로그인A deep dive does not feel like falling.
The sea tells that lie first.
You are dropping at the speed of a slow elevator into a dark that has never once held light, and your body insists you are sitting still in a cold metal room with six people who might kill you.
The pressure does not announce itself either. It just begins to take things. The first hour it takes the give out of the hull, so that every surface goes hard and exact.
The second hour it takes the air, o
Damian finds me in the maintenance alcove an hour later, which means he has spent that hour learning the one corner of this city the cameras do not watch, the same way I would have, the same way Leo did before either of us.“They’re keeping you comfortable,” he says, taking in the alcove, the pipes, the thin place in the field.“That’s their mistake. Comfortable people wander.”“How did you get free of your handlers?”“I’m a paying customer. They escort me. They don’t cage me. Greed has manners.”He stops a careful arm’s length away, and even here, alone, he stands like a man being watched, because we both always are.There is a drip somewhere behind the pipes, one drop every seven seconds into a metal pan. Someone has taped a cracked pressure gauge to the wall with yellowing medical tape. The needle is dead, stuck forever at a reading that would have killed everyo
The dark-haired woman, whose name is Mara, shows me how to find my brother. It is not a place you walk to.It is the first thing I have to unlearn.Leo is not somewhere.Not in a room. Not behind a door. Not a body I can reach with my body.He is the walls answering back.Mara takes me to a maintenance alcove deep in the residential tier, a dead-end space full of the city’s plumbing, conduit and ductwork and the soft roar of the systems that keep ten thousand sleepers alive, and she puts my hand flat against a cold access panel and tells me to use the leash, the bud in my skull, here, where the field is thin and the cameras do not bother to watch the pipes.“He found this spot for us,” she says.“He finds things. Reach for him here. And brace yourself, the first time. It will not feel like a call.”I press the bud. I reach down the dead relays the way I always have. And for the first time it is not
I did not burn for them.I sat in the soft chair with my hands folded and my silver banked cold and I told the clinician, in the flat pleasant voice of a tired traveler, that I was too exhausted from the descent to perform, that surely a carrier deserved a night’s rest before being read.She did not like it.But she could not call a tired pregnant woman a liar in a city built on the fiction of gentleness, so she smiled a thinner smile and said we would resume tomorrow, and they did not force me, and the not-forcing told me how badly they want the reading to look like consent.Then they take me to live among the tame ones, while I rest. To help me settle, Caleb says. To let me see how good it can be.Four of them wait in the quarters they give me, and they are the worst thing I have seen in this whole city of worse things, worse than the racks, because the racks are asleep and these are awake and have chosen this.They are me. That is t
They do not put me in a cell. I keep waiting for the cell, the way you wait for a second shoe, and it never comes, and the absence of it is its own message.Instead they take me to a room that is almost beautiful. Pale curved walls, warm light, a chair that adjusts itself to my spine when I sit, a low table with water and a bowl that smells like real fruit.It is the room you would put an honored guest in, or a difficult patient, or a very expensive animal you intend to keep a long time and want to keep calm. A cell tells you what you are.This room is worse, because it asks me to forget. Caleb stays.Two others come, a woman with a tablet and the still hands of a clinician, and a tall man who does not speak and whose only job, as far as I can tell, is to be the size he is by the door.None of them are armed in any way I can see, and that is the most frightening thing in the room, because it means they are not afraid of me, which means they think t
I look at the racks, and the reason I came down here breaks its spine.I came eleven thousand meters to break one boy out of one cell.I had it sized that way on purpose. A cell is a thing you can picture. A brother is a thing you can carry up a ladder.The size of the job was the only part of it I could hold in my two hands, and I held it all the way down through the dark and the knocking and the crack in the hull, one boy, one door, one way home.And now I am standing on a gallery above a shaft full of my sleeping kindred, tens of thousands of them, and the job will not stay the size I made it. Caleb is still talking.He has the easy momentum of a man who has given this tour before, to other frightened arrivals, and watched their fear turn into the soft surrender he calls peace.He talks about yield and stability, about how the surface world is a slaughter and Sector Seven is a garden, about how out there a waking source is hunted and in h
We walk in like guests, because that is the only weapon we have left.The young man, who gives his name as Caleb the way you would offer a hand, leads us up off the dock and into the city, and we follow with the postures of people who have come willingly.The whole way I can feel Damian beside me running the same play I am running, the old play from the house, the one where you wear the face the captor wants to see and use the time it buys you to learn the building.We were good at this once, the two of us, on opposite sides of it. We are better at it now that we are on the same side, which is its own small horror.“Smile when he points at things,” Damian murmurs, under the cover of an awed tourist’s pause.“You’re a defector. You came to come home. He wants to believe it. Let him.”“And you?”“I’m the broker who delivered you. Greedy, reasonable, here to be paid.”
The magnetic seal of the nursery door settles with a heavy, metallic thud that travels through the soles of my feet.I stay pinned against the wall, listening.My right arm is dead weight—a limb of static and ice from the bio-EMP I channeled through the locket. The DNA Key collected its tax in full,
Forty percent.The ticker doesn't blink. It ticks upward, one decimal place at a time, with the indifferent patience of a machine that doesn't care what it's dismantling.On the stolen tablet's screen, my skeleton burns incandescent silver—a lattice of high-conduction filigree where bone should be.
The utility closet door doesn't creak. Damian doesn't tolerate human failures like squeaky hinges. He buys silence.I'm holding the Syndicate harvester by her ankles.Her skin has already gone waxy, the fight-heat draining from her body, replaced by the cooling-mutton chill of the recently dead. The
The red light doesn't blink. It bleeds.I take my hand away from the intercom panel. The wood is still warm where Leo's signal-jammer scorched the line. My skin crawls.Leo called me an antenna. If he's right, every second I spend in this suite is a broadcast address—coordinates being sold to whoeve







