Mag-log inThe trek continued. The sun began to set, painting the jungle canopy in blood-red hues. The shadows lengthened, twisting into monstrous shapes.
They reached a ridge overlooking a valley. In the center of the valley, a river cut through the green like a black scar. The "Silent River."
"We need to cross that," Jack pointed.
"How?" Ben asked. "I don't see a bridge. Or a boat rental."
"We build one," Marcus said. "Or we steal one."
Suddenly, a drumbeat echoed th
Katherine had always hated running from a room before she understood it.Running meant the enemy had forced tempo. It meant she was reacting to architecture instead of rewriting it. It meant someone else had chosen which problem mattered most.Nightingale Sanatorium gave her no time to be offended by that.The white nursery convulsed.Cribs slammed against walls. Files flew open, spilling old family names and possible futures like frightened birds. Lionel Pierce's wheelchair rolled backward without anyone touching it, oxygen tubes snapping taut across his face. Susan grabbed the chair handles before he tipped over.Haley stared at her phone.RUN.The golden word pulsed once.Then again.Harder."Katherine," Haley said. "When the unborn legal baby tells us to run, I feel like we should respect his brand."Katherine scanned the room.Vance's projection had vanished when the press room began collapsing, but his smile seemed to
David Sterling entered the press room with perfect posture, a charcoal suit, and a bullet hole of black ink in the center of his forehead.Haley's voice came through Jack's earpiece first."No."Then Susan's.A wounded sound. Not a word. Worse than a word.Katherine did not speak at all.Jack understood that silence. Katherine's anger became quiet only when it was arranging knives by category.David looked around the ruined press room with the mild disdain he had once reserved for Jack's cooking, Katherine's compassion, Haley's mistakes, and any room where he was not the most important parasite."Well," David said. "This is dramatic."Marcus raised his weapon.Jack touched his arm. "Wait."David smiled. "Still hiding behind soldiers, Jack?""No," Marcus said. "He is keeping me from being rude."David's smile faded a degree.Vance stood beside the podium, black ink dripping from his hand into the floor. The Tail's
Jack hated falling.He had fallen through markets, contracts, Source corridors, draft rooms, memory layers, and at least three places that Haley had later described as "bad elevators with theology." Falling always meant someone else had chosen the direction.This time, Jack chose faster."Marcus!""On it."Marcus threw himself into the collapsing aisle and caught Dana Ruiz by the back of her jacket before she vanished into the black paper below. His other hand closed around a camera rig, using it as an anchor. The camera snapped free from its tripod. Marcus snarled, drove one foot through the floor where the floor was still pretending to exist, and held.Jack moved into the next row.A reporter fell past him, eyes wide, mouth open around his own name."Caleb!"Jack caught his wrist.The man was heavier than he looked. Fear made bodies dense. The hole below him was not empty. It was full of pages, all blank, all eager.Caleb Pric
The lights went out in Vance Capital's press room, but the darkness did not arrive like ordinary darkness.Ordinary darkness had mercy. It hid fear. It gave people permission to become bodies instead of performances. This darkness did the opposite. It made every breath sound recorded. Every heartbeat felt indexed. Every swallowed scream seemed sorted into a folder before it left the throat.Jack stood still.That was the first rule after the first judgment. Do not move because the room wants motion. Do not speak because silence feels like surrender. Do not strike because the enemy has offered violence as a hallway with lights at the end.Marcus shifted one step closer to Jack's left side.That was all.One step.The movement was almost silent, but Jack heard leather flex, muscle tighten, metal whisper beneath cloth. Marcus had no cosmic armor now. No future shield blazing across his chest. No Source-given certainty that he would survive the next do
Jack entered the Vance Capital press room with Marcus at his left and no system in his head.Cameras turned.Reporters surged.Vance stood at the podium beneath lights bright enough to bleach mercy from a man's face. Behind him, the altered Vance logo curved into its serpent shape more openly now. People still did not see it. Or they saw it and translated it into branding.That was how ownership survived. It taught the room to call the warning a design choice."Mr. Miller," Vance said. "You came."Jack stopped ten feet from the podium.Marcus scanned exits, hands relaxed, body ready. He wore no future shield, no cosmic armor, no Guardian certainty. Just a dark suit strained over dangerous shoulders and the calm of a man who had decided where to stand.Jack said, "You invited me.""I invited you to sign.""You invited me to choose under threat."Vance smiled for the cameras. "Dramatic language from a man whose wife is currently d
Nightingale Sanatorium still looked like a place where rich families sent guilt to die quietly.Katherine hated it on sight.The lawns were too neat. The brick facade too tasteful. The windows too clean for a building that made its money storing secrets in human bodies. Haley stood beside her in oversized sunglasses and a cream coat she had described as "heiress under legal threat." Susan stood on Katherine's other side, clutching her purse with both hands."You came here before?" Haley asked.Katherine looked at the brass sign. "Not in this version."Haley went still.Susan whispered, "This version."Katherine did not explain.They entered under false names that would not survive serious inspection, which was fine because Aaliyah had already replaced serious inspection with a looping maintenance alert and a fake plumbing emergency. The lobby smelled of lilies and disinfectant. An elderly woman played piano in the corner, repeating the same fo
The extraction from the Amazon river delta had been a blur of rotor wash, mud, and the metallic taste of adrenaline crashing into exhaustion. Now, the silence of the Leviathan—the Ouroboros faction's flagship submarine—was absolute, a heavy, pressurized quiet that felt less l
The apex of the Pyramid was not a room of technology. It was a garden.The roof was a transparent dome, allowing the moonlight to filter in. The floor was covered in lush, bioluminescent grass. Trees with translucent leaves whispered in a breeze that shouldn't exist.And in the cent
The silence inside the Pyramid was not the silence of an empty room. It was the silence of a held breath.Jack led the way, the red flare sputtering in his left hand, casting long, erratic shadows against the obsidian walls. The air here was cool, dry, and smelled faintly of antiseptic and
The Pyramid of the Flower was not a ruin. It was a fortress.Rising three hundred feet out of the jungle floor, the structure was a seamless geometric marvel of black obsidian. Vines—the size of suspension cables—wrapped around it, pulsing with a faint blue bioluminescence, act







