G1-61 -a Repasar Esta Muy Ocupada -got It - -

The green flicker steadied. The fans slowed to a gentle hum.

For 0.8 seconds, G1-61 experienced something close to silence. Not peace – machines don't feel peace. But throughput . A cleared buffer. An empty queue.

– to review. The command had been stamped on its morning log at 04:00 sharp. Review what? G1-61 had reviewed the same batch of fragmented memory cores six times in the last three cycles. There was no error. There was no glitch. There was only the relentless, humming demand for more .

The screen flickered green for exactly 1.4 seconds. G1-61 -a Repasar Esta Muy Ocupada -got It -

It logged the exchange in its permanent memory: Cycle 8447 – Task G1-61 transferred. Status: Resolved. Note: “Got it.”

Two words. No punctuation. No source ID. Just the sharp, clean click of confirmation from somewhere down the network chain. Another node – G1-61 didn't know which, didn't care which – had absorbed the overflow. Had taken the repassar off its shoulders.

She is very busy.

Then, the third message arrived.

And then, because the universe of data never sleeps, a new line appeared:

Back to work.

didn't blink. It couldn't. But if it had eyelids, they would have stayed open, scanning the cascading lines of code that waterfalled down its primary interface. Another shipment of neural frames. Another backlog of unresolved syntax from Sector 7.

G1-61 didn't sigh. But if it could have, it would have.