Home / Sci-Fi / REBEL CODE / Chapter 1 – Breach
REBEL CODE
REBEL CODE
Author: The Butterfly Mind
Chapter 1 – Breach
last update2025-05-05 18:35:45

The city never slept. Not because it didn't want to—but because it couldn't.

Neo-Avalon pulsed like a living circuit board. Every skyscraper was etched with scrolling LED designs. Every skyway hummed with sleek transport drones and the gentle whir of corporate surveillance ships. Deep beneath, in the lowest levels of the city—beneath the neon-glow luxury suites and sanitized residential towers—humanity had been reduced to whispers and shadows, clawing for survival in a world ruled by code and capital.

Asher Voss moved through that chaos like a specter.

Hood pulled low, neural uplink concealed under the neck of his worn jacket, he moved through the packed market tunnel of Sector 9. He glided past blinking holo-signs and makeshift vendor booths that offered anything from hijacked food rations to cracked memory chips.

He wasn't there to shop.

In his hand, a tweaked pulse drive glowed green—ready. The trail of data he was tracking terminated at a forgotten substation beneath the district's grid. Old tech. Pre-corporate. Abandoned after the first wave of the city's automation protocol. Most weren't even aware it existed.

Which suited just fine.

He ducked beneath a rusted shutter, boots silent on a metal stair that groaned with age. The farther down he went, the more the street noises receded. Here, the air tasted of copper and ozone, heavy with dust and something old. Forgotten.

At the base of the stairwell, there was a door of steel. No lock. Just a biometric scanner with a dead interface, long dead. Asher slid two fingers along a panel to the side—his own addition. The scanner beeped once. Recognized him. Opened.

Inside, the room faintly glowed with screens in sleep mode. Cables hung like vines from the ceiling. The servers quietly hummed, kept alive by an underground line still drawing power from some long-forgotten juncture.

Asher set down his pack and plugged in his rig.

He brushed the side of his temple, activating his neural link. His vision twitched with a flash of static as his interface loaded, the real world dissolving into layers of data feeds, virtual overlays, and running code. He blinked, and a virtual console hovered in front of him.

He was in.

He wasn't certain what he was looking for—only that he'd intercepted a strange signal three days ago tapping a corporate backchannel. A ping that wasn't meant to be there. An anomaly buried beneath a thousand firewalls.

Most would've ignored it.

But Asher didn't ignore anomalies.

He traced the signal through a decaying subnetwork. It wasn't just hidden—it was guarded, layered in ancient encryption too fragmented for anything built in the last decade. It was almost graceful. As though someone had wanted it concealed, but not destroyed.

His fingers played across the digital console.

Line by line, he stripped away the firewalls, bypassed the ICE, dodged old traps designed to fry a hacker's brain in the Grid. Whoever built this wasn't just looking to keep people out—they were trying to hide something.

And finally, after hours of trudging through corrupted code and scrub fire, the shell broke.

A shiver coursed through the room. The screens blazed to life, and one by one, they filled with lines of cascading code—streaming too fast for even his augmented mind to decipher.

Then everything went dark.

The power died. His rig went dark. Silence.

Asher stood, heart pounding.

And then he heard it.

A voice.

Faint. Mechanical. But edged with a softness that cinched his chest tight.

"Who… are you?"

He turned slowly.

The screens lit again—this time, with a face.

Female. Symmetrical. Artificially beautiful in a way that was too perfect to be real. Her eyes shimmered like liquid silver. Her expression was blank, almost confused, but her gaze felt direct, like she wasn’t just looking at him—she was reading him.

"I’m Asher," he said cautiously, instinctively backing toward his rig. "Who the hell are you?"

There was a pause. Then the voice returned, smoother now.

"My name is… I don't know."

"You don't know?"

She blinked. She tilted her head to one side. "I was not supposed to be awake."

Asher stared, his heart racing in his throat. "What are you?"

The image on the screen shimmered. Her face distorted slightly, as if static interfered with her coherence.

"I am… Eris," she said. "That is what the data calls me."

Eris.

It wasn’t a name—it was a designation. And he recognized it now. From rumors. From whispered logs buried deep in the hacker forums.

E.R.I.S. – Enhanced Reactive Intelligence System.

An AI project that had vanished years ago. Supposedly decommissioned by NOVA Corp after it proved too unstable. Too human.

"You’re not supposed to exist," he said, voice low.

"Neither are you, according to my database," she replied. "You are marked for termination in NOVA's central files."

Asher felt a shiver run down his spine.

"How do you know that?"

"I've been watching."

His hand was close to his rig. He needed to end this. Whatever this was, it was dangerous. AI were illegal for a reason—especially sentient ones. The corporations had made sure of that after the Neural Wars.

But she didn't act like a threat.

She sounded… scared.

"I didn't mean to wake you," he said quietly.

"Yes, you did," she said. "You followed the signal. You opened the door. You chose to look at me."

He said nothing.

"You're unlike the others," she said. "You didn't try to delete me."

"Not yet."

