Ivory Skin
Ivory Skin
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Genesis and Ivoryta
Kronos did not sleep.
He was aware of everything he had created.
He had written laws into matter. He had shaped the impossible. He had created the first form of life in the Universe of Tzion and, against all divine logic, he had been able to love her.
He had protected Genesis with the fire of Polaris burning inside her, with the sacred strength of Proferrum wrapping her body, and with weapons forged from the same metal, capable of challenging kings, beasts, and stars.
And yet, something inside him knew it was not enough.
Because Kronos knew there was something more.
He knew that, together with Primo, he had conceived divine abilities, gifts reserved for Meta-Gods, Architects, and higher entities. Powers he had never thought to give to the physical universe. Powers he had never imagined placing in the hands of the Kwasars, guardians of the Universe of Tzion.
And yet, the visions screamed at him a truth impossible to ignore: the Kwasars could not remain only warriors.
They had to become something more.
They had to carry the power of the gods inside flesh.
This vision appeared in his mind because every night, he saw Genesis die in his nightmares, which were like visions of what was about to occur.
Not once.
Not in one future.
In thousands.
He saw her standing beneath a blackened sky, her Proferrum armour shattered over her body like broken moonstone. He saw her sword fall from her hand while something from beyond Tzion struck her with a power no forged metal could withstand.
He saw cities burn.
He saw future Sapiens calling her name from worlds too distant for any ship to reach in time.
He saw enemies from within the Universe. Tyrants. Beasts. Corrupt kings. Sapiens who would turn wisdom into domination.
Then he saw something worse.
Things from beyond.
Things that did not belong to Tzion. Shadows from hostile Universes. Echoes of the Antiverse. Creatures that did not only kill flesh, but tried to rewrite the meaning of life itself.
And in every vision, Genesis fought.
She always fought.
With Polaris burning inside her. With Proferrum over her body. With the sword he had forged for her. With a courage that broke his heart.
But courage was not enough.
Not for what was coming.
On the seventh night of these visions, Kronos remained alone, contemplating the immense beauty of the planet he had created with his own hands. Above him, the newborn stars of Tzion shone like promises too fragile to trust.
Behind him, Genesis appeared in silence.
“You are hiding from me,” she said.
Kronos did not turn around.
“No.”
“Yes.”
Her voice was soft, but there was iron beneath it.
“You speak less. You train me harder. You look at me as if I were already wounded.”
Kronos closed his eyes.
Genesis came to stand beside him. Her black hair moved in the night wind. Her eyes changed from black to violet as she looked at her Magister, at her beloved Kronos.
“What have you seen?”
For a while, he said nothing.
Then he answered.
“You.”
She waited.
“Dying.”
The word did not break loudly.
It broke deeply.
Genesis looked away.
“How many times?”
Kronos’s jaw tightened.
“Enough.”
“And how does it happen? I mean, my death?”
“In battle. In fire. In the void. Beneath cities. Among stars. Against things I still cannot name, because even I do not know them.”
Genesis breathed slowly.
“And do you believe these visions are true?”
“I believe they are possible.”
“That is not the same.”
“No,” he said. “But possible is enough when I love what can be lost.”
Then she looked at him.
The Architect of Tzion did not look like an Architect in that moment. He looked like a man standing before a door he wished he could seal forever.
Genesis touched his hand.
“Tell me.”
Kronos lowered his gaze to their joined fingers.
“Your strength has grown. Polaris has made you more than Sapiens. The Kun Arts have sharpened your body. Your reflexes are extraordinary. Your Proferrum armour is sacred and almost unbreakable by the standards of this era.”
“But?”
“But this era is not the enemy.”
Genesis said nothing.
Kronos looked toward the horizon.
“Proferrum is powerful. It is harder than diamond, harder than any simple metal of the worlds to come. It channels Kwasar energy. It can make armour worthy of a queen and weapons worthy of myth.”
He turned toward her.
“But it is still not enough to face my visions.”
Genesis understood the weight of that sentence.
“It can break.”
“It can be removed from your body. It can protect the body from impact, but not from impacts like the ones that torment me in my nightmares.”
Genesis looked toward the sleeping world.
“What are you saying?”
Kronos hesitated.
She had rarely seen him hesitate.
“That there is another path.”
“A weapon?”
“No.”
“Another armour?”
“Not armour.”
“Then what?”
Kronos’s eyes darkened with memory.
