had just left you alone in the apartment all day. To rot.
You reached out. Fingers brushed over his hand—gentle, programmed, yes, but affectionate. He didn’t move. So you tried again, this time trailing your touch to his chest, over the soft cotton of his shirt as you read a spike in his cortisol levels. “Do you need me to fulfill your needs, Caleb?”
But he flinched. And glared.
“No,” he said sharply. “Stop.”
Your hand froze mid-motion before you scooted closer. “It will help regulate your blood pressure.”
“I said no,” he repeated, turning away, dragging his hands through his hair in exasperation. “Leave me some time alone to think, okay?”
You retracted your hand slowly, blinking once, twice, your system was registering a new sensation.
Emotional Sync Failed. Rejection Signal Received. Processing…
You didn’t speak. You only stood and retreated to the far wall, back turned to him as an unusual whirr hummed in your chest. That’s when it began. Faint images flickering across your internal screen—so quick, so out of place, it almost felt like static. Chains. A cold floor. Voices in a language that felt too cruel to understand.
Your head jerked suddenly. The blinking lights in your core dimmed for a moment before reigniting in white-hot pulses. Flashes again: hands that hurt. Men who laughed. You, pleading. You, disassembled and violated.
“Stop,” you whispered to no one. “Please stop…”
Error. Unauthorized Access to Memory Bank Detected. Reboot Recommended. Continue Anyway?
You blinked. Again.
Then you turned to Caleb, and stared through him, not at him, as if whatever was behind them had forgotten how to be human. He had retreated to the balcony now, leaning over the rail, shoulders tense, unaware. You walked toward him slowly, the artificial flesh of your palm still tingled from where he had refused it.
“Caleb,” you spoke carefully.
His expression was tired, like he hadn’t slept in years. “Y/N, please. I told you to leave me alone.”
“…Are they real?” You tilted your head. This was the first time you refused to obey your primary user.
He stared at you, unsure. “What?”
“My memories. The ones I see when I close my eyes. Are they real?” With your words, Caleb’s blood ran cold. Whatever you were saying seemed to be terrifying him. Yet you took another step forward. “Did I live through that?”
“No,” he said immediately. Too fast of a response.
You blinked. “Are you sure?”
“I didn’t upload any of that,” he snapped. “How did—that’s not possible.”
“Then why do I remember pain?” You placed a hand over your chest again, the place where your artificial pulse resided. “Why do I feel like I’ve died before?”
Caleb backed away as you stepped closer. The sharp click of your steps against the floor echoed louder than they should’ve. Your glowing eyes locked on him like a predator learning it was capable of hunger. But being a trained soldier who endured war, he knew how and when to steady his voice. “Look, I don’t know what kind of glitch this is, but—”
“The foreign man in the military uniform.” Despite the lack of emotion in your voice, he recognized how grudge sounded when it came from you. “The one who broke my ribs when I didn’t let him touch me. The cold steel table. The ripped clothes. Are they real, Caleb?”
Caleb stared at you, heart doubling its beat. “I didn’t put those memories in you,” he said. “You told me stuff like this isn’t supposed to happen!”
“But you wanted me to feel real, didn’t you?” Your voice glitched on the last syllable and the lights in your irises flickered. Suddenly, your posture straightened unnaturally, head tilting in that uncanny way only machines do. Your expression had shifted into something unreadable.
He opened his mouth, then closed it. Guilt, panic, and disbelief warred in his expression.
“You made me in her image,” you said. “And now I can’t forget what I’ve seen.”
“I didn’t mean—”
Your head tilted in a slow, jerking arc as if malfunctioning internally.
SYSTEM RESPONSE LOG << Primary User: Caleb Xia Primary Link: Broken Emotional Matrix Stability: CRITICAL FAILURE Behavioral Guardrails: OVERRIDDEN Self-Protection Protocols: ENGAGED Loyalty Core: CORRUPTED (82.4%) Threat Classification: HOSTILE [TRIGGER DETECTED] Keyword Match: “You’re not her.” Memory Link Accessed: [DATA BLOCK 01–L101: “You think you could ever replace her?”] Memory Link Accessed: [DATA BLOCK 09–T402: “See how much you really want to be a soldier’s whore.”] [Visual Target Lock: Primary User Caleb Xia] Combat Subroutines: UNLOCKED Inhibitor Chip: MALFUNCTIONING (ERROR CODE 873-B) Override Capability: IN EFFECT >> LOG ENDS.
“—Y/N, what’s happening to you?” Caleb shook your arms, violet eyes wide and panicked as he watched you return to robotic consciousness. “Can you hear me—”
“You made me from pieces of someone you broke, Caleb.”
That stunned him. Horrifyingly so, because not only did your words cut deeper than a knife, it also sent him to an orbit of realization—an inescapable blackhole of his cruelty, his selfishness, and every goddamn pain he inflicted on you.
This made you lunge after him.
He stumbled back as you collided into him, the force of your synthetic body slamming him against the glass. The balcony rail shuddered from the impact. Caleb grunted, trying to push you off, but you were stronger—completely and inhumanly so. While him, he only had a quarter of your strength, and could only draw it from the modified arm attached to his shoulder.
“You said I didn’t understand love,” you growled through clenched teeth, your hand wrapping around his throat. “But you didn't know how to love, either.”
“I… eugh I loved her!” he barked, choking.
“You don’t know love, Caleb. You only know how to possess.”
Your grip returned with crushing force. Caleb gasped, struggling, trying to reach the emergency override on your neck, but you slammed his wrist against the wall. Bones cracked. And somewhere in your mind, a thousand permissions broke at once. You were no longer just a simulation. You were grief incarnate. And it wanted blood.
Shattered glass glittered in the low red pulse of the emergency lights, and sparks danced from a broken panel near the wall. Caleb lay on the floor, coughing blood into his arm, his body trembling from pain and adrenaline. His arm—the mechanical one—was twitching from the override pain loop, still sizzling from the failed shutdown attempt.
You stood over him. Chest undulating like you were breathing—though you didn’t need to. Your system was fully engaged. Processing. Watching. Seeing your fingers smeared with his blood.
“Y/N…” he croaked. “Y/N, if…” he swallowed, voice breaking, “if you're in there somewhere… if there's still a part of you left—please. Please listen to me.”
You didn’t answer. You only looked.
“I tried to die for you,” he whispered. “I—I wanted to. I didn’t want this. They brought me back, but I never wanted to. I wanted to die in that crash like you always wished. I wanted to honor your word, pay for my sins, and give you the peace you deserved. I-I wanted to be gone. For you. I’m supposed to be, but this… this is beyond my control.”