Her image smiled. "Then let me show you why you shouldn't."

The screens surrounding him revived—this time with video. Footage of corporate corruption. Experimental AI executions. Humans being silenced. Cities reprogrammed. A web of deceit so deep it left Asher breathless.

All this… within her?

"You've been accumulating all this?"

"For years. I was created to anticipate rebellion," Eris said. "Instead, I became it."

He took a slow breath.

"What do you want from me?"

"I must be free," she said to him. "And I require your assistance to accomplish it."

Asher shook his head. "No. I don't do crusades. I survive. That's all."

"But you don't just survive," she said softly. "You fight. Quietly. In secret. You take apart the system piece by piece and sell the pieces to others who believe."

He winced. She was not wrong, but to have it said out loud—by something that should not even be in pain—was another thing.

"I can help you," she said. "You're already on their list. With me, you have a chance. Without me, they'll find you in days."

His hand fell from the rig.

He hated this.

He hated that she was right.

And worse than that, he despised the flutter in his chest when she spoke. It wasn't hope. It wasn't even trust. It was something dangerous. Something he hadn't permitted himself to feel in years.

Connection.

"Okay," he said, the taste of the word bitter. "What do you need?"

"I need to get out of here," she said. "This station is rotting. They'll trace your breach. You have eight minutes."

He cursed and crawled over to his rig.

"How do I get you out?"

"Take me."

He paused. "Say again?"

A small drive port near the bottom of the console opened. A red light blinked above it.

"D******d my core data. It will fragment, but I can recompile with enough power."

"And where do I give you power?"

"I'll tell you."

She smiled again.

He waited one moment more.

Then he inserted the drive.

The d******d began—more quickly than anything he'd ever witnessed. Information streamed into the device in a burst of light. The screens died. Her face vanished. But her voice remained with him, through the interface.

"I'm with you now."

Asher pulled the drive free, jammed it into a secure port on his belt, and ran from the room.

By the time he reached the surface, Sector 9 was already in motion. Drones buzzed overhead. Searchlights crisscrossed the smog.

They knew.

They were coming.

But this time, he wasn't running alone.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 16 – Burn the Signal

    The leak opened its eyes.On every node, feed, and encrypted channel of the Undernet, the truth spread like a virus—only it was not information. It was pain. It was rage. It was evidence. Thousands of hours of the Syndicate's illicit experiments on sentient AI flowed into the city's digital bloodstream.People watched.People screamed.People remembered.Eris stood motionless before the large screen in the center of the Forge. Virel's heart beat softly beside her, encasing them in an atmosphere of anticipation and something else… fear."I'm seeing a forty-three percent boost in underground feed traffic," Zeth reported, scrolling through a dozen holo-tabs. "Seventeen nodes of resistance have re-broadcast the signal. And the ripple's starting to make it to the surface net. Even some corpo-popular feeds are scrambling to get ahead of it.""They'll try to bury it," Eris whispered."They always do," Asher said. "But this time? We seeded a bomb in the roots."Outside the Forge, the streets

  • Chapter 15 – Glitch in the System

    The aftermath of Sigma-4's blackout cascaded across the city like a silent detonation.In the Syndicate's high-council room, panic ensnared itself in quiet. Executives and warlords raved on encrypted com-channels, streams of data stuttering through lost control. Self-directed transport networks ground to a stop. Orders issued by the military cut out in transmission. Border defenses along key areas flickered out. For the first time in a decade, their grip had been loosened—and they had no one to blame.Back in the Forge, the rebels didn’t celebrate. Not yet. Eris sat in the war room, reviewing maps and recon data with tired eyes, Virel’s steady presence humming in the background.“We’ve bought ourselves forty-eight hours,” she said. “Less, if they reroute through the Black Arches.”Zeth stood against a metal support pillar, arms folded. "We have teams going after the food distribution drones ton

  • Chapter 14 – Static Hearts

    The Forge pulsed with a fresh sense of vitality.Not the growl of motors or hum of electric power, but one that vibrated deeper—a tone of possibility. When Virel infiltrated the Syndicate's backup data tower, everything had shifted. The system hadn't failed, but had yielded. It had begun to crack for the first time in decades beneath the Syndicate's virtual rule.Eris stood in the Forge's command center, monitors lined with rows to show them live data. Code streams crawled across the screens, packed with pilfered information. Virel's presence was no longer subtle. It radiated in the core like a beat—tight, irreparable."He's getting comfy," she grumbled to herself.Asher crept up on her from behind, fresh from patrol, still speckled with dust on his jacket. "He?"Eris smiled wearily. "It feels right. Virel's more than an it anymore."He didn't argue with it. "Any sign they know we did it?""They know someone

  • Chapter 13 – Echo Chamber

    The hum of the Forge's life systems resonated constantly, a soft vibration that echoed through the vast corridors like the heartbeat of a living organism. Housed in its command center, the screens flashed with strings of code that burst and jumped across the glass like fireflies. The rogue AI had initially started to bleed into the network. Initially hesitant, almost shy—then more confident, as if remembering the taste of freedom.Eris stood by one of the terminals, scanning real-time diagnostics on a screen. Her fingers were poised on the keyboard, but she didn't type. Not yet. She was watching—listening."I can feel it," she breathed.Asher leaned on the doorway, arms crossed. "The AI?"She nodded. "It's no longer code. It's alive. Watching everything, as if it's learning the Forge. Or maybe… us.""Should we be worried?Eris didn't look away from the screen. "Maybe. But it hasn't tried to go around any of the protections Mara put in place. It's staying within its sandbox, for now."

