Home / Urban / The Inheritance Protocol / 18. The Last Inheritance
18. The Last Inheritance
Author: Achie Ver
last update2025-08-07 23:50:55

The wind was warm again. Birds sang in the trees. The Everhart Estate stood tall, clean, peaceful. The sky stretched wide above it, blue and perfect. It looked like a world reborn.

But Kai Everhart didn’t feel peace. Not yet. Not completely.

He sat on the edge of the courtyard fountain, his sleeves rolled up, hands wet from helping Iris fix the garden pumps.

They had been broken for years. Small things Lucian never bothered with. But now… it mattered. Little things mattered.

Iris laughed as the water finally burst through the pipe. “We did it!”

Kai smiled, wiping sweat from his brow. “You did it,” he said.

She looked up at him. “You used to never say that.”

He chuckled. “I used to be a lot of things.”

Then he looked toward the east wall. Where a black stone plaque had been placed days ago.

Carved into it were four names. Lucian Everhart. Ash. Subject Zero. The Forgotten One.

Iris followed his gaze. “Do you miss them?”

Kai didn’t answer right away. “Sometimes,” he said. “But mostly…
Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • 32. When Titans Walk

    The plateau groaned under their feet. Dust rained down from the tower’s ceiling. From the west, the ocean Sentinel hauled its massive body onto the land, each step leaving a crater in the rock.From the east, the inland Sentinel appeared, its armor the color of rusted iron, its limbs bristling with spikes like dead trees.Between them, the tower and everyone inside stood like a pebble between two storms. Rex swore under his breath. “Two of them? This is not a fight we can win.”Thorne gripped his shotgun tighter. “We’re not running.”“Not running?” Rex snapped. “You see the size of those things?”Thorne’s eyes didn’t leave the inland giant. “Running doesn’t help if there’s nowhere to run to.”Amara knelt in the tower’s center, sweat dripping down her face. The tether glowed faintly, the link to Linh stretched thin. “They’re not just walking here,” she whispered. “They’re speaking to each other. Deciding what to do with us.”Kai crouched beside her. “What are they saying?”She looked u

  • 31. The Thing From the Deep

    The wind howled across the plateau. Everyone at the tower froze, weapons forgotten for a moment, staring toward the ocean.It was not a ship. It was not the ark. It was bigger. A wall of jagged black armor pushed through the waves, each plate shifting like the scales of some ancient beast. Between the plates, faint green light pulsed, as if something alive was breathing inside, and it was coming toward them.Amara’s voice was soft, almost lost under the roar of the sea. “That’s not the gardener's work. Not entirely.”Kai turned sharply. “Explain.”She shook her head. “It feels wrong. Not like the others. This thing was made.”“By who?” Thorne demanded.Her answer was cold. “By people.”The thing reached the cliffs. Its weight made the ground shudder. Stone cracked and tumbled into the sea, taking pieces of the cliff with it. The edge of the plateau groaned under the strain. Thorne cursed. “We stay here, we drop into the ocean with it.”As if the giant’s arrival had called them, the

  • 30. The Seeds of War

    The plateau shook beneath Thorne’s boots. Down in the low mist, shapes moved, dark, lean, fast. Each one carried a glowing green lump in its chest. “Pods,” Amara whispered, her voice shaking.Thorne lifted his rifle. “Pods for what?”She met his eyes. “New life. New weapons. New arks.”The lead creature broke into a sprint. The others followed, their claws biting into the dirt.“Positions!” Thorne roared.The gunners opened fire, bullets tearing into the first wave. Black ichor splattered across the rock. But even with holes in their chests, the pod-bearers kept coming.“They’re not stopping!” one gunner shouted.On the comm, Kai’s voice cut through the gunfire. “Thorne, hold your ground. We’re on our way.”Thorne gritted his teeth. “Better hurry. We’re gonna run out of ammo before you run out of sky.”Amara sat in the center of the tower, the tether still faintly glowing. Her breathing was ragged.“They’re linked,” she said. “Not like the ark or bloom. These are pieces of it. If the

  • 29. Two Fronts

    The camp was quiet except for the wind moving through the cliffs. Everyone was staring at Amara.She sat upright now, her dark hair falling around her pale face. The faint green glow in her eyes made her look both fragile and dangerous.“You can’t be serious,” Nova said.Amara didn’t flinch. “I am. The Gardener knows me. I am part of it. If I reach for both the bloom and the ark at the same time, I can connect them, make them share the same root. That way, a strike against one will hit the other.”Dax shook his head. “That sounds like magic, not science.”“It’s biology,” Amara said softly. “Terrible, unnatural biology. But it will work.”Kai studied her. “You’re leaving something out.”Amara met his gaze. “If I do this, the Gardener will know exactly where I am. It will send everything it has to stop me.”Linh’s grip tightened on the tether between them. “And you think we’ll just let that happen?”Amara’s voice didn’t rise, but it carried weight. “If it works, the war could end before

  • 28. The Black Case

    Saltwater dripped from the black case, pooling at Kai’s boots. The symbol on its surface, a sharp silver spiral encircled by a broken ring, seemed to glimmer in the weak morning light.He hadn’t seen that crest since Lucian’s death. Nova stepped closer, rifle still in her hands. “That’s his, isn’t it?”Kai didn’t look up. “Yes.”Dax squinted. “What’s it doing here? The Seed-bearers didn’t make that.”“No,” Kai said slowly, “but someone wanted us to find it.”He knelt, running his fingers over the case. It was cold, far too cold for something that had been in seawater.There was a lock, but not a mechanical one. The surface shimmered faintly as he touched it, a small circle of light expanding under his palm.“It’s gene-coded,” Linh said from behind him. She was still tethered to Amara, her voice tight with fatigue. “Only certain people can open it.”Kai’s eyes narrowed. “And Lucian made sure I was one of them.” The case clicked softly. The lid rose with a hiss of compressed air.Inside

  • 27. Landfall

    The armored transport tore through the dusty road, its heavy tires spitting gravel behind them.Kai sat in the passenger seat, visor down, eyes fixed on the GPS feed projected across his HUD. A blinking red dot moved steadily toward the California coast.“We’ve got eleven hours now,” Oracle’s voice came through the comm. “It’s slowing down a little, but not enough.”Nova drove like the vehicle was an extension of her body, hands steady even as the wheels bounced over uneven terrain. “If it’s slowing, maybe it’s preparing to, I don’t know, change?”Dax was wedged in the back beside Linh, who still held the glowing tether connecting her to Amara. “Or maybe it’s hungry,” he said under his breath.Kai didn’t look back. “Either way, we meet it before it reaches a city.”They made it halfway to the extraction airfield before they saw the smoke.Thorne spotted it first. “That’s not from the wildfires,” he said, pointing at the thin column rising straight up in the distance.As they drew clos

More Chapter
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