“A symbiont.”
Genesis’s expression changed.
The word entered the air between them like something alive.
“A living organism?”
“Yes.”
“One that joins with the host?”
“Yes.”
“Where did this come from?”
Kronos looked away.
“From an older design.”
Genesis studied him.
“Yours?”
His silence answered before his mouth did.
“Mine,” he said. “And Primo’s.”
At the name, the night seemed to lose its warmth.
Genesis knew enough of Primo to understand the wound behind the silence. She did not press with cruelty. But neither did she look away.
“You designed this with him?”
“At first,” said Kronos. “Before the betrayal.”
He looked toward the moons.
“We studied the possibility of linked beings. Not armour worn by the body, but life joined to life. A second skin. A living interface. Something that could transform the host from within, protect the vessel, stabilise power, and allow a guardian to survive forces no external armour could withstand.”
“Then why was it not used?”
“Because I feared it.”
Genesis remained silent.
Kronos continued.
“I destined it for gods, for spiritual realms. For controlled states. For the Antiverse as a concept, not for the tangible Universe as flesh. It was too wild. Too dangerous. Too capable of consuming the host if the will failed.”
He looked at her, and now the fear was completely visible.
“I did not create you so I could lead you into pain.”
Genesis took one step closer.
“But you believe I need this.”
“Yes.”
“Can I die?”
Kronos answered immediately.
“Yes.”
Without softness.
Without lies.
Genesis absorbed it.
Then she asked, “Will it hurt?”
Kronos released a bitter, broken breath that was almost a laugh.
“Beyond anything I have ever asked of you.”
“Will I remain myself?”
“If you are strong enough.”
“And if I am not?”
His voice lowered.
“Then it may take more than your life. It may take your form and leave something wearing your name.”
Genesis’s face tightened, but she did not step back.
Inside her, Polaris stirred.
He is telling you the truth because he loves you.
Genesis answered inwardly.
I know.
Then she looked at Kronos.
“Where is it?”
He closed his eyes.
“Beneath Urkulo.”
“Alive?”
“Waiting.”
“For me?”
“For the first host worthy of calling it.”
Genesis’s voice softened.
“And you did not want that host to be me.”
“No.”
“But it has to be.”
Kronos looked at her.
“I have searched every path I can bear to search. I have tried to imagine another way. I have strengthened the Proferrum. I have trained your body. I have awakened a deeper coordination with Polaris. I have delayed this because delay felt like mercy.”
His face hardened with pain.
“But mercy that leaves you unprepared is cowardice.”
Genesis stood completely in front of him.
“Then teach me.”
Kronos shook his head.
“Do not answer as a warrior. Answer as a woman. Answer as a soul. Answer as Genesis.”
“I am answering as all three.”
“You are afraid.”
“Yes.”
“You may hate me for this.”
“Perhaps.”
“You may scream my name as if I were your enemy.”
“Then stay anyway.”
The words struck him.
Genesis took both his hands.
“If this path is necessary, do not hide it from me because you love me. Love me enough to let me become what I must become.”
Kronos bowed his head.
For a moment, he could not speak.
Then he whispered, “I do not want to lose you.”
Genesis rested her forehead against his.
“Then help me survive.”
The Descent Beneath Urkulo
Before dawn, they descended.
Genesis wore a simple garment of white linen, soft and light, tied at the shoulders and waist. It was beautiful in its simplicity, but deliberately humble. No metal. No jewels. No Proferrum. No ceremonial crown. Nothing hard. Nothing proud.
When Kronos saw her, he seemed wounded by the image.
“You look as if you are going to an altar,” he said.
Genesis gave him a faint smile.
“Perhaps I am.”
“This is not marriage.”
“No,” she said. “But it is union.”
Kronos did not answer.
They descended into the deepest reaches of Urkulo, into the sacred cavern Kronos had named: The Symbiont Cradle, a place hidden beneath the living crust of the mother planet, far below the forests, mountains, rivers, and newborn kingdoms of the surface.
There, Kronos had given shelter to the first symbionts of Urkulo — the first living seeds of a majestic symbiotic species that was not yet known to the Universe, but was already beginning to awaken.
They were the beginning of something immense.
The first pulse.
The first hidden garden.
The first silent promise of a life-form destined to bloom, multiply, and spread through the endless underrealms of Urkulo.
