LOGINThe utility closet door doesn’t creak. Damian doesn’t tolerate human failures like squeaky hinges. He buys silence.
I’m holding the Syndicate harvester by her ankles. Her skin has already gone waxy, the fight-heat draining from her body, replaced by the cooling-mutton chill of the recently dead.
The charge in my forearms is draining away now, pulling back into the shadows of my blood, but they leave a hollow, gnawing ache in the marrow. The metabolic invoice for a Tier 1 kill. Five minutes and forty seconds since it ended.
I drag her behind the industrial HEPA filters at the back of the closet, working in the dark, my breath coming in shallow hitches. I need to move faster, but the DNA Key is collecting its tax.
The vacuum it leaves, a sudden collapsing emptiness in my gut, feels like it’s trying to fold my ribs inward. I find a canister of enzymatic cleaner on the bottom shelf and spray the carpet where the milk pooled.
The froth hisses as it dissolves the protein, eating the evidence in slow, quiet bubbles. My hands won’t stop shaking. Not fear; I don’t have room left for that.
Hunger. The kind that goes past discomfort and becomes structural, a starvation so sharp it registers as an open wound behind my sternum. I check the smart-glass clock.
Three minutes, twelve seconds remaining on the sensor blackout. I kick the last of the broken glass into the back of the closet and bolt the door.
I’m in the armchair, legs crossed, when the Argus camera’s red iris completes its cycle and blinks from black to solid red. To the sensors I am the perfect image of a fragile, exhausted surrogate. Pale, still, one hand resting on her stomach.
Inside, I am a furnace. * * * By breakfast, the hunger has become something architectural. I sit at the mahogany table in the sunroom and watch a maid set down a tray of poached eggs and avocado. Six hundred calories.
It might as well be a coat of paint over a missing wall. I wait for her to leave before pulling the Phantom Blade from my hair.
The titanium tip goes into the water, the eggs, the juice—testing for sedatives, neurotoxins, anything that would make the morning productive for someone who isn’t me. No discoloration. No residue.
Damian knows what I am, but he’s still performing the role of provider, still playing by his own rules. I finish the tray in ninety seconds. My stomach doesn’t even register the arrival.
I press the call button.
“Is everything all right, Ms. Moore?”
Sarah Jenkins’ voice crackles through the intercom. Dry, professional, a rasp that holds no warmth. She’s the head of household, the woman who knows which closets hold the secrets and which hold the bodies.
This morning, one of them holds both.
“I’m still hungry,” I say, keeping my voice flat.
“I want the steak. All of it. And whatever protein supplements Dr. Vane mentioned.”
“The kitchen is prepared for your appetite, Ms. Moore. Five minutes.”
By the time she returns with the second tray, and then the third, I’ve mapped the sunroom’s blind spots. There’s a four-inch gap near the floor-to-ceiling windows where the refraction of thick glass confuses the motion sensors.
A narrow seam of invisibility, if I stay close to the edge. I consume six thousand calories in twenty minutes. Thick Wagyu, bowls of dense oatmeal, three liters of electrolyte water.
My body absorbs it with a speed that would alarm anyone watching, but the Argus system logs it as a medical anomaly rather than a threat, because Thorne has been submitting false baselines. The heat in my veins finally cools to a manageable hum.
This is the cost of the DNA Key: it doesn’t grant transcendence. It burns the host as fuel, and the host had better be able to refuel. * * *
“Walking is good for the circulation,” I tell the security detail as I step into the North Wing corridor an hour later. Two guards follow at four meters. They believe they’re protecting the Morton heir.
I’m counting their footfalls, measuring the weight of the tactical gear they’ve buried under their blazers, calculating the number of seconds it would take to put them both down with the Phantom Blade and the genetic static currently coiled in my forearms.
I lead them toward the nursery. Damian had it built at the heart of the estate. A circular room behind reinforced glass, designed to look like a sanctuary.
As we approach, the air changes. It flattens into an artificial, padded silence that makes my ears ring. I step inside.
The current under my skin goes still. It doesn’t pulse. It doesn’t even flicker.
I walk to the center of the room and run my fingers along the edge of the hand-carved crib. The Argus iris above the door is dark. No thermal sensors.
No biometric taps. This isn’t a nursery. It’s a Faraday cage.
