MasukThe initial blast had ripped the North Quadrant open, but it was the secondary incendiaries that turned our sanctuary into a vision of hell.
I was thrown against the central assembly table, the wind knocked out of me. My ears were a high-pitched whine of static, but as I scrambled to my feet, I felt the Suit tightening around my ribs. The weave had hardened during the impact, absorbing a blow that should have
This wasn't the city I remembered. This Miami was a masterpiece of order.The streets were too clean. There was no noise here, no shouting, no sirens, no music. Just the low hum of the Pulse, a frequency so subtle you felt it in your marrow rather than heard it with your ears."It’s wrong," Maya whispered, her hand instinctively going to her throat where the dampeners had once been.She looked at the passing citizens, their faces smoothed into masks of contentment."They’re not happy. They’re just... empty.""They’re synchronized," I said, pulling my hood lower to shadow my face."It’s a living infrastructure. The Pulse doesn't just block pain; it replaces the individual consciousness. If you step out of time, the Vanguard knows."We moved through the city, sticking to the shadows of the loading docks.
The five minutes we allowed ourselves had stretched into ten, but nobody complained. Watching Gideon and Maya hold onto each other made me realize that our war wasn't just about killing Silas Vance; it was about reclaiming the pieces of humanity he had shattered.The distant whine of a Vanguard drone-sweep echoed through the vents, a reminder that the hunt was still on.Maya finally pulled back, wiping her eyes. She stood up, her posture straighter, her Apex lethality replaced by a sharpened focus. She looked at me, then at the others."You mentioned Miami," Maya said, her voice steady now."Why? Why there? It’s the most heavily fortified Aegis Hub in the Western Hemisphere. It’s Silas’s private sanctuary."I stepped forward, pulling the obsidian black-box drive from my tactical vest."Because that’s where the pulse originates, Maya. S
Maya sat on the edge of a rusted technician’s chair, her eyes darting around the room with a feverish intensity.She looked at Gideon with the searing fire of a woman who had just been forced to watch her own childhood be murdered."You think this is a gift?" Maya’s voice was a jagged glass edge, cutting through the silence."You took me out of the fog. You took me out of the only place where I didn't have to feel the weight of what you’ve done."She stood up, her movements still possessing a lethal grace, and took a step toward Gideon.He flinched."I was a tool, yes," she continued,"But I didn't have to carry the knowledge that my own father was the architect of my damnation. You didn't save me, Gideon. You just condemned me to the truth. I would have rather stayed a mindless weapon f
We had left a trail of butchered Vanguard soldiers across the industrial sector, a bloody scar that told Silas exactly what we were: a pack of wolves who had finally decided to bite back.But we were running on fumes. Our weapons were spent, our bodies were shredded."The drive," I said, my voice barely audible over the wind as we crouched in the skeleton of a pre-war manufacturing plant."Gideon. You said you kept the records. Where is the black box?"Gideon, huddled near a pile of rusted iron, looked up with eyes that had seen too much. He didn't have his usual smirk. He had only a frantic, desperate need to survive."It’s in a safehouse, three klicks north. In an old Aegis observation post. It’s not just transit data, Eloise. It’s the original neural-mapping of every Apex citizen. Their names, their families, their actual, unfiltered memories from the moment they were wiped.""That’s our lever," Cane said, his golden eyes scanning the horizon."If we broadcast those memories, the P
"I learned a few things about your 'Ghost Network,'" Jax said, his voice shaking with pure, unadulterated rage.Jax slammed the scrambler against the floor, and the bridge went dark. The gravity plating died, and the emergency lights turned a deep, blood-red.In that split second of chaos, I shifted.The White Wolf didn't hold back. I didn't care about the dampeners or the safety of the ship. I roared, a sound that shook the very foundation of the ship, and hit Vinnie with the force of a freight train.His metal arm tore off his shoulder in a spray of hydraulic fluid and sparks. He shrieked, stumbling back into the wall.Gideon scrambled, his hand reaching for his pulse-carbine, but I was faster. I was on him, my claws hovering inches from his throat. I wasn't looking at a human anymore. I was looking at the man who had brought death to my pack."You had a choice," I growled, my voice vibrating with the Alpha’s resonance."You had a home. You had us.""I... I have a debt," Gideon gasp
Vane vibrated with the energy of a man who had been pushed past the edge of the world. His eyes were locked onto Gideon’s throat."Step aside, Eloise," Vane repeated."You chose to trust them once. You let them into our fold, you let them feed on our secrets, and you let them butcher Jax. I won’t let you make that mistake again. I won't let your 'mercy' bury the rest of us.""This isn't about mercy, Vane!" I shouted back, planting my feet firmly between him and the cowering Syndicate leader."It’s about strategy! It’s about the truth! If we kill them, Silas wins by default. He stays the hero, and we stay the monsters in the dark."Vane let out a sound that was half-laugh, half-snarl."Monsters? You’re worried about being monsters now? Look at me, Eloise! Look at what this war has turned us into. We are already monsters. The only difference is that I’m the only one here who knows how to do what’s necessary."He stepped forward."You’ve spent months making 'decisions' that end with our
It was still the same night, the night we had been nearly carved apart by the Apex, the night the Syndicate had forced our hand, and the night Cane and I had finally stopped fighting for control and started fighting for each other.We stepped into the galley, the atmosphere shifting the moment we e
The air in the cabin was thick with the sharp tang of Vane’s accusations. My heart was a frantic bird against my ribs, and the distance between Cane and me felt like a physical weight, cold and suffocating."I trust you," he repeated, his voice low, dropping the facade of command.He didn't just st
In the galley, the Rust Runners were already back to their usual organized chaos, but my mind was in the brig. I needed to bring Torin and Vane into the fold, and I knew that it was going to be a difficult conversation.I walked to the containment sector, Gideon’s men watching me with a mix of wari
"What the hell was that?" Gideon shouted, dropping his candy bar.Before he could pull his weapon, the ceiling of the cargo corridor simply vanished. It was sliced away in clean, surgical lines. The hybrid hovered in the opening, her bat-like wings blotting out the flickering emergency lights, her