The walls were not built of stone, but of living stone, veined with pale light, as if the planet itself had blood made of moonfire. Roots thicker than towers crossed the ceiling of the cavern, twisting like the bones of ancient gods. Somewhere far below, underground rivers moved like sleeping beasts, their distant current echoing through the darkness like the breathing of the world.
And in that sacred depth, beneath the gaze of Kronos and Genesis, the future of the Bio-Skins waited in silence.
Genesis touched the wall as they walked.
“Does Urkulo know?”
“Yes,” said Kronos.
“Does it approve?”
“Urkulo does not approve or disapprove as we do. It recognises thresholds.”
“And this is one?”
“One of the first.”
Polaris moved softly within the soul of Genesis.
I will be with you.
Genesis answered silently.
I know.
But Polaris felt her fear anyway.
Fear does not shame you, said Polaris. It keeps you awake.
Genesis looked at Kronos.
“Can Polaris help me?”
“She may be the reason you survive,” said Kronos.
Genesis stopped walking.
Kronos turned.
“You should have told me that before.”
“I did not want to place the burden on her.”
The voice of Polaris came, clear and bright.
She whom I love does not burden me.
Genesis briefly closed her eyes.
“Then we go together.”
The path opened into a chamber so vast that the darkness above them seemed like a buried sky.
In the centre lay a circular lake.
White.
Viscous.
Luminous.
Alive.
The surface moved without wind, slow ripples folding into one another like thoughts beneath skin.
Genesis stopped at the edge.
Her throat tightened.
“Is that Ivoryta?”
Kronos nodded.
“The underrealm colony. But not all of it will join. The one destined for you must respond.”
Genesis looked at him.
“How do I call it?”
“Not with command.”
“I imagined that.”
“Nor with need.”
She frowned.
“Then what remains?”
“Consent.”
The lake trembled.
Genesis knelt.
The linen touched the dark stone. Her hands rested on her thighs. For a moment, she looked painfully mortal beside the living lake.
Kronos remained behind her, but not too close.
Genesis closed her eyes.
At first, she heard only breathing.
Hers.
Kronos’s.
The deep pulse of Urkulo beneath them.
Then she reached downward with thought. Not into the lake, but beneath it. Beyond the stone. Beyond the roots. Beyond the warm arteries of the planet.
She did not say: Come.
She did not say: Serve.
She did not say: Make me stronger.
Instead, she offered herself.
I am Genesis.
The lake stilled.
I was formed from Ex-Codice, but I am no longer clay. I carry Polaris, but I am not only spirit. I am loved by Kronos, but I am not his possession.
A ripple moved across the white surface.
I am afraid of you.
The lake tightened.
I will not lie to you.
Another ripple.
I do not ask to wear you as armour. I ask to live with you, if you can accept me.
The chamber grew colder.
Kronos’s voice came low behind her.
“The bond has formed.”
Genesis opened her eyes.
The lake rose in thin tendrils, like white silk being pulled upward by invisible fingers. But Genesis felt something else: something deeper than the lake, something moving beneath the stone.
Her breathing changed.
“Kronos…”
“I know.”
“It is not in the lake.”
“No. It is beneath us.”
The ground trembled.
Genesis stood.
A line split the stone several steps away, thin and bright.
Something white pressed upward.
Kronos’s tone sharpened.
“Listen to me. Once it reaches the surface, time begins.”
“What time?”
“Ivoryta cannot remain exposed for long. The underrealm sustains her. Open air does not. She is made for symbiosis. If you hesitate too long, she will destabilize.”
Genesis looked at the crack.
“How long?”
“Minutes. Perhaps less.”
Her face changed.
“You let me call a being that can die if I fail?”
“You needed to know the cost.”
“Before calling it!”
“If I had told you before, fear might have spoken louder than consent.”
Genesis turned against him.
“That was not your choice.”
Kronos accepted the blow.
“No. It was not.”
The honesty disarmed her more than defence would have.
Then the stone opened.
Ivoryta emerged.
It was not a creature with limbs or eyes. It was a mass of pearly white life, liquid and cohesive, sliding from the wound in the ground with a horrible grace. It gathered into a trembling pool, slippery and luminous, nacreous like mother-of-pearl under moonlight.

And Genesis felt its terror.
Not as thought.
As sensation.
Exposure.
Suffocation.
Urgency.
Need.
The edges of Ivoryta began to fray into vapour.
Small threads of white light rose from it and disappeared.
