MasukThe magnetic seal of the nursery door settles with a heavy, metallic thud that travels through the soles of my feet. I stay pinned against the wall, listening.
My right arm is dead weight, a limb of static and ice from the bio-EMP I channeled through the locket. The DNA Key collected its tax in full, and the change is still settling in my nervous system. My heart is too slow.
Each beat drops like a stone into deep water, and the rhythm I rely on, three, two, one, has abandoned me. Then the roar starts. Not a whine.
A flood. The Faraday cage hasn’t failed. I have.
The Morton Estate’s curated silence dissolves all at once and the world pours in raw: the rhythmic strike of a guard’s boots three floors below, each step a distinct impact; the mechanical hum of the server room buried under the east gardens; the wet slap of pool water in the south wing, forty meters away and impossible to hear.
My father called me an antenna. He never mentioned I’d be tuned to every frequency at once. I stumble toward the crib, both hands finding the post where the Phantom Blade is hidden.
The wood feels different under my fingers. I can hear the grain, the microscopic tension of the fibers against the mounting screws, the faint acoustic memory of every hand that has ever touched it.
Then Marcus Vane’s voice cuts through, as clear as if he were leaning over my shoulder. He’s in the security sub-level. I can hear the specific echo of the server racks framing his words.
“Damian is losing his grip. He’s babysitting a womb while the Board is breathing down my neck for quarterly yield.”
A pause; the dry sound of his heel on a grated floor.
“If he thinks he can play god with the Syndicate’s property, he’s going to find out how fast a Market Correction actually works.”
I stop breathing.
“The Director is already asking for the manifestation data. Damian is cooking the thermal logs, reporting array glitches to hide her. If Blackwood realizes we’re sitting on a Sovereign and not harvesting the marrow, it’s a death sentence for everyone on this payroll.”
Damian is lying for me. Not out of mercy. Damian Morton has never wasted a drop of mercy in his life.
He’s doing it because a Sovereign manifestation is worth more intact than extracted. Worth more as a controlled weapon than a raided one. He’s keeping the world from seeing the blade until he decides how to swing it.
The thought barely has time to settle before a searing spike of pain lances through both eyes. Electric fire behind the optic nerves, a white heat that forces a gasp through my teeth. I find the bathroom mirror by feel.
I should see the girl from the slums. I should see an assassin with pale, bruised eyes and a scar across her throat. Instead, the face in the mirror is something I don’t have a name for.
My pupils are webbed with silver. Thin, incandescent threads pulse across the irises in a slow, cold rhythm. A cold filament of light that belongs to nothing biological I know.
The DNA Key isn’t just rewriting my bones. It’s claiming my eyes. If a guard walks in.
If Sarah brings another tray. If anyone opens that door— The nursery door opens. I don’t hear the footsteps.
I feel the pressure change, the faint displacement of air that carries the scent of sandalwood and spent ammunition.
“Elena?”
He’s back. And he’s close. Three seconds.
Two. One. I can’t hide the eyes.
There’s only one move that works. I let my knees go. Not a gentle sink.
I throw my weight forward, aiming for the marble floor, betting that Damian catches me before I hit it and that his attention will go to the emergency rather than my face. His arms are there before I finish falling.
He catches me against his chest with a speed that has no business belonging to a man who runs a corporation. One hand splays across my lower back.
The other cradles the back of my head, and the hand that cradles is careful in a way the rest of him never is, fingers spreading to take the weight of my skull as if it were the one part of me he has decided not to bruise.
The warmth of him hits me like a physical force. Sandalwood and gin and the particular cold of high-altitude air, and under all of it the Morton bloodline the DNA Key recognizes and reaches for the way a compass finds north.
“Elena!”
The clinical edge is completely gone. What’s left is sharp and urgent in a way I haven’t heard from him before. I keep my eyes shut and bury my face against the crook of his neck.
Shallow breathing. Disoriented. Woman in shock.
The charge in my veins is no longer screaming. It’s straining, reaching through my skin toward his pulse point, trying to lock onto the Morton signature in his blood. The DNA Key wants to feed.
“Look at me,” he commands.
I don’t.
“The light. It’s too bright,”
I gasp, and the lie tastes like ash.
“Everything’s too loud.”
