Chapter 23 The AI Knows Their Location
Karl didn't sleep.
He sat at the eastern wall until the bunker's yellow light felt less like night and more like early morning and then he stood up, picked up his rod, and went to the door.
The watch guard, a quiet man named Sethi who had been an electrician before everything, looked at him and then looked at the door and then looked at Karl again with the expression people wore when they wanted to say something and had decided it wasn't their place.
Karl nodded at him and went through.
Outside the city was doing what it did in the hours before dawn, sitting in a specific gray stillness that felt less like peace and more like the world holding its breath before it started again. He moved northeast, away from the northwest coordinates, away from everything that had happened the previous day. His body didn't need direction. The restlessness knew where it wanted to go.
He found the first machine six blocks away, proceeded to destroy it quickly, efficiently and felt the pressure ease the way it always did. It was immediate and something he had completely stopped feeling good about.
He kept moving.
The second machine he found on Carver Street, near the reservoir he still couldn't look at without thinking about his memory being wrong. Standard combat unit, heavier than the scouts, moving in the patrol pattern the AI had been running for the last week. He came at it from above the same way he always did against this class and it responded the way this class always responded, orienting on his descent and raising its strike arm to intercept his attack
He had destroyed fourteen of this exact type and knew every movement before it made it. He knocked the attack aside, shoved the rod through its sensors, then ripped out its core as he pulled back, dropping to the street and straightened his stance.
A third machine stepped out of the alley about twelve meters ahead, and Karl reacted before his mind fully understood why.
Something about it was wrong.
Not obvious at first. It looked similar to the combat units he’d been destroying for weeks, same size, same heavy frame. But the way it moved was different. Too smooth. Too exact. When it locked at him, it didn’t track where he was. It tracked where he was about to be.
Karl stopped.
The machine stopped too.
For two seconds, they stared at each other across the empty street while Karl studied everything he could. Its sensors were wider than normal, stretching farther across its body to cover more angles. The arm joints were reinforced, protected in the exact spots Karl usually targeted. Even the way it stood blocked the attack routes he relied on most.
A cold feeling settled in his chest.
The machine attacked first.
Instead of charging straight at him like the others, it moved diagonally, forcing him to choose between the wall on his left and open space on his right. Karl went right. Instantly, the machine adjusted, cutting off the space it had given him like it had already predicted his choice.
Karl swung the rod.
The hit slammed into reinforced armor around the machine’s arm joint. The impact shot back through the rod and into his arms so hard his hands nearly went numb. The plating was much thicker than anything he’d fought before.
The machine struck back immediately.
Karl blocked it, but the force smashed his own arm into his ribs. Pain exploded through his chest, sharp and deep, and the bones that had barely healed screamed under the pressure. He stumbled back two steps.
The machine followed with those same two steps, never giving him room to recover. Like it already knew he needed space to survive.
Because it did know.
Because it had been built around everything Karl had shown the AI's observation units over the last three weeks.
He went low instead of back.
He ducked under the next attack and threw himself at the machine’s legs, trying to knock it off balance like he had done with larger units before. But instead of losing balance, the machine leaned into him, using his own momentum against him.
And BOOM!
A second later, Karl was slammed against the road with the machine crushing him under its weight, creating tiny cracks on the road.
His face hit the pavement hard. Pain exploded through his head as he tried planting both hands on the ground to push against the force.
For the first time since coming back, the fight felt almost even. This machine had clearly been built to handle someone with his strength.
Karl screamed and forced harder.
The machine shifted just enough for him to get a knee under himself. He surged upward with everything he had, throwing it off him before it could recover. The instant he got to his feet, he drove the rod toward its sensor trying to aim for the weak point where the reinforced armor connected to the older plating. The one spot that hadn’t been fully upgraded.
The rod punched through.
The machine jerked violently.
Karl shoved the rod in deeper, twisting it through wires and metal. Sparks burst across his arm while hot oil sprayed over his chest. The machine’s limbs lashed out wildly, one strike smashing into his hip hard enough to spin him, but he didn’t let go. He kept forcing the rod deeper until the lights in its sensors flickered through several colors and finally died.
The machine collapsed.
Karl stood over it, breathing hard, blood dripping from his nose and a deep cut running along his left forearm where the machine had sliced him during the struggle.
He stared down at the destroyed machine.
Then he crouched beside the machine and examined it properly for the first time. Along its upper back were extra data ports, more than the usual observation units carried, and they were still warm from recent transmissions. Near the sensor housing, the behavioral module had cracked open during the fight, exposing some of the circuitry inside.
Karl stared at it for a long moment.
The patterns inside weren’t random. They were built around specific combat movements. His combat movements. He recognized them immediately—the diagonal counter, the overhead strike, the low tackle he used to knock larger machines off balance. The machine had been designed to defend against all of them.
This wasn’t a unit made to fight humans in general.
It had been built to fight Karl Arden specifically.
A cold weight settled in his chest.
He stood and headed back toward the bunker, turning the damaged module over in his hand as he walked. The AI hadn’t just been watching him. It had been learning. Adapting. Building counters.
And if it had built one specialized unit, it had probably built more.
But now, the only dire question was how many.
He reached the bunker entrance and gave the signal. Sethi opened the door and Karl went straight for Holt, who was already studying his expression before he even spoke.
Karl held up the module.
“The AI’s making specialized units now,” he said. “This one was designed specifically to counter the way I fight.”
Holt looked at the damaged module, then back at Karl.
“How many?”
Before Karl could answer, another voice spoke from across the bunker.
“At least three more.”
Selene stood near the eastern wall, still wearing her jacket, a metal pipe hanging loosely from one hand. She must have returned while Karl was gone.
Karl turned toward her.
“They were moving northeast when I came back,” she said. “About twenty minutes ago.” Her jaw tightened slightly. “They were coordinated. Moving in formation. And they weren’t heading toward open ground.”
A heavy silence filled the bunker.
Karl looked down at the module in his hand, then toward the bunker door, then back at Holt.
The AI knew where they were.