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Chapter 21: A Reckoning in the Dark

Author: Zaviu
last update publish date: 2026-06-22 11:34:40

The rain in the city was cold and biting, a sharp contrast to the humid, suffocating metallic tomb they had just left behind. They were ghosts climbing out of a digital grave, smelling of cooling fluid, desperation, and the lingering, sweet rot of M-ESSENCE. 

They reached a nondescript apartment complex in the lower district—the kind of place where history was easily buried and secrets went to fester. Anji didn't bother turning on the lights. He knew exactly where the shadow in the room was sitting before he even saw the glint of his cigarette in the gloom.

"You really tore the place apart, didn't you, Anji?" 

Elias Sutherland sat in a low-backed armchair, looking more like an emeritus professor than the man who had authored a biological apocalypse. He wore a heavy wool coat, and the gray in his beard looked curated, not aged. 

Anji stood by the door, his heart—now reclaimed from the digital rhythm of the tower—thudding in a clumsy, mortal pace. Sarah and Arga moved to his flanks, a jagged, exhausted vanguard.

"The tower was a laboratory, Elias," Anji said, his voice flat. "And like any experiment that gets out of hand, it required incineration."

Sutherland exhaled a long cloud of smoke. "Experimentation requires failure, Anji. But it also requires data collection. Do you have any idea how much effort it took to prune the branches, to steer you into the basement? You were so... desperate. It made you the perfect substrate. The only one capable of carrying the network without your brain melting into pudding by week two."

"I’m not your substrate anymore," Anji stepped forward. 

Sutherland stood up, and the ease with which he moved reminded them that they weren't just fighting a man; they were fighting a mindset. He didn't look threatened. He looked curious. He gestured to the room, which was filled with more monitors and arrays, hidden in the mundane comforts of an apartment.

"You think you’ve purged the Essence? You think because you cracked a few tanks, the biological memory is gone? You’ve got half a liter of the final batch flowing through your own liver right now, kid. Your nervous system is the node. Every memory, every hit of dopamine you gave to your little playthings, every drop of sweat… it's all part of the Sutherland Map."

"Then I guess I’ll have to shut down the map," Anji muttered. 

Sutherland’s eyes shifted from Anji to the others. He looked at Arga, whose clothes were stained with his master's struggle, and at Sarah, whose hands were still shaking with withdrawal. He smiled, a jagged, unkind thing.

"You think you’re in control because you burned the building down. But you’re just a puppet who’s fallen in love with his strings. And since you’ve come all this way to negotiate, let's talk about the only thing that makes this 'integration' bearable: the feedback."

Sutherland moved to a side table and produced a small, silver tray containing two needles, shimmering with the violet concentrate.

"You need it," Sutherland noted, his tone clinical. "You're all at the precipice of a full-body shutdown. You’ve played house, you’ve broken things, but the hunger… the hunger doesn't go away. Why do you think you keep ending up in rooms together, hands all over each other, seeking that artificial heat? It’s not love. It’s an electrical fault. And I’m the only one who can flip the switch."

Arga, who had been struggling to keep his composure, took a step toward the tray. His eyes were wide, vacant, and utterly pathetic. He was the corporate wolf who had finally realized his leash was held by a master who didn't even care if he lived.

"Don't," Anji hissed, catching Arga by the elbow.

But it was too late. The pull was more than biological; it was ontological. Arga didn't resist Anji—he merely brushed past him with a strength that betrayed his own fear. He grabbed Sutherland’s wrist, his voice thick with a guttural, terrifying demand. 

"Give it to me," Arga choked, the professional dignity of his former life entirely incinerated. "Fix me."

Sutherland didn't even blink. He shoved the syringe into Arga’s arm. The effect was immediate. Arga collapsed, arching into the rug, a howl of profound, chemical agony and ecstasy tearing through his throat. The raw, unfiltered output of the high hit the room, creating an atmospheric distortion that felt like pressure against the ears.

"See?" Sutherland gestured to the room. "Anji, you spent your life being invisible. I gave you a name. I gave you power. And I gave you the ability to feel every other soul you’ve broken as your own reflection. Don't act like you didn't enjoy it."

Sarah was breathing hard now, her back pinned against the bookshelf. The sheer, rampant toxicity of Arga’s release—his raw chemical feedback broadcast into the air—was drowning her defenses. She scrambled across the floor, moving toward Anji with a desperate, animalistic intent.

"Anji, look at him," she whispered, her hands clawing at Anji’s belt. "We’re already broken. Don't fight it."

