Chapter 92
Waves
Alexander paused on the terrace, breathing it all in. Salt air carried the warmth of sun-baked stone, mixing with the faint scent of olive trees from the gardens. The evening held onto the day’s heat, gentle against his skin.
One of the aliens sat on the low wall bordering the terrace, appendages moving in what looked like stretching exercises. It noticed him and raised one limb in a very human-like wave. He nodded and waved back, then turned toward the path leading down to the beach.
His boots crunched on the stone steps as he descended. The evening Mediterranean stretched before him, darker blue fading to gold where the sun touched the horizon.
The Core had changed something fundamental. He could feel it with every breath, every thought. His powers didn’t fight each other anymore. Before, making them work together had been a challenge. He’d advanced it enough to make the senses intermingle without a problem, which had shown he was on the right path. But now they simply flowed. Separate streams when he wanted, a unified current when he needed.
The urge to check his status pulled at him. A simple thought would bring up the System interface, show him whatever changes the Cultivator’s Core had made official. But he suppressed it. Right now he wanted to trust the new intuition humming through his awareness. Wanted to understand what he could do without the System’s lens interpreting it for him.
Alexander reached the beach. Sand gave slightly under his boots. The waves provided a steady crashing rhythm, their sound filling the space where his thoughts usually churned.
Further down the shore, he could see the shattered remains of the boulder from his earlier gauntlet test. Chunks of rock scattered across the sand like broken teeth.
He flexed his hands, feeling the gauntlets shift with his grip. Time to see what he could actually do now.
Alexander planted his feet and reached for his chest plate with Metallokinesis. The familiar anchor point. He gripped it and pulled.
His body jerked upward. Smoother than before, less grinding resistance. But still that same jerky quality. Seize and shift. Seize and shift. He held it for maybe ten seconds before letting himself down.
Better. But far from good.
He’d tested all the individual anchor points before. The belt alone caused a strange sense of motion. Boots made him eat sand. Gauntlets left him dangling uselessly. The chest plate was the best solo option, but alone it wasn’t enough.
It was time to try combinations.
Alexander focused on the chest plate and belt together. He pulled with both anchors simultaneously. The lift was immediately more stable. Two points instead of one. He rose five feet, wobbling less. The jerky quality remained but the wider distribution helped. Fifteen seconds before his control slipped.
It was progress.
He added the boots. Three anchor points now. A line down his body’s core. He lifted with all three.
The stability jumped. His body rose smoothly at first, the triangle of force keeping him more centered. Twenty seconds. Twenty-five. But the same seize-shift pattern wore him down. His concentration frayed and he descended.
Better still. But fundamentally the same problem.
Alexander tried adding the gauntlets to the mix. Four points. The control became harder, not easier. Too many discrete anchor points to manage, pulling in slightly different directions. He could barely maintain it for ten seconds.
He dropped the gauntlets from the pattern, returning to the three-point system. Chest, belt, boots. That felt more natural. More sustainable.
But still wrong. Still that same jerky grab-and-shift motion.
Alexander landed and stood for a moment, frustrated. Why was moving himself so much harder than moving other metal?
He snapped open one of the compartments on his belt and pulled out a handful of ball bearings. With a thought, he sent them spinning through the air around him. They moved smoothly, flowing in a simple orbital pattern. It was easy. Natural, even. He couldn’t control each one independently yet, had to keep them following the same circular path, but the motion itself was effortless.
He reached out and let them fly into his palm, then put them back in the compartment.
Alexander stared at the closed compartment, thinking.
The ball bearings flowed around him so easily. Spinning, orbiting. Centered on… him.
When he’d turned the room full of cannons into a spiral, he’d imagined a vortex of his power flowing out from where he was.
He was the frame of reference. The fixed point that everything else moved relative to. That’s why controlling external objects felt natural. He could see them or sense them, track them, flow power through them continuously because they existed in relation to his perspective.
But that didn’t help him fly. Understanding that he was his own reference frame didn’t solve the paradox of trying to move that frame itself.
Alexander looked down at the sand beneath his boots. Could he use the earth as his reference instead? Anchor his perspective there, make himself move relative to it?
