Chapter 181
One Ring Changes Everything
The second fabricator lifted off the workshop floor, tons of industrial equipment responding to Alexander’s will. Metallokinesis guided it across the room toward the right wall where the first unit already waited, power feeds dangling from ceiling mounts.
His new workshop stretched out before him. The room ran long from the entrance, maybe 70 feet to the far wall where display screens waited in near darkness. Tool racks flanked the doorway on both sides, with empty slots ready for equipment he’d acquire over time. The left wall held a workbench running most of the length, the surface already populated with circuit board stations, welding equipment, and precision cutting tools.
Everything he’d need for detailed electronics work.
The fabricator settled into position beside its twin. Feed bins mounted above each unit, waste disposal chutes below. Collection baskets waited beneath the output ports for completed parts. The setup was functional but crude. A professional manufacturing line would have conveyor systems with automated handling arms and quality control scanners at each station.
He had to start somewhere though. And he’d been making do with worse for quite some time now.
The third fabricator rose. Alexander guided it over the central island workbench, careful not to clip the scanning equipment and testing stations built into its surface. Holographic projectors waited at intervals along the table, ready to display schematics in three dimensions. Piled across it were the damaged drones that had survived his trip into space in various states of disrepair. They’d made it through the cultists. Cultivators. Beasts. New York. But not whole.
Feed lines connected automatically as the third unit locked into place. Mechanical clicks echoed through the empty workshop as power systems engaged.
The fourth fabricator was the hybrid unit, heavier than the others by half a ton. Alexander’s focus tightened as he lifted it. The weight wasn’t a problem for Metallokinesis, just required more concentration to keep the ascent smooth. Damaging the new equipment before he got to use it would be a tragedy.
Mostly because he’d have to find someone else to borrow replacements from.
It settled into the final position. Four fabricators lined the right wall in neat formation.
Alexander reached into each unit simultaneously using Technopathy. The systems opened to him like books, their architectures clear and simple compared to the complexity of true 3D printers. Three were specialized units. One for basic metal alloys, one for polymers, one for ceramics and composites. The fourth could handle layering multiple materials during fabrication, but would require manual finishing work to properly bond the different substances.
People called them 3D printers. The terminology was technically correct, and while he preferred that most days, in this particular instance it obscured what mattered. The Zhao-Matsuura NX-7000 he’d rented on Astra Omnia was a comprehensive 3D printer. An artist’s tool that allowed research and creation, along with all the experimentation required between the two. It had a two-nanometer resolution with real-time atomic monitoring. It could handle almost anything you needed, even offering material synthesis on demand.
These were fabricators. Industrial photocopiers for manufacturing work.
The distinction mattered. The NX-7000 could print a complete functional drone in a single build cycle. Frame, electronics, casing, all molecularly bonded at material interfaces. A finished product when the chamber opened. These fabricators would produce components. Fast and reliable components, but components nonetheless. The metal unit would print drone chassis. The polymer unit would handle casings and flexible parts. Then he’d need to manually assemble everything, integrating the electronics and running his own tests.
Time-consuming work. But still faster than doing it manually, even with superpowers.
Alexander examined their specifications more carefully. Print resolution sat around fifty nanometers. Acceptable for structural work and laying down basic circuit board pathways, though he’d need to install commercial or custom-built chips and modules. The capacitor banks in his gauntlets required perfect carbon lattice alignment down to two nanometers. Fabricators couldn’t even approach that level of detail.
They’d serve their purpose though. He already had established designs for the drones. The fabricators could reproduce parts while he focused on new development work. These units could run continuously, pumping out chassis and components in parallel.
His mind drifted to what he really wanted. An NX-7000 of his own. Full capabilities with no time limits or rental fees burning through credits. Fifty million for the printer itself. Probably another ten for installation and infrastructure. The cooling systems alone would cost millions. Clean room construction, backup power, repair contracts, all before worrying about material spools and feed bins.
Stealing one would be a nightmare. The printers weighed multiple tons, were the size of a small room, required specialized cooling infrastructure, and every fragile component demanded exacting calibration. Even if he successfully borrowed one, getting it operational somewhere new would take months of work.
Then he’d have to figure out how to convince Zhao-Matsuura to send maintenance technicians every other month…
Someday maybe. But these fabricators solved the immediate problem. Eighty percent of his personal manufacturing bottleneck was resolved. New designs and experimental work would still require time with a commercial workshop, but everything else could happen in-house now.
