
The rays of the evening sun spilled through a thick layer of clouds hanging over Whitewood City, one of the largest cities on the Eastern Coast. Among the crowds, a young man with unremarkable dark hair walked quietly down the street. Around him, skyscrapers loomed, and holographic ads flickered in the air above bustling sidewalks.
He wore a sleek black jumpsuit that hugged his athletic frame and a pair of black sneakers with soft soles that silenced every step. His dark hair was an anomaly, a detail that made sense only when you knew the truth about him. His name was Michael Grey, grandson of Walter Grey, the powerful patriarch of one of the most influential corporations in the world. But his father had been cast out of the family decades ago for reasons never made public. The Grey family was known for its distinctive blond hair color, a trait Michael didn’t share—something that helped him blend in without drawing attention. As he wove through the moving crowds, Michael glanced up at the glowing digital billboards and augmented reality projections that lit up the skyline. Some advertised cutting-edge gadgets or luxury fashion. Others were more ominous, flashing public safety alerts and corporate surveillance notices. He didn’t stop to watch. He had a mission, and nothing was going to get in his way. He reached a towering building stamped with the emblem of a well-known corporation and walked through its doors without hesitation. Inside, the air buzzed with the energy of machinery and murmuring employees. Michael moved quickly, navigating a maze of cubicles and glass-walled meeting rooms, his eyes scanning every screen and shadow. Then he saw his target—a middle-aged man in a business suit, briefcase in hand, heading toward the elevators. Michael acted without pause. He moved fast, his body fluid and precise, and in one clean motion, he snatched the briefcase and disappeared into the throng before anyone could react. Back on the street, he ducked into a quiet alley and opened the case. Inside, data chips glinted in neat rows. He allowed himself a small smile. It was exactly what his employer had sent him to retrieve. The sounds of building panic echoed from the street behind him. He could picture the man raising the alarm, security scrambling. With the kind of tech available these days, it wouldn’t take long for them to track his general location. But they’d be too late. This wasn’t Michael’s first job. Moving like someone who’d done this a hundred times before, he slipped between buildings and disappeared into side streets, gradually putting distance between himself and the noise behind him. The glittering corporate towers faded into everyday city blocks—convenience stores, apartment complexes, and restaurants far less glamorous than what he’d just left behind. He slowed down to a casual pace. Running here would only draw attention. In this part of the city, he was just another face. Eventually, he reached a hidden alley nestled in shadows where the setting sun barely touched the ground. It was empty except for a few scattered trash cans and the quiet hum of the city beyond. A soft purring sound caught his attention. A sleek black cat jumped up onto a trashcan, rubbing against his leg with a low meow. Michael crouched and scratched behind its ears, a faint smile tugging at his lips. “Hey there, little black cat,” he said quietly. “How’s your day been?” “You know, you really shouldn’t pet stray animals.” In a flash, Michael stood up and stepped back, one hand clutching the briefcase, the other reaching behind him instinctively. A man stood a few paces ahead. He was dressed in dark clothing too, though his three-piece suit had an unsettling quality, as if it drank in the surrounding light. He held a smoking pipe and wore a calm expression that gave away nothing. Michael’s posture eased slightly when he recognized the man. His features settled into a neutral expression as he stepped forward and held out the briefcase. “You should stop taking these jobs,” the older man said, his voice steady. Michael shrugged. “Easy for you to say. You’re the one wearing the thousand-dollar tech suit.” The man raised an eyebrow but didn’t argue. With a quiet sigh, he scanned Michael’s wrist with his own. Both wore Biz-Watches, devices that had replaced wallets and credit cards decades ago. Most transactions across the world now run through these slim bands. The company that had created them had even managed to unify the global economy under a single currency: the dollar. Michael glanced at the screen on his watch. Ten thousand dollars glowed in bright red. He didn’t react. The man noticed. “We’re done here,” Michael said flatly, turning to leave. “Michael.” He paused, tilting his head slightly. The man took a slow drag of his pipe, then exhaled a thin stream of smoke. “This world’s more dangerous than ever,” he said. “You never know who to trust anymore. Just… be careful.” Michael said nothing. A small shrug was his only reply as he turned and vanished into the street beyond. Left alone in the alley, the older man looked over at the black cat still perched on the trashcan, watching him with unblinking blue eyes. “I don’t suppose I could count on you to keep an eye on him?” “Meow?” He chuckled softly, reaching out to stroke its fur. “That’s what I thought. Take care, little fella.”Latest Chapter
Chapter Eighty – The Shadow That Answers