It felt wrong immediately. Foreign. Like trying to see out of someone else’s eyes. The power came from him. Flowed from somewhere in his body. He was inevitably, inescapably the center of his own power. And he was absolutely certain that was true for all of them, not just Metallokinesis.
Alexander walked over to a nearby boulder and sat down heavily. Understanding the problem didn’t give him a solution. He was his own frame of reference, and he couldn’t change that fundamental truth.
He stared out at the Mediterranean, mind turning over the paradox.
The waves rolled in. Rising and falling. Rising and falling. Steady and uninterrupted.
His breathing slowed. Matched the tempo without him noticing. The frustration began to drain away, replaced by something quieter. His mind stopped turning and he simply… watched.
The waves never stopped. Nothing grabbed at the water and shoved it forward. They just flowed. Continuous pressure manifesting as motion. Each wave rolled into the next without pause, without separation.
He’d been grabbing. Seizing and shoving.
But the ocean didn’t work that way.
You could be reading stolen content. Head to the original site for the genuine story.
The realization came easily, like something that had always been true. External objects moved smoothly because he could flow power through them continuously. An unbroken stream.
But himself? He’d been trying to grab and lift in discrete pulses. Fighting the fundamental truth that he was his own reference frame.
The waves pulsed. Oscillated. Created continuous pressure that manifested as motion.
If he wanted to fly, then his power needed to flow like the ocean.
Alexander stood from the boulder, purpose sharpening into action. His frustration had burned away completely, replaced by quiet certainty.
He leapt from the boulder with a thrust of Metallokinesis, slowing his descent at the last second, landing on the sand with his feet planted. This time when he reached for his chest plate, he didn’t grab. He pulsed power through it. A steady rhythm. Not seize-shift, but flow-flow-flow.
His body rose off the sand.
Then dropped.
Rose again.
Dropped.
He was bobbing like a cork in water, the amplitude wild and uncontrolled. But he was maintaining lift. The continuous wave kept him airborne even as it bounced him up and down.
Alexander adjusted the pattern mid-flight. Less pull down. More push up. Creating asymmetry in the oscillation.
The bobbing smoothed into a gentle rise. He climbed three feet. Five. The motion still carried that rhythmic quality, but now it propelled him upward instead of just keeping him suspended.
He added his belt to the pattern, extending the wave through both anchor points.
The oscillations tried to sync immediately, both pulsing in unison. The bobbing actually got worse for a moment, the combined waves reinforcing each other.
Alexander adjusted instinctively. Offset the timing. Made the belt’s wave pulse slightly out of phase with the chest plate’s rhythm.
The oscillations harmonized. When the chest plate wave pushed up, the belt wave was pulling down. When the belt pushed up, the chest was pulling down. The opposing rhythms cancelled out the extremes, smoothing the motion into something steadier.
Two points of force working against each other in just the right way to reduce the bobbing. The ascent stabilized.
Ten feet above the beach now, and the improvement was dramatic. He could feel the wave flowing through both anchors, the rhythm syncing naturally.
The boots came next. Three anchor points forming a line down his body’s core. He staggered their timing like he had with the belt, each wave offset from the others.
The stability jumped. Alexander rose to fifteen feet, the gentle oscillation barely noticeable now. Like breathing. Like the waves themselves, continuous and natural.
He hung there, suspended above the beach. The evening Mediterranean stretched before him. The three-point wave system hummed through his chest, waist, feet. Separate but unified. Just like his powers.
Then realization struck him.
He was flying.
Not hovering. Not throwing himself around. Flying.
Alexander threw his head back and laughed. Pure joy erupted from his chest, echoing across the empty beach. The sound mixed with the waves lapping against shore, the sunset painting everything gold on blue.
The analytical part of his mind tried to catalogue the achievement, measure the success, but emotion overrode his logic for once. This wasn’t about testing or training or tactical advantage. This was wonder. This was something he’d wanted since the moment he’d first seen superhumans dancing across the clouds in battle.
He was flying, and it was beautiful.
Alexander forced himself to focus. Testing. He was supposed to be testing.
He maintained the hover, watching the sun sink lower. Thirty seconds. Forty-five. A full minute. His breathing grew harder, something deeper than muscle straining with the effort. But he held it. The three-point system made it manageable in a way the chest plate alone never would have.
