Shantali Jackson awakens from cryostasis to discover she's been asleep for over 600 years. A working-class woman from the pre-collapse era, she finds herself in a sterile medical facility, where staff address her as royalty and claim she's the beloved of Prince Costa—a man she barely remembers meeting at Le Glow Club one fateful night. As fragmented memories surface, Shantali learns the devastating truth: she and Costa were never willing participants in the preservation program. After publicly defying their arranged marriages to choose each other, they were declared enemies of the state and forcibly preserved by the Emergency Preservation Committee. They've been awakened seventeen times for six centuries, only to have their memories wiped when they refused to comply with the Council's genetic breeding program. This time is different—the memory suppression technology is failing, and ghostly echowisps (manifestations of psychic trauma) guide them through their escape. With the help of Marcus, a resistance member, they flee to the underground networks where Shantali discovers shocking truths: her half-brother Elliot became a resistance leader, Costa's parents have been working to undermine the Council for centuries, and the outside world has been habitable for generations. The couple escapes to Haven's Gate, one of seven thriving Eastern Sanctuaries where humanity has rebuilt naturally. But freedom is short-lived when they learn Dr. Thorne and other preservation specialists are using extracted consciousness data to create a new form of control—artificial minds programmed for obedience. Refusing to remain passive victims, Shantali and Costa make a bold choice: they'll pose as desperate refugees seeking re-preservation, walking willingly into Dr. Thorne's trap to stop his plans once and for all. Their love story becomes humanity's last hope against a system that would sacrifice free will for genetic perfection. A tale of choice, resistance, and the power of love.
Lihat lebih banyakI don’t remember very much about the life that I once lived before I meet the man that I fell in love with. I have fragments of memory like it was told to me by a wondering future teller that I was to meet the love of my life that night only if I went to the Le Glow Club but I’d only meet him if I went there as I went home that day. I found it hard to believe as I had always been overlooked my men in the past so I really didn’t think much of it but straighten up my bag and started to head towards the tube sky station somehow I still found my way to the Le Glow Club so I thought to myself I guess I’ve got nothing to lose except for a good telling off once I finally got home.
However my father always told me that a girls only job was to marry a man nothing more. Although not that he was really home for me from the little that I could remember of his was that my father was hardly every home. So I doubt I ever knew what he did for a job.
I only had the faintest memories of my mother but that’s all they were now I didn’t even remember what she even looked like or sounded like.
What I do remember was opening my eyes like I had been asleep to find people standing over me some where smiling, their some of their faces were covered. I awoke as the last group began to cry I tried to sit up a middle aged women spoke softly, “Lay still my lady you’ve been asleep for along time and so has your beloved Prince Costa will be awake again soon.”
“Who?” I asked.
“I’m not surprised that you can’t remember much from your life before you were put into your cryostasis on and off over 600 years my lady but I’m sure that it will all start to comeback with time,” the elderly woman spoke again.
I began to try and sit up more slowly this time although that didn’t workout for me so well either.
"Easy now," the elderly woman cautioned, placing a gentle hand on my shoulder. "Your muscles haven't been properly used in centuries."
I blinked rapidly, trying to process what she'd said. Six hundred years? Cryostasis? Prince Costa? None of it made sense, yet something about the name stirred a distant feeling within me.
"Where am I?" I managed to ask, my voice raspy from disuse.
The room around me was pristine white with curved walls that seemed to glow from within. Strange devices hovered nearby, emitting soft beeps and occasional flashes of blue light. The people attending me wore fitted garments that shimmered slightly as they moved.
"You're in the Royal Restoration Chamber of New Avalon," another voice said—a tall man with silver streaks in his dark hair. "I'm Dr. Thorne, Chief Restoration Specialist. We've been maintaining your stasis pod for generations, waiting for the right time to awaken you."
"But why? Why was I..." I struggled to find the words.
"Preserved?" Dr. Thorne finished for me. "The Great Collapse was imminent. You and Prince Costa were among the selected few meant to rebuild civilization once the world recovered. Your genetic profiles were exceptional, and your bond was deemed strong enough to withstand the temporal displacement."
My head throbbed. Bond? Prince? Nothing made sense. I closed my eyes, trying to grasp at the fragments floating in my mind. The Le Glow Club. A face in the darkness. A hand reaching for mine.
"I remember music," I whispered. "And someone's eyes. Green, like forest shadows."
The elderly woman smiled knowingly. "That would be Costa. His eyes were famous throughout the old kingdoms."
A younger attendant approached with a small device that pulsed with gentle light. "My lady, this will help ease your transition. May I?"
I nodded weakly, and she pressed it against my temple. Warmth spread through my mind, and suddenly images began to flow more clearly—not memories exactly, but something adjacent to them.
Than a flash of some memories for my Father and Mother but they weren’t royalty but maybe be upper middle class or lower upper class?
The confusion must have shown on my face because Dr. Thorne stepped closer, his expression growing serious. "What are you remembering?"
"My parents," I said slowly. "They weren't... they weren't royal. My father worked somewhere, left early, came home late. My mother made breakfast in a small kitchen with yellow curtains." The images felt more real than anything these people were telling me. "We lived in a flat near the transport lines."
