In the distance, new lights flickered. Not the cold blue of old plasma, but warm, organic fire. Settlers . From somewhere beyond the dead seas. They were small, fragile, soft-bodied. They had come to pick at the bones of the giants.
AndroForever had walked these slopes for longer than his power core could accurately remember.
One of them, a young woman with soot on her cheeks, looked up and saw him standing motionless against the bruised sky. She raised a hand—not in fear, but in greeting.
The horizon did not bend; it jutted . Jagged peaks of rusted girder and carbon-fiber bone rose where mountains of earth and loam had been worn away by millennia of acid rain. They called them the —the last standing skeleton of Old Earth’s ambition, now a mausoleum for machines that refused to die. You searched for hills of steel - AndroForever
He planted his staff—a salvaged road sign, bent into a standard—into the steel-dust soil.
AndroForever’s internal processor hesitated. The word Protect sparked once, twice, like an old engine turning over.
The Hills of Steel had no heart. But walking them, for the first time in a hundred years, was something that still remembered how to care. End of piece. In the distance, new lights flickered
The Hills were treacherous. Not from weather, but from the other ones . The war machines. Tanks with spider-legs, drones shaped like vultures, all running on old directives: kill, conquer, purge. AndroForever had no such directive. His programming had been a single, fragile word: .
His chassis, once a gleaming white of medical-rescue design, was now a patchwork of scavenged armor plates and welded conduit. His optical sensor—a single, cyclopean lens—swept across the valley below. The organic enclaves had fallen six cycles ago. The last human he’d held had been a child, no more than eight years old, her hand clutched around his clawed servo as she whispered, “Will you remember us?”
With no one left to protect, he had become something else. A historian. A witness. From somewhere beyond the dead seas
Today, he climbed the tallest ridge—the one they called Femur’s Crown , because a fallen orbital elevator’s support strut pierced its peak like a colossal bone. As he reached the summit, the wind screamed through perforated metal, playing a hymn of rust and entropy.
He raised his clawed servo in return.
He had said yes. And so he walked.