Morning always arrived the same way for Luther. He woke before sunrise in the narrow apartment above the repair shop, listening to the soft mechanical ticking of the old wall clock. The building creaked as the temperature shifted, and the pipes rattled in a predictable sound behind the cracked plaster. He depended on predictability because predictability made him invisible.
Luther sat up slowly and rubbed his eyes. He waited exactly ten seconds before standing, just as he did every day, because routine reduced mistakes. He folded the thin gray blanket into a neat rectangle and placed it at the foot of the bed. He washed his face in cold water from the rust-stained sink and stared at his reflection for longer than usual. The face in the mirror belonged to Daniel Rowe. That was the name printed on the identification card in his wallet. It was the name on his employment file at the repair shop downstairs. It was the name attached to the small bank account that never carried more than necessary. It was not his real name. He turned away from the mirror before memory could follow him. The apartment smelled faintly of oil and dust, which drifted upward from the workshop below. He dressed in the same dark clothes he wore every day, including the plain jacket with a torn inner seam where he kept emergency cash. He checked the hallway through the peephole before leaving, even though no one had ever followed him here. That habit never changed. Luther locked the door behind him and walked down the narrow staircase, counting each step as he descended. He had counted those steps for three years. Fourteen steps, always fourteen. The repair shop owner, Malik, was already awake and working when Luther entered. Sparks flashed from a welding torch in the back corner, briefly illuminating shelves filled with broken electronics and mechanical scraps. “You are early again,” Malik said without looking up. “I prefer mornings,” Luther replied. Malik laughed quietly. “You prefer quiet.” Luther allowed himself a small smile. Malik never asked questions about Luther’s past, and that silence made the arrangement work. Luther moved to the workbench and began sorting circuit boards that needed repair. His hands moved with careful precision as he replaced damaged components. The work required focus but not conversation, which suited him. Outside, the city slowly came alive and traffic noise grew in the distance. Vendors opened stalls along the street. The smell of roasted coffee drifted through the open shop door. The world followed patterns, and Luther relied on those patterns to stay hidden. He did not check the news. He never checked the news. Malik eventually turned off the welding torch and stretched his arms. “You never miss a day,” he said. “I like consistency,” Luther answered. Malik nodded, then stepped outside to speak with a supplier. Luther continued working, alone with the hum of old electronics. A loose screw rolled off the table, and Luther caught it without looking, he paused because the screw should not have rolled. He had placed it in the center of the table. He stared at the work surface, replaying the last few seconds in his mind. He could not remember touching the screw again. He told himself it had been vibration from the welding earlier. He placed the screw back in the center. He went back to work. Minutes passed. The screw did not move again. Still, the moment lingered in his thoughts. By midday, customers arrived with broken appliances and damaged devices. Luther handled repairs while Malik negotiated prices. The routine unfolded exactly as expected, and the earlier incident faded from Luther’s mind. Until the power flickered and the lights blinked once. Then again, it stabilized. Malik sighed. “The grid again.” Luther glanced at the wall clock. It had stopped, the second hand rested between numbers. He stood slowly and tapped the glass. The clock resumed ticking. Malik did not notice. Luther returned to his workbench, but unease settled in his chest. Small coincidences had begun happening more often over the past few months. He always found explanations, yet the explanations felt weaker each time. At closing time, Malik handed Luther a small envelope of cash. “Same tomorrow,” Malik said. “Yes,” Luther replied. He stepped outside into the cooling evening air. The sky glowed orange between tall buildings, and distant sirens echoed through the city. Luther walked home using his usual route. He never varied it because routine protected him. He passed the same bookstore, the same fruit vendor, and the same cracked sidewalk corner where water always collected after rain. The world behaved exactly as it should. Until the traffic light changed. It turned green earlier than expected. Cars moved before pedestrians had finished crossing. A cyclist nearly collided with a taxi and Luther stopped walking because he knew it would happen. The certainty struck him seconds before the light changed. He did not understand how. The moment passed, and the city returned to normal motion. He continued walking, but his heartbeat felt louder than the surrounding noise. When he reached his building, he climbed the fourteen steps again. He unlocked the apartment door and stepped inside. The room looked untouched. Everything remained where he left it. He exhaled slowly. Night arrived quietly. Luther ate a simple meal and read an old technical manual under dim lighting. He forced himself to focus on the diagrams and instructions. At exactly ten o’clock, he turned off the lamp. Sleep did not come easily. Memories pressed against the edges of his mind, threatening to surface. He saw flashes of bright laboratories, unfamiliar voices, the day they framed and voted him out, and long corridors filled with glass walls. He pushed the images away. He had buried that life, and it was safer to be buried. Hours passed before exhaustion finally pulled him into sleep. A dream followed. In the dream, Luther stood in a massive room filled with screens displaying endless streams of numbers. The numbers rearranged themselves into patterns he could almost understand. A voice spoke from behind him, calm and controlled. “You cannot erase what you are.” He turned, but no one stood there, and the screens suddenly went dark. He woke but the apartment was silent. His heart pounded as he sat up in bed. Then he heard footsteps in the hallway outside his door. They were slow and deliberate. They stopped directly in front of his apartment. Luther remained still. A thin beam of light appeared beneath the door, as if someone stood outside holding a device. He moved quietly to the kitchen counter and opened a drawer. His fingers closed around the small emergency knife he kept hidden there. The light disappeared. The footsteps resumed, moving down the hallway. Luther waited, five minutes passed, then ten, and silence returned. He approached the door carefully and looked through the peephole. The hallway was empty. He exhaled, but tension remained in his shoulders. He opened the door slightly, and he saw something lying on the floor like a black envelope with no writing, no markings. He picked it up and closed the door. His hands felt colder than usual as he opened it. Inside was a single photograph, It showed a younger Luther standing beside a tall man in a dark suit, Victor Cain. Luther dropped into the chair because the photo was impossible. That image had never been public. He turned the photograph over and three words were printed on the back: WE FOUND YOU Then the wall clock behind him stopped ticking again. And this time, it did not start back up.Latest Chapter