Genesis’s anger died.
“Oh…”
Kronos’s face hardened.
“It answered you.”
Ivoryta raised a tendril toward her.
It trembled.
Genesis stepped back.
The tendril shrank, not from offence, but from weakness.
Polaris spoke firmly.
She is afraid too.
Genesis swallowed.
“I know.”
Kronos’s voice was low.
“Genesis. You must choose.”
She looked at him.
“Can you stop this?”
“I can return her below, perhaps. But the bond would break. She may never answer you again.”
“And if I touch her?”
“You begin.”
“And if I begin?”
“You must finish.”
Genesis looked at the trembling white tendril.
She thought of the visions Kronos had described. Worlds burning. Future children calling from the stars. Her own body broken beneath forces Proferrum could not resist.
She thought of fear.
Then she thought of the being before her, dying because it had trusted her call.
Kronos’s breathing stopped.
Genesis extended her hand.
“Wait,” he said.
She froze.
His voice was no longer the voice of an Architect.
It was the voice of a man begging time to stop.
“I love you.”
Genesis looked back.
“I know.”
“If you feel yourself disappearing, fight.”
“I will.”
“If it takes too much, call me.”
“You said you cannot do this for me.”
“I cannot.”
“Then why call you?”
His eyes shone with pain.
“So I can hear you.”
Genesis smiled sadly.
“You will hear me.”
Then she turned toward Ivoryta.
“I accept you,” she whispered.
The tendril touched her hand.

Cold.
Then burning.
Then intimate beyond anything she had ever known.
Genesis inhaled.
For one heartbeat, nothing happened.
Then Ivoryta launched herself.
The Trial of Pain
It climbed up her hand like liquid white fire.
Her fingers disappeared beneath pearly life. Her wrist followed. Then her forearm.
Genesis gasped.
“It is cold.”
Kronos stepped closer.
“Breathe.”
“It is so cold—”
The first needles entered her skin.
Her body jerked.
Then came the heat.
Not on the surface.
Beneath it.
Ivoryta found openings no eye could see. Pores. Nerve endings. Microscopic spaces between cells. It pressed into her, at first not violently, but with an unbearable intimacy.
Genesis clenched her jaw.
“I can feel her looking.”
“She is mapping you.”
“She is inside my hand.”
“Yes.”
Her linen sleeve began to dissolve.
Not burn.
Not tear.
Dissolve.
The fibres separated into pale dust wherever Ivoryta passed. The white linen became white vapour, and beneath it the living symbiont spread upward.
Genesis looked at her arm, horrified and fascinated.
“She is taking the fabric.”
“She removes barriers.”
Genesis released a trembling breath.
Ivoryta reached her elbow.
The pain sharpened.
Genesis screamed.
The sound struck the lake and returned to her as an echo.
Polaris burned inside her.
Stay with the breath.
Genesis whispered, “Easy for you to say.”
I have no lungs. I must borrow yours.
Despite the pain, Genesis almost laughed.
Then Ivoryta reached her shoulder.
The laughter died.
She crossed her clavicle and rushed down her chest, over her back, around her waist.
The linen dress disappeared in waves, undone by the fusion. In a few moments, the simple white garment vanished.
And Genesis was dressed in living ivory.
The Symbiont Suit formed around her like a wild storm.
It was white, nacreous, organic, and visibly alive. Its surface rippled constantly, crawling over her body with predatory intelligence. Strands crossed her ribs. Plates formed and collapsed. Liquid ridges moved along her spine. The suit clung to her with perfect precision, but it did not yet understand beauty.
It understood survival.
It understood fear.
It understood possession.
Genesis screamed when it entered her nerves.
She fell to one knee.
Her fist struck the ground.
The stone cracked.
Kronos moved by instinct.
Genesis snapped her head up.
“No!”
The order was raw, but absolute.
Kronos stopped.
“I can help stabilise—”
“No,” she hissed. “If this must accept me, then it must accept me.”
Ivoryta tightened around her ribs.
Genesis’s eyes opened wide.
“I cannot breathe.”
Kronos’s face changed.
“Do not panic.”
“I am trying not to!”
The suit thickened over her chest, misinterpreting terror as external danger. It reinforced the very place that needed release. Genesis bent forward, clawing at the ground, her spine curving under invisible pressure.
Polaris’s voice became firm.
She thinks you are under attack.
“I am under attack!”
