The mountain nights in Afghanistan were as cold as an ice cellar.
Freezing wind whipped through the ravine, driving coarse yellow sand against the rock faces with a relentless, crackling hiss. The dim, sickly yellow glow from inside the cave leaked through the cracks in the heavy iron door, throwing long, distorted shadows across the desert floor.
I crouched in the leeward shadow of a massive boulder, watching the two n huddled together on my retinal display, and finally let out a long, heavy sigh.
I had been sitting in this canyon for two days.
The reality of their captivity was far more brutal than the movie had portrayed. The glowing electromagnet keeping the shrapnel out of Tony's heart was entirely dependent on a heavy, leaking car battery. The cave was damp, freezing at night, and suffocatingly hot during the day. The risk of Tony's chest wound going septic grew exponentially by the hour. Yinsen's health was already deteriorating; without dicine or proper supplies, his deep, rattling cough had grown worse every single day.
Their only reprieve from hamring steel and welding crude armor was sitting under the flickering halogen bulb, using rusty hex nuts as poker chips. The winner got an extra mouthful of murky, lukewarm water.
I crouched on the rock for forty-eight hours, trying to maintain my operational discipline.
But I finally hit my limit.
I had originally sworn to act strictly as a detached Observer. I wasn't supposed to interfere with the tiline. But watching two n slowly die of dehydration and infection when I had the power of a god at my fingertips eventually broke through my psychological firewall. My lingering human empathy simply overrode the pri directive.
Look, dropping off so antibiotics and a few Cokes isn't going to radically alter the tiline, right?
I justified the breach of protocol in my head. With a single thought, I issued a command to the Explorer II android waiting in the shadows of the cave.
The instant the command fired, the invisible Executor slipped seamlessly out of its hiding spot. Moving with absolute, terrifying silence, it approached the corner where Tony and Yinsen slept. It set down a small box of broad-spectrum cephalosporin antibiotics, two packs of sterile surgical gauze, and two bottles of freezing, frost-covered Coca-Cola.
The android retreated back into the darkness without making a single sound.
On the retinal display, Tony and Yinsen imdiately noticed the sudden appearance of the items.
Both n instantly froze. Tony snatched a heavy wrench off the workbench. Yinsen grabbed a sharpened steel file. They approached the corner as if they were stalking a live bomb, staring at the items in utter disbelief.
"What is this?" Yinsen picked up the box of pills, his voice hushed with shock as he read the English label. "Cephalosporin? And sterile gauze? Where did this co from?"
Tony picked up one of the Cokes. The mont his fingers brushed the plastic, his eyes went wide.
The bottle was coated in a thick layer of white frost. It was bone-chillingly cold. In a sweltering terrorist cave where the only source of electricity was a dying car battery, the existence of ice-cold soda was mathematically impossible.
He cracked the seal. The carbonation hissed violently, and the sharp, sweet sll of sugar and syrup filled the cramped space. Tony and Yinsen looked at each other, entirely bewildered.
"Did one of the guards drop this?" Yinsen asked, frowning deeply. "Or... is the carbon monoxide finally making us hallucinate?"
"If this is a hallucination, it's a damn good one," Tony muttered. He took a massive swig of the freezing soda. The icy liquid burned down his throat, instantly cutting through the oppressive heat and exhaustion. He let out a long, ragged exhale. "God. That is better than any Coke I've ever had in New York."
It wasn't that Tony lacked the paranoia to suspect the drinks were poisoned. But trapped in a cave with a car battery wired to his heart, his life was currently worth less than the dirt on his boots. If the Ten Rings wanted him dead, they had a thousand easier ways to do it than sneaking in perfectly chilled, poisoned soda.
The two n shared the drinks and hid the antibiotics. Yinsen took a dose that night. By the next morning, his cough had noticeably improved.
Over the next two days, these "miracle supply drops" continued. Sotis it was high-calorie protein bars. Sotis it was a sealed bottle of purified water. Once, it was two squares of dark chocolate. The items always appeared in the dark corner of the cave, and neither man ever saw who left them.
After their initial terror wore off, Tony and Yinsen grew accustod to the drops. It beca a psychological lifeline. They started calling their invisible benefactor "The Cave Santa," and they began betting their hex nuts on what Santa was going to bring them next.
Up on the freezing rock, I watched them genuinely thank the empty corner of the cave. I couldn't help but smile.
I shook the icy Coke in my own hand and raised it toward the cave in a silent toast.
The day of the escape arrived faster than I expected.
The atmosphere in the canyon had grown incredibly volatile. The Ten Rings doubled their patrols. Every guard had a round chambered, and the heavy iron door of the cave was reinforced with two heavy padlocks. The warlord had issued his final ultimatum: Tony had twenty-four hours to produce the Jericho missile, or they were both dead.
Everyone in the canyon knew the blood was going to flow today.
Inside the cave, the two n moved with a grim, hyper-focused efficiency.
Yinsen helped Tony run the final diagnostic on the chest electromagnet, confirming the crude arc reactor was fully synced and capable of powering the suit. Tony, encased in the jagged, terrifying steel plating of the Mark I armor, moved stiffly. But the look in his eyes was entirely different. The fear was gone, replaced by a desperate, lethal resolve.
"Rember. You do not move until the boot sequence finishes," Yinsen said, his hands trembling slightly as he locked the final pneumatic joint. "I am going to the armory. I will buy you the ti."
Tony frowned behind the iron mask. "No. We stick to the plan. We stick together. Don't play the hero."
