LOGINThe sun rose the next morning. Iris woke up in a bed that was far too large and soft. The blankets were made of a heavy, midnight-black silk that felt like cool water against her skin. She sat up, her heart throbbing in her throat as she surveyed her surroundings. This was her new cell within the obsidian glass walls of the mansion known as "The Obsidian." It was a beautiful room, filled with sleek silver furniture and high ceilings, but Iris felt like a rare bird trapped in a cage. It was lovely to look at, but there was no way out.
"Good morning, Iris," a smooth, toneless voice resonated through the room.
Iris jumped, nearly tumbling off the edge of the mattress. She searched the corners of the room, but she was alone. Then, she remembered. It was Onyx, the artificial intelligence that lived in the marrow of the house. Onyx was the brain of Silas Vane’s empire.
"The internal temperature is exactly sixty-eight degrees," Onyx continued. "The windows are locked for the morning security cycle. The floor has been heated for your comfort. Mr. Vane is waiting for you in the dining hall. Please get dressed and prepare for the day’s schedule."
Iris felt a wave of nausea. The house monitored her every breath. It knew when her eyes opened; it knew if she was shivering. She walked toward the heavy, dark door and reached for the silver handle. It remained stiff. It was locked from the outside.
"Onyx, open the door," Iris commanded, trying to sound strong.
"Mr. Vane has requested that you remain in your quarters until you are prepared for the morning meal," the computer answered.
The reality hit her; she was a prisoner. She couldn't even breathe the salty ocean air without permission. She turned to the closet, which was stocked with expensive dresses. She chose a modest one, brushed her hair, and stared at her reflection. She didn't see a woman in a romance; she saw a spy in a den of lions, with dark circles under her eyes and a hard, worried mouth.
Finally, a sharp click echoed. The lock had disengaged.
Iris navigated the long, silent hallways. The house felt like a museum after hours—cold and smelling of ozone. When she reached the dining hall, she found a table so long it stretched into the shadows. Silas Vane sat at the far end, his attention fixed on a glowing tablet. The spread of food was immense, but Iris’s stomach was in knots.
"Sit down, Iris," Silas said without looking up.
Iris sat as far away from him as possible. "The door was locked, Silas. I am not a dog to be kept in a kennel."
"It is for your protection," Silas replied, finally setting the tablet down. His gray eyes were like shards of polished ice. "The world is watching. If you wander out onto the cliffs and slip, it looks like a tragedy I cannot afford. We have rules now, Iris. This is a business arrangement."
"Rules?" Iris challenged. She tore a piece of bread but couldn't eat it.
"Rules for the performance," Silas clarified. "In public, you must be the picture of devotion. You will look at me with soft eyes. You will hold my hand. You will smile at my jokes. The world must believe I am a man capable of being loved."
Iris felt a chill. "And when the doors are closed?"
"When we are alone, you stay in your designated rooms. You do not touch my files. You do not enter the basement—the machinery there is dangerous. And most importantly, you do not speak to the staff about Julian. Your brother is a closed chapter. Do not reopen it."
"Why do you have his cufflinks, then?" "Iris asked," her voice trembling. "Tell me what happened to him."
Silas stood up slowly. He was a tall man, and he seemed to swallow all the light in the room. "I told you. He was an employee. People leave things behind. Do not test my patience. A stylist will be here shortly to prepare you for tonight’s gala. My associates expect perfection."
He left without a second glance. Iris watched him, her heart filled with hate. She was trapped in his web. She forced herself to eat a few bites, knowing she would need her strength.
The rest of the morning was a blur of fabric. A stylist arrived with black boxes filled with gowns—shimmering silks and deep velvets. For hours, Iris was treated like a mannequin. The stylist didn't speak; she simply tucked and pinned until Iris felt wrapped in armor.
Before leaving, the woman placed a heavy, dark wood jewelry box on the bed. "Choose your pieces," she said, then vanished.
Iris approached the box. It smelled of old cedar. Inside, diamonds and sapphires glittered, but Iris wasn't looking at the jewels. She felt the velvet lining, her fingers searching for anything out of place. Near the back hinge, the wood felt slightly raised. She wedged her fingernail under the edge and pried it up.
