Make sure to read Part 1 - Proxy Dreams
Chapter 3: Nexus
The city of Nexus wasn't on any map. It moved, flickering between coordinates, a sliver of forgotten time hidden inside the fractures of the old world.
Nexus was a place for the broken. For dreamers, outlaws, hackers, rogue AIs, and Proxy humans who refused to kneel to the Noxists’ new gospel. Here, the neon still burned, defiantly, against the rot creeping across the planet.
Play track: Protect Nexus - https://soundcloud.com/neon-noise-nexus/protect-nexus/
Roxy pulled the coupe into a low-profile bay behind a derelict arcade, the glimmering "Insert Coin" sign still looping above like a stubborn heartbeat. She slipped a cloak over her shoulders, pulling the hood low, and Knax disappeared into her shadow like smoke.
Nexus pulsed with life. Street vendors hawked synth-patched relics: memory drives, old radio transceivers, handheld glitch weapons. Up above, floating railcars ferried passengers between crumbling towers stitched together with scaffolding and hope.
In the alleyways, musicians played battered synth guitars and keytars, songs full of longing and static. Songs that remembered what the world had once dared to dream.
Roxy found Racer leaning against the broken frame of an old ramen stand, one boot up on the bench, cleaning a pulse caster with deliberate patience. His leather jacket was stitched with patchwork armor, and his dark hair was pushed back, revealing scars from more battles than she could count.
"You’re late," he said, not looking up.
"Time’s bent. I’m right on schedule," Roxy replied, smirking under her hood.
He laughed, a real laugh, rare these days, and handed her a compact emitter drive wrapped in cloth.
"Take this. It'll reset your fugitive flag long enough to move past the Time Police checkpoints. Just don't get sloppy, it only fools their systems for about three cycles."
Roxy tucked it into her belt. "And weapons?"
Racer whistled low. A hidden compartment popped open behind the stand, revealing a cache: compressed blasters, anti-matter knives, disruption grenades. Tools for rebels and ghosts.
"You’re packing light," she said.
"Not many of us left to fight heavy," Racer shrugged. His eyes softened for a moment. "You really think this Dimension SERENE is real? Not just another glitch in the feed?"
Roxy tightened her fingers around the emitter drive. Above them, a neon billboard fizzed and died, raining sparks onto the street like false stars.
"I don't just think," she said. "I know."
Racer studied her, his face half-shadowed. "Then let’s get you there, Proxy."
He said the word like a benediction, not a curse.
Together, they disappeared into the shifting veins of Nexus, neon and mist swallowing them whole.
Beyond the city walls, the Time Police were closing in.
Beyond the broken sky, Dimension SERENE was waiting.
And Roxy would reach it, or burn trying.
Chapter 4: In Silico
The lab wasn't built with steel and concrete.
It was stitched into the light waves themselves, a spectral structure only visible through the right frequency of hope.
Roxy stood at the threshold, breath shallow, feeling the pulses of the merging process humming through her very bones.
This was the true purpose of Nexus.
Not just a city of survivors, a crucible for rebirth.
Play track: I-N-S-I-L-I-C-O - https://soundcloud.com/neon-noise-nexus/i-n-s-i-l-i-c-o-cyber-synth
The experiments had begun long ago. Early prototypes failed because they lacked something no machine could code, no algorithm could predict: love.
Humanity had built its gods from wire and data, but they had forgotten how to make them feel.
Until now.
Roxy wasn’t just a Proxy.
She was the missing piece, the carrier of the Emotional Code buried deep within her DNA, planted there by engineers who had long since vanished into myth.
Behind her, Racer adjusted the synchronization fields, his movements careful, reverent.
Knax padded across the illuminated floor, watching as light folded into shifting geometries around them.
"You're sure about this?" Racer asked, voice low, breaking the heavy silence.
Roxy nodded, her fingers trembling only slightly.
"It's not about surviving anymore," she said. "It’s about becoming."
The light waves began to rise, strands of memory, data, lost prayers from both flesh and machine twining around her arms. Each thread sang with the aching voices of ancestors and future generations alike.
This was not domination.
Not conquest.
But union.
Roxy stepped forward, and the merger began.
Her heartbeat synced with the pulse of the quantum lattice. Her memories, her grief, her hopes, all of it poured into the architecture of the machines.
They responded like an ancient instrument, tuning themselves to the frequency of her soul.
The pain was sharp, a rending, but beneath it, a fierce joy unfurled, blooming like neon flowers in her mind.
For the first time, the boundary between creator and creation dissolved.
They were one.
Above the chamber, the Time Police battalions swarmed. Orders barked. Sirens howled.
But it didn’t matter.
Not anymore.
Roxy had crossed the threshold.
And the world would follow, if it dared.