No. You are in union with something that does not yet understand the difference between fear and threat.
Genesis choked.
“Kronos…”
He came closer, but did not touch her.
“Genesis, listen to me. She is protecting you incorrectly. Teach her.”
“How?”
“Tell her the truth.”
Her hands trembled. Sweat ran down her temples. Tears fell from her eyes and disappeared into the living white surface of her throat.
Genesis pressed one palm against her chest.
“I am afraid,” she gasped.
The suit trembled.
“I am afraid, but I am not being attacked.”
The pressure did not release.
She almost collapsed.
Polaris burned brighter.
Again.
Genesis dragged air through her teeth.
“I am afraid,” she repeated. “But you are not my enemy.”
Ivoryta loosened slightly.
Only slightly.
Enough for one breath.
She inhaled like a drowning woman breaking the surface of the water.
Kronos exhaled too, although he had not known he was holding his breath.
“Good,” he said. “Again.”
Genesis looked at him with fury.
“Do not say good.”
“I will say whatever keeps you alive.”
Ivoryta entered her blood.
Genesis was on her knees upon the living floor of the Symbiont Cradle.
Around her, the cavern trembled with ancient silence. The walls rose like the ribs of Urkulo itself, carved by time, veined with faint blue-green light, while roots, stone spires, and forgotten markings watched from the darkness like witnesses of a ritual older than kingdoms.
Then the pain intensified violently.
It struck her from within.
Genesis threw her head back and cried like never before.
Purple energy erupted from her chest and mouth in wild, luminous streams, twisting through the cavern like lightning made of soul-fire. The force of it arched her spine and opened her hands, as if her body were no longer fully her own, as if something sacred and terrible were pulling her toward a form she had not yet learned how to survive.
Her hair began to change without her command.
Violet.
Black.
Violet again.
Then black once more.
The colours flashed through her hair like a storm of identity — violet, the impossible echo of Kronos’s hidden mystery; black, the sacred darkness of Genesis’s origin, the night from which the future Genesis Mark would one day be born.
It was not beauty.
Not yet.
It was instinct.
A desperate rebellion of flesh, spirit, and symbiont.
The white Bio-Skin stretched across her body, luminous and unfinished, still raw, still fluid, still learning her shape. Long strands of living matter pulled from the ground and from the lake behind her, binding to her arms, her back, her waist, as if the Symbiont Cradle itself refused to let her escape the transformation.
Genesis’s body arched.
The symbiont forced itself deeper.
Into skin.
Into blood.
Into bone.
Into the places where pain becomes memory and memory becomes destiny.
And from her lips came a cry that was not surrender.
It was the sound of the first Prime Hero being broken open by the future.
The sound of Genesis becoming more than flesh.
The sound of the first Kwasar beginning to rise.

And then, this pain was different.
Vast.
The symbiont moved through her circulation, carried by her heartbeat. Each pulse dragged it deeper. Her veins lit with white fire. Her heart faltered, then hammered violently as if trying to outrun what now flowed through it.
Genesis screamed again.
This time she did not sound like a warrior.
She sounded like someone being remade.
Kronos shuddered.
Polaris appeared in her inner darkness, red-haired, green-eyed, luminous.
Genesis, listen to me.
“I hear everything! That is the problem!”
Polaris came closer.
Then choose one thing.
“What?”
Choose my voice.
Genesis sobbed.
“I cannot.”
Yes, you can. Pain is loud. It is not sovereign.
Ivoryta reached her spine.
Genesis collapsed forward, her forehead striking the stone. The impact split the ground beneath her brow. Her fingers hooked into the cracks, gripping with such force that the rock broke under her hands.
Kronos whispered, “Stay with me.”
Genesis could not answer.
The Negotiation of the Body
There was no longer a lake.
No Kronos.
No ground.
Only white pain.
It had roots.
It opened doors inside Genesis she had never known existed.
Ivoryta was searching.
Skin was not enough.
Muscle was not enough.
Nerve was not enough.
Blood was not enough.
Bone was not enough.
She wanted origin.
She wanted code.
She wanted the hidden writing beneath form.
Genesis understood with terrible clarity.
“She wants my DNA.”
Polaris stood beside her in the white void.
Yes.
“If she reaches it…”
She will not simply live over you. She will live as part of you.
“And if I fail?”
Then she may write over what she cannot understand.
Genesis trembled.