The dragon’s wooden jaws slammed shut around Michael, its body twisting as it dove into the ground. The impact detonated with the force of a localized explosion, the forest shaking from the pressure. Soil, stone, and splinters of shattered bark scattered in all directions, painting the air with brown haze. Rose watched the cloud rise, the deafening echo of the collision slowly fading into the distance.For a few long seconds, she didn’t move. The battlefield was still. The ground beneath her vibrated softly from the residual shockwaves, and the cocoon of vines surrounding her lowered on command, letting her step out into the open air. She surveyed the destruction — the splintered terrain, the uprooted trees, the streaks of frozen earth and shattered vegetation marking every place the fight had torn through.It was over.Rose exhaled slowly, her confidence returning in a calm rhythm. “Persistent, but predictable,” she said under her breath. Her to
Chapter Seventy-Nine – Michael vs Rose
The ground where Michael had fallen cracked under him as he stood again, dust still rising in faint clouds around his feet. His clothes were torn at the shoulder and along one arm, but he hardly noticed. His eyes remained fixed on the shape moving behind the tree line, on Rose who had her hand extended outward, guiding the movement of the giant wooden construct that had struck him moments before. The air around her shimmered faintly with life energy, and every motion she made caused the earth to stir and the vines to twist more violently.The construct shifted, its tangled limbs reconfiguring into something far larger. The creaking of wood filled the air as branches fused together, forming a massive torso and long arms that scraped against the ground. Its head emerged last, carved from the bark itself, with hollow eyes that glowed green. In moments, the treant stood twice the height of the nearby trees, roots digging deep into the soil for stability.Mich
Chapter Seventy-Eight – The Root
Michael moved through the streets at full speed, his footsteps echoing over the cracked pavement as the Southern Sector blurred around him. Every few seconds, the ground shook from distant explosions. Gunfire and screams overlapped like static in the air, but he kept running, keeping his eyes forward and ignoring everything that wasn’t directly in his path. Mutants appeared on rooftops and out of alleys, their shapes irregular and wrong—some had exposed muscle that glowed faintly under the morning light, others dragged distorted limbs with metallic growths attached. Michael cut through one that leapt too close, freezing its midsection with a burst of frost before shattering it apart. Throughout the entire sequence, he didn’t slow down.“Erin,” he said, voice steady despite the wind rushing past his ears. His Biz-Watch blinked faintly on his wrist, static breaking for a moment before her voice came through.“I’m here,” she answered. “You’re still heading t
Chapter Seventy-Seven – Genesis of the Tide
The air around the water tower shimmered with the haze of early sunlight and industrial dust. The skyline of the area stretched below like a fractured skeleton of concrete and steel, the morning fog tinted with faint green light from the mutated growth spreading across the lower industrial districts. Rose Armitage stood at the tower’s edge, the breeze teasing the strands of her red hair as her eyes swept across the distant horizon. Below her feet, the cracked surface of the tower hummed with vibration. From the vast cavity beneath her facility—the “garden”—came a chorus of movement: the sound of claws scraping metal, of heavy bodies pushing against one another as they poured into daylight. The mutants she had cultivated for months now climbed from their birthing chambers in a steady, coordinated surge, spreading outward like roots from a wound in the earth.Victor leaned on the railing beside her, his arms crossed, a look of strained admiration shadowing his
Chapter Seventy-Six: The First Wave
The alert spread through the Libertas Aeterna headquarters like an electric pulse. Red emergency lights flared across the underground corridors, their glow pulsing rhythmically with the rising tension of the command center. Commander Cane stood at the central console, the holographic map of the Southern Sector projected before him. Dozens of crimson markers dotted the map’s surface, each one representing a mutant signature picked up by the orbital scans above. They were moving in clusters that were fast, chaotic, and unnervingly deliberate.Cane’s expression hardened as he read the data. He had seen battlefields where soldiers bled and screamed and cities fell in hours, but this was something else. This was not a conventional offensive, it was like a tide of pure violence. With steady precision, he began issuing orders to the field captains through his comms. “All combat teams, mobilize immediately. Lock down all civilian exit routes from the Southern Sector. Alph
Chapter Seventy-Five: True Purpose
The hum of machines filled the sterile silence of the laboratory with a constant, low vibration that seemed to echo inside the glass walls and inside Erin Lassette’s mind. It was past dawn, but the underground levels of the Libertas Aeterna headquarters were untouched by daylight. Erin stood before the containment cell, her lavender hair glowing faintly under the sterile lights as her strands extended outward like the cords of a living instrument. Each filament shimmered with faint static pulses as she guided the machines with perfect telepathic precision. Her eyes were fixed on the restrained mutant that lay before her.The mutation had not only reconfigured its anatomy but had fused mechanical elements deep within the organic mass. She had already mapped out three distinct technological augmentations — all crudely bonded at the cellular level with plant matter that had grown from inside the body itself. It was grotesque, and yet, fascinating.
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