MasukThe date on the calendar meant nothing to most people.Just another square.Another Tuesday.To Lys, it was the day everything had started and ended and started again.Contract signing.Collar calibration.A wedding with lawyers instead of vows.The first time Kael had walked into her cage and called it a home.She stared at the little notation Aria had added in the corner of the day on their shared digital calendar:> YEAR X – “CONTRACT DAY” (REBRAND?) *You could just delete it,* Aria said. *Very cathartic. Highly recommend.*Lys sat on the edge of their bed, the evening light slanting in low, painting long shadows across the floorboards.“Or we could… mark it,” Lys said slowly. “Differently.”Kael emerged from the bathroom, towel slung around his neck, hair damp, T‑shirt clinging in a way that still made her pulse do unhelpful things.“Mark what?” he asked.She turned the screen toward him.He grimaced.“Ah,” he said. “That.”They’d never really celebrated anniversaries.They’d ha
A year later, the city woke up slower.Not because it was safer—safety was always relative—but because the constant sense of *something about to break* had eased into *something we can fix when it does.*Lys sat at the narrow desk in their apartment above the main warehouse, bare feet propped on the lower drawer, a cup of coffee cooling at her elbow. Morning light spilled across the surface, catching on a stack of reports Aria had already summarized, and she was now ignoring in favor of watching the courtyard feed on the small screen.Below, in the yard where their sapling had once been the only bit of green, the tree had grown.Its trunk was thicker, branches spreading wide enough to cast a decent patch of shade. A couple of kids sat under it now, one leaning back against the bark, the other drawing furiously in a notebook. Someone—Nia, probably—had strung a line of small paper lanterns between two lower branches.The plaque on the wall had faded a little.THIRD PATH – PLANTED YEAR O
They were halfway through a mind‑numbing budget meeting when Lys decided they were done being responsible adults for the day.Lina was droning (accurately, but still) about projected sanctuary expansion costs. Dima was arguing about fuel prices. Kael was nodding in that way, which meant he’d absorbed every number and hated all of them.Lys stared at the spreadsheet on the wall.The columns blurred.Something inside her just… clicked.“No,” she said.The room stilled.Lina blinked.“Excuse me?” she said.“No,” Lys repeated. “We’re stopping. Now.”Dima’s brows climbed.Jace, for once present and pretending to take notes, perked up instantly.“I knew this day would come,” he said. “Budget mutiny.”Kael turned his head slowly.“Lys,” he said, polite, cautious. “We do need—”“I need you,” she cut in. “Somewhere that doesn’t have fluorescent lighting and a line item for bulletproof glass.”The silence that followed was an impressive feat, considering the number of people in the room.Jace m
They picked a day with no meetings on purpose.No council.No court.No donors to charm, no elders to glare at.Just a pale spring sun, a sky more blue than gray for once, and a rare stretch of hours where the city felt… almost gentle.“Tell me again why we’re going outside,” Kael said, watching Lys rifle through the wardrobe.“Because I’m tired of only seeing the world through warehouse windows and safehouse doors,” she said. “And because I promised Nia I’d prove to her that I have hobbies that aren’t ‘toppling regimes’ and ‘arguing with lawyers.’”*Also,* Aria said, *you’ve spent the last three months stalking around in tactical jackets. It’s time for your arms to meet vitamin D.*Lys pulled out a dress.Simple.Black.Sleeveless.Not cut to flaunt anything in particular—but it left her shoulders bare, and when she turned, the old, jagged line along her left ribs was clearly visible where the fabric dipped.She’d worn it in front of Kael before.In front of their inner circle.She h
Rain turned the city softer.Muted the neon.Blunted the edges of sound.By late afternoon, sheets of water streaked down the warehouse windows, distorting the view of the street into abstract smears of color. The steady drum on the roof filled the space with a white noise that, for once, didn’t make Lys twitch.Most of the building was in low‑gear.Dima had declared it a “paperwork day.”Sanctuary ops ticked along without crisis.No blinking red from Aria.No emergency pings.Just… weather.Lys stood in the doorway of their bedroom, barefoot, watching Kael fail at being off‑duty.He was half on the bed, half propped against the headboard, still in his shirt, sleeves rolled, tablet in hand. A faint frown line had dug itself back in between his brows.“You realize,” she said, “it’s raining. That’s basically a divine mandate to do nothing productive.”He didn’t look up.“I’m reading a report,” he said. “That’s practically leisure.”She crossed the room.Plucked the tablet out of his han
Lys saw her own face on a news feed for the first time—and didn’t flinch.That surprised her.Not because she hadn’t expected it—Aria had been warning her for days that the press, both respectable and underground, were circling.Because the coverage wasn’t a threat report.It was… analysis.She stood in the doorway of the small media room Lina had insisted on building off the warehouse floor, one hand on the frame, watching as a commentator in an expensively neutral suit gestured at a graphic behind her.> THIRD PATH COLLECTIVE: > SANCTUARIES OR SHADOW STATE? “She’s being dramatic on purpose,” Aria said. *Clicks. Ad revenue. All that nonsense.*The graphic showed a map of the city, certain districts shaded in blues and greens where Third Path facilities clustered.“This network of ‘sanctuaries’ and clinics,” the anchor said, “is quietly reshaping former red‑light and conflict zones. Crime rates in these neighborhoods have dropped by as much as twenty percent in the past year. Repo