Alexander pulled up the metal fabricator’s control interface. Loaded the drone chassis specifications from his personal files. The machine accepted the design and calculated material requirements before estimating completion time at six hours per unit.
Six hours. That was one thing the fabricators did better. The NX-7000 would need twice as long for the same chassis, and only then by cranking the precision down to match fabricator tolerances anyway.
He queued up a series of orders. The fabricators hummed as feedstock began flowing from the overhead bins.
Alexander surveyed the quiet workshop.
Everyone had scattered to their own priorities. Annie was somewhere on the island drilling Gilly and Felix in combat exercises. Augustus had locked himself away with a spellbook he’d purchased off some dark web store site. Alexander was half-convinced the old goat had been scammed, but Augustus swore he knew what he was doing.
Talia was upstairs working on the Dubai action plan. Carmen had finally taken a break, though her version of relaxation involved slotting herself into the Sleipnir’s watch rotation for a couple of days.
Which left him with actual free time. A rare commodity.
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His gaze drifted across the workshop and caught on a toolbox resting near the far end of the left workbench. Alexander crossed the room and grabbed it, then dropped into the leather chair. The seat was ridiculously comfortable, one of Augustus’s contributions to the space. He spun around as he flipped open the toolbox’s lid.
The cultivator’s storage ring sat nestled among screwdrivers and wire cutters and other standard kit.
It was a simple metal band, unassuming and stubborn.
He’d made some progress since the first time. Routing Electrokinesis through his Cultivator’s Core had revealed an entrance into the ring’s internal structure during his first examination. From there, the current had traced out an increasingly larger maze of energy pathways twisting through the solid metal. Branching paths, dead ends, a puzzle that required navigating correctly to unlock whatever storage mechanism the cultivator had used.
Alexander set the toolbox aside and lifted the ring, turning it between his fingers. It was time to finish what he’d started.
He settled deeper into the chair and closed his eyes. Electrokinesis cycled into his Core, the power responding smoothly to his intent. Then the current flowed down his cybernetic arm and into the ring.
Power poured into the metal.
The maze opened before him. Energy pathways stretched through the ring’s interior, wrapping around its curved surface. Alexander followed the routes methodically. Left at this junction, straight through that passage, right when the path split, forward over the cross. Time passed. The fabricator hummed in the background as it worked.
Another dead end. He backtracked and tried a different route. Progress was slow. The maze was complex, and every wrong turn cost him time.
Then he had an idea. Multithreading kicked in, following the thought.
Alexander reached out with his right hand and gripped the ring, now holding it with both hands. Animachina cycled through his Core separately from the Electrokinesis. The two powers remained distinct as he pushed the second current down his flesh arm.
He’d tested his other powers on the innocuous band before, and while Animachina had provided a sensation of the energy somehow engraved into the ring, it had provided no further insight. But that was before he could simultaneously trace the inside of the maze and map the patterns outside.
He wondered if he were truly generating two individual streams of thought or just task-switching extremely fast.
The analytical consideration fractured his focus. Both currents flickered and died. Alexander cursed under his breath, opened his eyes, and glared at the innocent metal band.
He took a breath, closed his eyes again, and started over.
Electrokinesis flowed down his left arm. Animachina down his right. This time he kept the thoughts on task. One stream navigating. The other mapping.
The process revealed something that he’d been unable to perceive using either power alone. The maze had depth. What had felt like simple dead ends were actually exit points that spatially corresponded to other disconnected sections of the labyrinth. Multiple separate mazes occupying the same locations within the ring but energetically isolated from each other.
A dead end he’d hit earlier aligned perfectly with an entrance to a completely different maze segment.
Alexander frowned. He didn’t know if Qi worked differently to the current he was channeling into the ring, but the energy creating the patterns, the maze, locked his Electrokinesis within its structure. He’d already considered blasting current through the energy before, tearing it open with raw power. But he was afraid that might destroy the subtle enchantment, losing the ring’s contents forever.
Not that the contents really interested him.
Droney had proven that Animachina could reach across vast distances, treating the space between as if it were merely a suggestion, allowing Technopathy to ride along the connection it formed between them
That was what had given him the idea to create Soul Circuit. Which proved that Electrokinesis could do the same.
Alexander focused. Sharpened the stream of Animachina, turning it from a questing wave, mapping out the energy in its entirety, into a single tube. A temporary connection spanning the gap between constructs.