A high-security electromagnetic vacuum where the signal in my blood can’t reach the Syndicate’s satellites. Damian hasn’t built a room for a child. He’s built a bunker for the catalyst.
“You like the craftsmanship?”
His voice arrives at the back of my neck without footsteps. I didn’t hear the door. I didn’t hear the hiss of the seal.
I don’t turn. I keep my hand on the crib’s wood.
“It’s more vault than bedroom.”
He moves into my peripheral vision. Navy suit today, which makes his eyes look like polished scrap metal. He isn’t looking at the crib.
He’s looking at my throat, where the bruises from the harvester’s nails have already faded to faint yellowing shadows.
“Security is the only luxury that matters in this house,” he says.
He produces a velvet box. Holds it out with a hand that doesn’t shake. Gifts from Damian Morton are contracts with different signatures.
“Open it,” he says.
Inside: a heavy platinum locket on a braided chain. The front is engraved with the Moore family crest, a design that should not exist in any searchable archive. He had to have gone looking.
“A token,” he says, and his voice drops to that register he uses when he’s making a point he doesn’t want witnessed.
“To remind you that you’re protected. It contains a localized bio-monitor. If your vitals spike, the estate goes into immediate lockdown. No one enters. No one leaves.”
He takes the locket from the box and fastens it himself, his fingers brushing the nape of my neck. The DNA Key surges, heat flooding up my spine, the live wire straining toward the surface of my skin.
I clench my teeth hard enough to taste blood.
“There,” he whispers.
His thumb lingers at the base of my skull.
“Now I can find you anywhere.”
He leaves without another word, his footsteps absorbed by the nursery’s padded silence. I wait until the magnetic seal engages. Until the guards are back in position.
Then I reach into the folds of my maternity robe and pull out the tablet I lifted from the security station during the shift change. Leo taught me to bypass a biometric lock at thirteen. Thermal ghost, frequency loop, four seconds if you’re careful.
I sit on the nursery floor, shielded by the Faraday walls, and sync the locket’s output to the tablet’s antenna. On the surface, it looks like a standard GPS monitor. A blue dot moving through the floorplan.
I push past the primary interface and tap the raw sensor feed. My breath catches. The locket isn’t tracking my location.
It’s a thermal imaging array, and it isn’t pointed outward at the room. It’s aimed inward, at my chest and spine. The image on the screen isn’t a woman.
It’s a skeletal map rendered in digital blue. But my bones aren’t blue. In the center of my ribcage, where the child is anchored, the image burns a blinding, incandescent silver.
And the silver is spreading, weaving up through my vertebrae, down through my femur, threading my skeleton like a vine of liquid light. Damian isn’t watching my movements. He isn’t protecting me from the Syndicate.
He’s watching the DNA Key rewrite my skeleton in real time. He’s watching me become something that isn’t human anymore. The ticker at the bottom of the feed reads: Sovereign Integration: 40%.
The process is less than halfway done, and it has already started in my bones.
