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Chapter Fourty

Author: Eric Parsley
last update publish date: 2026-05-07 17:30:31

The appearance of Arthur Hart was not a resurrection; it was a haunting. He stood in the red dust of the wash, wearing the same salt-and-pepper tweed blazer he’d worn the night of the "accident" at the Sterling lab. He looked older, his face a cartography of grief and genius, and he leaned on a cane that hummed with a familiar, low-frequency vibration.

The sandstone wall—the living tomb of Ethan—groaned in response to his presence. The silver threads pulsed a frantic, blinding white, the tecton
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  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Fifty One

    The transition from the subterranean steel tunnel to the surface wasn't a gradual incline; it was a violent eruption.The armored transport tore through the northern ridge’s exit gate with a deafening *shriek* of tearing metal, launching the multi-ton vehicle directly into the teeth of a blinding northern blizzard. The red tactical high-beams slammed into a wall of solid white, scattering the light into a chaotic, bloody fog that made it impossible to tell where the sky ended and the cliffside began.Inside the cedar-lined cabin, the sudden change in velocity threw us off balance. Julian was tossed against the rough planks, his iron pry-bar clattering across the corrugated steel floor. Ethan caught himself on the edge of the empty wooden cradle, his teeth bared as his ruined leg buckled under the G-force. I slammed my shoulder against the reinforced glass partition, my arms locking like a vice around Florence to absorb the impact."The navigation overlay is blind!" Julian shouted, dra

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Fifty

    The darkness of the pine-scented tunnel didn't just feel cold; it felt industrialized. The raw, damp earth beneath our boots rapidly gave way to corrugated steel plating—the structural flooring of a hidden Vesper arterial line.Eighty yards ahead, the mechanical hum of the armored transport grew from a distant vibration into a throat-rattling roar. Red tactical high-beams cut through the thick haze of dust and mercury vapor, blinding us, pinning us against the narrow metal walls like insects on a display board."Grace, drop behind me," Ethan rasped.He didn't have the Unit precision anymore, but the visceral, human instinct to protect was violently loud. He braced his good leg against a steel structural rib, his hands gripping the jagged, melted edge of the tungsten scepter like a weapon. Faint sparks of dying electrical current still spat from the raw flesh behind his ear, his biological systems screaming as they tried to process the feedback of the broken loom."I’m not dropping ba

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Forty Nine

    The first second didn't drop; it struck.On the screen of the manual device, the numbers flipped from *00:00:90* to *00:00:89*, and with that single tick, the gravity inside the liquid-mirror sphere shifted. The mercury coating the walls didn't slide down the granite; it began to thicken, its surface tightening into a polished, seamless chrome that reflected our faces in grotesque, infinite repetitions."Ethan, the clock!" I screamed, my voice bouncing off the metallic curves until it sounded like a choir of panicked Graces. I squeezed Florence closer, her tiny fingers digging into the wool of my lapel, her breath a warm, frantic puff against my throat.Ethan didn't look at the device. He was already moving. He slammed the point of the broken tungsten scepter against the mercury wall, but the metal didn't crack. It parted like cold grease, swallowing the tip of the rod before sealing around it with a heavy, pressurized *schluck*. The feedback hit his arm instantly—a violent, purple cu

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Forty Eight

    The fall didn't taste like wind; it tasted like metal.The cold, heavy stench of liquid mercury rushed up to meet us as the salt flats caved in, a silver throat swallowing the sky. I held Florence crushed against my ribs, my arm locked around her tiny spine so tightly I could feel the frantic, rabbit-kick of her heartbeat against my chest. Above us, the starlight was choked out by collapsing red dirt; below us, a mirror of fluid metal rushed up with terrifying velocity.We didn't hit a hard floor. We hit a viscous, shifting current. The mercury didn't splash; it parted with a thick, heavy groan, a dense velvet fluid that rejected our buoyancy while dragging our limbs down into the dark.A hand grabbed the collar of my soot-stained coat. It was Ethan. His grip was frantic, his fingers digging into the fabric with a raw, desperate strength that owed nothing to Vesper subroutines. The blue pilot light at his temple was dead, replaced by a jagged, bloody smear where his interface had burn

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Forty Seven

    The mechanical click-click of twelve locking needles cut through the desert static with the chilling precision of a mass execution. The Vesper board of directors stood like obsidian monoliths on the clean-cut elevator platform, their identical charcoal-gray suits swallowing the pale moonlight.In the center of them stood Beatrice Vance, her posture rigid, her silver-rimmed glasses reflecting the cold, mathematical white of the salt flats. And in her arms, resting inside a small silver basket, was the real Florence.The baby’s cry was ragged, thin, and undeniably, beautifully human. It was a sharp contrast to the digital screech still echoing from the dying, bleeding simulation of her twenty-year-old self currently twitching in the sand a few paces away."Beatrice, don't do this," I whispered, the words freezing in the midnight air. I took a step forward, but the twelve directors mirrored each other’s movements, their raised palms pulsing with a faint, localized frequency that made the

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Forty Six

    The wind on the salt flats grew teeth, biting through the coarse fabric of my grease-stained coat. The live video feed on the manual device's screen remained frozen in a terrifying, high-fidelity loop: the Burnt Ethan, a ghost of ash and exposed circuitry, methodically carving a violent groove into his own knee on the porch of our ruined mill.The fourth weaver is already inside the house.I stared from the glowing screen to the figure walking north across the desert. The silhouette of the twenty-year-old woman—the one who carried our daughter’s face, our daughter’s name, and the integrated tungsten ring in her palm—didn't hesitate. Her bare feet left glowing, rhythmic trails of silver and mahogany light in the cracked earth, a perfect, mathematical calculation of a human gait."Ethan," I choked out, my voice dropping into that raw, unpolished rasp that the Weaver's logic had spent hours trying to smooth away. "Look at her cadence. Look at the way her shoulders don't shift when her we

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Twenty Eight

    The Massachusetts air was thick with the smell of scorched ozone and ancient dust as we emerged from the belly of the textile mill. The world outside didn’t know the digital apocalypse that had just been averted; the sun continued its slow, indifferent descent, painting the rusted brick chimneys in

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Twenty Seven

    The private jet sat on the tarmac like a silent, silver needle, its engines whistling a low, mournful frequency that seemed to vibrate in the very marrow of my bones. It bore no markings, no logos, no corporate identity—just a stark, polished exterior that reflected the bruising purple of the Pacif

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Twenty Six

    The first week of being "nobody" felt like learning to breathe underwater. The silence of the redwood coast was heavy, a physical weight that pressed against the eardrums. There were no pings from high-frequency trading algorithms, no frantic whispers from stylists, and no cold, calculated directiv

  • Reclaiming Mrs. Wolfe   Chapter Twenty Five

    The rhythmic thwack-thwack-thwack of the helicopter blades was the heartbeat of our new reality. As the Mojave floor fell away, turning the jagged peaks of the Dead Zone into a miniature set of cardboard cutouts, the cabin of the civilian chopper felt like a pressurized vacuum. For the first time i

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