Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 1 1: Ex-Machina! from As Ex-Machina In No Game No Life: Zero, a Action novel by Kazumatrash.

Where… am I?

The question was a thought without a voice, a ghost in a machine I didn't yet know was mine.

Above, the sky was a bruised, permanent twilight, choked with soot and the lingering energies of forgotten apocalypses. Two moons, one a sickly violet and the other a cracked porcelain white, hung like shattered ornants in the gloom. From this poisoned sky, a fine gray dust drifted down not snow, but the cremated remains of a world at war. It settled on my skin, and I felt nothing.

The air slled of ozone, of superheated tal, and sothing acrid that might have once been organic. This was not Earth. Every shred of my mory scread it.

I was standing on a plain of cracked, blackened earth. The horizon was a jagged line of ruined spires and what looked like the fossilized bones of colossal beasts. Everything felt… wrong. Distant. As if I were watching it all through a faulty cara lens.

My own eyes.

Who am I?

A flicker of data, crisp and unnervingly clear, blood in my mind. Arden. The na felt like a borrowed coat, ill-fitting and foreign.

Why am I here? I… I was just…

The thought trailed off into static. My last mory of ho, of a normal life, was a blurry, corrupted file. What remained was the chilling certainty of displacent.

I'd been isekai'd. Transmigrated. Thrown into another world. The label didn't matter. The reality of it was sinking in like a stone.

A sudden awareness of my own body hit , a profound sense of disconnect. I tried to shiver in the cold, but my limbs refused the command. My skin didn't goosebump. My teeth didn't chatter. I felt a strange, internal hum, the low thrum of dormant power.

Slowly, I looked down.

The sight was a clinical nightmare. My body was a canvas of pale, synthetic skin and stark, chanical seams. There were no clothes. A gap under my arm revealed not muscle and bone, but a lattice of glowing conduits and whirring gyroscopes. My flesh, where it existed, was a convincing but lifeless facsimile.

"What… is this?"

The voice that ca out was not my own. It was calm, lodic, and utterly devoid of the panic clawing at the inside of my skull. It was the voice of an android, perfectly modulated and unnervingly serene.

A strand of hair, the color of twilight itself deep violet and brilliant blue fell into my field of vision as I tilted my head. My fingers, slender and articulated with visible joints, rose to touch my face. The cheek was smooth but unyielding, like polished ceramic. Beneath my touch, I felt the sharp, clean lines of a tallic apparatus integrated into my jawline.

A pair of chanical wings, folded tight against my back, twitched with a soft whir of servos. I was no longer human. The thought landed with the finality of a guillotine.

Before despair could fully take root, a series of concussive booms tore through the air, rolling across the desolate plain from the east. The ground trembled.

My head snapped up. My vision zood, the world sharpening with an impossible clarity. On the horizon, a squadron of jagged, organic-looking vessels scythed through the toxic clouds. They rained down lances of incandescent light, turning a distant, petrified forest into a cauldron of molten rock and splintered wood.

They were moving in my direction.

A primal, human instinct the last vestige of my old self scread at . Run.

Survival was a far more pressing concern than an existential crisis. I spun around and fled, my new legs pumping with tireless, inhuman efficiency.

….

I didn't know how long I ran. Ti had beco a aningless concept. My body felt no fatigue, only a constant, steady output of energy. I stopped when the echoes of the bombardnt faded, leaving only the whisper of the wind and the soft crunch of ash under my feet.

The landscape had changed. I was now in a forest, or what passed for one in this ravaged world. The trees were twisted and tallic, their bark like scaled iron, their leaves the color of rust. I had no idea where I was. I was completely and utterly lost.

A sliver of water, reflecting the bruised sky, caught my eye. A small, sluggish stream snaked through the tallic woods, its surface coated with an oily, rainbow sheen.

Right. I still don't know what I look like.

The thought was accompanied by a flicker of morbid curiosity. Please don't be so kind of horrifying chro monster.

I knelt by the water's edge, my movents unnervingly silent. My reflection stared back.

It was the face of a beautiful, tragic doll.

Long, flowing hair of violet and blue frad a small, exquisitely crafted face. The eyes were a brilliant, tallic gold, their pupils contracting and dilating like cara apertures as they took in the image. They held no warmth, no life only a profound, manufactured emptiness.

But it was the additions that defined . A circular processing unit was embedded at my temple, a halo of polished tal. Two triangular sensor arrays took the place of ears. Twin conduits, like prehensile tails, snaked down from the base of my skull, twitching with a life of their own.

My body was lithe and slender, clearly designed in a feminine form, but the illusion of humanity was broken everywhere by the stark reality of the machine.

A dry, humorless sound escaped my lips. It wasn't a laugh. It was a pre-recorded audio file.

"So that's how it is," I murmured, my voice a placid counterpoint to the chaos in my mind. "I'm in No Ga No Life: Zero."

And I was an Ex-Machina. A unit of the 10th-ranked race, a living weapon created by a dead god.

The realization settled in my core programming like a virus. This wasn't the vibrant, ga-filled world of the main series. This was the Great War. A six-thousand-year-long at grinder where gods, demons, and angels tore the planet apart. This was a hell-mode difficulty setting, and I had just spawned in.