An uncomfortable silence fell over the room. I caught several of the attendants exchanging glances with Dr. Thorne.
"Memory displacement is common after extended stasis," the elderly woman said quickly, but her voice had lost its earlier warmth. "Your mind is simply confused, mixing fragments of dreams with reality."
But I could see it now—clearer than before. The cramped living space. My mother's tired smile as she packed my lunch. The way my father barely looked up from his news tablet at breakfast. These weren't the memories of a princess.
"Show me a mirror," I said, surprising myself with the firmness in my voice.
"My lady, perhaps you should rest—"
"Show me a mirror." I tried to sit up again, ignoring the weakness in my limbs. "Now."
Dr. Thorne hesitated, then nodded to one of the attendants. A reflective surface materialized in the air before me, and I found myself staring at a face I recognized—but not from any royal portrait.
It was the face of a working-class girl who had snuck out to a nightclub against her better judgment. The face of someone who had been overlooked, invisible, ordinary.
"Who is Prince Costa?" I asked, my voice barely above a whisper. "And why do you really need us?"
As we stepped into the corridor, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the polished walls—no longer the confused girl who had awakened an hour ago, but someone harder, someone who had lived through seventeen lifetimes of betrayal.Behind us, Dr. Thorne's voice echoed through the corridor, “No matter what you go your highnesses they will find you in the end.”"They can try," Costa replied without turning back.The hallway stretched before us like a gleaming arterial vein in the heart of the facility. The echowisps moved with purpose, their luminescence pulsing in time with our footsteps. Some darted ahead while others lingered near us, their whispers creating a protective cocoon of sound that masked our movements."The resistance has been monitoring the preservation chambers for generations," Marcus explained as we hurried along. "We've mapped every corridor, every security protocol. There are people waiting to help you disappear."My legs trembled with each step, muscles remembering
Marcus nodded. "Those who believe humanity should evolve naturally, not through genetic manipulation and control. They've been watching the preservation program for generations, waiting for the right moment."Costa's grip tightened on my hand. "And you're part of it?""My grandmother was awakened and reset six times before her pod finally failed," Marcus said quietly. "I grew up watching echowisps dancing around her grave, whispering fragments of her refusals."The pieces clicked into place. "That's why you can see them too," I said. "The echowisps. They're connected to those who the memory wipes have manipulated."Dr. Thorne lunged for the wall panel, but Costa was faster despite his weakened state. He grabbed a medical instrument from a nearby tray and jammed it into the communications port."I wouldn't," Costa said calmly as sparks erupted from the panel. "Now, we're going to walk out of here. All of us. Anyone who wants to stay can stay, but no alarms, no warnings."The elderly wo
The elderly woman stepped forward. "My lord, the Council felt it would ease her transition if—""If you lied to her," Costa finished, finally turning to face them. "I told you I wouldn't allow it."I stared at him, pieces of memory crystallizing with each passing second. "The club," I murmured. "You weren't supposed to be there either."Costa's smile returned, softer now. "My security detail had quite the time tracking me down. I'd slipped away during a state function—needed to breathe air that wasn't perfumed with politics.""And I was running late for my night shift," I continued, the memory unfurling like a flower. "I cut through the alley behind Le Glow...""Where I was hiding from my handlers," Costa finished. "You nearly knocked me over.""You caught me," I whispered. "You caught me and said—""'If you wanted to fall for me, you could have just said hello,'" we recited together.The medical staff exchanged uneasy glances as Costa helped me to my feet. My legs trembled beneath me
A knock at the door snapped everyone’s heads towards the door. An attendant of no more than 20 came in. “Ah, sir. We have gone through the archives. It appears that Prince Costa’s beloved was the only daughter of an average household, lower-upper class at best. He was meant to marry someone else, but it appears in the records that he met Lady Shantali Imogen Jackson.”The blood drained from Dr. Thorne's face. He spun toward the young attendant with fury blazing in his eyes. "You were instructed to review those files in private!"But it was too late. The name hit me like a physical blow—Shantali Imogen Jackson. My name. Not "my lady" or "princess," but the name my mother had whispered when she thought I was sleeping, the name scrawled on school reports that my father never bothered to read."He wasn't supposed to marry me," I said, the pieces clicking into place. "He chose me."The elderly woman stepped forward, her gentle demeanour replaced by something harder. "The genetic matching w
I don’t remember very much about the life that I once lived before I meet the man that I fell in love with. I have fragments of memory like it was told to me by a wondering future teller that I was to meet the love of my life that night only if I went to the Le Glow Club but I’d only meet him if I went there as I went home that day. I found it hard to believe as I had always been overlooked my men in the past so I really didn’t think much of it but straighten up my bag and started to head towards the tube sky station somehow I still found my way to the Le Glow Club so I thought to myself I guess I’ve got nothing to lose except for a good telling off once I finally got home.However my father always told me that a girls only job was to marry a man nothing more. Although not that he was really home for me from the little that I could remember of his was that my father was hardly every home. So I doubt I ever knew what he did for a job.I only had the faintest memories of my mother but t
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