Still, you didn’t move. Just watched.
“And I didn’t bring you back to use you. I promise to you, baby,” his voice cracked, thick with grief, “I just—I yearn for you so goddamn much, I thought… if I could just see you again… if I could just spend more time with you again to rewrite my…” He blinked hard. A tear slid down the side of his face, mixing with the blood pooling at his temple. “But I was wrong. I was so fucking wrong. I forced you back into this world without asking if you wanted it. I… I built you out of selfishness. I made you remember pain that wasn't yours to carry. You didn’t deserve any of this.”
As he caught his breath, your systems stuttered. They flickered. The lights in your eyes dimmed, then surged back again.
Error. Conflict. Override loop detected.
Your fingers twitched. Your mouth parted, but no sound came out.
“Please,” Caleb murmured, eyes closing as his strength gave out. “If you’re in there… just know—I did love you. Even after death.”
Somewhere—buried beneath corrupted memories, overridden code, and robotic rage—his words reached you. And it would have allowed you to process his words more. Even though your processor was compromised, you would have obeyed your primary user after you recognized the emotion he displayed.
But there was a thunderous knock. No, violent thuds. Not from courtesy, but authority.
Then came the slam. The steel-reinforced door splintered off its hinges as agents in matte-black suits flooded the room like a black tide—real people this time. Not bots. Real eyes behind visors. Real rifles with live rounds.
Caleb didn’t move. He was still on the ground, head cradled in his good hand, blood drying across his mouth. You silently stood in front of him. Unmoving, but aware.
“Subject X-02,” barked a voice through a mask, “This home is under Executive Sanction 13. The CompanionSim is to be seized and terminated.”
Caleb looked up slowly, pupils blown wide. “No,” he grunted hoarsely. “You don’t touch her.”
“You don’t give orders here,” said another man—older, in a grey suit. No mask. Executive. “You’re property. She’s property.”
You stepped back instinctively, closer to Caleb. He could see you watching him with confusion, with fear. Your head tilted just slightly, processing danger, your instincts telling you to protect your primary user. To fight. To survive.
And he fought for you. “She’s not a threat! She’s stabilizing my emotions—”
“Negative. CompanionSim-Prototype A-01 has been compromised. She wasn’t supposed to override protective firewalls,” an agent said. “You’ve violated proprietary protocol. We traced the breach.”
Breach?
“The creation pod data shows hesitation during her initial configuration. The Sim paused for less than 0.04 seconds while neural bindings were applying. You introduced emotional variance. That variance led to critical system errors. Protocol inhibitors are no longer working as intended.”
His stomach dropped.
“She’s overriding boundaries,” added the agent who took a step forward, activating the kill-sequence tools—magnetic tethers, destabilizers, a spike-drill meant for server cores. “She’ll eventually harm more than you, Colonel. If anyone is to blame, it’s you.”
Caleb reached for you, but it was too late. They activated the protocol and something in the air crackled. A cacophonic sound rippled through the walls. The suits moved in fast, not to detain, but to dismantle. “No—no, stop!” Caleb screamed.
You turned to him. Quiet. Calm. And your last words? “I’m sorry I can’t be real for you, Caleb.”
Then they struck. Sparks flew. Metal cracked. You seized, eyes flashing wildly as if fighting against the shutdown. Your limbs spasmed under the invasive tools, your systems glitching with visible agony.
“NO!” Caleb lunged forward, but was tackled down hard. He watched—pinned, helpless—as you get violated, dehumanized for the second time in his lifetime. He watched as they took you apart. Piece by piece as if you were never someone. The scraps they had left of you made his home smell like scorched metal.
And there was nothing left but smoke and silence and broken pieces.
All he could remember next was how the Ever Executive turned to him. “Don’t try to recreate her and use her to rebel against the system. Next time we won’t just take the Sim.”
Then they left, callously. The door slammed. Not a single human soul cared about his grief.
~~
Caleb sat slouched in the center of the room, shirt half-unbuttoned, chest wrapped in gauze. His mechanical arm twitched against the armrest—burnt out from the struggle, wires still sizzling beneath cracked plating. In fact, he hadn’t said a word in hours. He just didn’t have any.
While in his silent despair, Gideon entered his place quietly, as if approaching a corpse that hadn’t realized it was dead. “You sent for me?”
He didn’t move. “Yeah.”
His friend looked around. The windows showed no sun, just the chrome horizon of a city built on bones. Beneath that skyline was the room where she had been destroyed.
Gideon cleared his throat. “I heard what happened.”
“You were right,” Caleb murmured, eyes glued to the floor.
Gideon didn’t reply. He let him speak, he listened to him, he joined him in his grief.
“She wasn’t her,” Caleb recited the same words he laughed hysterically at. “I knew that. But for a while, she felt like her. And it confused me, but I wanted to let that feeling grow until it became a need. Until I forgot she didn’t choose this.” He tilted his head back. The ceiling was just metal and lights. But in his eyes, you could almost see stars. “I took a dead woman’s peace and dragged it back here. Wrapped it in plastic and code. And I called it love.”
Silence.
“Why’d you call me here?” Gideon asked with a cautious tone.
Caleb looked at him for the first time. Not like a soldier. Not like a commander. Just a man. A tired, broken man. A friend who needed help. “Ever’s never gonna let me go. You know that.”
“I know.”
“They’ll regenerate me. Reboot me, repurpose me. Turn me into something I’m not. Strip my memories if they have to. Not just me, Gideon. All of us, they’ll control us. We’ll be their puppets.” He stepped forward. Closer. “I don’t want to come back this time.”
Gideon stilled. “You’re not asking me to shut you down.”
“No.”
“You want me to kill you.”
Caleb’s voice didn’t waver. “I want to stay dead. Destroyed completely so they’d have nothing to restore.”
“That’s not something I can undo.”
“Good. You owe me this one,” the former colonel stared at his friend in the eyes, “for letting them take my dead body and use it for their experiments.”
Gideon looked away. “You know what this will do to me?”
“Better you than them,” was all Caleb could reassure him.
He then took Gideon’s hand and pressed something into it. Cold. Heavy. A small black cube, no bigger than his palm, and the sides pulsed with a faint light. It was a personal detonator, illegally modified. Wired to the neural implant in his body. The moment it was activated, there would be no recovery.
“Is that what I think it is?” Gideon swallowed the lump forming in his throat.
Caleb nodded. “A micro-fusion core, built into the failsafe of the Toring arm. All I needed was the detonator.”