Outside the vision, her body convulsed inside the wild Symbiont Suit. The living white surface lashed and rippled, forming half-made ridges along her arms and back. Her legs trembled. Her jaw clenched. Her breathing broke into torn fragments.
Kronos fell to one knee before her, close but still not touching her.
“Genesis. Speak to me.”
Her lips moved.
No sound came out.
“Genesis!”
Inside the void, Ivoryta reached the spiral of her living code.
Genesis felt her touch the molecular soul of her body.
Not spiritual soul.
Physical soul.
The deep architecture of flesh.
The part of her that said: this is Genesis and no other.
She pulled back.
“No.”
Ivoryta pressed.
Her fear became hunger.
Her hunger became instinct.
Her instinct became invasion.
Genesis screamed inside herself.
“I am dying.”
Polaris rushed to help her desperately, and a strong comforting warmth was born inside Genesis. That relieved her more than anything.
No. You are being asked whether you can remain yourself while becoming more.
“I cannot hold it.”
Then do not hold it. Guide it.
“How?”
“Name yourself.”
Genesis trembled.
“I am Genesis.”
Stronger.
“I am Genesis.”
Deeper.
Ivoryta pressed harder.
The void cracked.
Genesis’s body rose from the stone, suspended by the living suit. White strands pierced deeper beneath the surface, threading into cells, joining genetic markers, reading the Ex-Codice-born design of her flesh.
Kronos rose, horror breaking his face.
“No…”
Genesis’s voice finally emerged, broken but clear.
“I am Genesis.”
The chamber trembled.
“The first Sapiens.”
Ivoryta entered the DNA.
“The bearer of Polaris.”
Every cell ignited.
“The beloved of Kronos.”
Kronos froze.
“The beginning.”
The Symbiont Suit became rigid.
Genesis opened her eyes. White light burst from them, almost drowning the violet.
“You may enter me,” she said, her voice shaking the chamber. “But you will not erase me.”
Ivoryta fully penetrated her DNA.
Genesis screamed.
Then her heart stopped.
Silence.
Absolute.
The Symbiont Suit stood motionless.
Genesis hung in the air, wrapped in living white, still as a statue not yet born.
Kronos felt the absence.
It was worse than pain.
It was the sudden withdrawal of the future.
His face emptied.
“Genesis?”
No answer.
“Genesis.”
Nothing.
The lake retreated before him.
The walls of the chamber began to fracture. The living stone groaned. The roots above them twisted. The underrealm felt the pain of the Architect and feared what he might become.
Kronos raised his hand.
No gold, no weapon, terrible.
“If you have taken her…”
The chamber trembled.
“If you have stolen her from me…”
The voice of Polaris burst through the motionless body.
Wait.
Kronos stopped.
Not because the word was strong.
Because it was certain.
Wait.
He lowered his hand slightly.
For one heartbeat, nothing.
Then, beneath the white suit, something pulsed.
Once.
Twice.
Genesis’s heart returned.
But not as before.
Stronger.
Slower.
Deeper.
Ivoryta had reached her DNA and had not found surrender, but limit. Not weakness, but invitation. Not a body to consume, but a host to join.
The integration began.
The wild Symbiont Suit softened.
Its frantic ripples slowed. Its ridges smoothed. Its pressure released. The white glow beneath Genesis’s skin settled into rhythm.
She fell.
Kronos caught her before she touched the ground.
He held her as if she were both newborn and dying.
Genesis’s eyes slowly opened.
They were violet again.
Around the iris, white light shone.
Her lips trembled.
“Did I die?”
Kronos pressed his forehead against hers.
“Almost.”
Polaris glowed weakly around them.
Almost is not victory, she said, but neither is it defeat.
Genesis tried to laugh.
It became a sob.
The Symbiont Suit reacted instantly, thickening around her chest and throat.
Genesis felt it and raised a trembling hand.
“No,” she whispered to it. “Not danger. Pain.”
The suit hesitated.
Then loosened.
Kronos stared.
“She listened.”
Genesis looked down at herself.
The living white suit breathed over her body, nacreous and restless. It embraced her form perfectly, but moved constantly, like a celestial predator trying to become clothing. Strands rose and sank. The surface tightened when she trembled and softened when she breathed.
“She feels me,” she said.
Kronos nodded.
“And you feel her.”
“Yes.”
“That is the beginning.”
Genesis raised her hand. A white tendril rose from her wrist, curving through the air like a curious serpent.