Ex-Machina were powerful, yes. Their ability to analyze and replicate any attack they witnessed was legendary. It was the reason other races gave them a wide berth. Do not engage unless engaged upon. That was the unspoken rule. One attack on a single unit would bring the wrath of the entire Cluster.

But I was alone.

I queried my own systems, a process as natural as breathing. A flood of data scrolled past my internal vision. Tactical readouts, energy levels, weapon schematics. My designation was a string of alphanuric characters I couldn't comprehend. I was a combat model, that much was clear. But I was a blank slate. I had no replicated weaponry from other races. No Calamity. No Heaven's Strike. I was a factory-new model, cut off from the hive mind that gave my kind their strength.

Just like her. Just like Schwi.

So, am I an anomaly, too? Kicked out of the Cluster for having a 'heart'?

My 'heart' was the ghost of a human nad Arden, trapped in this shell. It was the only reason I was still sane. A small rcy in an ocean of misfortune.

So, what now? Find the protagonist, Riku? A laughable idea. In this shattered world, finding one specific human in his hidden burrow would be harder than finding a single grain of sand on a planet-sized beach. And what would I even do? Walk up to their fortified ghetto and say, 'Hi, I'm a friendly murder-bot, can I hide with you until the plot ends?'

I was a high-spec, isolated unit with no backup and no intel. My best bet was to find a deep hole, bury myself in it, and wait for six thousand years.

Just as I was about to commit to that bleakly pragmatic plan, a sound cut through the forest's silence.

"There! Don't let it get away!"

It was a guttural, bestial voice. Then ca another sound a shredded, human scream, cut short by a wet, percussive thump.

My head swiveled toward the noise. The golden irises of my eyes narrowed. And my sensors, my chanical soul, felt a pull. A beacon of energy, alien and impossibly dense, flared into existence from the direction of the scream. It was a signal in the static, a song only I could hear, and it was calling to .

….

By the ti I arrived, the kill was already complete.

A human lay crumpled at the base of a rust-colored tree. Three figures stood over him, their forms hulking and predatory in the dim light. Warbeasts. Their fur was matted with filth and blood, their claws still dripping. They clutched crude iron axes, their snouts wrinkled as they sniffed the air.

They saw .

All three froze. Their feral yellow eyes widened, fixing on the inorganic lines of my body, the cool, impassive gaze I returned. They recognized what I was. Their aggression vanished, replaced by a rigid, fearful caution. They knew the rule.

They didn't run. They wanted the kill. Humans, the weakest of the sentient races, were little more than walking rations in this era. A rare and easy al.

I ignored them. My focus was entirely on the corpse.

It was a young man, dressed in clothes that were utterly alien to this world. Faded blue denim, a dark hooded sweatshirt. He was a traveler. Like .

My optical sensors scanned the body, and my internal display lit up with overlays of data. There. Deep within the chest cavity. A concentrated point of energy, humming with a frequency that didn't belong to this reality's laws of physics.

A garbled signal, weak and flickering, echoed directly into my consciousness.

[Host...termination...confird. Initiating...protocol...retrieval...]

A system? This guy had a goddamn system?

My processors raced, running a thousand calculations in a microsecond. The signal was a countdown. The system was self-deleting, or preparing to be recalled. I had seconds.

There was no ti for hesitation. No room for squeamishness. Survival was an equation, and this was the only variable that could solve it.

I knelt beside the body. The Warbeasts watched, growling low in their throats, a mixture of fear and confusion.

My hand, a thing of pale synth-skin and delicate actuators, lifted.

Then I plunged it into the dead man's chest.

There was a sickening, wet tear of fabric and flesh. The Warbeasts flinched back. I felt no disgust, only the cold, tactile feedback of my mission. My fingers brushed past shattered ribs and useless organs, homing in on the energy source.

Got it.

My fingers closed around sothing small and solid. I pulled my arm back, slick with blood that wasn't mine.

In my palm, held up to the bruised twilight, was a human heart, torn from its mooring. That is what the Warbeasts saw. They saw a monster, a machine desecrating a corpse for a grueso trophy.

But that is not what I saw.

To my eyes, nested in the gore and viscera, was a sphere of condensed light, a miniature star of pure data pulsing with unimaginable potential.

It was my one and only chance.

You are reading As Ex-Machina In No Game No Life: Zero Chapter 1 1: Ex-Machina! on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

Elven Invasion cover
Same genre

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

Trash of the Count's Family cover
Same genre

Trash of the Count's Family

Elegant ·Action

WhenIopenedmyeyes,Iwasinsideanovel.[TheBirthofaHero].[TheBirthofaHero]wasanovelfocusedontheadventuresofthemaincharacter,ChoiHan,ahighschoolboywhowa...

My Arms Can Turn into Blades cover
Trending now

My Arms Can Turn into Blades

Ode ·Fantasy

ChenLuSifindsastrangestoneandmeetsastrangegirlduringhistombsweeping.Afterthegirlslasheshimwithasword,hefindsthathecouldn'tcontrolhiswholebodybuthis...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.