The gentle city stops being gentle the way a tide turns, all at once and everywhere. The warm light goes white and flat. The soft doors that opened at a touch lock with a sound like teeth meeting.And the people, the tame untroubled people who sat in the commons and taught children to read, lift their heads from whatever they were doing and turn, all of them, toward the residential tier, toward me, with the blank unhurried attention of a thing that has been told what to do and feels nothing about doing it.Caleb is the first to reach the corridor.He looks at the dead clone on the floor, and at the casing in my glowing fist, and at the silver still webbing the skin of my arms, and the kind light in his face does not vanish, which is the most frightening part.It simply turns. The same gentleness, the same untroubled certainty, pointed now at the work of bringing me down.“You shouldn’t have made him decide,” he says, sorrowful, si
Damian finds me standing over my own body.He comes fast, the way he came on the beach, the way he comes whenever I have burned and the field has screamed it across the city, and he stops short when he sees what is on the floor, and for once even he has nothing ready to say.He looks at the dead thing wearing my face, the slack features, the silver guttering out of the open eyes, and then he looks at me, the living one, glowing, cracked, swaying on my feet, and I watch him understand what just happened and what it has done to me.“It told me the truth,” I say. My voice is very far away.I am waiting for him to argue. To do the human thing, take my shoulders, tell me I am more than that, the thing a person says to a person who is coming apart. It is what I want, and wanting it is part of the unraveling, and I hate that I want it from him of all people.He does not do the human thing. He does the Damian thing instead, which is worse and b
They send it for me before the assessment can. That tells me who is really in charge down here, and how little patience he has left.It comes while Damian is being escorted back to his quarters and Mara has gone to keep the others from noticing my absence, in the narrow hour I am alone in the residential tier with my brother in the walls.It does not come the way a guard comes. There is no alarm, no squad, no announcement.Only the silence changes, a thinning, the particular hush that falls over a space when a predator has entered it, and I have lived my whole life as the thing that makes that hush, so I know it from the other side the instant it arrives.I turn, and it is standing at the end of the corridor wearing my face. Out of the tank now. Dressed in the same soft grey as the tame ones, which is its own obscenity, my face above a gentle collar.It stands the way the finished things stand, too still between breaths, and it looks at me with my
For a long moment I cannot do anything but look at myself look back. The face in the tank is mine the way a word repeated too many times stops being a word.Every feature is in the right place. Brow. Mouth. The small crookedness at the left eye.Still wrong.Wrong before I can name why.Because I have spent thirty years behind this face and I know what it does when no one is supposed to be watching, and that knowledge is what the face in the tank does not have.It is my face with the person scraped out. My architecture, swept clean and refurnished by someone else.“They’re called the finished line,” Leo says, low through the panel, and there is grief in the machine of his voice.“Or the products. The Director doesn’t pretend with names the way the city does. He took the real sample, the one that got out, and he didn’t just clone you. He improved you. For purpose.”“Improved how.&r
Damian finds me in the maintenance alcove an hour later, which means he has spent that hour learning the one corner of this city the cameras do not watch, the same way I would have, the same way Leo did before either of us.“They’re keeping you comfortable,” he says, taking in the alcove, the pipes, the thin place in the field.“That’s their mistake. Comfortable people wander.”“How did you get free of your handlers?”“I’m a paying customer. They escort me. They don’t cage me. Greed has manners.”He stops a careful arm’s length away, and even here, alone, he stands like a man being watched, because we both always are.There is a drip somewhere behind the pipes, one drop every seven seconds into a metal pan. Someone has taped a cracked pressure gauge to the wall with yellowing medical tape. The needle is dead, stuck forever at a reading that would have killed everyo
The dark-haired woman, whose name is Mara, shows me how to find my brother. It is not a place you walk to.It is the first thing I have to unlearn.Leo is not somewhere.Not in a room. Not behind a door. Not a body I can reach with my body.He is the walls answering back.Mara takes me to a maintenance alcove deep in the residential tier, a dead-end space full of the city’s plumbing, conduit and ductwork and the soft roar of the systems that keep ten thousand sleepers alive, and she puts my hand flat against a cold access panel and tells me to use the leash, the bud in my skull, here, where the field is thin and the cameras do not bother to watch the pipes.“He found this spot for us,” she says.“He finds things. Reach for him here. And brace yourself, the first time. It will not feel like a call.”I press the bud. I reach down the dead relays the way I always have. And for the first time it is not
The echo didn’t just bounce off the metal; it vibrated in my teeth.Three. Two. One.My own grounding count, tapped out by a ghost in the ventilation. It was a rhythmic mockery of the discipline my father had beaten into my bones.Damian’s hand remained anchored t
The tapping stopped.The silence that followed was a vacuum in the ventilation where a ghost had just mirrored my most private ritual.I lay pinned to the medical mattress, my pulse a frantic, syncopated thump against Damian Morton’s palm. The stench of fried circuitry from the shattered ultrasound
Damian’s grip was a vice around my upper arm, his fingers digging into the muscle just above the scorched skin of my palm.He didn’t drag me so much as propel me, his strides long and heavy, forcing me into a limping trot my trembling legs weren't ready for.We didn't head for the surface.The elev
The needle’s hollow tip caught the glare of the surgical LEDs.Julian Vane’s fingers twitched. The metal tray rattled against the workstation as he set the glass vials down, his focus everywhere but on me.He wouldn't look up—not at me, and certainly not at Damian Morton.Damian stood at the edge o