She wasn't begging for his leadership; she was begging for the friction, for the anchor he provided. Her mouth found the space at his neck, and Anji felt his own pulse begin to spiral. Sutherland had calculated perfectly. The room wasn't an arena; it was a circuit. The trauma, the drugs, and the proximity to Sutherland’s presence had created a nexus of uncontrollable urge.

Anji gripped Sarah’s shoulders, pushing her away, but her teeth nipped at his skin, her body writhing against his in a way that screamed for release. It was pure chemical interference. 

"Stop it!" Anji roared, even as he found himself pulling her back in, unable to separate the command from his own biological response.

Sutherland watched, leaning against the counter. "It’s a lovely loop, isn't it? The more you try to assert dominance, the more the drug needs the physical reinforcement. You can't kill me because I'm the one who calibrated your reality. Go ahead. Fuck each other to death. Feed the sequence. It’s the only way you stay 'human'."

Anji realized then that the showdown wasn't going to happen with guns or data files. Sutherland was the designer; he knew exactly where their nerves tied off. He shoved Sarah toward the floor, her dress ripping, her eyes fluttering as she collapsed into the arms of a waiting Randy. 

Anji ignored them. He walked straight toward Sutherland. He didn't draw a weapon; he used his own hands. He reached for Sutherland’s throat, not to kill, but to tether. He dragged his tormentor toward the window, forcing him to face the reflection of his own work in the glass—the three people writhing on the rug in the background, trapped in a nightmare loop of his own orchestration.

"Is this the peak of your imagination, Sutherland?" Anji whispered, his thumbs pressing hard into the cartilage of Sutherland’s neck. 

Sutherland grabbed Anji’s arms, gasping, his own control wavering for the first time. The closeness, the raw heat of Anji’s body, the overwhelming scent of the catalyst he had engineered, acted as an unwanted input to his own dormant synapses. 

"I... am... your god..." Sutherland rasped, his resistance turning into a jagged, unexpected flush.

"Then show me," Anji snarled, forcing Sutherland’s hands down onto the edge of the low desk where the remaining violet vials lay. 

Anji stripped Sutherland’s heavy coat away with a vicious rip, his actions blurring with the erratic pulse of his own chemical spike. He could see Sutherland’s pupils beginning to mirror the dark, expansive nothingness of his own. The man was arrogant, yes, but he was biological—a fragile configuration of wetware that had spent too long playing with the source code of human bliss.

Anji forced him onto the desk, pinning his hips with an aggressive, downward drive. He wasn't doing this for power. He was doing this to desecrate the logic that kept him tethered. He grabbed one of the vials, cracked it, and smeared the viscous, freezing violet gel directly across the friction points between their skin.

Sutherland went limp for a second, then snapped into a blinding arc of sensation as the high hit his bloodstream directly, without the buffer of long-term integration. He let out a shriek that turned into a pathetic, whirring moan.

"Tell me the data doesn't feel like this!" Anji ground out, slamming his rhythm into the older man until Sutherland’s dignity was a shattered husk on the floor. 

Behind them, the room had gone quiet, the others—Sarah, Randy, Arga—now nothing but a breathing, shivering chorus of their mutual annihilation. They were all participating in the feedback loop, creating a hum of electrical output that Sutherland’s laboratory had likely never seen before. It was an orgy of deconstruction. 

As the peak descended on the room—the air screaming with the pressure of six overtaxed human hearts beating in unison—Anji pressed a vial into Sutherland’s trembling hand, forcing the founder of the experiment to witness the monster he had helped raise. 

"You didn't build a project, Sutherland," Anji rasped into the ear of the trembling creator. "You built a wildfire. And you’re not the one who lights it. I am."

When it hit, it didn't feel like sex; it felt like a total systems reboot. Sutherland crumbled beneath him, the color draining from his face, his gaze focusing on the ceiling with a vacant, terrified realization. Anji stood up, adjusted his ruined clothes, and walked to the door.

He felt hollowed out, but the dread was gone. He looked back one last time. Arga was sitting on the floor, holding a discarded syringe like a holy relic; Sarah and Randy were entangled in the shadows, their breaths echoing the slow, steady beat of a cooling computer. 

And Sutherland? He was huddled against the desk, eyes wide, staring at the floor, finally looking at the ruin of his map. 

Anji opened the door and walked out into the cool, uncaring rain. He was empty, clean, and entirely ready to vanish into the dark. He wasn't the target anymore. He was the end of the line. The experiment was finished, not by design, but by a simple, terrifying realization: they were all monsters now, and the world outside was completely, blissfully unprepared.

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