The basent was my sanctuary, an underground world where Gotham's chaos stayed locked outside, sealed behind layers of steel and biotric locks. The air here was cool and filtered by the fans I had installed myself—a constant hum of circulating air, laced with the tallic scent of recent soldering and the faint ozone from the servers working tirelessly. The LED lights hanging from the ceiling cast a rciless white glow over the central workbench, illuminating the organized chaos of tools: precision screwdrivers lined up by size, coils of copper wire in different gauges, digital multiters blinking with residual readings, and stacks of electronic components I had transmuted earlier that day. My body still ached from yesterday's training with Artemis—muscles throbbing in my arms and legs, a deep fatigue that the elental mitigated but didn't erase completely. I wore a simple black tank top, now stained with sweat and grease, that highlighted the muscular arms I had sculpted over the years. Light gray training pants allowed free movent, and my black padded gloves protected against accidental cuts and burns while I handled hot pieces.
I stepped back, wiping my hands on a dirty rag, and admired what I had created. On the workbench, gleaming under the light, sat the red helt—a smooth, spherical piece with no visible visor or openings, just an opaque surface of transmuted alloy I had forged from common scrap. The red was deep, like coagulated blood, and around it were multiple coupling ports: slots for neural cables, reinforced fiber-optic connectors, and quantum interfaces I had designed for direct nervous system integration. This wasn't an ordinary helt; it was the core of Project Sensei, ready for the final test. My heart beat a little faster as I imagined it in action—absorbing martial arts data from the entire world, simulating infinite combats, turning into sothing beyond human.
I picked up the helt carefully, feeling its perfectly balanced weight in my hands—light enough not to tire, yet solid as titanium. I walked over to the ergonomic chair in the center of the basent, the one I had built myself from aerospace foam and recycled carbon fiber to support hours of imrsion. Behind it, erging from a hidden panel at the base, was a tangle of cables: quantum-insulated neural transmission lines, fiber optics for terabyte-per-second data transfer, and biotric sensors to monitor brain waves in real ti. I connected them one by one to the ports on the helt—each click satisfying, like pieces of a puzzle locking into place. The elental in my chest pulsed warmly, as if approving, a spark of excitent mixed with the day's fatigue.
As soon as the last cable clicked into place, I heard it: firm knocks on the basent door, echoing down the hallway above. My stomach twisted. I already knew who it was—Artemis. At the end of our rooftop training, I had casually ntioned: "Co to my basent tomorrow. I've got sothing to show you." She had laughed, thinking it was a joke, but here she was. I climbed the stairs slowly, each step creaking like a warning. My body protested—the liver still tender from Robin's shot, arms aching from the manual work. I opened the door with a click, and there she stood: Artemis, blonde hair loose, wearing a light jacket over a casual top, jeans hugging her athletic curves. Her almond-shaped eyes scanned with that usual sarcastic edge, but there was curiosity there too.
At the end of the hallway, my mother paused, a teacup in her hand, looking at us with genuine confusion—who was this girl? I had never brought friends ho, let alone a girl. My parents knew I was… different, since the Zsasz incident, but this? This was new. She blinked, puzzled, but said nothing, just gave a small wave before returning to the kitchen.
"Co in," I told Artemis, closing the door behind her. My tone was casual, but inside I felt a mix of excitent and nerves—showing soone my basent was like exposing my soul.
Artemis's Point of View
The invitation ca at the end of our rooftop training, between an explanation of fractal footwork and a demonstration of force redirection. "Co to my basent tomorrow," Erick said, breathless, sweat dripping down his pale face. "I've got sothing to show you." I laughed at the ti, thinking it was another attempt to impress—the kid was smart, sure, but from yesterday to today? What could he possibly have ready? Still, here I was, the next day, knocking on his door in Crest Hill. The neighborhood was nicer than mine—spacious houses, well-kept lawns—but I could still feel Gotham's weight in the air, that damp scent of impending rain and buried secrets.
