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Chapter 5 The First Blind Spot

Author: R.J. Sterling
last update publish date: 2026-03-17 01:48:43

Forty percent. The ticker doesn’t blink. It ticks upward, one decimal place at a time, with the indifferent patience of a machine that doesn’t care what it’s dismantling.

Forty point one. Forty point two. Each increment is a piece of me being rewritten without my consent, and the worst part is that I can feel it now.

A low, constant itch in the long bones. The sense of something settling into my marrow and making itself at home. On the stolen tablet’s screen, my skeleton burns incandescent silver, a lattice of high-conduction filigree where bone should be.

I’m not just carrying Damian Morton’s heir.

I’m becoming the terminal for a genetic weapon my father hid inside me before he disappeared, before the laboratory doors were chained, before Leo’s hand vanished into the back of that van and the smoke swallowed everything I had ever called home.

I have less than four minutes before the Argus system completes its nursery perimeter cycle. I need to kill the locket’s thermal feed without triggering a hard-line alert.

If the GPS signal goes dark, the estate goes into tactical lockdown within seconds—doors sealing, guards converging, the whole machine clenching like a fist.

But if the thermal camera simply malfunctions, if it reads as a hardware fault in a house full of experimental prototypes, it’s just one more glitch in a system already straining at the edges of what its makers understood.

I close my eyes and reach inward. Not for a feeling. For the heat.

It’s there, coiled in the marrow of my forearms, humming at a frequency that makes my back teeth ache.

My father’s voice surfaces from somewhere in the static of ten lost years, patient and exacting, the way it was when he’d make me hold a stance until my legs shook: You’re the antenna, Elena. Not the signal. You direct it.

You don’t become it. I didn’t understand him then. I was eight, and the words were a riddle wrapped in a man who smelled of solder and chalk.

I understand him now, with a clarity that feels like grief. I wrap my hand around the locket casing. I don’t squeeze.

I coax the current toward my palm. A slow, deliberate channeling, like forcing a river through a keyhole, like threading a needle with something that wants to be lightning. The pressure builds in my fingertips.

Dense. Sharp with a scorched, electric smell. It smells like scorched hair and something deeper, mineral, wrong.

The smell of a storm that hasn’t decided where to strike. Push. A needle of white heat lances from my thumb into the locket.

The tablet lets out a brief, soft digital shriek as the screen dissolves to gray static.

My arm goes numb to the shoulder, the muscles seizing in a staccato rhythm I can’t control, and my throat floods with the dry copper of a metabolic debt called in all at once.

The tax arrives like a physical blow: a hollow, gutting ache that feels like my ribcage collapsing inward from sheer absence of fuel. This is the part my father never warned me about, or maybe the part he was killed before he could.

The Key doesn’t give. It lends, at interest, and it collects the moment the work is done. The nursery tilts.

The gold-leaf molding smears at the edges of my vision. I press my back against the Faraday wall and breathe until the spinning slows, until the cold sweat on my neck stops feeling like the precursor to a blackout.

Three. Two. One. I check the tablet. The thermal map is gone, replaced by a SENSOR ERROR: VOLTAGE SPIKE notification. The GPS dot pulses on, steady and obedient blue.

The camera is dead. The leash is still intact. A blind spot, carved out by hand, paid for in marrow.

Ninety seconds left. I pull the Phantom Blade from my hair. In the Faraday cage’s dim light the titanium needle catches nothing.

It is too flat, too practiced at being invisible, a thing that has survived ten years because it refuses to shine. This is the only piece of the Moore legacy that Damian hasn’t managed to reduce to a data point on one of his screens.

Everything else about me he has measured, logged, and filed. Not this. This is still mine.

I move to the hand-carved cherry wood crib. Damian had it built with the care of a man who wanted the craftsmanship noticed. A cruelty dressed as tenderness.

A cradle for a child he intends to harvest a weapon from. But even perfect joinery has seams.

I find the decorative post at the foot, where a carved lion’s head masks a structural join, and I think, absurdly, that the lion is the only honest thing in this room: a predator carved to look ornamental, exactly like the woman they think they’ve caged.

I press the needle’s tip into the grain and pry back a sliver of wood just wide enough. The Phantom Blade slides home with a soft, final snick.

