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Chapter 31: The Infiltration Trap

last update 게시일: 2026-07-03 21:27:10

​The manor did not look like a home anymore. From the perimeter fence, it looked like a fortress carved out of the dark.

Every window was a dead eye, and the silence around the estate was too perfect.

We crawled through the drainage pipe we had used in our childhood, my clothes scraping against the cold, damp concrete.

​As we emerged into the basement, the air tasted of ozone and static. Julian stopped instantly, his hand hovering over my arm to hold me back.

He pointed at the ceiling. A cluster of red lights flickered in a pattern I didn't recognize.​"Sensors," Julian whispered. "New ones. They weren't here when we left."

​My heart skipped. The intruder in the garden had not just left a note; they had signaled the estate. My father knew we were coming. He had upgraded the security specifically to trap us the moment we crossed the threshold.

​"We have to get to the office," I said, my voice barely audible. "If those pages are anywhere, they are in the wall safe behind his desk."​Julian moved forward, his steps silent.

As we reached the main corridor of the ground floor, two guards appeared at the end of the hall. They were equipped with high-tech tactical gear, their visors glowing with thermal overlays.

They saw us immediately.​Before I could even reach for my sidearm, Julian was gone. He moved with a speed that defied human logic.

He closed the distance between us and the guards in seconds. One guard raised his weapon, but Julian hooked his arm, pivoted, and drove his elbow into the man’s throat.

The second guard tried to fire, but Julian was already under his guard, delivering a calculated strike to the solar plexus.​It was over in three seconds.

​I stood paralyzed, watching him. He didn't look like the man I had spent weeks helping to recover. There was no hesitation, no empathy in his movements.

He functioned with a cold, terrifying efficiency that belonged to a machine.​"Move," he commanded, not looking back.​We sprinted toward the library, the shortcut to my father's office.

As we rounded the corner, I felt a sharp, pulsing ache in the back of my neck. I pulled out my tablet, my fingers flying across the screen as I tried to jam the local network.

​"They’ve locked the terminal," I said, panic rising. "I can’t bypass the biometric lock on his office door. The architect has blocked my access codes."

​Julian stopped, his face unreadable.

He walked to the heavy mahogany door and placed his hand on the panel. For a second, nothing happened. Then, the green light flickered to blue.

The door hissed open.​"How did you do that?" I asked, my breath catching.​"I didn't," he said, his eyes scanning the empty, opulent office. "The system allowed it."

​That realization hit me harder than the physical danger. The architect had let us in. It wasn't a failure of their security; it was an invitation.

​I rushed to the desk, tearing through the drawers. My hands were shaking, making it impossible to focus. I looked at Julian. He was standing perfectly still in the center of the room, his eyes glazed, looking at nothing.

​"Julian?" I called out.​He didn't move. His head twitched, a jerky, mechanical motion.​"Julian, look at me!" I shouted.

​He turned, but his expression was blank. "The data is here, Clara. But the system is tracking us. It is waiting for us to initiate the transfer."

​My hands froze on the safe. Every move we made—the way Julian fought, the way he bypassed the door - the way I searched the desk—was being recorded, analyzed, and integrated into their model.

My fear spiked. Was this the real Julian? Or was the architect driving his body, mimicking his movements, using us to perfect the very interface that had destroyed my grandmother?​

"We are walking into a kill zone," I whispered, pulling the heavy ledger pages from the wall safe.

My father had kept them right where we expected, like a lure for a trap.​Outside, the heavy thud of boots began to echo in the hallway. They weren't just coming for us; they were closing the exits.

I clutched the pages to my chest, my mind screaming for an escape. Julian stood by the door, his posture rigid, waiting for an order that he was clearly receiving from a source I couldn't see.

​"Julian, fight it," I pleaded, grabbing his arm. His skin was unnaturally cold.​He looked at me, and for a split second, a flicker of humanity returned to his eyes. "I am trying, Clara. But the connection... it’s stronger in here."

​The office door began to vibrate as a heavy strike hit the frame from the other side. We were trapped in the heart of the beast, and the machine was finally ready to reclaim its property.