He pulls me closer. His heartbeat is against my ear now. Heavy, deliberate, perfectly regulated, the pulse of a man who has trained himself out of every involuntary reaction.
Except that as my cheek settles against his shirt, the rhythm under it stutters, once, a single missed beat he cannot have meant to give me, before the discipline closes back over it. He does not know I felt it.
I will spend longer than I want to admit pretending I didn’t. And then I feel it: the child’s heartbeat shifts. The frantic, stuttering growth-rhythm it maintains most of the time smooths out, finds a groove, and locks in.
Thud-thud. Thud-thud. Damian’s exact frequency.
A perfect biological echo. The child isn’t just his heir. It’s becoming a mirror of him, learning his signature, building the bridge between his blood and mine that no Faraday cage will be able to block.
Damian’s thumb moves to my jaw. He tilts my head back, forcing my face upward, and I keep my eyelids fluttering, dazed and confused and harmless, while I work out whether the silver has dimmed enough to risk being seen.
“Your eyes,” he says, barely above a whisper.
His face is inches from mine. I can see the mineral hardness of his irises, the way his pupils have contracted to near-pinpoints as he examines me. He doesn’t call for Julian.
He doesn’t hit an alarm. He just looks at me with an expression I have no framework for. Not clinical.
Not cold. Closer to the way a man looks at a fire he has spent a long time trying to build.
“They’re changing,” he says.
“Exactly the way Julian predicted.”
He leans forward until his forehead rests against mine. The charged, mineral smell of him fills the small space between us.
“The Syndicate is coming for what’s inside you. Marcus thinks I should hand you over.”
“Then why don’t you?”
I have the Phantom Blade’s location mapped in my mind. Trajectory, distance, the specific angle required to find his carotid before he can call out.
His hand moves from my jaw to my throat, thumb resting over my pulse, finding the three-two-one I’m trying to fake. He smiles, thin and razored, in a way that tells me the mask has never worked on him.
“Because they’d only use you as a battery.”
His voice drops to a register that seems to resonate in my sternum.
“And I want to see you burn the world down first.”
His encrypted phone chimes from the floor where it fell. He doesn’t move. He stays in my space, his breath grazing my lips, as though the world can wait.
“Sir.”
Marcus’s voice crackles from the device, tight with urgency.
“Perimeter breach. Bio-signature confirmed. It’s not a cleaner. It’s a Harvester. Thorne is here.”
The heat leaves Damian’s eyes. The CEO returns, smooth and cold, replacing whatever that was. He sets me on the edge of the bed and stands, rolling down his shirtsleeves.
“Stay in the nursery,” he says.
“If anyone but me or Sarah opens that door, use the needle you hid in the lion’s head.”
The heat in my veins flatlines. He’s known the whole time.
“I’ll handle Thorne,” he says from the doorway.
“But Elena. If you try to run while my sensors are down, I’ll let him have you.”
The door seals. I’m left in the dark with the child’s pulse still drumming against my spine, a perfect echo of the man who just threatened to feed me to the wolves while doing everything in his power to keep the wolves out.
Then the nursery’s monitor flickers, and a single line of text resolves on the dark glass where the lullaby feed should be. Not from Damian. Not from the house.
SIX HOURS. They are not even bothering to hide the countdown from me anymore. Someone in this estate wants me to watch it run.
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
—fire.Damian didn’t finish the sentence.The secondary vault doors slammed home with a hydraulic hiss that swallowed the roar of the surface. Silence followed—heavy, pressurized, and tasting of ozone. We were two hundred feet below the estate, encased in enough reinforced concrete to weather a nuc
The elevator doors sealed with the finality of a coffin lid.I leaned against the mirrored back wall. The cool glass bit through the thin silk of my ruined robe.My right hand was a map of agony. The skin on my palm was blackened and peeling where ten thousand volts had exited my bo
Damian didn’t let up.His thumb pressed harder, pinning the pulse in my jaw against the bone until the beat felt like a rhythmic, electric needle."What is your brother telling you?" he asked.It wasn't a question. It was a cold order from a man who considered the very
I didn't breathe. I couldn't.Damian’s palm felt like a block of ice against the fire of my fever, but it wasn't the temperature that was killing me. It was the silence.The child, usually a rhythmic, thrumming engine of silver light in my blood, had gone still. Not the stilln







