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The Geneva Protocol

Author: Rajendra
last update publish date: 2026-07-07 10:57:10

The tires of the off-roader shrieked violently as the vehicle materialized onto the slick, wet cobblestones of a narrow alleyway. The dense, pine-scented mist of Shimla was instantaneously replaced by the crisp, biting air of a European dawn. Towering stone facades with intricate Gothic arches pressed in from both sides, and in the distance, the synchronized chime of a massive cathedral clock echoed through the empty streets.

Anaya gasped, her fingers still pressed against the central spindle of the brass pocket watch. The device was now completely silent, its metal casing cooling down from a searing heat to a deathly, metallic cold.

"Everyone shut up and don't touch anything," Kabir commanded, his hand white on the gear shift as he kept the idling engine as quiet as possible. His eyes darted across the unfamiliar street signs written in sharp French script. Rue de la Fontaine. "Vikram, tell me your laptop didn't just malfunction."

Vikram didn't answer immediately. The erratic, flashing diagnostic bars on his screen had suddenly locked into a solid, unchanging grid. The satellite mapping software on his screen aggressively shifted its focal point across continents, zooming through global layers before pinning their exact GPS coordinates down to a precise, flashing red dot in Geneva, Switzerland.

"It didn't malfunction," Vikram whispered, his voice completely devoid of color. "We just bypassed six thousand miles of geographic airspace in less than half a second. The pocket watch... it used the Shimla node as a slingshot. It didn't just restart time; it executed an emergency network relocation."

Devashish leaned forward from the backseat, staring out the window at the grand clock tower looming over the distant square—the historic Tour de l'Île. "This is their birthplace. If the ledger is right, the Chronomos Society operates directly beneath the old horology guilds of this city. We haven't escaped them, Kabir. We just delivered ourselves straight into the hornets' nest."

"We had no choice," Anaya said, her voice shaking as she carefully folded her grandfather’s blood-stained letter and slid it back into her satchel along with the glowing crystal data-shard. "If we stayed in Shimla, those operatives would have erased us from existence. My grandfather said the watchmaker's blood is the anchor. He wanted us to come here."

Before Devashish could argue, a low, ominous vibration rattled through the off-roader’s chassis. It wasn't the sound of an approaching vehicle. It was a deep, rhythmic hum that resonated from the stone buildings themselves. High above the cobblestone street, the gas lamps and modern LED storefront lights began to flicker in a broken, frame-skipping sequence—the exact same metronomic signature that had heralded the arrival of the operatives at the Shimla manor.

"They already know we're here," Kabir growled, shifting the car into drive. "The moment a foreign chronal signature drops into their home sector, their defensive grid triggers. We need to abandon the vehicle. A modified Indian off-roader sticks out like a flare on these streets."

"Where do we go?" Vikram asked, frantically packing his laptop into his backpack. "We don't have a safe house in Switzerland!"

"Your grandfather’s ledger, Devashish," Anaya ordered, her adrenaline spiking once again as she saw a fleet of sleek, silver sedans turn the far corner of the avenue, their headlights cutting through the pale morning fog with perfect, synchronized precision. "Look for the Geneva coordinates he noted down. There has to be a secondary regulator or a sanctuary listed."

Devashish hurriedly flipped through the fragile, leather-bound book, his thumb tracing the old ink entries until he stopped at a page watermarked with a stylized hourglass entwined with a rising sun. "Here! L'Atelier des Ombres—The Workshop of Shadows. It’s an underground vault located beneath the old waterworks near the Rhône river. It’s listed as a decommissioned baseline stabilizer."

"Hold on!" Kabir shouted.

He slammed his foot onto the accelerator just as the silver sedans accelerated with impossible, physics-defying speed. The pursuing cars didn't move linearly; they glitched across the cobblestones, appearing ten yards closer with every erratic, frame-skipping second.

Kabir spun the steering wheel, sending the off-roader crashing through a set of decorative iron gates leading down toward the lower riverbanks. The tires lost traction on the wet stone stairs, bouncing violently as the vehicle plummeted down the steep incline toward the dark, rushing waters of the Rhône.

With a final, desperate turn, Kabir aimed the car directly at the gaping, dark mouth of an old brick drainage tunnel that fed into the river. The off-roader slammed into the darkness, its roof scraping against the low archway with a deafening, metallic shriek before Kabir violently engaged the emergency brake, bringing the vehicle to a hard stop inside the subterranean vault.

The headlights flickered out, plunging them into absolute darkness, save for the faint golden glow still radiating from the satchel on Anaya's lap.

"Out! Now!" Kabir whispered, throwing his door open.

They scrambled out of the car just as the sound of rhythmic, heavy footsteps began to echo from the entrance of the tunnel behind them. The Chronomos operatives were already entering the perimeter, their movement perfectly silent except for the synchronized click of their weapons locking into place.

Anaya led the way into the deeper, uncharted network of the brick tunnels, her hand tightly gripping the ancient brass pocket watch. As they turned a blind corner into a massive, cavernous chamber filled with the rusted gears of nineteenth-century water turbines, the watch in her hand suddenly vibrated.

A single, brilliant beam of golden light shot out from the empty face of the watch, projecting a complex, three-dimensional geometric map directly onto the ancient brick wall in front of them. The map showed a hidden doorway concealed behind a massive, rusted iron fly-wheel.

"The workshop," Anaya breathed, rushing toward the mechanism. "It's opening the way."

But as she reached for the fly-wheel, a cold, clinical voice echoed from the shadows directly above the turbine platform.

"Fascinating," the voice said, spoken in a flawless, aristocratic British accent. "Dinanath always did say his bloodline would be his ultimate contingency. Welcome to Geneva, Miss Anaya. We have been adjusting the variables for your arrival for a very long time."

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