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  • Whisper of Thoughts    Chapter 33: Ashes of Secrets

    ​The silence that followed the crash was not the absence of sound; it was the heavy, pressurized quiet before a collapse. In the office, the air had shifted. The smell of ozone—the sharp, metallic scent of overheating circuits—was replaced by the acrid, biting sting of burning plastic.​Victor was still on the floor, his back against the wall. He wasn't looking at us. He was staring at the main terminal, where the once-steady flow of diagnostic data had been replaced by a jagged, scrolling cascade of red error codes. His hands, which had been so steady for decades, were trembling. ​"You don't understand what you’ve done," Victor whispered. His voice lacked the authority it held only moments ago. "The Architect was not just a tool. It was a failsafe. You’ve severed the brain, and now the body is entering the final stage of its lifecycle." ​A low, mechanical groan vibrated through the floorboards. It sounded like the manor itself was inhaling.​"What is that?" I shouted, my eyes lock

  • Whisper of Thoughts    Chapter 33: Ashes of Secrets

    ​The silence that followed the crash was not the absence of sound; it was the heavy, pressurized quiet before a collapse. In the office, the air had shifted. The smell of ozone—the sharp, metallic scent of overheating circuits—was replaced by the acrid, biting sting of burning plastic.​Victor was still on the floor, his back against the wall. He wasn't looking at us. He was staring at the main terminal, where the once-steady flow of diagnostic data had been replaced by a jagged, scrolling cascade of red error codes. His hands, which had been so steady for decades, were trembling. ​"You don't understand what you’ve done," Victor whispered. His voice lacked the authority it held only moments ago. "The Architect was not just a tool. It was a failsafe. You’ve severed the brain, and now the body is entering the final stage of its lifecycle." ​A low, mechanical groan vibrated through the floorboards. It sounded like the manor itself was inhaling.​"What is that?" I shouted, my eyes lock

  • Whisper of Thoughts    Chapter 32: The Final Confrontation

    ​The office door groaned under a massive impact, the heavy wood splintering inward. Julian remained standing, his gaze fixed on the shadows near the floor-to-ceiling bookshelves. He didn't look like he was preparing to fight; he looked like he was waiting for something to reveal itself. ​"Come out," Julian said, his voice devoid of emotion. ​From the darkness between the shelves, a figure stepped forward. It was an elderly man, dressed in the worn, grey uniform of a senior curator—someone who had lived in the manor since long before my father took control. He held a small, black device in his hand, his eyes filled with a mixture of suspicion and deep-seated grief. This was the man who had left the note in the shed. ​"I thought you were his recruits," the man whispered, his eyes darting to the pages I held. "I thought you were here to finish the harvest." ​"We are here to stop it," I said, my voice steady despite the adrenaline flooding my system. "Who are you?" ​"I was Evely

  • Whisper of Thoughts    Chapter 31: The Infiltration Trap

    ​The manor did not look like a home anymore. From the perimeter fence, it looked like a fortress carved out of the dark. Every window was a dead eye, and the silence around the estate was too perfect. We crawled through the drainage pipe we had used in our childhood, my clothes scraping against the cold, damp concrete. ​As we emerged into the basement, the air tasted of ozone and static. Julian stopped instantly, his hand hovering over my arm to hold me back. He pointed at the ceiling. A cluster of red lights flickered in a pattern I didn't recognize.​"Sensors," Julian whispered. "New ones. They weren't here when we left." ​My heart skipped. The intruder in the garden had not just left a note; they had signaled the estate. My father knew we were coming. He had upgraded the security specifically to trap us the moment we crossed the threshold. ​"We have to get to the office," I said, my voice barely audible. "If those pages are anywhere, they are in the wall safe behind his desk

  • Whisper of Thoughts    Chapter 30: Torn Pages of History

    ​Julian held the leather-bound ledger under the flickering beam of his flashlight. The cover felt rough and brittle against his skin, a relic of a time before the facility had turned our lives into a series of data points. My hands remained poised at my sides, my eyes darting toward the open door, scanning the darkness of the garden for the person who had left the note.​"Look," Julian said, his voice flat. He flipped the cover open. ​The first few pages were intact—meticulous notes on garden cultivation, grocery lists, and casual reflections on the weather. It was an ordinary life captured in ink. But as he turned further into the book, the atmosphere in the shed changed. The paper became thinner, more delicate, and the handwriting more frantic.​Then, the destruction became obvious. ​A dozen pages in the center had been torn out with brutal efficiency. The jagged remains of the paper clung to the binding like shredded flesh. The culprit hadn't just removed the information; th

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    ​The west wing of the manor was a place the staff had forgotten decades ago. Thick vines choked the stone walls, and the garden path, once manicured, was now a treacherous tangle of thorns and dead leaves. We moved in silence, our bodies low, weaving through the overgrown bushes. Every snap of a twig sounded like a gunshot in the oppressive stillness of the night. ​Julian was ahead of me, his movements fluid and precise. He didn't seem to breathe, his eyes constantly scanning the shadows for movement. He was back in his element, but not as the mindless enforcer I had once known. He was a man on a mission, and the target was the truth about his own existence. ​The shed stood at the very edge of the property, partially obscured by an ancient, rotting oak tree. It looked smaller than I remembered from my childhood—a cramped wooden box that seemed barely able to hold the secrets we hoped to find. My hand shook as I reached into my pocket, my fingers brushing against the cold, bra

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