"You should know, right? General Kristen." Miku said in a subtle tone.

"Yes, the transmitter was not created by me. The person who created it was the director of my Originium Arts Application Department, and her purpose was..."

Christen closed her eyes and recalled the report Dorothy had handed her.

"It is to make up for the deficiencies in human talent, so that even people with average adaptability to Originium techniques can transform themselves into excellent magicians."

In some ways, Kristen is also a beneficiary of this purpose.

The reason why Christen was able to fight with Saria was because of the special features of the transmitter... It was not because Christen was weak, but because Saria was too strong.

"For equality for all?" Miku summed up Kristen's answer in one sentence.

"Yes, for equality for everyone," said Kristen.

"Okay, very good, at least the idea is good, as for the method..."

Miku put away his cleaned monocle, and confiscated the drop of transmitter on his fingertips, and said to Christen in a very serious tone:

"This thing is generally called a natural disaster in the universe."

"Natural disaster..." Christen's face turned pale instantly. Her tail, which had been drooping, suddenly stood up, and her golden hair exploded as if it was hit by static electricity.

As a Terran, Kristen has a certain degree of PTSD about the word "natural disaster".

But Christen had no idea how neurotransmitters could be equated with natural disasters... Although Rhine Life had conducted research on neurotransmitters, many of the results were not perfect, but they were not to the extent of natural disasters.

"It's just a semi-finished product now, but have you ever thought about what she will become in the end if you let these things grow?"

Miku used the tone of an experienced person to talk to K

Listen said.

"Growth? She?" Kristen was a little surprised why Miku used a word referring to women to refer to the transmitter, and she remembered Dorothy's "Magic of Oz" experiment.

Although the experiment was eventually stopped, the neurotransmitter did exhibit its own unique dangers.

But no matter what, the danger is not as serious as a natural disaster.

"It seems that you have already encountered it, but you are lucky that you did not encounter the worst situation." Miku roughly understood what happened by looking at Christen's reaction.

"The worst case scenario?" Kristen asked curiously.

After the "Magic in Oz" experiment failed, Christen, who was recovering the neurotransmitters, also thought about the consequences of the neurotransmitters if they were not controlled.

At most, it would cause a mobile city to go out of control... Wait, so in this way, transmitters can actually be equated with Originium disasters.

It can only be said that Rhine Life has conducted too many out-of-control experiments, so that Christen's understanding of the power of natural disasters has become somewhat biased.

"In theory, this kind of thing should first become a tool, then a container, and finally have a soul due to various circumstances."

Miku explained to Christen in a calm tone why this thing became a natural disaster:

“When a soul is acquired and an object becomes a life, the only way left for this new life is growth.”

“Growth requires nourishment, but life grows at all costs.”

Miku did not specify what the nutrients were, nor did he say what the cost was.

But after a brief thought, Kristen understood what Miku was saying.

It relies on more matter as nourishment, on other species as nourishment, on its own Creator as nourishment, and even on the planet and the universe as nourishment.

"She has almost endless potential in her evolutionary path. Give her enough time and she can devour the entire universe."

Miku paused for a moment and smiled as he said, "You skipped the previous process and directly made it qualified to accommodate souls."

"She?" Christen, who realized what a cosmic disaster was, was now more curious about why Miku always used the female "she" to describe the transmitter that underwent that kind of "evolution".

"I know someone with a similar evolution. She has served me for 5000 years," Miku explained.

"Cough cough cough..." Christen almost couldn't catch her breath.

"Don't be too nervous. Not all natural disasters are terrible." Miku waved his hand indifferently and said, "After all, I am also called a natural disaster."

"..." After Christen's expression froze for about five seconds, a big question mark appeared on top of her head.

"It just means it's too dangerous, nothing else." Miku said with a smile.

...You just said it wasn't a bad thing...

"Anyway, just press that button. Even if there's no soul yet, this thing won't have any effect on it." Miku said with a smile without continuing to discuss the natural disaster issue.

Christen, who was caught up in a brainstorm, hesitated for a moment, but finally squeezed the coin in her hand.

A silent wave spread out instantly, and the passive lights in the ecological warehouse went out instantly. At the same time, the disappearance of the artificial gravity system turned Christen into a flying man in the air.

Miku, who had anticipated this scene, moved slightly and instantly appeared behind Kristen. He raised his hand and hugged Kristen, who almost turned into a ball due to the stall.

After recovering from the upside-down feeling caused by weightlessness, Kristen asked Miku who was holding her in a princess hug:

"Electromagnetic pulse?"

"That's right. Simple and effective. Great force can make miracles happen." Miku nodded while holding Kristen and thinking that the golden retriever felt pretty good.

As for the aftermath work, didn’t you see that BT has already started?

Unsure whether the drones could resist the electromagnetic pulse, Christen turned her head and looked out the window.

All I saw was that the drone that had just been trying to attack Wanxing Garden was now hovering quietly in the space as if it had been turned off.

Some of them floated to the porthole and then floated out from another place.

It can be seen that the electromagnetic pulse only destroyed the systems of these drones and Wanxing Garden, and did not affect the defense system installed by Miku.

Christen struggled to get up from Miku's arms, holding onto a plastic chair that stood firmly on the floor even though the entire cabin had fallen into a state of weightlessness again, and asked Miku curiously:

"What about her now?"

"Who?" Miku was stunned for a moment, and responded randomly: "Are you talking about Gray Wind?"

"Yeah," Kristen nodded, remembering the name "Gray Wind" in her mind.

"The contract expired." Miku replied.