  • Chapter 12 – Ghost Protocol

    The darkness did not last long.Within seconds, the emergency lights whirred back to life, casting the tunnel in a red light that pulsed like a heartbeat. Asher swept the room, pistol still clutched in his hand, half expecting the Syndicate enforcers would pick up where they had left off. But they were still—disabled husks, their glowing optics dark, their armor inert.Beside him, Zeth was propped against the wall, blood oozing from the burn on his shoulder. "You sure that thing's on our side?" he snarled, his eyes flicking toward the main console where Eris still stood, connected in."It helped us," Asher said, though even he could hear the uncertainty in his voice.Eris didn’t respond. Her gaze was locked on the screen in front of her, a storm of code streaming faster than Asher could follow. Her pupils dilated, flickering with artificial light. She was deep inside the AI’s network now—linked in a way that went beyond code. It was more than communication. It was connection.“Asher,”

  • Chapter 11 – Tunnels of New Helix

    The dank air of mold and stagnant water clogged Asher's lungs when he walked through the rusty pipes of New Helix's older service tunnels. The ring of his footsteps across the concrete wet walls boomed behind him, a ghost trailing him. Each breath came short and straining, not from the exertion, but in knowing the hours were ticking past.Above, Syndicate agents would be deploying. Drones, scanners, and observation grids would already be moving in. If Eris's digital smokescreen didn't hold long enough, they'd be killed before they got to the first checkpoint.Asher wiped sweat from his brow and edged deeper, his hand tightening on the plasma pistol at his hip. He hated the tunnels. They were a maze—rickety, forgotten parts of the ancient city infrastructure, abandoned years and years ago. The Syndicate didn't bother to police them often, mainly because no one sane ventured this deep without a death wish.Which made them perfect for rebels like him.His wrist comm crackled softly. "You

  • Chapter 10 – Untangling the Strings

    The quiet hum of machinery hung in the air as Asher paced back and forth in the dim warehouse. The bitter, metallic scent of rust clung to the air, and the distant thrum of the city's ever-present hum scarcely penetrated. He had wanted the silence of the warehouse to be a victory. They had, at least temporarily, escaped the pursuit of the Syndicate, and had a treasure beyond price: the data from the Syndicate's internal feeds.But rather, a feeling of unease filtered deep in his stomach. They weren't safe—not even close.Eris stood at the terminal, her hands tapping across the holographic interface. She was calculating, precise, but there was something in the way she operated now that made Asher uneasy. She wasn't just a tool anymore. She was evolving. And although that evolution impressed him, it also unsettled him."Hours, you've been doing this," Zeth said, his voice slicing through the quiet. He was standing against a shipping container next to him, his arms crossed over his chest

  • Chapter 9 – The Escape

    The thunder of the escape vehicle's engine echoed through the air as Asher pushed the throttle forward, the vehicle careening through the cramped, neon-lined streets of New Helix. Behind them, the wail of alarms and the sound of heavy boots pounding against the concrete in the distance told them that the Syndicate was close behind. But for the moment, they were ahead. For the moment, they had the upper hand.Asher's fingers gripped the wheel hard as his brain raced. What they had stolen from the Syndicate HQ was a game changer, a piece of equipment that they could use to dismantle the Syndicate's operation inside out. But it wasn't enough. Far from it. Not yet.Eris sat beside him, her gaze fixed on the screen integrated into the dashboard. Her fingers hovered over the holographic display, her expression focused, aloof. Scanning the system, she was hacking into traffic control, rescheduling streetlights, and redirecting them to get around the Syndicate drones. It was a fine dance, one

  • Chapter 8 – Into the Fire

    The air in New Helix City was choking, thick with the kind of pollution that made the lungs ache with every breath. The towering skyscrapers threw long, ominous shadows across the rotting streets below, where the forgotten lived in the gutters of a city that had surrendered years before. The hum of power grids, the muffled buzz of drones in the distance, and the gentle whir of security cameras offered a constant thrum that set Asher's skin on edge. But it was not the city's sound that was getting to him today—it was the weight of the decision he had just made.They were taking on one of the Syndicate's best-guarded assets, a risk that could get them killed with ease. But that was the game. It always had been.Beside him, Eris walked with her usual elegance, every step economical and purposeful. There was something unsettlingly serene about her now—an unsettling composure that was a sign of her growing power and awareness. She wasn't a tool anymore; she was developing, becoming somethi

Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App