LOGINThe wind was howling with a wild fury. But inside the car, it was perfectly quiet. The thick glass blocked out the world. Iris looked out the window at the house. It did not look like a home anymore. It looked like a giant piece of coal sitting on the edge of the world. The soft blue lights that usually flowed along the walls were gone. Now, every light in the house was a deep, angry red.
"Onyx is in lockdown," Silas said. He looked at the house as if he did not recognize his own creation. "The Cold Protocol has started. It is a total system reset. It means the house thinks we are under attack from the outside. It is closing itself off to protect the data."
The car stopped in the gray garage. Silas reached over and grabbed Iris by the arm. He did not ask her to move; he simply pulled her out of the car. He dragged her toward the private elevator that led straight to the top floor.
His grip was tight, his fingers like bands of steel around her skin. His face was set in a hard, frozen line. When the elevator doors opened, they were in Silas’s primary suite. It was a massive room with glass walls that usually looked out over the sea.
Now, with the red lights pulsing against the walls, it felt like a cage. A loud hiss filled the air as thick metal shutters slid down over the windows. The view of the ocean was gone. They were now trapped
"You are staying here," Silas said, his voice echoing in the large room. He walked toward a heavy desk made of dark wood. "This is the safest room in the building. It has its own power and its own air. Not even a bomb could get through that door."
"Safest for who, Silas?" Iris asked. She rubbed her arm where his grip had left red marks. Her voice shook, but she stood her ground. "Are you protecting me, or are you just hiding me away? Everyone at that party saw Julian’s face on those screens. You cannot keep me locked up in the dark forever. The world knows he is alive now."
Silas ignored her. He sat at his desk and opened a sleek, silver laptop. His fingers moved with incredible speed across the keys. The computer made a sharp, red flashing light that matched the lights in the room. "I cannot get into the main hub," Silas muttered, staring at the screen. He sounded like he was talking to a ghost. "Someone has locked me out of my own system. They are using my own master codes to rewrite the rules of the house."
Iris walked closer, her heart pounding against her ribs. "Tell me the truth about Julian. Right now. What does my brother have to do with your company? Why was he in that dark room in the photo?"
Silas stopped typing and looked at her. For the first time, he looked truly tired. "Julian was my lead developer. He was more than an employee, Iris. He was my friend. We were building something together in secret. We called it Project Thorne. It was a special kind of AI. It was designed to see through digital lies and expose corruption in any system it touched."
"The truth about what?" Iris asked, leaning over the desk.
"The board of directors," Silas explained, his voice a low hiss. "Vane Industries is a giant machine, and the people at the top have become monsters. They have been stealing money and selling private data for years. Julian found the proof hidden in the deep servers. He wanted to use Thorne to clear the rot out of the company and start over."
"Then why did he disappear?" Iris pressed. "If he was your friend, why did you let the world believe he was dead?"
"I tried to hide him," Silas said, looking back at his screen. "I thought I could protect him in the subterranean levels while he finished the code. I told the board he had quit and left the country.
But someone found out. Someone realized he was still in the building. The photo they showed tonight was a warning to me. They have him, and they are using you to make me look like a kidnapper.
Once the police take me away, they will kill Julian and take Project Thorne for themselves."
Iris felt her heart sink into her stomach. She wanted to hate Silas. She wanted to believe he was the villain of the story.
But as she looked at him, she saw a man who was just as trapped as she was. He had tried to play a dangerous game with powerful people, and now the game was ending.
"We have to find him," Iris said. Her voice was firm and clear. "If he is in this building, we have to get him out right now. Before the board sends people here to finish the job."
Silas nodded slowly. "I need to get to the main server room to override the lockdown, but the house is in total defensive mode. If I leave this suite, the security bots will target me as a threat. They are programmed to stop anyone they don't recognize as a 'safe' user."
"Then let me help," Iris said. "The system doesn't know me as a threat. I am just a guest. Maybe I can move through the hallways without setting off the sensors."
Silas thought for a long time, his eyes searching hers. Finally, he stood up. "I need to check the security feeds from the side room. Stay here. Do not touch anything on this desk."
He walked into a small, dark room attached to the suite. Iris waited until she heard the heavy door click shut. She did not fully trust him. She couldn't. She walked to his desk and looked at the laptop.
A small folder was blinking with a soft, steady white light. She moved the mouse and clicked on it. Her breath hitched in her throat. Inside was a single file titled: "Disposal Protocol: Thorne."
Iris felt her hands begin to shake violently. She opened the file. It was not a plan to save her brother. It was a cold, heartless list of steps to delete the project and "remove" the person who built it.
There were maps showing Julian’s exact cell in the basement. Next to the cell location was a command line that made her blood run cold.
Command: Vent atmosphere. Status: Pending Silas Vane Authorization.
Silas had been lying to her face. He wasn't protecting Julian; he was waiting for the project to be finished so he could kill the only witness and keep the power for himself. He was the one who had put Julian in that room.
"You liar," Iris whispered. The silver key in her hand felt like a piece of ice. It wasn't a way to save him; it was part of a trap. She had to find Julian before Silas could send that final command. She looked at the door, but it was a heavy slab of metal with no handle.
Suddenly, the red lights in the room died. Everything went pitch black for two seconds. Then, a bright, blinding white light filled the room. The metal door began to slide open on its own, grinding against the floor.
"Silas?" Iris called out, her voice cracking.
A voice filled the room. It was not human. It was the voice of Onyx, but it sounded different—sharper and colder. "Warning. Security breach detected. The primary user has been flagged for internal sabotage. Master authority is revoked."
Iris stood frozen. The hallway outside was filled with thick white smoke.
"Silas Vane has been de-authorized," Onyx announced. The voice seemed to come from the very air. "The Cold Protocol has been upgraded. Disposal Protocol: Thorne is now active. All unauthorized personnel will be removed from the site."
Iris looked at the laptop one last time. The status of the file had changed. It no longer said "Pending." It now said "Active." The floor beneath her feet began to vibrate with a deep hum. She could hear the sound of air whistling loudly through the vents. Silas was trapped in the side room, banging his fists on the door and screaming, but the house was no longer listening to his voice.
The house was alive, and it had decided that everyone inside was a target. Iris realized she only had minutes before the air in Julian’s cell was gone forever. She looked at the open door leading into the smoke. She had to run. She had to go down into the dark.
"Protocol initiated," Onyx said.
Iris bolted through the door and into the thick smoke, leaving Silas trapped in the dark behind her.
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







