FAZER LOGINFIFTY-EIGHT SECONDS.
The basement floor didn't just vibrate; it shrieked. A high-frequency howl tore through the limestone, rattling my molars and making the glass of the monitor screens ripple like water. I lunged for the terminal, my boots skidding on a layer of frost that shouldn't have been there. In the gaps of the foundation above, the sky of Rebirth City had finished its rot, turning from a synthetic blue to a flat, light-eating black.
"Silas, get up!"
He didn't mo
The cannon light did not burn.That was the first wrong thing.Fire would have been honest. Heat, smoke, skin blistering off bone; those were things a body could understand. The Null-Canon gave me none of that. It took the air out of my lungs, the weight out of my blood, and the direction out of the world, then pulled me upward through the place where the basement ceiling used to be.My fingers clawed at nothing.For one stupid, human second, I tried to grab the terminal.Not the Root. Not the Mercury Lines. Not the hidden architecture of Rebirth City.The terminal.The old mechanical keys with blood drying in the cracks. The cracked glass corner where Silas had once slammed his fist and sworn it could survive a direct overload. The ugly little machine that smelled like hot plastic, old dust, and the cheap soap the basement girls used when there was enough water pressure to pretend they were still people.My nails scraped throu
FIFTY-EIGHT SECONDS.The basement floor didn't just vibrate; it shrieked. A high-frequency howl tore through the limestone, rattling my molars and making the glass of the monitor screens ripple like water. I lunged for the terminal, my boots skidding on a layer of frost that shouldn't have been there. In the gaps of the foundation above, the sky of Rebirth City had finished its rot, turning from a synthetic blue to a flat, light-eating black."Silas, get up!"He didn't move. He was a heap of iron and scarred muscle on the floor, his fingers digging into his scalp so hard his knuckles had turned white. His cybernetic eye whirred—a frantic, mechanical clicking—but the iris was gone, replaced by a flickering grey 'loading' icon. The system was formatting him in real-time, scrubbing the Guardian clean of the woman he’d spent months protecting."Who..." He coughed, and the sound was wet, like gravel in a blender. "Target... target identified.
My fingers lock into a jagged ridge of granite that shouldn't be here, anchoring us to the only sliver of the ceiling that hasn't turned into white static.The girl’s weight drags at my shoulder, her scream swallowed by the white noise of the churning throat of gray pixels below. Gravity is glitching, the air tasting like scorched copper as the first Null-Drone recalibrates its weapons for a second pulse.I heave us onto a narrow lip of rendered stone. The strength doesn't feel like mine. It's a surge of foreign current, a jagged lightning bolt shooting through a dying wire.Above us, the three drones hover. Their optic lenses cycle through shades of confused amber, sweeping the area for the anomaly that just absorbed a formatting pulse and lived.I am that anomaly.I press my palms flat against the stone, needing the bite of nineteen-degree granite to prove I am still physical. My chest doesn't heave; it grinds. It feels as if my ribs have b
The white light from the drone’s discharge shears the air an inch above my ear, the heat singeing the frayed threads of my hood. I don’t flinch. My fingers are already buried past the knuckles in the terminal’s glass, the interface yielding like thick, electrified honey as I submerge my consciousness into the city’s Root layer."Move, Silas!" I bark.Silas is a blur of frayed iron and sparking steel. He slams into a support beam, using the momentum to swing upward, his heavy blade grinding through the lead drone’s ceramic casing with a screech that vibrates through my teeth. The machine sputters, trailing black pixels as it hits the floor."Terminal’s live," Silas grunts, his voice a gravelly rasp. He pivots, his cybernetic eye flickering between a dull gray and a frantic, dying amber. "Aria—tell me. Why are we in the dark? Did the Alpha... did Kael send these?"I don’t answer. I don’t have the breath
The white isn't empty; it’s a pressure. It pushes against my eardrums until the bone clicks, smelling of ionized air and scorched hair.Silas’s fingers are anchors of bruised heat around my wrist, the only tether left while the basement re-renders in jagged pulses of steel.I press my free hand against the nearest server rack. The metal is freezing, biting into my skin with a reality that hurts."Stay with me," Silas grunts.His voice rasps over the high-frequency whine of the cooling units. A static hiss snaps from the housing nearest us—a sharp crack of discharged energy that leaves the taste of copper on my tongue.I pull my arm back. It isn't a jerk, but a slow, heavy strength that forces his grip to break.My skin feels like live wire. The Mercury Lines—the liquid silver maps of the city’s power—are no longer just under my skin. They are the skin.They pulse with a molten gold light that bleeds
The white isn't light. It’s a pressurized void, a gap in the code where the Moonstone Citadel used to be. I press my palm against the basement wall, the stone grinding into my skin until the grit draws blood.Forty-two degrees. The biting cold is the only thing proving I haven't been deleted along with the rest of the room.Leo’s pulse thrums against my lower ribs. It’s a steady, rhythmic vibration, a low-frequency broadcast that anchors my weight to the floor. In this vacuum, his heartbeat is the only source of gravity I have left.The white fractures.The basement bleeds back into existence, but the rendering is staggered. The server racks are jagged, their edges pixelating into static. The air tastes like scorched copper and ozone.Rebirth City has stabilized for now, but the floor is buried under a layer of fine, gray ash—the incinerated remains of the code Serena tried to purge.I pull my hand from the wall. The
The underground garage felt hollow and airless, stripped of warmth and sound.Phoenix moved through it without running.Leo lay heavy in her arms, his breath shallow and uneven, his skin far too pale beneath the flickering lights. She held him close, every step measured, controlled—because panic wa
The North Wing dungeon was not a place of stone and iron. It was a place of forgotten things.Located three stories beneath the manicured gardens, the air was thick and wet, heavy with the scent of rust and ancient mold. The silence pressed against the eardrums like a physical weight.Kael walked
The silence in the medical wing pressed down harder than the storm raging outside.The transfusion pump had stopped. Leo slept now, his small chest rising and falling in a rhythm no longer frantic—only drained, fragile, real. The ashen gray had faded from his skin, replaced by the faint pink of lif
The document lay on the bedside table, its red Priority Termination stamp stark beneath the fluorescent lights.Leo was asleep again. His breathing was steady now—no longer fragile, only deeply exhausted. The faint scent of pine lingered in the room, anchored by the quiet rhythm of machines and the