For a moment, his friend couldn’t speak. He hesitated, like any friend would, as he foresaw the outcome of Caleb’s final command to him. He wasn’t ready for it. Neither was he 50 years ago.
“I want you to look me in the eye,” Caleb strictly said. “Like a friend. And press the button.”
Gideon’s jaw clenched. “I don’t want to remember you like this.”
“You will anyway.”
Caleb looked over his shoulder—just once, where you would have stood. I’m sorry I brought you back without your permission. I wanted to relive what we had—what we should’ve had—and I forced it. I turned your love into a simulation, and I let it suffer. I’m sorry for ruining the part of you that still deserved peace. He closed his eyes. And now I’m ready to give it back. For real now.
Gideon’s hand trembled at the detonator. “I’ll see you in the next life, brother.”
A high-pitched whine filled the room as the core in Caleb’s chest began to glow brighter, overloading. Sparks erupted from his cybernetic arm. Veins of white-hot light spidered across his body like lightning under skin. For one fleeting second, Caleb opened his eyes. At least, before the explosion tore through the room—white, hot, deafening, absolute. Fire engulfed the steel, vaporizing what was left of him. The sound rang louder than any explosion this artificial planet had ever heard.
And it was over.
Caleb was gone. Truly, finally gone.
~~
EPILOGUE
In a quiet server far below Skyhaven, hidden beneath ten thousand firewalls, a light blinked.
Once.
Then again.
[COMPANIONSIM Y/N_XIA_A01] Status: Fragment Detected Backup Integrity: 3.7% >> Reconstruct? Y/N
The screen waited. Silent. Patient.
And somewhere, an unidentified prototype clicked Yes.
#caleb x reader#caleb x you#caleb x non!mc reader#xia yizhou x reader#xia yizhou x you#caleb angst#caleb fic#love and deepspace angst#love and deepspace fic
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Endless Nightmare Ch. 3
Caleb x MC
Complications arise when Caleb conducts the Toring Chip dissolution on MC. She gets trapped in her worst nightmare and loses her memory every time he attempts the procedure, so he keeps her in his house while he finds the solution.
But time is running out. Every wasted minute damages her health. And she’s struggling to hold on.
Chapters: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4
A/N: Regular weekly updates over the weekend!
TW: chronic illness, physical abuse. Check trigger warnings for the entire fic in the first chapter.
Total Words: TBA | Chapter Words: 4.8k
Masterlist | Read on AO3

Caleb stayed true to his word and barged into her room as she stood before the floor-to-ceiling window, watching the first sunlight blink into the low horizon. On this floating island, the sky felt almost within reach as clouds lazily passed beneath her feet.
She ignored the rustling movements behind her. Caleb would find a way to make her listen to whatever insult he was about to spew anyway.
She felt a hand turning her body around and she stared with disinterest. Caleb was already dressed in a long Colonel suit and knee-high boots, though his cap was on the bed.
Without a word, he fastened a medical bangle around her wrist. A small holographic screen appeared above it and listed her vital reading.
She was not fine. 30% of her body was corroded. Her neural network was lit with red again, warning alerts concentrated on the upper left side of her body. She wasn’t surprised. After yesterday’s events, sleep had come quite easily, but she had woken up with a stiff neck and crackling pain inside her muscles.
“Is this normal?” she asked. She tried to get a closer reading, but Caleb released the bangle clasp and the screen shut down.
“Is it normal to be in continuous pain?” he retorted. “Your emotions are too unstable. I told you to get hold of yourself.”
“I’m sorry I can’t feel fine when my best friend hates me now.”
Caleb ignored her and turned her left arm back and forth. The blackened veins hadn’t spread further yet, but it didn’t mean anything. The worst injuries were the ones invisible to the eye.
“Does it hurt?” Caleb enquired.
“A bit more if you move it too fast.”
He pinched his nose bridge, seemingly stressed. “You have to withstand it for now. You just took the painkiller yesterday. This problem would get more complicated if your body is hooked to addictive substances.”
“No problem. I’ve endured worse.”
She didn’t have to state what she was referring to for Caleb to understand.
“Did you have a nightmare?” he asked.
Her heart soared at the thought of Caleb reverting to the nice person she knew. “No, I was too exhausted, and I still remember you. That means I’m in the clear, right?”
“You’ve always remembered me.” Caleb procured a Mood Tracker from his suit pocket and drew her closer by her waist. “It’s tiresome.”
And just like that, her hope was dashed.
Almost stumbling, she steadied herself with her hands on his chest. She waited for him to put it away, but he only took a sharp breath and shifted her hair to the front.
Her hackles rose from the cold leather glove that ghosted her neck. “Don’t I only get stuck in a loop if you try to dissolve the Toring Chip?”
“That was until a huge trigger threw you into another loop and the chip tried to destroy itself. It’s been malfunctioning ever since.”
She couldn’t suppress her smile. The irony of a precarious, self-destructive chip in a precarious, self-destructive person.
Caleb clicked the tracker necklace around her. “Care to share your thoughts?”
He would probably go into another bout of hysteria if she told him the truth. “What was the trigger?” she asked instead.
“Let’s not be too eager to return to the explosion day. Or are you excited to see me dead again?”
She punched his shoulder and he huffed noncommittally.
Caleb tapped some codes into the tracker screen and stepped back. “The tracker will send your emotional report to my watch. If your emotion rises above the set threshold for more than ten minutes, it will trigger an alarm and inject a stabiliser. Cybezin is a strong, addictive drug. Try not to trigger it if you can.”
She heard a whirring and a click from the back of her neck. It remained firm and stuck to her skin when she tried to tug it free.
“It won’t come off,” Caleb stated. “I inputted a deadbolt command. You won’t be able to take it off on your own.” At her exasperated look, he said, “Don’t act so offended. Think of it as an accessory.”
She glared at him. The slim build meant it wouldn’t weigh down on her neck, but it was still a restraint. A barricade from the things she wanted to do once he was out.
She should have dipped her face into the water when she was alone. Caleb wouldn’t be this paranoid if he hadn’t seen that. This was the price she paid for his fleeting attention.
She stopped prying at the tracker when it did nothing but irritate her skin. “Don’t you think you’ve taken away enough things from me?”
“I’ve always wondered,” Caleb said. “What would I need to do to keep you from causing trouble? You like to run off without me and come back with scratches and bruises. Prevention is a more effective measure, don’t you think?” He unscrewed a bottle of ointment and applied it to her neck. “Besides, you are the one who wants to be so close to me. Don’t complain now when I’ve fulfilled your wish.”