When he finally had to rest, he descended slowly and touched down in the sand. Caught his breath. Then lifted off again.
This time he added lateral motion to the wave. Biased the oscillation sideways instead of just up. He drifted left over the beach, moving at maybe walking pace. Slow, but controlled. He adjusted the pattern and moved right. Forward. Backward.
The directional control felt good. Not combat-fast, but functional. Real movement, not just position holding.
Alexander rose higher, testing his limits. Twenty feet above the beach. The drain increased but remained manageable. He hung there for several seconds before descending back to fifteen feet.
He rotated slowly, testing the three-point system’s response to rotation. The wave pattern adjusted smoothly. Full rotation in maybe four seconds total.
Slow for combat. Completely telegraphed. But the fact that he could do it at all while maintaining altitude was progress.
And his hands were free. Completely free.
The realization brought another grin. He could gesture, manipulate objects, use his gauntlets. All while flying.
Alexander rotated again, this time raising both gauntlets. The joy bubbled up fresh as he spun, and when he faced the darkening sky he fired.
Lightning arced upward in a brilliant purple-blue streak. The bolt climbed maybe fifty feet before dissipating, leaving afterimages across his vision. He completed the rotation grinning like an idiot, not caring how much power he was burning or how impractical the display was.
He was flying and shooting lightning while he spun. Because he could!
The drain caught up with him quickly after that. Alexander descended carefully, reversing the wave bias. More down, less up. The controlled descent was smooth and gentle. He touched down on sand without stumbling.
His legs trembled slightly. Sweat beaded on his forehead despite the evening cool. But he was grinning.
Alexander walked back to the boulder and sat down heavily. He stared out at the Mediterranean, watching the last of the sunset paint the water gold.
The wave technique worked. Not perfectly. Not fast enough for combat yet. He’d need weeks of practice to make it truly reliable, months to make it second nature.
But the foundation was solid. He could fly. Slowly, carefully, and with significant effort. But he could fly.
The Core’s integration made it possible. He understood his powers in a way that he never had before. And that was without considering the seize-and-shift method he’d been using.
Alexander flexed his hands, feeling the gauntlets respond. Chest, belt, boots for flight. Hands free for everything else.
It wasn’t mastery. But it was a beginning.
He sat there for a moment longer, catching his breath. Then another thought occurred to him. He’d tested Metallokinesis and Electrokinesis, but not Animachina.
The mysterious fourth power. The one he barely understood.
Alexander closed his eyes and reached out with it. Not toward the ocean or the rocks, but back toward the house. Searching for the one machine he knew would respond.
Droney.
The connection snapped into place immediately, as if the distance didn’t matter. Alexander could feel the drone hovering in the living room, could sense its awareness turning toward him like a sunflower following light.
Then Droney’s senses slipped into his mind.
Alexander gasped. Audiovisual data flooded his awareness. The living room from Droney’s perspective. Augustus at the stove, spectral hands moving. Aliens scattered across furniture. The holo display playing something with bright colors.
And beneath it all, a sensation that took him a moment to identify.
Contentedness.
Droney felt… content. Almost happy watching over the house. Fulfilling its purpose.
Alexander’s eyes snapped open, staring at nothing. The data feed continued for another heartbeat before fading, but the connection remained. He could feel Droney’s presence like a warm point of awareness in the back of his mind.
Technopathy and Animachina. Both working together.
The realization stunned him. Technopathy alone had never worked at this distance. It could sense over considerable range, but to work at such a distance and without line of sight required being able to operate through an existing network of data or electrical signals. But Animachina was reaching across hundreds of meters like the distance meant nothing, and Technopathy was piggybacking on that connection.
And there was something more. A sensation building at the edge of his awareness. Like he could almost… reach out and touch Droney. As if the connection was more than just data and emotion. As if he could extend his hand and—
A roar shattered his concentration.
Alexander’s head snapped toward the sound. Down the beach, maybe one hundred meters away, something was charging directly at him. Sand exploded behind it with each thundering step, a dramatic plume marking its approach.
He had just enough time to register the absurdity of the moment.
A monster. Charging at him. On a Mediterranean beach. While he was sitting on a rock testing his new powers.
Of course.
Annie.
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