The Technician took a long time to process what Nick had just said.
Nick didn't say anything further and just let everything sink in.
This was a lot to say in a couple of minutes.
The Technician looked away from Nick and walked to a random wall, just staring into space, his eyes unfocused.
"Is this true?" the Technician asked, his voice shaky. "Is there really a way?"
"Hypothetically speaking, there is a chance," Nick said. "Everything is stacked against the animals. It's almost impossible to win. However, it is not completely impossible."
The Technician became quiet again.
And then, tears ran down his face as he grimaced.
Nick could even hear a couple of sobs.
The Technician was actually crying, and he wasn't just shedding some tears.
No, he was genuinely crying.
When Nick saw that, he was glad that there were still humans like the Technician.
Humans that were willing to dedicate their life to bettering humanity.
Humans that could shed tears for a collective group of people they didn't even personally know.
From the outside, Aegis seemed stable and unified.
They seemed like they were on their way to dealing with the Specters.
Technology was advancing, and more powerful Extractors appeared.
And yet, behind the scenes, it was nothing like that.n/ô/vel/b//in dot c//om
The true danger was not the Sun but the beings that created the Sun.
Dealing with them was so much harder than dealing with the Sun.
Most likely, the Shields mostly knew about as much as Nick about the aliens.
They knew that they had a base on the moon, and it was not difficult to infer what the aliens had stationed there.
However, they didn't have a plan of attack.
How could they possibly keep anything secret with the Champion of Light being a double agent and no one being able to stay in darkness?
While light created by Specters wasn't light of the Sun, the Specters belonged to the Sun,and it was very possible that any dangerous pieces of intel could be transmitted to the Sun by the light-giving Specters as proxies.
It was hopeless.
It was well and truly hopeless.
But now, Nick had come up with a plan.
If Nick could deal with the aliens, humanity would have a chance at dealing with the Sun.
After all, the Enlightened Ones had most likely succeeded in severely damaging the Sun.
Maybe they had even destroyed it, and the aliens had to create a new one.
But the aliens had been unkillable.
They had been unassailable.
"Why would the animals fight for so long without any hope?" Nick asked.
The Technician understood what Nick meant.
He dried his tears and regained control almost immediately.
"What else is there to do?" the Technician asked. "Even if things seem impossible, you have to keep trying. You have to keep fighting against the tide, even if nothing changes."
"But it's difficult," the Technician said with a deep sigh. "Fighting something you know you can't win against for your entire life is so very difficult."
"You keep trying again and again, and you see some minor success, but in the grand scheme of things, you know it doesn't make a difference."
"And yet, you keep fighting and fighting and fighting. You keep going on and on forever."
"Just for that small glimmer of hope."
"You don't hope that you can win."
"No, you only hope that it stops looking impossible."
"You fight for just the tiniest hope."
The Technician took a deep breath.
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