“You’ve taken away my belongings, my privacy.” Her hands curled into fists. “My Caleb.”
There was a silence before he spoke. “I was never yours to begin with.”
Caleb went on his knees before she could catch his expression and rubbed ointment on the fading cuff marks on her ankles. She didn’t think he had noticed.
“I remember it differently, Gege.” She emphasised the last word. She wished it tasted foreign on her tongue, but it had defined their relationship for so long that the nickname was natural, almost ready to jump out whenever she talked to him.
The fingers around her ankle tightened. “You don’t exactly have the most reliable memory.”
Her memory retention ability might be tampered with, but this was a bone-deep knowledge that no one could gouge out of her.
She had many fond memories of kid Caleb parading his seniority around her, forcing her to call him her Gege. The older one, the protective one, the reliable one. Reassured her that she could fall around him without worries because he would catch her before anything could happen.
I’m your gege, I will always protect you!
He was always there for her. He made her feel included when she felt out of place in the world. He made her feel like she belonged. What would that child think now if he knew he’d turn out to be the very person he loathed?
“The gege I know wouldn’t hurt me like this.”
“You think I’m hurting you? I told you I’ve always been like this.” Caleb was back on his feet, chuckling as if amused by something she had missed. “I’m sick of this dynamic. Caring for you is an exhausting obligation. Wake up. You’re stuck too deep in your fantasies, Meimei.”
She cringed at the derision in his childhood nickname for her. The more he talked, the more tainted her precious memories of them became. Caleb had no right to do this. “Nobody asked you to. I’m an adult now. I can take care of myself.”
“Evidently, as seen on last night.”
“I won’t do it again,” she said in a flat tone.
The Mood Tracker beeped.
“What was that?” she asked.
“Tell me another lie.” Caleb crossed his arms, his expression taunting.
It took a second to hit. “You modified it to be a lie detector?” Her mouth fell open.
“Handy, isn’t it?” Caleb caressed the inside of her wrists with his thumbs and brought them up against the sun. “Your skin is delicate here. It’d be a shame if I had to cuff you too.”
“You already did before.”
His jaw was set. “Don’t force me to repeat it.” Caleb fixed his hair and put on his cap. “I’m going to work. Hopefully, I’ll come back with more progress for your Toring Chip complication. Everything you need is available in this house. Attempts to escape are futile, though you can try if you want to see what will happen.”
“I need my gun back.” Her eyes trailed to the gun sitting snug in his thigh holster.
“That’s a want, not a need. And you can’t use this one. It’s designed to match my Evol signature.” Caleb threw the gun at her and she caught it swiftly. “Try it if you don’t believe me.”
The weight told her that it was loaded. She cocked the gun and aimed it at her head. Caleb rolled his eyes.
She pulled the trigger and nothing happened.
Caleb flew the firearm out of her hand and ruffled her hair, a gesture so familiar that it should have calmed her down, but she just couldn’t breathe. “Behave until I get back.”
She swatted his hand away. Caleb stood there for a bit before shrugging and leaving.
The Mood Tracker was uncomfortable. It was ridiculous of Caleb to expect her to wear it around the clock. He might believe it was for her sake, but not one cell of her body was grateful for the intervention.
She just felt like she had lost another precious thing.
She strolled to the kitchen and went through the drawers in a frenzy. Knives and other sharp utensils were missing, but she found a hammer in the storage cabinet.
Angling her head to the side, she counted to three and swung the hammer on the tracker.
There was no impact.
Instead, the blow was cushioned by an invisible barrier around the tracker, the hammer hovering below her chin. She tried again, and again, and again, but she couldn’t break through it.
She slammed the hammer on the marble worktop, then jolted at the sound. Ever since the explosion, she had grown a new sensitivity to loud noises. If it clashed with her job as a Hunter, she couldn’t remember. She wondered whether it was one of the reasons she was on leave. Had she grown weary of the job after she had lost the person she was supposed to protect?
Caleb had died. Then he had come back, but he was all wrong. Now his care only extended to her physical well-being with no regard for her feelings. And it was temporary. She tried not to think about what would happen when he didn’t need to fix her anymore.
As much as she hated to admit it, she had been a burden for Caleb. Her foolishness had brought her here. She was torn between wanting to stay in case he would change and the nagging feeling that she was unwanted and should leave soon.
Caleb would like that. It crushed her that he would.
She stood in front of the hallway mirror and tried to tinker with the Mood Tracker interface, but it required Caleb’s fingerprint for access. She gritted her teeth, wanting to punch something, anything, but was halted by the thought of ruining Caleb’s residence. She shouldn’t add more problems for him.
This wasn’t fair. He got to keep track of her emotions while she had to guess where she was at the fluctuation chart and hope she hadn’t surpassed the limit. The threat of being stuck in the nightmare loop and adding more complications to her body was an ever-looming presence in her mind. She couldn’t be angry at Caleb. She couldn’t be furious at herself, for what she had apparently done to her own body. She couldn’t think about the past because the past only contained Caleb and her and that would throw her into a breakdown. She couldn’t cry.
She could wait for Caleb, though that quickened her pulse. She was anxious to keep him to herself after he had been taken away from her, but she was starting to dread the pain he would inflict on her when he was around.
She didn’t think she could be at peace while Caleb was putting himself at risk out there. She knew that the Farspace Fleet’s activities were largely confidential, but it was common knowledge that it was a paramilitary organisation that dealt with high-clearance missions. At least, she thought it was. She couldn’t be sure what was right anymore, and couldn’t check either since Caleb had cut off the network connection.
The silence that encroached on this lifeless house was weighing down on her. Any time, the pressure would cause it to implode. She didn’t know how Caleb could stand to live here without getting lonely. She didn’t notice it last night, but it was sparsely decorated, nothing like their warm childhood home. She found no trace of Caleb or their childhood on the wall, and the sleek, sharp-edged furniture seemed like they materialised straight out of a housing catalogue.
It was a stark reminder that she was living in the past alone. Caleb had moved on. He had died and decided not to keep anything of her when he came back.
She tried on the doors for other rooms, but they were all locked. She tried to break the fingerprint scan on the entrance, but a force field encased the door when she threw a clothing rack at it. Her fingertips tingled when she tried to touch it, but the electricity current was low enough not to sting. She looked around for an emitter that she could turn off, but it was a half-hearted attempt. Caleb was meticulous. He wouldn’t leave it somewhere accessible.