Electrokinesis flowed across it, finding itself in an entirely new maze. The pathway twisted in different patterns, branching in unfamiliar directions. Alexander navigated carefully, one thought stream piloting the current while the other continued mapping and maintaining the path.
Another dead end. Another bridge.
The fabricator chimed as it completed the first chassis. The sound nearly shattered his concentration. Alexander’s focus wavered, both currents threatening to collapse. He steadied himself and sharpened his Will.
Electrokinesis stabilized. Animachina held.
He pushed forward.
More mazes. More bridges. The pattern became clearer as he progressed. Each section led to the next in sequence, a lock mechanism that required threading power through every disconnected segment.
Then, abruptly, something clicked into place. The sensation was metaphysical. Energy patterns within the ring began rewriting themselves as the locking mechanism adjusted, shifting from whatever Qi signature the original cultivator had used to reflect Alexander’s own power signature.
Vertigo washed over him.
Suddenly he was aware of standing inside an enclosed space. Except his body remained in the leather chair, hands gripping the ring. Alexander released both powers, allowing one part of his mind to acknowledge his physical position while the other accepted the awareness of the ring’s dimensional storage space.
The vertigo faded.
The space was modest.
Perhaps ten feet by ten feet. Three meters high and on each side.
Mostly empty except for a few scattered items. What he assumed were cultivation manuals bound in weathered leather. A handful of jade slips and painted paper slips. Several sealed wooden boxes and stoppered vials with pills or liquid inside. A small pile of roughly shaped glowing rocks, right next to a smaller pile of smooth colored orbs.
Some of the cultivator’s personal effects. A locket. Spare change of clothes. And a painting of a fierce-looking young woman.
Alexander allowed the guilt to wash over him for several heartbeats, then crushed it. They may not have been responsible for opening the gateway to the Nexus, but there was no doubt in his mind they would have joined their guild or clan or school in attacking if the opportunity presented itself. He didn’t deny it might not be all of them, might not be their individual choice, but it mattered little. They would have followed the cultivator who took his arm if he’d demanded it.
He couldn’t afford to feel remorse at defeating every enemy. For killing them if the need arose.
Especially because deep down he knew there would be a lot more to come.
Alexander opened his eyes. The ring still sat between his palms, warm from the power that continued flowing through it passively. He didn’t need to focus anymore. The lock was solved. It responded to the slightest flow of Electrokinesis.
The storage was his.
He grinned.
Finally.
Then he dumped the ring’s contents out onto the floor. For a moment, he was curious about the manuals and the knowledge they might contain. But only for a moment. The Cultivator’s Core didn’t make him a cultivator. It was a superpower masquerading as a Core. He’d give them to Augustus. Or Talia. They could figure out what the cultivator’s junk did.
Alexander held out a hand. Metallokinesis pulled, and a drone flew into his hand. He focused on the drone, on the ring, and Willed it inside.
It vanished from his hand.
Alexander blinked, then checked the ring’s interior by sending a quick pulse of Electrokinesis into it. The basketball-sized drone sat inside, taking up a tiny corner of the available space.
He grinned and seized another. Focused for an instant before it disappeared too. He kept going, adding a third, a fourth, then more.
Until every drone was stacked inside. Neatly, according to his intentions. No fumbling to place it. Just Will and execution.
He did some quick math, realizing he could easily fit over fifteen hundred drones in there with room to spare. Which meant he could fit a lot more interesting things in there than just drones.
Alexander glanced down at the unassuming metal band and laughed.
No longer would he have to travel without his drones. Everywhere he went from now on, he’d do so with a portable drone swarm.
He slipped the band over the middle finger of his cybernetic left hand, sliding it down until it rested snug against the wolf ring.
A single ring had changed everything.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 224 - Hard Truths
- Chapter 223 - Three Divine Wills
- Chapter 222 - Trustworthy
- Chapter 221 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 10
- Chapter 220 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 9
- Chapter 219 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 8
- Chapter 218 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 7
- Chapter 217 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 6
- Chapter 216 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 5
- Chapter 215 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 4
- Chapter 214 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 3
- Chapter 213 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 2
- Chapter 212 - The Convergence of Wills, Pt. 1
- Chapter 211 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 3
- Chapter 210 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 2
- Chapter 209 - The World Is Watching, Pt. 1
- Chapter 208 - Trust in Tomorrow
- Chapter 207 - Uncoordinated
- Chapter 206 - Within Range
- Chapter 205 - What the Future Holds
- Chapter 204 - Tell Me
- Announcing: The Spellforged Magus
- Chapter 203 - Countdown to Escalation
- Chapter 202 - The M.G.S.