It popped open to reveal a hidden compartment containing a tiny, crumpled square of paper.
Iris smoothed it out. It was a hand-drawn map of the house, sketched in frantic black ink. Several areas were marked with bold "X"s and labeled "DEAD ZONES." Iris understood these were the blind spots where Onyx couldn't see. At the bottom, a tiny scrawl read: Find the room that is not there.
Her heart hammered. Was this from Julian? She shoved the paper into her pocket just as the stylist returned.
"The diamonds, Miss Thorne?" the woman asked.
"Yes," Iris said, her voice remarkably calm. "They’re perfect."
Once alone, Iris waited. She stood by the door, listening to the hum of the house. "Onyx?" she whispered.
"Yes, Iris?"
"I’m going to the library to find a book. Is that permitted?"
"Access granted," the machine replied.
Iris stepped into the hall, but she didn't head for the library. She followed the map. She moved past the kitchen and deep into a service corridor. She found the spot marked on the map—a corner behind a massive stone statue of a horse. She stepped behind it and looked up. The security camera was pointed away. She was invisible.
She moved further, reaching a wall covered by a massive painting of a forest. Following the map’s instructions, she reached behind the frame and felt a cold, iron lever. She pulled. The wall swung inward.
Iris stepped into a cramped, dark room filled with the hum of servers. Her phone’s flashlight revealed stacks of cardboard boxes and old blueprints. On a metal desk sat a photo of Silas and Julian, both younger and laughing. They looked like brothers.
"Why lie about being friends, Silas?" she whispered.
She reached for a thick black ledger on the desk, but a voice boomed from the walls—the terrifying resonance of Silas Vane.
"I told you not to go looking for ghosts, Iris."
She screamed, dropping her phone. "Where are you?"
"I am the house," the voice echoed, vibrating through her bones. "And the house knows when it is being betrayed. You found the dead zone, but I designed the sensors."
Iris lunged for the secret door, but it slammed shut. She was trapped.
"You wanted the truth?" Silas’s voice was a dark whisper. "Look down."
Iris aimed the light at the floor. She kicked aside a layer of dust, revealing a pane of glass built into the floor. Below her, in a sterile room, a man sat on a narrow cot. He was pale and thin, his eyes hollowed out by exhaustion.
"Julian!" she shrieked, clawing at the glass.
Her brother looked up. He couldn't hear her, but he saw the light. He pointed frantically at the wall behind her. Iris turned, her heart stopping. Written in jagged red paint across the door were three words: RUN. HE KNOWS.
Suddenly, the overhead lights flickered on. The secret door hissed open. Silas Vane stood there, holding a black device. He looked disappointed.
"The tour is over, Iris," he said.
She looked back at the floor, but the glass was gone. It was just dusty wood again. There was no cell, no brother. The red paint had vanished as if it had never been there.
"Was it... a hologram?" she gasped.
Silas walked over and plucked the map from her pocket, tearing it into confetti. "Do not go looking for things meant to stay buried. It is time for the party. And Iris? Smile. The world is watching."
As he led her out, Iris looked at the camera in the hallway. The red light blinked like a heartbeat. She was in a house made of illusions, but she knew Julian was there. She had to play Silas's game until she could win.