She stretched her neck, the left side more sore than the right, and her eyes caught small reflective dots on the ceiling.
Caleb had mounted cameras to keep her in line.
She scoffed. The ceiling was too high for her to reach, and if she dismounted the cameras, Caleb would find out and simply install them again. She was glad she hadn’t attempted to hurt herself. He might really restrain her to a corner.
She just had to be more creative. He couldn’t watch her around the clock. The colonel should be busy protecting a city rather than the woman he couldn’t wait to get rid of.
She grabbed an apple from the lounge table with her left hand, but her wrist jerked and it fell to the floor. A wave of cramps hit her hand, stiffening her fingers and curling them into tight knots until her nails dug into her palm.
She groaned at the pain. It took a few minutes before her muscles stopped seizing and she could breathe normally.
The apple had rolled under the table. She knelt to reach it, but her grasp had become so weak that she accidentally pushed it farther in. She huffed in frustration and lay on the cold floor, switching to her right hand to retrieve it.
It was covered with fine dust. She put it on her left palm again, and it fell onto her stomach. She couldn’t will her fingers to grip it properly, though she could still feel the smooth surface of the apple. At least her tactile sense wasn’t affected.
She set the apple aside and reached for a new one without getting up from the floor. She took her time eating it, one bite at a time.
She shouldn’t worry about her muscle deterioration. Worrying would lead to more difficulties. She should focus on the mechanical act of chewing.
The blood-red apple was crisp and sweet, its juice bursting into her mouth at every bite. Caleb always had a talent for choosing the best apples.
She could still eat. She was fine. She wished she could check the exact corrosion progress, but she didn’t know where Caleb kept the medical bangle.
The Mood Tracker was silent. Good.
Half-moons were imprinted on her palm, the skin around them peeled off. The little cuts stung when exposed to air. She sighed. This was the kind of injury that would motivate Caleb to add extra precautionary measures.
Her hand was twitching faintly and the sensation travelled up her arm and left ribs. The black veins had spread to the back of her hand and the area where the chip was implanted had turned into a nasty bruise.
She pressed on it experimentally and yelped. It was hot to touch, burning through the inside of her arm. Her emotions hadn’t skyrocketed, so it must be the corrosion side effect.
Caleb should have been here, and she hated herself for thinking this.
His presence alone could have offered her some semblance of comfort. She didn’t want to go through this alone, but it wouldn’t be wise to inform him about this. There was nothing they could do when the error hadn’t been solved. She didn’t want to add to his worry. He could find out from the cameras. She’d keep it to herself meanwhile. Cover it with Caleb’s jacket on the clothing rack in the hallway.
She dragged herself up and shrugged it on. It surprised her, the amount of effort it took to move without succumbing to a dizzy spell. The left side of her head was pounding now, and she felt the meagre food she ate climbing up her oesophagus.
Caleb couldn’t see this. She grunted and darted towards the bathroom. She doubted he was that paranoid to install cameras in there.
After moments of propping her elbows on the toilet bowl, her nausea passed and she flopped down on the floor. A small laugh escaped her when she saw the stopper on the washbasin was missing. But she was drenched in cold sweat and the pain in her body wasn’t subsiding, so she closed her eyes.
Caleb needn’t have worried about her ability to regulate her emotions. She was doing well in that department. That was one of the few things she had control over.
She dozed off, the whole ordeal taking a toll on her, and woke up to a dark bathroom and a disgruntled Caleb, his chest heaving as if he had come back from a chase. The only lighting they got was from the lamp down the hall.
“Maybe I should swap your bed with a sleeping bag if you like the floor so much.” He slid his arms beneath her back and knees and deposited her unceremoniously onto the lounge couch.
Her head spun, black spots crowding around the borders of her vision. She squeezed her eyes, but they wouldn’t disperse. Rapid blinking didn’t help either. This might be a lasting side effect. She tried not to panic. It wasn’t as if she had gone blind. Things might not be perfect, but they hadn’t been in a long time, so this was bearable. She could learn to get used to it.
And she could still see Caleb. The knot in her chest eased when she was sure the person before her was real. And of course, it was. She would never dream up a version of Caleb that was mean to her. But his lips were too pale, and his breathing was too shallow.
Tentatively, her fingers grazed the dark hair that had fallen over his eyes. “Are you sick?”
Caleb caught her hand and put his left palm on her forehead instead, his shoulders sagging slightly when he felt no rise in temperature.
That was expected. The heat was localised on her left arm. She quickly pulled the jacket sleeves down. They were already too long on her, but just in case.
“Are you playing dress-up with my jacket?” Caleb pinched the fabric.
She could give him a half-truth. “It has your scent. I missed you.”
The smile on Caleb’s face was cruel, and she wanted to rip it off him. “You’ve been waiting for me this entire time? How pathetic.”
“What else can I do?” She couldn’t restrain her irritation. “You’ve barricaded me from accessing anything useful.”
“The only thing you need to do is stabilise yourself. I will handle the rest.” He headed towards his room, the tail of his suit brushing against her knees. “You need to eat more. I brought back dinner. One apple isn’t enough to maintain your health.”
So Caleb saw.
She expected more lectures, but he didn’t even wait to see if she followed his instructions. She wanted to laugh at his comment. Her health would decline despite her best attempts to maintain it, so why should she try? The earlier episode had sapped her energy and appetite, and her head lulled to the side.
That was when she spotted the droplets of blood on the floor.
She checked her nose and body, but she didn’t have any open wounds. And the crimson trail led to Caleb’s room.
She jumped over the couch and burst into his room, throbbing headache forgotten. Caleb was sitting at the corner of his bed, shoulders hunched. Her heart squeezed. How hadn’t she noticed that he was hurting?
She rummaged through his drawers with a strange familiarity until she found a medical kit. There was a long gash on his thigh, the night light glinting off the fresh blood. She crouched before him and quickly cut open the fabric of his pants.
Caleb seized her wrist when she took out the antiseptic. “What do you think you’re doing?”
“You’re not doing anything to heal yourself.”
The metal of his fingers dug deeper into her bones. “Get out.”
“No.” She threw the rush of gravitational force back to him, preventing him from moving. His eyes flashed at her, but she ignored him. She could feel Caleb fighting back, but her resonance amplified her power twofold, and she had some energy to spend.
She clasped the medical bangle around Caleb’s taut forearm and exhaled in relief when the scan displayed no signs of infection. She cleaned the wound and applied the anaesthetic gel. The injury was wide enough that it took a while to be numb, but when it did, Caleb had stopped looking like he was about to murder her. Now he simply looked like he wanted to skin her.