"A 5000-year contract?" Kristen asked with her eyes wide open, and her tail, which had just calmed down, rose high again.

"Yeah, actually I miss her a lot, but I couldn't accept the request for contract renewal, so I didn't sign it." Miku said with some emotion.

I don’t know if Huifeng is stabbing himself now, or is looking for me all over the world.

"..." After struggling for a while, Kristen finally asked a question that could destroy Terra: "How old are you?"

"It's been a long time." Miku, who is not shy about his age, answered casually, but also basically

This is equivalent to no answer.

Not daring to ask further questions, Kristen could only look at Miku deeply.

18: Take a ride

Time becomes meaningless when measured against the scale of Miku's journey.

Miku once had the experience of staying in one world for a while, going to another world and stopping thinking for tens of thousands of years, and returning to this world only less than a month had passed.

It would be even more troublesome if Miku used his personal perception to record time.

After burning his memory more than once, Miku completely forgot his exact age.

It took quite a long time anyway.

"To put it in a more literary way, I have witnessed the rise and fall of countless civilizations, and the birth and destruction of countless species."

As Miku said this, he put on an eyepatch and posed like the Evil King's True Eye.

Seeing Miku's unconcealed performance, Kristen wanted to laugh, but found that she couldn't laugh.

Because what Miku said is very likely true.

Maybe Miku personally intervened in the process of rise and fall, birth and destruction, otherwise it would not be called a natural disaster.

Knowing what Christen was thinking, Miku stopped her exaggerated performance and said,

"Of course I have, because the second half of the previous paragraph is that only the stupidity of mortals is eternal."

Hearing the second half of Miku's words, Christen remembered what Miku had said before in a very casual tone: "It doesn't matter, I don't care."

Kristen suddenly became worried about Terra's future.

"Don't worry, with someone like you around, Terra can't be that bad."

In response to Kristen's concern, Miku waved his hand nonchalantly and said, "You can't be the only pioneer."

"...There must be more." Remembering that Friston had said something similar, Kristen wanted to make her tone sound convincing.

However, this performance doesn't mean much to Miku.

"It's okay, I don't care."

Miku said the words that Kristen just remembered.

"..."Kristen was already thinking about how she should persuade Miku if one day he started to care or not care.

Although the memories of her hometown were not very good for Christen, and even though she had been living in seclusion for a long time, Christen could still understand all kinds of bad things on Terra... The boss behind some of these bad things was simply herself.

But in the end, Kristen still didn't want Tyra to get too bad.

It would be too strange that he was killed just because he was so bad that he was disliked by the passing advanced civilization.

"Aha, it's not that exaggerated, although it's quite common to be killed by advanced civilizations." Miku said with a smile.

...Again, if there is time now, Christen really wants to study how to solve the problem of being read by others.

"And sometimes they don't just kill people randomly. There was once a planet whose civilization was still at the nascent stage, but one day, it was forcibly demolished because it occupied the area where a galactic highway was being built."

Miku, who didn't care that Christen thought her mind was being read, told a story.

"Forced demolition?" Christen couldn't wrap her mind around it.

"It's not really a forced demolition. Before the planet was demolished, this highway plan for developing remote areas of the galaxy was displayed in the planning hall of the Galaxy Planning Committee for fifty years, but no one on this planet raised any objection to this plan."

Miku told a story that sounded normal, but was completely unbelievable when you thought about it carefully.

"Wait, I remember you mentioned the cradle civilization. Is that what I mean by cradle civilization?" Christen asked, after taking a few seconds to realize the weirdness of Miku's story.

"It's the one you know, the civilization that doesn't have any interstellar travel technology, collectively known as the cradle civilization." Miku said.

To be precise, even if a civilization has developed interstellar travel technology but has not developed superluminal travel, and is unable to travel in deep space and can only stay at home, it can be considered an infancy civilization.

"Then this civilization should not be able to raise any objections to that plan, right?" Christen asked speechlessly.

It's like a moving city crushing a settlement as it passes by to escape a natural disaster.

The people living in the place where they live came to the door, and the action planning department of the mobile city said that their movement routes have been marked out for a long time. Who told you not to look or ask?

...Oh, no one from the residential area came to find me because I was crushed along with the residential area.

"Well, definitely not capable," Miku said.

"... Even the worst writer couldn't come up with such a plot." Kristen rubbed her brows, feeling like she had learned something new.

"Haha, later on, the Galaxy Planning Bureau also noticed the procedural problem, so they restored the planet. Even the President of the Galaxy who issued the demolition documents apologized in the newspaper." Miku put on a subtle smile at Kristen's conclusion.

"Is it just a procedural problem? Wait... do the people on that planet know what happened? Or have they only restored the planet itself..."

Kristen is very perceptive

Grasped the key point of the matter.

“It was restored, just like a replay, but the people on that planet don’t know what happened.”

Miku replied with a smile.

"You don't know anything?" Kristen asked.

"Yes, I know nothing." said Miku.

"..." Christen didn't know what to say. She found that when she first looked up at the real starry sky, what she thought and felt, compared with the real universe, seemed so... romantic, which is unique to scientists.

Kristen didn't want to admit that her thoughts were childish.

But soon, Kristen realized why Miku suddenly brought up this story.

"You're trying to tell me that when the gap is too big, there's no need to go easy on me, right?"

"That's a little bit true." Miku nodded, but did not fully agree with Kristen's guess.

"You still want to tell me..." Kristen was silent for a while, closed her eyes, opened them again and said, "There is no such thing as pleasing or unpleasing."

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