"If I don't buy you the ti, they will breach this door before the suit cos online." Yinsen smiled. It was a calm, tragic smile that Tony didn't understand yet. "Don't waste your life, Tony."
Up on the cliff, I gripped the edge of the rock tightly.
I knew exactly what was about to happen. Yinsen was going to grab a rifle, run screaming down the tunnel to draw their fire, and die bleeding out on bags of grain. He was going to use his life to buy Tony the forty-five seconds he needed to power up the suit.
But... everyone wants a story to have a happy ending.
I took a deep breath and slowly stood up.
The desert wind whipped around , blowing my silver-white hair wildly into the air. I closed my eyes and let my consciousness plunge directly into the foundational galaxy of the Siren code.
For the first ti since arriving in this universe, I completely unlocked the apex authority of the Antikythera sequence.
[Rigging Manifestation Protocol: Initiated]
[Wisdom Cube Core: Synchronized]
[Annihilation Batteries: Spooled]
[Quantum Communication Array: Full-Band Access]
As the cold, chanical system prompts echoed in my mind, a massive, pale blue halo erupted in the air behind .
The complete, terrifying architecture of the Observer rigging unfolded into reality.
At the center was the massive, translucent jellyfish core, glowing like an ethereal, deep-sea flower blooming in the middle of a desert sandstorm. The Antikythera cross was stamped across the crown, radiating a soft, but absolutely oppressive blue light. Countless luminous quantum tendrils drifted from the bell, cascading downward like a flowing digital river.
On both sides of the core, the massive, black-armored annihilation batteries deployed with a heavy, chanical hum. Pale blue plasma swirled violently at the muzzles, yet the energy containnt was so perfect that not a single spark of heat leaked into the air.
I pushed off the rock. My body floated upward, defying gravity until I settled comfortably onto the edge of the jellyfish core. I sat on the rigging like a throne, my legs dangling in the air.
The rigging emitted a localized energy shield, instantly vaporizing the driving sand and killing the wind in a ten-ter radius. I hovered three hundred feet above the canyon floor. The entire battlefield was laid out beneath . My Fire Control Radar tracked the trajectory of every rifle, the heartbeat of every militant, and the exact power-up percentage of Tony's armor inside the cave.
In that mont, I was no longer the quiet high school student trying to survive in Queens.
I was the Second Observer Zero of Antikythera. I was an apex technological deity hovering above a mortal warzone.
"Finally," I muttered, looking down at the cave where Tony was waiting for the boot sequence. "Finally, I don't have to watch these two old guys gamble with rusty hardware anymore. I was losing my mind."
I looked at the massive, glowing weapon systems floating beside . The blue light reflected brilliantly in my eyes. I couldn't help but rub my chin, completely impressed with my own aesthetic.
"Honestly? I look incredibly cool right now. I should have used the matter reconstruction to print a Polaroid cara. First ti deploying the full rigging—I really should have taken a selfie."
I was genuinely considering taking the ti to fabricate a cara when a soft, polite female voice spoke directly next to my ear.
"It is indeed a very striking aesthetic. I must admit, this level of extradinsional technological architecture is a first for as well."
My blood ran completely cold.
The arrogant smile froze on my face. My entire body locked up as if soone had pulled my power cord. Even my legs stopped swinging.
My Fire Control Radar covered a five-kiloter radius. It was sensitive enough to track the electrical impulses of an ant. Yet I had not detected a single anomaly. No energy spikes. No spatial tears. Not even a heartbeat.
I turned my head. It was a slow, terrifyingly stiff movent.
Hovering in the air directly beside my rigging was a bald woman in a simple yellow monk's robe. She was holding a folding paper fan. The Eye of Agamotto hung from a heavy chain around her neck. Her gaze was impossibly gentle, yet it carried the terrifying weight of soone who spent her life looking through the kaleidoscope of infinite tilines.
It was the Ancient One.
The Sorcerer Supre of Kamar-Taj. The apex mystic guardian of Earth. The one being on the planet capable of observing the multiverse and fracturing reality with a gesture.
My cybernetic brain instantly flatlined. Only one panicked thought began rapidly scrolling across my internal monitors.
I am so dead.
How did I completely forget about the Ancient One?!
She could literally see the future! I had been running around Afghanistan for two days using reality-warping technology. She probably saw my arrival in this universe months ago!
And I just deployed a planet-killing weapon system directly in front of her while monologuing about taking a selfie!
It was a catastrophic, cosmic-level embarrassnt.
I stared at the Ancient One's polite, knowing smile. My own expression was stiffer than a corpse. Every instinct I had scread at to retract the rigging, open a spatial jump, and run for my life. But I also knew that against the Sorcerer Supre, spatial jumps were functionally useless. She could just drag into the Mirror Dinsion.
I forced myself to remain calm. I cleared my throat, desperately trying to salvage so shred of my dignity, though my voice still carried a microscopic tremor of panic.
"...Sorcerer Supre? To what do I owe the pleasure?"
The Ancient One gently waved her paper fan. She looked at the massive jellyfish rigging, her eyes filled with academic curiosity rather than hostility.
"I am the Guardian of Earth. It is my duty to monitor any and all anomalies that intrude upon this reality. Especially an entity like yourself, who wields imnse power from a foreign dinsion, and who possesses the ability to actively manipulate the flow of ti."
She turned her gaze back to . Her eyes were warm, but they saw through absolutely everything.
"I have been watching you for quite a while... Miss Observer of Antikythera."
A layer of cold, human sweat broke out across my spine.
Just as I thought. She knew exactly who I was the entire ti.
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