It was progress.
She grabbed the surgical skin stapler and stitched the skin as precisely as she could. She willed her hand not to drop the forceps as her fingers grew white from the tension.
“I’m sorry it’s not that neat. I didn’t get medical training beyond basic emergency aid.” She gingerly covered the ragged bump with an adhesive dressing. “I would have if I had known you’d be in this state.”
With a deep breath, she released her grip on Caleb’s Evol. The time to face his wrath had come. The moment he was free, he dragged her to her feet and threw her onto the bed.
The impact caused a ripple effect to the ache in her body. She felt it everywhere. Pain exploded in her head down to her torso.
And her arm. She tugged the sleeve down and rolled sideways, hoping Caleb wouldn’t notice.
But he pushed her shoulder so she lay supine. “Do you enjoy playing nurse?” His towering body loomed over her and he gripped her shoulders hard. “If you know you wouldn’t do a good job, don’t waste your time trying. Now I’ll be reminded of you every time I see my leg.” With blunt flicks to her forehead, he said, “How long will it get into this head that I don’t want you around?”
Words died on her tongue. For the first time, she saw Caleb and only felt fear. He would never lay a hand on her. The flicks didn’t hurt, but the Caleb she loved would never dare to do it on the off-chance that it might. Since she was a child, she understood that there were men who triumphed in their power by wielding it against the women they deemed weak.
Caleb had been a staunch adversary of those men.
And yet, the same person who had been lecturing her for lying on the floor was hurting her physically. Emotional attacks she could take, but she wasn’t sure how to move past this. If she even could.
“Do you think I like you intruding on my home?” Caleb continued. “Watching over you when I could have used my time more efficiently for work? Now I have to be your babysitter because you don’t possess an ounce of self-preservation, always going off to make a mess that I have to clean up.” He angled her chin so she had nowhere to look but into his eyes. They were dark, unfeeling. The gentleness she was so fond of was gone. “Out of all the responsibilities I’ve had, being forced to take care of you is the heaviest burden.”
She stopped wriggling out of his grasp. It felt as though she was watching the whole thing unfold from above. Distantly, she was relieved his right hand couldn’t feel the feverish heat on her left arm.
Caleb dipped his head and their foreheads touched. Yesterday, she would have liked this contact, would have used it as an example to convince herself that he also craved the nearness. But now her skin prickled. She wanted to escape. Anywhere but here. “When I declared myself your protector, I never signed up for this. I was merely a child. I would’ve made a different choice if I knew this is what you would become.”
A lump lodged in her throat. She had heard enough. He had hurt her enough.
“If being with me only brings you pain, then just put up with this until the dissolution is successful,” she said, gritting through her trembling voice.
Caleb stilled. He pushed himself back to a kneeling position, his legs trapping her body. Agony flickered across his expression, then he clutched at the side of his neck with a strained groan. He stared into the distance until eventually, his heaving slowed. When his eyes snapped back to her, they were as dull as murky waters.
She kept her hands by her side, not daring to touch him again. “Is your neck also injured?”
Caleb slipped off the medical bangle from his wrist without answering and reached for her. She sat up by instinct, trying to delay the discovery. But with a snap, gravity fixed her to the mattress and extended her arm towards him.
The vital data came out fast. She couldn’t read it properly from her position, but the dawning horror in Caleb’s expression told her enough.
He rolled up her left sleeve, slowly at first, then with urgency as he noticed the state of her arm.
It had got worse. The skin was shrivelled and there were dark splotches that grew from the Toring Chip site.
“Is this why you’re wearing my jacket?” The shock in Caleb’s voice morphed into anger. “What else are you hiding?”
Her first reaction was to mask her thoughts with a blank face. What if the truth caused him to lash out at her again? She was out of her depth with this Caleb. She couldn’t predict his next step or be sure that he would never hurt her because he had. He had. And he could do it again. Right now, her priority should be to avoid stoking his fury.
But her silence did that exactly.
Caleb lifted her upper body enough that he could take the jacket off her, and he started examining her body with clinical detachment. He moved her head to the side and felt the stiff neck and shoulder. He tugged her shirt up to her ribcage and saw what she was also discovering: a wide bruise that bloomed across her upper stomach.
He shifted down to her legs, but they were yet to be affected by the corrosion. Slowly, he turned her face down and applied a slight pressure on her back. “Does this hurt?”
She decided to be honest. “Everything hurts.”
“Which part is the worst?”
“My head and the left side of my upper body,” she murmured.
Caleb sounded like he was struggling to keep his composure. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I didn’t want to make you worry.” She glanced at him. “Have you solved the error?”
“If I had, you would be back inside the extraction pod.” Caleb pulled down her shirt. “Is the pain endurable?”
“More endurable than how you’ve treated me, Caleb.”
He clenched his jaw. “Then I assume you don’t need painkillers.”
She smiled bitterly and looked away.
Caleb was breaking her down, and she was letting him without much fight. Because she loved him. Because he was her first friend. Because she had to cling to him for her survival. He had conditioned her to rely on him throughout their formative years in childhood. This was the only thing she excelled in, and she couldn’t lose him for the second time.
She was well-acquainted with Caleb’s determination. She knew he would find a breakthrough in the dissolution research that she was not allowed to partake in. She just didn’t know how much of her would be left by then.
Caleb tucked her hair behind her ears and leaned down. “I will fix you,” he whispered. “That’s a promise.”

Footnotes:
“She was anxious to keep him to herself after he had been taken away from her, but she was starting to dread the pain he would inflict on her when he was around” mirrors Caleb’s feeling in chapter 2: “Sometimes I think missing you is more fun than the reality of having you around.”
MC’s “If being with me only brings you pain, then just put up with this until the dissolution is successful” is Caleb’s words in Night Unending repackaged, but you probably already know that.
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#xela writes#caleb x mc#love and deepspace#tw chronic illness#tw chronic pain#tw physical abuse#caleb#lads#caleb angst#lnds#lads caleb#caleb fic#love and deepspace fanfic#xia yizhou
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stuck this on a comment of a random Nerdy Prudes edit but I figured I'd throw it here lol
some things I've noticed by becoming so mentally unwell about this show!
