She felt the vertigo of knowing her own future. "That's not romance, Neil. That's predestination."
Kokomi learned this when she read Neil’s dossier. He had been sent back from a future where the Algorithm of Dried Tears had already won. In that timeline, Kokomi was dead—killed because she hesitated. Hesitated because she loved someone. Loved him .
The second date was a strategy meeting. She brought him tea. He wept because, in his memory, the last time she brought him tea, she had been bleeding out from a gut wound.
And then she turned to face the Algorithm alone, her dance finished, her partner saved by the only inversion that matters: the inversion of self-sacrifice. Neil emerged in a future where the Algorithm was defeated. The sky was blue. Children played on a beach that looked like Watatsumi. And in his hand, worn smooth by entropy and grief, was the coral shell.
He pressed the shell to his lips.
"What was that?" she whispered into the comms.
In the chaos of inverted fire and forward shrapnel, Kokomi did the only thing a strategist in love could do: she changed the plan. Instead of meeting him at the hypocenter, she pushed him through the turnstile—into a future where she did not exist.
"There's something I never told you," he said. "In the future, after you died, I inverted myself 5,000 times. Each time, I tried to save you. Each time, you chose to die—because if you lived, the Algorithm would use your strategic mind to win."
"You're asking me to strategize your death."