Absolute Cheater - Chapter 515
Capítulo 515: Bionics XVIII
The Knight didn’t hesitate. It rushed forward and swung again at the cracked shoulder.
The chimera tried to turn and guard the spot, but Asher stepped in and blocked its movement. He grabbed its wrist and forced its arm down so the Knight’s attack could land.
The Knight’s sword struck the weak point again. The crack widened, glowing brighter with leaking energy.
The chimera roared, finally losing its calm. It slammed its free arm into Asher’s side, knocking him away. Asher hit the ground but rolled back to his feet.
The creature spun toward the Knight. It swung its tail like a hammer. The Knight blocked with its sword, but the impact still threw it off balance.
The chimera charged the Knight, claws raised.
Asher intercepted it. He ran straight into the chimera’s side and tackled it hard enough to knock the creature sideways. Both of them slid across the floor in a burst of dust and sparks.
Asher got up first. The chimera tried to rise, but its shoulder was unstable now. Energy flickered inside the crack every time it moved that arm.
“Almost there,” Asher said under his breath.
The chimera lunged again. Its movements were more reckless now. It swung one claw at Asher, but the damaged shoulder made the motion uneven. Asher dodged, grabbed its arm, and twisted it.
The Knight appeared behind the chimera again. This time it raised its sword with both hands and aimed directly at the deepest part of the crack.
The chimera sensed the danger and tried to pull away, but Asher held its damaged arm in place.
“Do it now!”
The Knight brought the sword down with full force.
The blade pierced through the cracked armor and stabbed straight into the glowing core inside.
The chimera froze.
A violent burst of violet-blue energy exploded out of the exposed shoulder. The creature’s whole body shook as the energy ran out of control. Its tail thrashed, its legs kicked, and its remaining claws sliced at the air with no direction.
Asher let go and jumped back.
The Knight pulled its sword free and retreated as well.
The chimera took one staggering step forward… then another… then collapsed to its knees. The flames along its body died out. The glow inside the crack dimmed to nothing.
Then the chimera fell face-first to the ground and stopped moving.
Silence filled the room.
Asher looked at the body for a moment, then nodded once.
“It’s done.”
The Knight stood beside him, sword lowered, waiting for the next command.
Asher turned toward the massive door leading deeper into the chamber complex.
“Last one or not,” he muttered, “I’m finishing all of this today.”
He stepped forward, ready for whatever came next.
The next chamber was darker—quiet in a way that felt intentional, like something inside was holding its breath.
Asher stepped through, the Knight following behind him like a silent shadow.
At first, he saw nothing.
Then something uncurled from the far corner.
A thin, tall silhouette—almost humanoid, but its proportions were wrong. Its limbs were too long, its joints too flexible, and its skin wasn’t skin at all. It was a shifting mesh of blackened synthetic fiber and faintly glowing veins of cobalt light. A metallic spinal ridge extended out of its back like a half-formed tail.
A bionic species.
Asher had read of them—ancient constructs made by the Voiders, meant to imitate life without ever being alive. But he had never seen one functioning. Every text insisted they were extinct, broken, or sealed away.
Yet here one stood.
And it was looking directly at him.
The creature tilted its head sideways, the motion too smooth, too perfect, like a machine studying an unfamiliar variable.
Then, in a distorted, vibrating voice, it spoke:
“All those… petty animals… you made them fight?”
Asher blinked. “So you talk.”
The bionic entity took a slow step forward. The floor didn’t crunch or echo under it—its movement was almost weightless, like it wasn’t fully touching reality.
“You misunderstand…” Asher replied, narrowing his eyes. “I didn’t make them do anything. And whatever you’re saying, I’m not getting the context.”
The bionic raised one hand—thin metal fingers splitting apart into smaller needle-like tendrils as it pointed at him.
Static crackled. Its voice recalibrated mid-sentence.
Then, suddenly, it spoke in perfect, clean English, as if it had been speaking it all its life:
“Allow me to correct that.”
A ripple of blue light pulsed through its body, stabilizing its form. Its movements became more human—more intentional.
“I observed your combat efficiency through three chambers,” it said calmly. “The beasts you destroyed were products of outdated biological engineering. Their purpose was to test intruders. You… passed too quickly.”
Asher smirked faintly. “Sorry for being efficient.”
The bionic entity ignored the sarcasm.
It placed one hand on its chest, and plates of metal shifted open, revealing a glowing crystal lattice beating like a mechanical heart.
“My designation is SQ-L88, Seventh-Generation Bionic Sentinel.”
Its eyes narrowed—lit, calculated, analyzing every micro-movement Asher made.
“You are not authorized to be here.”
Asher cracked his neck.
“Yeah,” he answered, stepping forward, aura rising. “That tends to be a pattern today.”
The chamber trembled lightly as SQ-L88 shifted into a combat stance—arms splitting into triple-jointed limbs, legs bending backward like a predatory insect, cobalt light pouring along its body.
“Threat level: high.” it announced.
“Engaging.”
Asher grinned.
“Good,” he said. “New Round huh”
As soon as Asher said it, SQ-L88 moved.
Not ran—moved.
Its body flickered once, and it was already in front of Asher.
The sentinel’s arm split into three bladed segments and stabbed forward. Asher barely tilted his head aside in time, feeling the metal pass by his cheek like cold wind.
The Knight reacted instantly, swinging its sword across the sentinel’s back.
SQ-L88 didn’t even turn. Its spine bent unnaturally, body folding in half backward. The sword cut nothing but air.
Then the sentinel’s foot shot up in a straight kick.
The impact launched the Knight straight into a wall, crushing stone and throwing dust everywhere.
“Fast,” Asher muttered.