Se connecterThe drive across the city felt longer than it should have.Not because of traffic.But because of what waited at the end of it.Rowan sat beside Elena, his arm resting against the door, eyes occasionally drifting toward her.She hadn’t spoken since they left.Not a single word.No second thoughts.No hesitation.Just silence—and focus.“You’ve done this before,” he said finally.It wasn’t a question.Elena kept her gaze forward. “No.”Rowan raised an eyebrow slightly. “Doesn’t feel like your first time walking into something like this.”“That’s because it isn’t about the situation,” she replied calmly. “It’s about the person.”Rowan leaned back a little, studying her more closely now. “So he’s different.”A brief pause.“Yes,” Elena said. “Very.”The car slowed as they approached the building.It didn’t stand out at first glance.No massive logo.No aggressive security presence.Just a tall, clean structure that blended into the skyline.But the moment you looked twice—you knew.Eve
The calm didn’t last.It never did—not after something that big.Not after a system powerful enough to reshape everything had simply… disappeared.Lucian was still running diagnostics when the first alert came in.At first, he thought it was a delayed echo—some leftover signal from the collapse.Then he frowned.“…That was fast.”Rowan looked up from where he stood near the table. “From who?”Lucian didn’t answer immediately. He pulled up the data, cross-checking it across multiple layers as if expecting it to change.It didn’t.“…Seraphina,” he finally said.Victor’s gaze sharpened almost instantly. “What did she do?”Lucian turned the screen toward them. Streams of data scrolled rapidly, stabilizing as they watched.“She’s lifting the suspension.”Cassandra’s voice came through clearly this time. “All of it?”Lucian nodded. “Global alliances, frozen assets, restricted flows—everything is being restored. It’s not gradual either. She’s pushing it all at once.”Rowan frowned. “That’s
The silence that followed felt different.Not tense. Not heavy.Just… unfamiliar.Lucian was the first to move. His fingers flew across the keyboard as he scanned every layer of the system again.“It’s gone,” he said, almost like he didn’t believe it himself. “No traces. No hidden processes. Nothing.”Cassandra’s voice came through more calmly this time. “External networks are stabilizing. The ripple effect is fading faster than expected.”Rowan leaned against the table, watching Elena closely. “So that’s it? We just walk away from something that almost took over everything?”Victor didn’t answer him. His attention remained on Elena.Because she hadn’t said anything yet.She stood by the window, looking out over the city. The lights were steady again. Traffic moved like nothing had happened. People went on with their lives, unaware of how close everything had come to collapse.“It’s over,” she finally said.But her tone wasn’t convincing.Lucian noticed immediately. “That didn’t soun
The moment the system questioned everything shifted.Not violently.Not immediately.But fundamentally.The pressure that had filled the space faltered.Just slightly.But enough.Rowan saw it first.“It’s hesitating.”Elena didn’t move.Because she felt it too.That crack she created was spreading.The structure around them flickered, no longer seamless. The once perfect framework now showed flaws small inconsistencies forming beneath the surface.The voice returned again.Quieter this time.Less certain.“…Elena?”Lucian’s voice broke through, distorted but audible.“Whatever you did keep going. It’s destabilizing fast.”Cassandra followed, more urgent. “You disrupted its decision logic. It can’t process conflicting outcomes.”Victor’s voice remained calm. “This is your opening.”Rowan glanced at her. “You heard him.”Elena nodded.“Yes.”She stepped forward, deeper into the core.This time, the system didn’t stop her.It didn’t block her.It watched.“You were built to enforce con
Moving forward was no longer just a direction. It was a decision—one that would determine everything that came next.The fractured space around them didn’t settle. Instead, it multiplied. Pathways split and reshaped themselves continuously, branching into possibilities that felt both real and unstable at the same time.Rowan turned slowly, scanning the shifting structure.“This isn’t a system anymore.”Elena’s gaze remained fixed ahead. “No. It’s a framework.”A framework built to judge. To decide. To control.Then the voice returned—not as sound, but as pressure pressing in from all sides.CHOOSE.Rowan frowned. “Choose what?”The answer came immediately.Three distinct paths lit up before them.Each one carried a different weight. A different consequence.Elena studied them carefully, her mind moving faster than the shifting environment.YOU SAID YOU WOULD END THIS. PROVE IT.Rowan glanced at her. “This isn’t just about ending it.”Elena nodded faintly. “No. It’s about how.”She st
There are lines you don’t cross.Not because you can’t—but because you knowwhat waits on the other side.The room moved faster now.Not chaotic.Controlled.But beneath it—urgency.Lucian was already rerouting systems.“I’m isolating external access points,” he said, voice tight.“If that thing spreads while you’re inside, we won’t be able to contain it.”Cassandra responded immediately,“I’m locking secondary networks. Nothing goes in or out without passing through me.”Victor stood still—watching Elena.“You understand the risk.”It wasn’t a warning.It was acknowledgment.Elena nodded once.“I do.”Rowan didn’t move.Didn’t speak—until she turned toward the exit.Then—“No.”The word cut cleanly through the room.Elena paused.Slowly turned back.Rowan’s gaze didn’t waver.“You’re not going in alone.”Lucian muttered under his breath,“…Here we go.”Elena’s voice was calm.“This isn’t something you can fight.”Rowan stepped closer.“Then it’s not something you should face alo







