Latest Chapter
Chapter 57. The Decision to Bleed Again
The rain was relentless, washing away the smell of scorched electronics and ozone, but it couldn't wash away the target etched onto Marcus’s back. He sat on the threshold of an abandoned maintenance bay, the hood of his coat pulled low, his sword leaning against his knee like a trusted, albeit blood-stained, old friend. The silence that had followed the destruction of the nexus hub was fragile. Marcus checked his tactical vest, tightening the buckles. The scramble-box was gone, and he was officially "unplugged," yet he could still feel the phantom hum of the global network scraping at the edges of his psyche. Every passing siren, every flicker of distant electricity, every gust of wind vibrating through the rusted girders felt like a signal being broadcasted from his own bone marrow.He didn’t just feel hunted anymore. He felt invaded. And that was a luxury he wasn't going to grant his pursuers twice.He reached into his pocket and pulled out a jagged, handheld mirror fragment he’d p
Chapter 56. Architect’s Contingency Plan
The floorboards beneath the destroyed nexus hub didn't just rattle—they shrieked as if the architecture itself was mourning its loss of connectivity. Marcus stood in the center of the ruins, his breathing steady, despite the heavy thrumming that was starting to resonate from deep underground. The destruction of the master terminal hadn't killed the grid; it had tripped a breaker in a sub-basement he hadn't known existed.Beneath the layer of charred server racks and fused plastic, a sequence began to unfold. A series of thick, shielded conduit cables—armored like deep-sea pipes—began to glow with a sickly, rhythmic pulse. The light wasn't the violet of Aoi's consciousness; it was a cold, clinical yellow. Emergency-Nexus, active.Marcus spat a mouthful of copper-tasting blood onto the floor and crouched, ripping away a segment of the flooring that had warped under the electrical stress. Underneath, an old, offline-capable junction box sat undisturbed. It looked nothing like the experi
Chapter 55. The Stolen Heritage
The logic-slate was dead, its violet light flickering like a candle gasping in a gale. Marcus didn’t stop moving. He jammed the shard he’d pried from the lead Splicer into the slate’s input port. He needed an interface, and the crude, brutal data-hacks these zealots used were his only lead.The display on the slate flared to life. It wasn't the refined, clean code Aoi had once navigated; it was raw, unrefined data—stolen fragments of his own neurological history.SUBJECT: MARCUS REED STATUS: BERSERK/HARD-DRIVE/CONTAINER RECORD ACCESS: PROJ. BUSHIDO-OS LEGACYMarcus slowed his pace to a tactical shuffle as the text scrolled. The data stream wasn't just his medical report; it was a map. Deep in the encrypted archives, linked to the ghost in his mind, were the locations of the "Emergency-Nexus" nodes."Aoi?" he growled into the damp night air.The slate vibrated in his grip. Her voice didn't come through the speaker—it emerged directly into his thoughts, jagged and layered with the echo
Chapter 54. The First Splicer
The sound of dry grass snapping under armored boots preceded the attack by a heartbeat. Marcus Reed didn’t look back. He dropped into a crouch as a monofilament whip hissed through the air exactly where his neck had been a second before, severing a rotted wooden post behind him with surgical precision.He was in the center of the coastal village now, the ruins of the local community center offering just enough cover. Three of them were hunting him—The Splicers. They didn’t walk like soldiers; they stalked with a stiff, twitching precision, their limbs assisted by pneumatic actuators that whined with a high-pitched, discordant hum."Designation confirmed," one of the attackers hissed, his voice coming out as a multi-layered distortion of binary and jagged vocal synthesis. He stepped into the clearing. The man’s entire face was hidden behind a smooth, chrome visor that reflected Marcus’s grim expression back at him, fractured into a thousand distorted polygons. This was the Splicer. No
Chapter 53. Artifacts That Speak
The interior of the derelict electronics shop was a claustrophobic tomb of circuit boards and calcified cables. Marcus didn't bother with the door; he forced his way through a smashed-in window, the scramble-box hanging at his belt pulsating with a faint, steady cyan hue. The air here smelled of ozone and damp cardboard—a cocktail of decaying history that hit the back of his throat like dust.He had to find something. Kaito had mentioned an encryption key residing in his own neurological memories, but the frequency spike, the sudden waking of Aoi in the rafters, suggested there was a catalyst. A heap of salvaged consoles lay piled in the center of the floor, their chassis rusted into orange reefs of decay. As Marcus neared them, the scrambling effect of the device at his hip hit a pocket of high-density resonance. The entire heap groaned. Not like shifting metal, but like a heavy sleeper exhaling after a nightmare."Aoi?" Marcus spoke the name low, his blade held low, scanning for mo
Chapter 52. Visitors from Shinjuku
The tires of the armored transport crushed the shoreline's dry shale with a sound like grinding teeth. Marcus hadn’t even made it to the main highway before the sleek, matte-black vehicle blocked his path. It looked like an anomaly—a relic of the pre-crash high-society sector, out of place among the rusted ruins and tidal debris of the coast.The driver’s side door hissed open, a hydraulic vent clearing the sea air with a sudden gust of filtered, recycled oxygen. A man stepped out. He was tall, dressed in a tactical duster that hung perfectly straight despite the fierce coastal wind. He didn't look like a Splicer. There were no ritualistic ports glowing on his skin, no patchwork augments. He looked like an executive who had forgotten his meeting and stumbled into an apocalypse.He stopped ten feet from Marcus, adjusting his collar. His face was polished, youthful, yet his eyes were hard, tired, and deeply suspicious."Marcus Reed," the man said. It wasn't a question. "The records said