- Chapter 201 - Where the Bodies Went
- Chapter 200 - Signed and Sealed
- Chapter 199 - Concessions
- Chapter 198 - Red Handed
- Chapter 197 - Plan S
- Chapter 196 - The Sidearm
- Chapter 195 - The (Not So) Wise One
- Chapter 194 - Blood on the Sand
- Chapter 193 - Everything Metal
- Chapter 192 - Dead Hours
- Chapter 191 - Due Diligence
- Chapter 190 - Opening Negotiations
- Chapter 189 - Price of Admission
- Chapter 188 - Cheap Tricks
- Chapter 187 - Old Habits Die Last
- Chapter 186 - Under Surveillance
- Chapter 185 - Laying the Groundwork
- Chapter 184 - Ascension Oasis
- Chapter 183 - Legal in Dubai
- Chapter 182 - Lesson One: Survive
- Chapter 181 - One Ring Changes Everything
- Chapter 180 - One Mind, Two Thoughts
- Chapter 179 - First Roundtable
- Chapter 178 - Past Plans, Future Planning
- Chapter 177 - Making History in Broad Daylight
- Chapter 176 - Signed, the Machine God
- Chapter 175 - Outclassed
- Chapter 174 - Heavy Metal
- Chapter 173 - The Vault
- Chapter 172 - The Borrowing Begins
- Chapter 171 - Legal Counsel and Illegal Plans
- Chapter 170 - Decisions that Ripple
- Chapter 169 - The Devil’s in the Details
- Chapter 168 - Coping Mechanisms
- Chapter 167 - No High Ground
- Chapter 166 - Sunset over Manhattan
- Chapter 165 - Window Shopping
- Chapter 164 - Best Behavior
- Chapter 163 - Sharp
- Chapter 162 - A Lot of Work
- Chapter 161 - Cat and Mouse
- Chapter 160 - Seven out of Nine
- Chapter 159 - Sparks in the Dark
- Chapter 158 - Just Kids
- Chapter 157 - Storm Chasing
- Chapter 156 - VIP Service
- Chapter 155 - The Ten of Spades
- Chapter 154 - Shifting Gears
- Chapter 153 - The Lawyer
- Chapter 152 - Returning Home
- Chapter 151 - A Formal Alliance
- Chapter 150 - Return to Sol
- Chapter 149 - One Reason Too Many
- Chapter 148 - Foundations
- Chapter 147 - Not Quite Pirates
- Chapter 146 - Arcane Warden
- Chapter 145 - Running Dark
- Chapter 144 - Just a Little Detour
- Chapter 143 - Heading Home
- Chapter 142 - Strawberry and Chocolate
- Chapter 141 - Snowflakes and Steel
- Chapter 140 - Spreading the Dream
- Chapter 139 - Politics
- Chapter 138 - Cleared
- Chapter 137 - Welcome to the Jungle
- Chapter 136 - Hunter or Hunted
- Chapter 135 - Into the Dark
- Chapter 134 - Beastworld
- Chapter 133 - The Right Kind of Crazy
- Chapter 132 - More Than Whole
- Chapter 131 - Nanomachines
- Chapter 130 - Windows
- Chapter 129 - Legal Courtesy
- Chapter 128 - Life’s Song
- Chapter 127 - Moving Forward
- Chapter 126 - Mending
- Chapter 125 - Date?
