로그인“Victor?!” Jack grabbed the communicator abruptly. This unexpected voice, like a ripple in an impenetrable suffocation of despair, screamed, “How do you have this channel?!”
“Enough talk, boss!” Victor’s rough roar, broken and intermittent, was mixed with the intense gunfire and explosions. “Those ‘monsters’ in black suits…and those crazed cops…they’ve sealed off the whole of New York! I…cough&hellip
Jack Miller stood beside the Sterling dinner table with a serving spoon in his hand and no god in his skull.That was the first terror.Not Vance's smile. Not Susan Sterling's perfume cutting through roasted lamb and old money. Not David Sterling's oily satisfaction from the far side of the table. Not even Katherine, seated three chairs away in white, beautiful and cold, her eyes still fixed on the untouched plate in front of her.The terror was silence.No mission prompt.No predatory points.No warning.No voice telling him what humiliation was worth.The system that had once turned shame into fuel had gone quiet so completely that Jack could hear the old house breathing around him. He could hear silverware against porcelain, wine moving in crystal, Susan's irritated exhale, David's tongue touching a molar before he prepared another insult.He could hear his own heart.Human.Too human.Across the room, Preston Vance smil
The Source Code dimension began to tear.It did not crack like glass or burn like paper. It lost agreement. One section still believed it was a courtroom. Another insisted it was a nursery. The maze tried to reassemble under everyone's feet and failed because Haley had somehow convinced part of it that floors were a social construct.The Tail surged through the disagreement.The Prime Analyst stabilized what it could, white architecture bracing against black coils.Katherine stood at the center of the Genesis Protocol with blood on her hands and equations in her eyes, building a solution fast enough to frighten the universe.Jack knew that look.It meant she had found a way.It also meant the way was going to hurt."Say it," he said.She did not look away from the code. That alone told him enough."The firewall cannot remain in its current form. The Analyst is right about one thing. Something has to stand between unbounded life and t
The Tail entered Genesis like a creditor breaking into a nursery.Black absence spilled through the crack in the protocol, turning lines of code into unpaid invoices and mission prompts into chains. The Source dimension buckled under the contradiction: the Tail was not authorized, but it owned enough discarded endings to pretend authority until someone could prove otherwise.The Prime Analyst's architecture flared.External collection entity violates review jurisdiction.The Tail answered with a hiss that turned several code spirals into ash.Jurisdiction purchased through collateral.Haley glared at the Analyst. "You let a debt snake buy the room?"The Analyst paused.Unhelpful framing."Accurate framing," Katherine snapped.The Tail lunged toward the baby file.Jack moved first.Restrictions crushed down again, but the rewritten interface rose inside him, gold and red braided together.Not a mission.A choice.
The Genesis Protocol did not unfold like a document. It hatched. Layers of code peeled open in translucent shells, each one containing older instructions beneath. Jack watched the system that had once whispered missions, rewards, penalties, and predatory logic into his mind reveal itself as something less mystical and more insulting. A training environment. A leash with achievements. Katherine stepped closer, eyes moving fast. "This is not the same structure your parents built." Jack looked at her. She pointed to a shell near the core. "Here. Neural interface architecture. Adaptive skill packaging. Bloodline activation safeguards. This layer is protective. Crude in places, but protective." The next shell rotated. "That layer is not." Haley read aloud slowly. "Humiliation conversion protocol. Shame-to-escalation pipeline. Spousal proximity trigger. Ew. Ew forever." The Prime Analyst spoke from above. Approved cultivatio
Haley did not enter the white room.The white room entered Haley.One second she stood beside Jack and Katherine, pale but upright. The next, the maze erased the distance, and Haley Sterling was alone in a space so blank that even her shadow seemed embarrassed to exist.Jack saw her through a transparent wall.He hit it immediately.The wall did not move.Katherine, still bleeding silver logic from her encounter, forced herself upright. "It isolated her."The Analyst answered.Chaotic anchor requires audience feedback, emotional mirroring, and external contradiction. Remove environment. Observe collapse.Haley stood in the room, arms wrapped around herself.No followers.No enemies.No family.No bad lighting to complain about.No crisis to make absurd.Just white.Jack felt dread crawl up his spine.The Source had misread many things. It had not misread this.Haley's chaos was not random noise
The version of Katherine beyond the wall sat at a table made of perfect proof.She wore white.Not bridal white. Sterile white. Laboratory white. The kind of white that made blood look like a data point.Her hair was pulled back. Her eyes were clear, calm, and empty of all unnecessary softness. Around her floated a thousand equations modeling Jack's pain as variables in a survival engine.Haley recoiled. "I do not like Corporate Elsa."Katherine's real self did not blink.The white Katherine looked up."That nickname is inefficient."Haley whispered, "Oh God, she is worse."The maze spoke.ACCEPT LOGIC FUNCTION TO PROCEED.White Katherine folded her hands."The scenario required an intellect capable of constraining Alpha escalation. Emotional involvement was statistically undesirable. I avoided it in the original model. That was correct."Real Katherine stepped forward.Jack reached for her.She shook her hea
The Obsidian facility was alive again, its mechanical heart thrumming with the immense power of the rebooted cold-fusion reactor. But for Jack Sterling, the restoration of light had brought a new, deeper darkness.He sat in the isolation ward of the medical bay, a room constructed of transpa
The descent into the bowels of the Obsidian facility felt like a journey into the throat of a dying beast.The emergency lights were failing, casting long, flickering shadows that danced on the rusted metal walls of the service elevator shaft. Jack, Catherine, Marcus, and Dr. Aris stood in t
The sound wasn't the rhythmic marching of boots, nor the mechanical hum of tanks. It was worse. It was a roar—a chaotic, organic, terrifying roar that vibrated through the reinforced concrete walls of the Obsidian facility.Jack Sterling stood in the command center, his hands gripping
The world outside the Obsidian Lab was burning, but within its shielded walls, a fragile, twenty-year-old peace was being pieced back together.Jack’s father, Robert Sterling, was a man who looked like he had been carved from the same granite as the mountains. His face was leaner than