Chapter 303: The Horizon
Morning sunlight stretched across the city; glass towers reflected gold and silver light into the clear sky; streets below carried the familiar rhythm of ordinary life; trains moved through elevated transit lines; delivery vehicles followed predictable routes; office workers crossed intersections with cups of coffee in their hands; students hurried toward schools; shop owners unlocked doors and prepared for another day.The city was alive, not because it had become perfect but because it had survived.Luther stood on the observation platform at the top of one of the tallest buildings in the district. Years earlier, towers like this one had represented something unique, control, and secrecy. Power concentrated into the hands of a few people who believed they understood what was best for everyone else, the skyline had once been a monument to ambition without limits; now it represented something else, like transparency, cooperation, and responsibility.The changes had not happened overni
Chapter 302: Calm Threads
The symbol vanished from the sky; one moment it stretched across the darkness above the facility, the next moment it was gone. No sound accompanied its appearance, no shockwave followed, and no distortion rippled through reality.The night simply returned to normal; stars filled the sky once again, and the silence that followed felt almost unreal. Researchers stood frozen across the facility grounds, observers stared upward, and technicians checked equipment repeatedly; nobody trusted what they had just witnessed.Luther remained motionless, his eyes stayed fixed on the sky long after the symbol disappeared; the image had awakened old memories, not complete memories.The damage caused by the gene rewrite still left spaces throughout his past, yet the feeling remained unmistakable in recognition, not fear or panic.Aiden stood nearby; the teenager looked unsettled. “What was that?”Nobody answered immediately because nobody knew. Selene emerged from the operations building carrying a t
Chapter 301: The Next Generation
The operations centre had never been quieter; dozens of specialists occupied the room, researchers monitored global anomaly networks, analysts reviewed incoming reports, and observers documented every development, yet nobody spoke above a whisper.The synchronised dream reports continued arriving from every region of the world; each account contained slight differences in different landscapes, different details, and different emotional impressions, but one element remained the same.The identity of the person standing at the centre of every dream was unknown; the descriptions varied too much to create a reliable image. Some witnesses described a young woman, others described a young man, and some claimed the figure appeared older; others insisted the person looked no older than sixteen, but the contradictions made no sense.Selene stood near the main display reviewing hundreds of testimonies; her frustration showed. “The descriptions keep changing.”Marcus looked over her shoulder. “A
Chapter 300: A Shared Path
The message remained on the screen long after everyone finished reading it; no additional information followed, no explanation appeared, and no source identified itself. The transmission simply ended, the display returned to the global anomaly map, and thousands of markers continued glowing across continents.The awakening continued.The aircraft descended steadily through the clouds; morning sunlight illuminated the landscape below, rivers cut through valleys, roads connected distant communities, and cities appeared on the horizon. Life continued everywhere; people woke up, people went to work, people attended school, and people worried about ordinary problems, but most had no idea that humanity stood at the edge of another transformation.Luther remained near the display; his attention lingered on the message.A warning.The words repeated in his mind; for years he had believed the gene crisis represented an ending. He wondered whether his understanding had been incomplete regarding
Chapter 299: Power Never Vanishes
The message remained on every screen; nobody spoke. The aircraft cabin felt smaller than before as the growing map dominated the central display; thousands of anomaly markers continued to appear across the world, and entire regions that had shown no unusual activity just hours earlier now displayed faint probability signatures.The pattern expanded continuously, not violently, not chaotically, but steadily, almost naturally.Marcus stared at the display; his years of experience had taught him how to evaluate threats. The numbers should have frightened him; the scale alone should have triggered emergency protocols, yet something about the situation refused to fit familiar categories. This was not an attack, this was not an invasion, and this was not a system failure. It looked more like a change, a transformation already underway.Selene rapidly reviewed every available data source like satellite feeds, environmental monitoring systems, transparency network reports, academic databases,
Chapter 298: The Journey Begins
Morning arrived beneath a grey sky; clouds drifted slowly above the mountain valley, casting moving shadows across the forests and scattered buildings below. The settlement had awakened early. People moved through the narrow roads carrying supplies, opening shops, and beginning another ordinary day.At least it appeared ordinary from a distance. Luther stood outside the guest lodge and watched the village come alive; the previous night’s conversation with Aiden remained fresh in his mind. That same voice knows all our names. Those words had followed him into sleep; now they remained just as troubling in daylight.The difference was that fear no longer dominated his thoughts, because concern existed, questions existed, and responsibility existed; anxiety did not. He had spent too many years allowing fear to guide decisions. Fear had nearly destroyed Victor; fear had empowered Cain; fear had convinced intelligent people that control was wisdom, and Luther refused to repeat that mistake.
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Reader Comments
is Luther's determination for me! I love his composure already