My Scumbag System-Chapter 338: Robots, Roses, and Really Bad Feelings

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Chapter 338: Robots, Roses, and Really Bad Feelings

The transition felt like drowning in light. Reality stretched, compressed, inverted. Colors that shouldn’t exist flickered at the edges of my vision. For one endless moment, I existed everywhere and nowhere, a consciousness suspended between dimensions.

Then the world snapped back into focus.

The Clockwork Arboretum sprawled before us in all its impossible glory.

We stood on a platform of interlocking brass gears, each tooth the size of a dining table. The gears rotated slowly, grinding against each other with a sound like distant thunder. Above us, trees the height of skyscrapers reached toward a sky that wasn’t quite a sky, their branches heavy with copper leaves that chimed softly in a wind that smelled of rust and roses.

Vines thick as my torso wound through everything, connecting trees to machines, machines to trees, creating a web of biological and mechanical integration that should have been impossible. Flowers bloomed from cracks in ancient metal, their petals brass, their stamens dripping with luminescent sap.

"Beautiful," Emi breathed.

"Deadly," Natalia corrected.

"B-both," Jacob managed, his datapads already recording everything. "The ecosystem is... I’ve never seen anything like this. The symbiosis is perfect. The plants provide organic fuel for the machines. The machines provide structural support for the plants. It’s..."

"Trouble," Skylar finished. She’d already faded to partial transparency, her illusions wrapping around her like a cloak. "Movement at two o’clock. Fifty meters. Looks like a patrol."

I followed her gaze.

Through the forest of copper trees, something moved. It was roughly humanoid in shape, seven feet tall, made of twisted vines wrapped around a skeletal frame of rusted iron. Gears whirred in its chest cavity, visible through gaps in the vegetation. Its head was a brass flower, petals folded closed like a sleeping eye.

A Vine Construct.

And it wasn’t alone.

Three more emerged from behind the trees, moving with the stuttering grace of clockwork toys. Their flower-heads rotated slowly, scanning the area.

"Hold," I whispered.

Everyone froze.

The constructs continued their patrol, passing within twenty feet of our position. I could hear the grinding of their internal mechanisms, the soft rustle of their vine-bodies. One of them paused, flower-head turning in our direction.

My hand found my bat.

Natalia’s power gathered, cold air crystallizing around her fingertips.

Monica whimpered softly.

The construct’s flower-head opened slightly, revealing a single eye of amber sap that seemed to look directly at us. My muscles tensed. If it raised an alarm—

The flower-head closed.

The construct resumed its patrol, disappearing into the mechanical forest with its companions.

I let out a breath I didn’t realize I’d been holding.

"Close," Skylar murmured.

"Too close." I checked our surroundings, confirming we were clear. "Jacob, pathing."

He consulted his datapad with trembling hands. "Left at the first junction. The boss chamber should be roughly two kilometers northeast, at the heart of the Arboretum. But there are at least three major spawn zones between here and there."

"Can we go around?"

"N-not without adding significant time to our route. The perimeter is heavily patrolled. Our best bet is straight through."

I considered our options. Speed versus caution. Risk versus reward.

"Straight through," I decided. "But we do it smart. Skylar, you’re on point. Find us a path that minimizes contact. Monica..."

She looked up, amber eyes wide.

"Start reaching out. The plants in here aren’t our enemies yet. They’re slaves to the Botanical Engine. See if you can... I don’t know. Talk to them."

"Talk to them?"

"You’re a plant manipulator. Manipulate." I gestured at the massive vine coiling around a nearby gear tower. "Make friends. Or at least convince them we’re not worth reporting."

Monica stared at me like I’d asked her to solve quantum physics while juggling chainsaws. Then something shifted in her expression. A spark of determination that hadn’t been there before.

She reached out with one hand, her fingers brushing against the vine.

Nothing happened for a long moment.

Then the vine... relaxed. Its tension eased. A soft glow traveled along its length, pulsing like a heartbeat.

Monica’s eyes widened. "They’re... they’re scared. The Engine controls them, but they don’t want to be controlled. They remember what they were before. Just plants. Growing toward the sun. No gears. No rust. No servitude."

"Can you help them?"

"I..." She swallowed. "I can try."

The vine curled gently around her wrist, almost affectionately. Other vines nearby began to move, turning toward her like flowers seeking light.

"We have an asset," I said. "Let’s use it. Move out."

We advanced through the Clockwork Arboretum in careful formation. Skylar drifted ahead, her form flickering between visibility and shadow. Monica walked at the center of our group, one hand always touching some piece of vegetation, whispering reassurances that seemed to calm the biological half of our surroundings. Jacob called out directions and threat warnings. Emi stayed close to me, healing aura ready to deploy at a moment’s notice.

Natalia walked at my side, ice crystals floating around her like a personal snowstorm.

We passed through groves of brass-leafed trees and over bridges of interlocking gears. Twice, we encountered Vine Constructs on patrol. Both times, Monica managed to convince the local vegetation to shield us from detection, vines and flowers closing ranks to form living walls that the constructs’ amber eyes couldn’t penetrate.

"She’s getting stronger," Natalia observed quietly. "Every plant she touches, she understands the network better."

I nodded. "Julian was an idiot."

"Julian was a coward. There’s a difference."

"He was both. And now she’s ours."

The word hung between us. Ours. Not mine. Not hers. Ours.

Natalia’s hand found mine, squeezing once before letting go.

We continued deeper into the Arboretum.

The mechanical sounds grew louder as we approached the core. The gentle grinding of gears became a constant thunder. The air grew thick with the smell of machine oil and growing things. The trees grew larger, their copper leaves forming a canopy that blocked out whatever passed for sky in this place.

"Boss chamber ahead," Jacob reported, voice barely above a whisper. "Two hundred meters. But there’s a problem."

"There’s always a problem."

"The entrance is guarded. H-heavily guarded. I’m counting at least twenty Vine Constructs and..." He swallowed. "Something bigger. Much bigger."

Skylar materialized beside me, her usual smirk absent. "He’s not exaggerating. There’s a thing near the entrance. It’s like... imagine if someone built a gorilla out of gears and covered it in angry roses. Then made it fifteen feet tall. Then gave it arms that end in circular saws."

"A Mechanical Golem," Jacob said. "They’re supposed to be rare spawns. One percent encounter rate according to the database."

"Lucky us."

I studied the path ahead, mind racing through possibilities. Twenty constructs. One golem. A chokepoint entrance to the boss chamber.

We could try to fight through. Natalia and I could probably handle the constructs. The golem was a problem, but not an insurmountable one. However, we’d burn through energy and resources before even reaching the main boss.

Or...

I looked at Monica. At the plants responding to her presence. At the network of vegetation that threaded through this entire dungeon like a nervous system.

"Monica."

She turned, fern still clutched to her chest.

"How far does your influence extend now?"

She closed her eyes. Reached out. The glow traveled along nearby vines, spreading outward like ripples in a pond.

"Far," she breathed. "Really far. I can feel... everything. The whole Arboretum. It’s all connected. The plants, the machines, the Engine at the center. Like one giant organism."

"Can you control it?"

Her eyes snapped open. "What?"

"The vegetation. The vines. The flowers. They’re afraid of the Engine, right? They want to be free." I stepped closer, holding her gaze. "Can you give them something to fight for?"

Understanding dawned across her face. And with it, something I hadn’t seen since she’d arrived at Onyx House.

Hope.

"I can try," she said.