He opened the basent door, and I stepped inside, the cool air wrapping around like a chanical embrace. The place was… impressive. Not just any basent, but an underground laboratory, a high-tech bunker disguised as a teenager's hobby room. The central workbench dominated the space, covered in projects at various stages: half-assembled circuits blinking with LEDs, coils of wire organized by gauge, precision tools lined up like soldiers. Shelves on the walls displayed academic awards—plaques for math, physics, English, even spelling bees—with Olympic math dals gleaming under the LED lights. Photos of him receiving trophies, young face serious, as if the world was a puzzle he had already solved. In the corner, training equipnt: a well-used pull-up bar, heavy dumbbells, a punching bag scarred from repeated impacts. And more photos: Erick in gis, fight shorts, dals on his chest—judo championships, Muay Thai, taekwondo, boxing. The kid was a multifaceted prodigy, isolated in his lair.
"So," I said, crossing my arms, looking around with a skeptical air I knew would annoy him. "You called here? I know we have a deal, but I haven't made any requests yet. What is this, a trap to show off your nerd collection?"
Erick walked past —he was shorter than I was, but carried a presence that filled the room—and gave a small smile, blue eyes shining with confidence. "Yeah, but I wanted to get ahead."
I raised an eyebrow, doubtful. "Get ahead? From yesterday to today? You think I'm dumb enough to believe you produced sothing useful in 24 hours?"
"Never doubt my abilities," he replied, voice steady, not blinking.
I snorted, but inside a growing curiosity stirred. He went to the workbench and picked up a rectangular box, opening it carefully. Inside, arrows—not ordinary ones, but customized, gleaming under the light. He took them out one by one, explaining with calm technical precision.
"It wasn't that hard to produce these," he said, handing them to . "Incendiary arrow—pyrotechnic compound tip, activated on impact, burns at 800°C for 30 seconds. Freezing—modified liquid nitrogen capsule, freezes targets in a 50 cm radius. Shock—embedded capacitor, discharges 50,000 volts on contact. Piercing—transmuted tungsten tip, penetrates Level IIIA armor. And this concussive one—heavy tip with internal damper, transfers kinetic force like a pneumatic hamr."
I took the arrows, feeling their perfect balance, the impeccable quality. My heart raced—this wasn't a joke. "Where did you get the materials for this? And so fast?"
He shrugged. "My setup. If you have more requests, just say the word."
Then he pulled another case from the other side of the table, opening it with a click. Inside, a uniform—similar to mine, but… different. Erald green, with reinforced seams, but without the wear of my current one.
"You made another of the sa?" I asked, touching the fabric.
"No," he said, picking up the mask and the suit. "This one I modified. Unlike yours, which is just reinforced fabric—I don't know why Green Arrow lets you use that, but anyway. This one has high levels of resistance to piercing, concussive damage, and more. Fla-resistant, waterproof. And look at this." He touched a discreet button on the collar, and the uniform shifted to pure black, absorbing light like living shadow. "Stealth mode for night missions. Press here—" He demonstrated, and it turned to a camouflaged green, like military gear for forests. Another touch: sandy beige for deserts like the Sahara. Another: reddish earth for Texas. White snow for arctic. "Adaptive colors via piezoelectric nanolayers. Responds to tactile or encrypted voice commands."
I blinked, speechless. My current uniform was good—reinforced, approved by Ollie—but this? At least five tis better: ballistic, thermal, waterproof protection. Insanely expensive to produce, materials I could never afford alone.
He pulled a utility belt from the case, handing it to . "And since you showed goodwill, I wanted to show so too. Modular compartnts: tools, smoke grenades, sedative darts. Customizable."
Inside, I was thinking: Damn, where did this guy co from? He's a genius. He had created sothing worth a fortune, in one day. My skeptical air vanished, replaced by admiration—and a hint of suspicion. Who was Erick Smith, really?
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