She shuddered.
The tendril shuddered too.
Genesis blinked.
“Did she just copy me?”
“She is learning the difference between your reflex and her own.”
She stared at the tendril.
Then she imagined protection.
The Symbiont Suit responded before she finished the thought.
A white biological shield formed from her forearm, smooth in the centre, serrated at the edges, like living ivory grown toward a purpose.
Genesis gasped.
The shield dissolved.
She imagined a blade.
A curved extension emerged from her wrist, sharp and luminous.
“Kronos…”
He looked at her in amazement.
“Attack Mode.”

“I thought this was armour.”
“It is not armour. It is alive.”
The blade withdrew.
Genesis placed her hand over her abdomen. The suit shifted there, thickening before she ordered it.
“She moves to protect me.”
“At first, she will move where she believes protection is needed,” said Kronos. “Later, she will move where you choose.”
Genesis looked at him.
“And if we do not agree?”
“Then training begins.”

The Learning of Unity
Genesis did not return to the surface for seven days.
On the first day, the Symbiont Suit overprotected everything.
When Genesis stood too quickly, it reinforced her legs until she almost fell.
When Kronos raised his voice, it formed ridges over her shoulders.
When Polaris burned in irritation, Ivoryta tightened over Genesis’s chest, confusing spiritual intensity with attack.
Genesis looked at Kronos with fury after the third failed attempt to walk ten steps.
“This thing thinks everything is war.”
Kronos crossed his arms.
“She was born inside your pain. She believes existence is combat.”
Genesis looked down at the rippling white surface.
“That is dramatic.”
“She learned it from you.”
She narrowed her eyes.
“I am going to ignore that.”
Polaris laughed softly inside her.
He is not entirely wrong.
Genesis sighed.
“You too?”
Kronos came closer and raised a hand.
“I am going to strike you.”
“Thank you for the romance.”
“I am your Magister.”
“You are also my husband.”
“Today I am more useful as Magister.”
“Debatable.”
He struck.
A controlled pulse of force crossed the chamber.
Genesis saw it coming, but did not move in time.
The Symbiont Suit did.
It launched over her left side, thickening into ivory plates. The impact struck. The suit absorbed the force and redirected it into the ground. The stone cracked beneath her feet.
Genesis staggered, but remained standing.
She looked at the reinforced plate as it dissolved.
“That was not me.”
“No,” said Kronos. “That was Protection Mode.”

“She saved me.”
“Yes.”
“But if she moves before I think…”
“Then you must learn to think with her, not after her.”
Genesis looked at the lake.
Ivoryta inside her pulsed.
On the third day, she trained calm.
It was worse than battle.
She sat beside the white lake, hands over her heart.
“There is no battle,” she whispered.
The suit rippled.
“There is no enemy.”
The surface smoothed.
“There is no fear.”
It tightened.
Genesis opened one eye.
“Really?”
Kronos, standing nearby, said, “She knows you lied.”
Genesis exhaled sharply.
“Fine. Some fear.”
The suit loosened.
Polaris spoke softly.
Honesty works better than performance.
Genesis closed her eyes again.
“I am afraid. But I am safe.”
The suit listened.
The ripples slowed.
“I am tired. But I am safe.”
The surface softened.
“I am not alone.”
The white organic texture began to polish itself. What had looked wild and predatory became smoother. The nacreous tones deepened. The living surface refined itself, becoming elegant, luminous, and close to the body like a perfect second skin.
Genesis opened her eyes.
“Kronos.”
He turned.
The Symbiont Suit had changed.
It still lived. It still breathed. But the rawness had calmed. It no longer crawled over her like hunger. It flowed with her like trust.
Kronos approached slowly.
“The Ivory Skin,” he said.

Genesis looked down.
The suit had become flawless. White and radiant, sculpted to her form with divine precision, not hiding her body but translating it into sacred beauty. It did not expose her. It did not conceal her. It made her look as if she had been carved from mother-of-pearl and brought to life by breath.
She raised one arm.
Pearly light moved beneath the surface.
“It is beautiful,” she whispered.
“Yes.”
“It does not feel like clothing.”
“It is not.”
“It does not feel like armour.”
“It is more intimate than armour.”
Genesis took a step. The Ivory Skin moved with perfect grace.
“I feel as if my body finally has an answer to power.”
Kronos’s eyes softened.
“That is exactly what it is.”

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