I’m back in the armchair, hands folded over my stomach, my breathing dragged down to something slow and convincing, when the nursery’s vacuum seal hisses open. Damian steps in without knocking. White shirt, sleeves rolled up, the tendons in his wrists visible and tight.

He doesn’t look like a billionaire right now. He looks like a man who just came back from something violent and hasn’t decided what to do with the residual energy, a man with adrenaline he hasn’t spent.

“You’ve been in here a long time,” he says.

“It’s the only room where I don’t feel like something being dissected.”

I don’t look up.

“Or is that why you built it? A moment of peace before the harvest?”

He crosses the room in three silent strides and stops inches from the armchair. He reaches down and catches the platinum chain of the locket, pulling it forward, his thumb running over the casing I scorched from the inside not three minutes ago.

The metal is probably still warm. I keep my face empty and let him feel it.

“The thermal array just went offline,” he says.

He isn’t angry. He’s clinical, the tone of a man cataloguing a variable, slotting a new data point into a model he hasn’t finished building.

“Dr. Thorne believes the hardware was faulty. He’s quite upset about the data loss.”

“Maybe your house is as broken as the people you keep in it.”

He tilts my chin up with two fingers.

The grip is nothing, the pressure of a man turning a page, and still his thumb drags once along my jaw before it goes still, a motion with no tactical use at all, gone before either of us can name it.

His eyes are polished flint, gray and hard, reflecting nothing but my own exhaustion back at me. He’s searching for the predator he knows is inside me, scanning for the moment I stop performing and the real thing surfaces.

He lets his thumb rest over my carotid artery, and the current in my neck claws toward the surface in response, reaching for the Morton signature in his blood like iron filings finding a magnet. I hold them down with everything I have.

“You’re pale,” he observes.

“And shaking. First-trimester metabolic drain. Or something more expensive?”

“I’m hungry. I’m always hungry.”

It isn’t even a lie. The Key has left me ravenous in a way no meal touches.

“Sarah is preparing a meal. We’ll double Julian’s supplements.”

He releases me and moves toward the crib, toward the post where the blade is hidden. My heart stops. His hand rests on the carved wood, broad and certain, an inch from the lion’s head.

I count the guards in the hallway. I calculate the seconds it would take to reach his throat if his fingers found the seam. His fingers tap the post.

Three. Two. One.

He’s mocking my rhythm. He knows the count. He has watched me do it on a feed I thought I’d looped, and he is telling me, without a word, that he sees more than I want him to.

He doesn’t find the needle. He turns for the door.

“Sleep, Elena. Tomorrow, the Syndicate will realize their cleaner didn’t report back.”

He pauses with his hand on the frame.

“The estate will be less peaceful.”

The door seals. In the corridor, muffled by reinforced composite but not enough, I hear him pull out his phone.

“Sir.”

Marcus Vane’s voice, filtered and precise, the voice of a man who has rehearsed how to deliver inconvenient truth to a brother who punishes the messenger.

“We’ve analyzed the surge that preceded the thermal array failure. It wasn’t a battery fault.”

Damian stops at the elevator bank. His reflection assembles itself in the brushed steel. Composed.

Still. Waiting.

“Explain.”

“We ran a frequency overlay against the biometric logs. The electromagnetic signature of the surge didn’t originate from the locket’s hardware.”

A pause. Vane’s professional shell developing a hairline crack.

“It matches the exact biometric resonance of the fetal heartbeat. The child is already using the mother’s nervous system as a conduit. The surge was intentional. It was a broadcast.”

Damian watches his own reflection. He doesn’t look shocked. He looks like a man who has been chasing a ghost for a long time and just confirmed it was real.

“The child is protecting her,” Vane continues.

“Or she’s teaching it how to hunt. We can’t tell which without—”

“Thank you, Marcus.”

Damian ends the call. On his screen, a new notification has assembled: TARGET SYNC: 42%. WARNING—SOVEREIGN MANIFESTATION DETECTED.

He stands there for a moment, looking at the nursery door, at the seam of light beneath it, at the woman on the other side he could end with a single order. Then he deletes the alert.

His thumb presses the screen until the warning disappears into the encrypted ether, unreported, unseen, unspoken. He isn’t just watching the weapon grow. He’s helping it hide.

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