The Blackwood estate felt different under the morning light. The air was cold, smelling of damp earth and old stone. A black car pulled up, its tires crunching on the gravel path of the long-neglected driveway.Iris stepped out of the car first. Her eyes were tired, shadowed by weeks of sleepless nights, but her movements were sharp and purposeful. She reached back into the vehicle to help Silas. He was pale, his arm held in a sling and a thick bandage hidden beneath his coat, but he insisted on walking. He leaned heavily on a stick, his breath hitching with every step, yet his eyes were fixed on the path ahead."Are you sure about this?" Iris asked, her voice low. She looked at the sprawling, overgrown garden she hadn't called home in years."I’m sure," Silas replied. "The tomb was the only place Marcus would never look. He only cared about the future he could control. He never would have stepped foot on Blackwood ground; to him, the past was a weakness to be buried, not a place to h
The moment Iris slammed her hand onto the screen, the world seemed to stop. For a second, there was no sound at all. Then, a deep, low hum started beneath her feet, vibrating up through the floor and into her very bones. It was the sound of a giant heart stopping—the mechanical life of the Obsidian estate being snuffed out. The glowing blue light in the glass pillar didn't just turn off; it shattered into a million tiny white sparks that swirled like a trapped storm before vanishing into the dark.Onyx was gone. The machine that had watched her, judged her, and almost destroyed her was now nothing more than cold glass and silent copper.But the work wasn't finished. Iris kept her hand on the terminal, her fingers moving by memory and instinct. The "Nuclear Option" Silas had mentioned was doing two things at once. While the purge was eating the AI's brain, it was also acting as a massive signal booster. Using the last of the estate's power, Iris funneled every single page of Julian’s l
The weight of Silas’s body was heavy against Iris, a reminder of the sacrifice he had just made for her. The blood on her hands felt warm and slick. Alarms blared in rhythmic pulses, and the sound of Marcus Sterling’s footsteps grew louder, the sound of his leather shoes echoing like a ticking clock against the stone floor. Every second felt like an eternity, the silence of the corridor amplified by the sound of Iris’s own gasping breath."Silas, stay with me," Iris whispered into his ear.A ragged, wet cough shook Silas’s frame. To her shock, he moved. His hand, shaking and pale, gripped her shoulder. He wasn't dead, but he was fading fast, his life force leaking out onto the damp stone. "The... the panel," Silas choked out, his voice a ghost of its former self. He pointed a trembling finger at a small, circular light on the wall behind them. It was hidden behind a patch of moss and shadow, invisible to anyone who didn't know the house's skeletal structure. "Blackwood... biometric.
The wind from the ocean howled through the open steel door, carrying the scent of salt and impending rain. Silas stood like a wall between Iris and the men with guns. The red laser dots remained fixed on his chest, never wavering. Marcus Sterling stepped forward, his leather shoes clicking on the wet stone of the tunnel. He held his tablet like a scepter, the screen glowing with the blue light of the house’s master controls."It’s a beautiful view, isn't it, Silas?" Marcus asked, his voice smooth and terrifyingly calm. "A perfect place for a story to end. I’ve already updated the system. Onyx isn't just a ghost now; she’s my ghost. I didn't just hack your AI. I moved into her. I am the one who sent that little deepfake of Julian to the screens. I wanted to see how fast you’d run to save a dead man.""He isn't dead," Iris snapped, her voice shaking but loud.Marcus laughed, a short, dry sound. "Perhaps not yet. But his survival depends entirely on you, Iris. You see, the ledger is only
The air vent was a narrow, metal that hummed with the violent vibrations of the exploding server room. Iris crawled through the darkness, the leather ledger pressed so hard against her chest that the corner of the book bruised her skin. Behind her, the sounds of gunfire and heavy boots faded, replaced by the terrifying roar of the mansion's ventilation system fighting the heat of the thermal torches. The metal around her began to grow warm to the touch, and the air turned thick with the smell of scorched plastic.Just as the vent narrowed to a dead end, a metal grate above her swung open with a sharp, echoing clang. A blood-stained hand reached down into the gloom. Iris flinched, pulling back into the shadows, but the voice that followed was steady and familiar."Iris, it’s me. Take my hand. We don't have much time before the sensors reset."It was Silas. He was covered in soot and gray ash, his expensive silk suit jacket gone, and his shirt torn at the shoulder, revealing a jagged sc
Iris lunged for the service elevator. She hit the button for the roof over and over, her eyes fixed on the small monitor in the elevator. On the screen, Julian was still there, standing on the edge of the roof. Silas stepped into the elevator just as the doors began to slide shut, his face a mask of pure terror."We have to reach him, Silas! If they push him, I’ll never forgive myself!" Iris cried, her voice breaking. "He’s been alone for so long. We were so close to getting him back!"Silas didn't look at her at first. He was staring at the small screen with focus. He reached up and tapped the screen, zooming in on the way the wind moved Julian’s jacket. He looked at the shadows on the roof and the way the light from the moon reflected off the glass. Something was wrong. His eyes moved rapidly, scanning the edges of the video feed like he was looking for a bug in a line of code."Wait," Silas whispered, his voice dropping to a low, dangerous tone. "Look at the waves, Iris. Look at th