- Chapter 124 - Spoils of War
- Chapter 123 - Measure
- Chapter 122 - Severed
- Chapter 121 - Animachina’s Purpose
- Chapter 120 - Practice Under Fire
- Chapter 119 - Forced Entry
- Chapter 118 - Returning Fire
- Chapter 117 - The Prophecy of Eights
- Chapter 116 - Rivals Reunited
- Chapter 115 - The Nexus
- Chapter 114 - Promises
- Chapter 113 - Starting a Fire
- Chapter 112 - Soul Circuit
- Chapter 111 - Teamwork
- Chapter 110 - Entropy Rising
- Chapter 109 - Assimilate
- Chapter 108 - The Cult of Entropy
- Chapter 107 - Sleipnir’s Landing
- Chapter 106 - All Hands on Deck
- Chapter 105 - Five and a Half Members
- Chapter 104 - Pathfinder
- Chapter 103 - Twenty-Five
- Chapter 102 - Mystery Solved
- Chapter 101 - Borrowed Time
- Chapter 100 - Sleipnir
- Chapter 99 - Captain’s Terms
- Chapter 98 - Service Record
- Chapter 97 - Help Wanted
- Chapter 96 - Borrowing Trouble
- Chapter 95 - Four Months
- Chapter 94 - Drug Dealers
- Chapter 93 - Freedom
- Chapter 92 - Waves
- Chapter 91 - Aftermath
- Chapter 90 - Vigil
- Chapter 89 - One Vote from Extinction
- Chapter 88 - The Weight of Dreams
- Chapter 87 - Machine God
- Chapter 86 - No Words
- Chapter 85 - Pure Will
- Chapter 84 - Will and Structure
- Chapter 83 - Blood in the Water
- Chapter 82 - First Blood
- Chapter 81 - Dreams Collide (continued)
- Chapter 80 - Dreams Collide
- Chapter 79 - A Peaceful Moment
- Chapter 78 - Will Made Manifest
- Chapter 77 - Maximum Output
- Chapter 76 - Sidekick
- Chapter 75 - The Weight of Heroes
- Chapter 74 - Moving
- Chapter 73 - Pay to Win
- Chapter 72 - Pressure Points
- Chapter 71 - Henchmen Manifested
- Chapter 70 - The Big Lie
- Chapter 69 - A Nice Day
- Chapter 68 - Choosing the Dream
- Chapter 67 - Practical Matters
- Chapter 66 - Spread the Dream
- Chapter 65 - The Good (Bad) Doctor
- Chapter 64 - First Contact
- Chapter 63 - Subtle Unease
- Chapter 62 - Splitting the Party
- Chapter 61 - No Witnesses
- Chapter 60 - Fear of Falling
- Chapter 59 - Crime-A-Lot
- Chapter 58 - Auggy's Crazy Plan
- Chapter 57 - Kill Quest
- Chapter 56 - First Defeat
- Chapter 55 - Of One's Own Accord
- Chapter 54 - A New Power
- Chapter 53 - Rivals, Not Enemies
- Chapter 52 - The Black Knight
- Chapter 51 - ...Now.
- Chapter 50 - ...Begins...
- Chapter 49 - Phase One...
- Chapter 48 - Just Add Hands
- Chapter 47 - Secrets Unearthed
- Chapter 46 - Snakes in a Snakepit
- Chapter 45 - Start of a Rivalry
- Chapter 44 - Villain with a Milkshake
- Chapter 43 - Every Villain Needs a Hobby
- Chapter 42 - War Chest
- Chapter 41 - An Audience with Royalty
- Chapter 40 - The Queen Awaits
- Chapter 39 - Storage Closet
- Chapter 38 - Barely Superhuman
- Chapter 37 - We Are Grimnir
- Chapter 36 - A Will of Steel
- Chapter 35 - Realm of the Mind
- Chapter 34 - A Hint of Scales
- Chapter 33 - Every Monster Has a Lair
- Chapter 32 - Curtain Close
- Chapter 31 - No Allies Here
- Chapter 30 - Masks Against Monsters
- Chapter 29 - The Hunt Begins
- Chapter 28 - The Die is Cast
- Chapter 27 - Winning is Better
- Chapter 26 - Grim Beginnings
- Chapter 25 - No Heroes Coming
- Chapter 24 - End of the Tutorial
- Chapter 23 - Lies Do A Villain Make
- Chapter 22 - Masks and Prophecies
- Chapter 21 - Our First Injustice
- Chapter 20 - Nutcracker
- Chapter 19 - Perfection Meets Ambition and Heart
- Chapter 18 - The First Game Room
- Chapter 17 - Blackout
- Chapter 16 - Iron Nadya
- Chapter 15 - Tut, Tut. Driver.
- Chapter 14 - Welcome to the Multiverse, Nerd
- Chapter 13 - Second Spark
- Chapter 12 - Ambition to Burn
- Chapter 11 - Surviving is Winning
- Chapter 10 - Wanted
- Chapter 9 - Home Sweet Workshop
- Chapter 8 - Cognitive Resonance
- Chapter 7 - Class R
- Chapter 6 - First Spark of Will
- Chapter 5 - Pick On Someone Your Own Size
- Chapter 4 - No More Chains
- Chapter 3 - When the Sky Shattered
- Chapter 2 - The Collar
- Chapter 1 - REDACTED