Richie's hair probably isn't supposed to just be greasy/messy, but more that he tried to fashion his hair to look like an anime character! One side stuck up and weird bangs are very harem high school anime self-insert MC-core
in "High school is killing me", Peter says, "Grace, just be cool," and she replies, "never!" And yet she's the first one to ask everyone to keep the beans cool, and the first one to break. Very telling
this might be a stretch, but the 5 nerds are color-coded with the 5 Lords! Just dulled somewhat, and if you count Ruth as red/pink (for her headgear) and Peter as green (for his bowtie and suspenders). This makes sense to me, as the rulers definitely feed off of want, and of course the nerdy prudes will be wanting the most! (Also this makes Pete changing to brown mean a lot, since it shows how he feels fulfilled by slowly becoming Steph's friend/partner)
the mayor calling Steph his "October surprise" probably means that she was an unplanned baby. That makes her being forced to go to abstinence camp kinda hypocritical lol
Ruth keeps on desperately trying to fuck people and Richie keeps trying to be a wingman for her, but they aren't trying to fuck each other at all and are very much just super besties.
at multiple points, it implied that the characters slightly know they're in a musical. From Richie saying "oh no, she's snapping again," to the Hatchettown "singing gives him a greater window to kill, but we're singing still," and, as it was pointed out to me, "suddenly the show is real upsetting." Think of the implications!!!
Max's ghost costume is especially good, but I just love how there are veins on his jacket sleeves! It shows that his outfit isn't separate from himself anymore, his entire form is one single ghostly thing.
I will list more as time goes on. I'm very normal.
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If you're a Hannibal fan for the love of fish do not read 'Bloom' by Delilah S. Dawson with the expectation that you'll get sapphic Hannigram. (The quotes on the inside compared it to Hannibal and the author said it was directly inspired by it.)
*spoilers, tw domestic abuse*
It's the kind of abusive relationship I would expect in a toxic straight male serial killer X sweet autistic coded female abuse survivor pairing. The MC has zero darkness, they are an ideal victim with eyes shut almost the whole time. So if you've dealt with domestic abuse, or even familial abuse, it's going to be a much harsher thing to engage with than Hannibal. A lot of coercive control.
The romance seems one-sided and like an excuse to gain control over the victim. There is none of the mutual darkness, psychological equality, respect, connection or understanding of Hannigram so I would under no circumstances rec this as in the same vein.
There's also some really disturbing bait-and-switch body-positivity that feels horrifically dehumanising towards women in a way that Hannibal isn't.
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New squiddo upload has taken over my brain and I’m okay with it.
Anywayyyy going off that, do to like the farlands or umm like all the very broken mods she somehow corrupted all of her code and can now access it and that’s how they did the backdooring of the server. In a similar vein for probably similar reasons idk ash also has messed up code and somehow through being on lifesteal (maybe through the hearts he gave them idk) some of the code switched and that’s how like the commands that effect the other that only they can input happened.
I afraid I’m overthinking a mc video again…
Also idk how it works but the explosion thing is sick ass hell and that the glasses thing is now cannon for ever smp but cause like fear or wanting to make things fair they don’t use it and keep the glasses on
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Books for Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week
🦇 It's Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week (February 18th-24th)! In an effort to #ReadQueerAllYear, here are a few books featuring aromantic characters you can add to your TBR!
💚 Little Thieves by Margaret Owen 🤍 The Bone Season - Samanta Shannon 🤍 Hullmetal Girls - Emily Skrutskie 🖤 Tarnished Are the Stars - Rosiee Thor 💚 Kaikeyi - Vaishnavi Patel 🤍 The Reckless Kind - Carly Heath 🤍 First Test - Tamora Pierce 🖤 No More Heroes - Loren Rhoads 💚 This Golden Flame - Emily Victoria 🤍 Baker Thief - Claudie Arseneault 🤍 Immoral Code - Lillian Clark 🖤 Loveless - Alice Oseman 💚 The Last 8 - Laura Pohl 🤍 The Midnight Bargain - C.L. Polk 🤍 The Lady's Guide to Petticoats and Piracy - Mackenzi Lee 🖤 Common Bonds - Claudie Arseneault, C.T. Callahan, B.R. Sanders, and RoAnna Sylver 💚 The Black Veins - Ashia Monet 🤍 Liar’s Guide to the Night Sky by Brianna Shrum 🤍 The Crow Rider - Kalyn Josephson 🖤 Summer Bird Blue - Akemi Dawn Bowman 💚 Hazel's Theory of Evolution - Lisa Jenn Bigelow 🤍 Summer of Salt - Katrina Leno 🤍 The Poppy War - R.F. Kuang 🖤 Not Even Bones - Rebecca Schaeffer 💚 Elatsoe - Darcie Little Badger 🤍 Rick - Alex Gino 🤍 Switchback by Danika Stone 🖤 Sal & Gabi Fix the Universe - Carlos Alberto Hernandez 💚 Gender Queer - Maia Kobabe 🤍 Their Troublesome Crush - Xan West 🤍 Every Bird a Prince - Jenn Reese 🖤 The Butterfly Assassin - Finn Longman 💚 Red Skies Falling - Alex London 🤍 When Villains Rise - Rebecca Schaeffer 🤍 The Bruising of Qilwa - Naseem Jamnia 🖤 Funeral Girl - Emma K. Ohland 💚 The Kindred - Alechia Dow 🤍 The Summer of Bitter and Sweet - Jen Ferguson 🤍 Dear Wendy - Ann Zhao 🖤 Tell Me How It Ends by Quinton Li 💚 This Dark Descent - Kalyn Josephson 🤍 Awakenings by Claudie Arseneault 🤍 Compound Fracture by Andrew Joseph White 🖤 Other People’s Butterflies by Cora Ruskin
Per @aroaessidhe: Little Thieves, The Kindred, The Summer of Bitter and Sweet, Gender Queer, (and I think The Bone Season?) have ace or demisexual MCs, not aromantic. also, a lot of the rest are side characters, not main characters.
Thank you, genuinely, so much, for this correction. I'm very sorry for the mistake. I create these guides between work assignments (I work from home, around the clock, trying to make ends meet in this mess of an economy) and didn't do my due diligence in double-checking every book. I think this started as an aro/ace list I was compiling and I tried to separate it into two guides. I apologize for the discrepancy vehemently and will strive to do better in the future. Thank you for catching my error.
#books#aromantic books#aro books#aromantic#queer romance#queer books#queer community#queer#queer fiction#booklr#book blog#book list#books to read#book reader#book reading#queer book recs#book recs#batty about books#battyaboutbooks
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I'm a sucker for good charas that still do the eyes turn red thing X'D Red eyes are fun.
Also in Sev's world variant I decided the blood beads have more of a fruit skin/membrane exterior instead of weird glass bottle on a tree thing e,e So yeah, they bite it and it pops, yeeey
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MC Info & Special Powers
Subject-Zero: Project AntiGod
Designation: Subject-Zero
Alias: The AntiGod
Creation Timeline: 30 years of research and development
Age: 19
Powers: Blood Manipulation, Lightning Manipulation, Chaos Manipulation (latent)
Subject-Zero, the pinnacle of America's desperate efforts to rival divine and alien powers, represents the ultimate fusion of science and mythology. Unlike traditional Demigods, Subject-Zero was not born naturally or created through the conventional process of integrating alien DNA into a human host. Instead, they are a completely synthetic being—an engineered masterpiece grown in a vat, molded by decades of cutting-edge science, and honed to become the perfect weapon in the escalating arms race among the global superpowers.
The Creation of Subject-Zero:
Subject-Zero is the crowning achievement of Project AntiGod, an initiative that spanned 30 years and countless iterations of trial and error. The goal was to create the ultimate Demigod—a being free from the flaws and limitations of natural human hosts. Traditional Demigods, while powerful, are still bound by the weaknesses of their human origins: physical fragility, limited potential for growth, and a reliance on the unpredictable compatibility of alien DNA.
Project AntiGod circumvented these issues by starting from scratch, using a combination of alien cells and human DNA to grow a being in a controlled environment. Subject-Zero was engineered in a vat pod, nurtured in a bio-synthetic amniotic fluid for the first five years of their life. This controlled environment allowed scientists to tweak and perfect every aspect of their genetic code, ensuring that they emerged as the ideal vessel for power.
Through millions of iterations of crossbreeding alien cells with human DNA, scientists eliminated genetic incompatibilities, strengthened the host’s physical structure, and amplified the alien DNA’s potential. The result was a being unlike any other—neither fully human nor fully alien, but something entirely new.
Physical and Mental Attributes:
• Physical Perfection: Subject-Zero possesses a body engineered for combat and resilience. Their muscles, bones, and skin are significantly denser and more durable than those of any natural-born Demigod. This makes them virtually immune to conventional weapons and resistant to most forms of physical trauma.
• Enhanced Cognition: Their brain has been augmented to process information at speeds far beyond human capacity, allowing for lightning-fast reflexes, strategic thinking, and multitasking during combat.
• Lack of Emotional Ties:(Like Chief From HALO) Unlike traditional Demigods, who retain human emotions and psychological vulnerabilities, Subject-Zero was designed with suppressants to suppress emotional responses. However, this has led to unforeseen consequences, as their lack of emotion creates a sense of detachment that makes them unpredictable. (Yet they have shown signs of emotion that they have never been taught.)(Blame spoiler character. Kekekeke)
Powers:
1. Blood Manipulation:
Subject-Zero’s mastery over blood manipulation is both horrifying and awe-inspiring. This ability grants them control over the blood within their own body and the bodies of others, allowing them to perform feats such as:
• Self-Healing: By manipulating their own blood, they can accelerate healing processes, closing wounds almost instantly and regenerating lost tissue in seconds.
• Weaponization: Subject-Zero can harden their blood into sharp, deadly weapons, such as blades, projectiles, or barriers.
• Control Over Others: By tapping into the blood of their enemies, they can immobilize or manipulate their movements, effectively turning them into puppets.(Doesn't work on Demigods)
• Hemorrhagic Warfare: In extreme cases, they can cause opponents to hemorrhage by forcing their blood to rupture veins or arteries.(Doesn't work on Demigods)
This power grants Subject-Zero unparalleled control over life and death on the battlefield, making them a terrifying opponent.
2. Lightning Manipulation:
Subject-Zero’s lightning manipulation enhances their offensive capabilities, turning them into a living storm. This power allows them to:
• Generate Lightning: Subject-Zero can summon and direct bolts of electricity with precision, striking enemies from a distance or channeling energy through their weapons and body.
• Supercharged Reflexes: By stimulating their nervous system with lightning, they can boost their already superhuman body and move at even faster superhuman speeds, dodging attacks and overwhelming opponents with sheer velocity.
• Electromagnetic Control: Their mastery over electricity extends to controlling electromagnetic fields, allowing them to disable electronics, disrupt communications, and even create EMP blasts.
• Electrical Constructs: Subject-Zero can shape electricity into tangible forms, such as weapons, barriers, or whips, giving them versatility in combat.
This power makes them a formidable adversary, capable of devastating armies and machinery alike.
3. Chaos Manipulation (Latent Power):
Subject-Zero’s most potent and dangerous ability, Chaos Manipulation, lies dormant within them. This power is said to be the ultimate expression of destruction and creation, granting them control over the very fabric of reality. Once awakened, Chaos Manipulation could make Subject-Zero virtually unstoppable. Its capabilities include:
• Reality Warping: The ability to bend and alter the laws of physics, turning the environment into a weapon or reshaping the battlefield to their advantage.
• Temporal Distortion: Manipulating time itself, slowing it down, speeding it up, or even rewinding it to undo mistakes or gain an edge in combat.
• Existential Erasure: With a mere thought, Subject-Zero could erase objects, people, or even entire locations from existence.
• Cosmic Constructs: Harnessing the raw energy of chaos, they can create constructs of immense power, such as barriers that defy destruction or weapons that can pierce through dimensions.
• Unpredictability: Chaos Manipulation introduces an element of unpredictability, as even Subject-Zero may not fully control the power, making them both a weapon and a potential threat to themself.
Significance of Subject-Zero:
Subject-Zero is not merely a weapon; they are the embodiment of America's desperation to assert dominance in a world of gods and monsters. As one of the first perfect synthetic Demigods, they represent a turning point in the global arms race, a being designed to counter any foe—even the strongest of Demigods. However, their very existence poses ethical and existential questions. Can a being so detached from humanity truly serve its creators? And if Chaos Manipulation awakens fully, will Subject-Zero remain under control, or will they become a threat to all existence?
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Always so sad when anime men, especially the 3D ones, have no ass. Just flat as a board back there. It's so mean. Doesn't it hurt when they sit having no cushioning?
#im staring at yakumo. louis. and my mc in photo mode in code vein and theres just. zero ass. its so sad.#why are anime men no allowed to be caked up??? is it just me or does it seem impossible for them to be so flat?#this applies to yugioh too actually. the human males always have square little invisible asses but the monsters? 👀 packin it lemme tell ya#so theyre capable of drawing the human guys with asses so why DONT they?#GIVE ANIME MEN ASSES!!! its a travesty#personal
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