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Chapter 225: A Shadowed Choice
The apple was a universe in his palm. He did not devour it. He ate it with a slowness so near ritual, each bite a deliberate, pained act of remembrance. The crisp, sweet flesh was a memory of a world before the rot, a taste of sun and earth that mocked the damp reality of the parking garage. The act of eating, of accepting sustenance offered without price or condition, was more blasphemous than all his betrayals.Abel's pity had not been a balm. It had been an acid, eating away at the last layers of his self-pity. The old man had not shown him a path to redemption. That was a myth, a luxury for a world that still had clean slates. This world had only ash and blood, and Abel had simply pointed out to him that even in the ash, a different kind of seed could be planted.He lay in the darkness hours after the apple had been eaten, the core grasped in his hand. The pain of his beating was a grounding pain, a map of his current existence. Every throbbing bruise, every burning sting of a cut
Chapter 224: Bargain of the Dead
The hunger was a jagged rat, gnawing at the remnants of his resolve. The fever had broken, and what it had left was a hollowed-out shell, cold and clear-headed in its despair. The visions had receded, not that he was forgiven, but that his mind did not have the energy for such complex torment. The fact was a bare, cold stone in his stomach now: he must eat, or die. And his death, here in the anonymous dark, would be as meaningless as his life had come to be.He had one thing left to sell. Not his loyalty—that currency was worthless, its mint broken. Not his skill—the state had no need of a biologist, and the resistance would sooner dissect him than hire him. What he had was memory. The fraught, poisonous knowledge of De Vries's machine. Safe house locations that were perhaps still live. Patrol routes. Communications codes that perhaps had not yet been changed. It did not take him long to understand that it was intelligence, and in a dying city, intelligence was sustenance.He found hi
Chapter 223: The Broken Mirror
The fever was no longer physical. It had entered his mind, a toxic gas that dissolved the wall between memory and reality, between the world of the living and the one he had sought to fill with the dead. The sewers were no longer just stone and filth tunnels; they were a catacomb of his own making, and the faces he had sent there were its eternal residents.At first, they were whispers in the drip-drip-drip of the water. The cadence would shift, forming names he hadn't allowed himself to think about in months. Anya. Flick. The Jansen twins. The water-taxi pilot who knew the secret routes. The old forger who could make anyone laugh. The children he'd never met, whose parents he'd nonetheless named for De Vries's cleansings.Then he began to see them in the shadows.He'd round a corner and there'd be a figure standing there, a silhouette in front of a distant grate-light. Not a solid shape, but a suggestion, a trick of light and his own crumbling mind. A woman with Anya's regal posture,
Chapter 221: Ash Without Flame
There was no ceremony for his dismissal. No ritual discharge, no final briefing. For Markus Hale, the end of his usefulness was a quiet, administrative procedure, as impersonal and cold as the state which he had served.It began with the silence of his comm. He was accustomed to the constant, low-level buzz of encrypted data—location checks, target skits, status queries—being a steady presence. The device on his wrist, which had vibrated with the cadence of his secret power, was a dead weight. He tapped it. He reset it. Nothing. The silence deafened.He went on to his billet, a neat small room in a converted office block on the Amstel, reserved for "consultants." The biometric lock did not take his fingerprint. He had to ring for entry. The guard who answered, a young man whose face Markus had seen a dozen times, looked through him as if he were smoke.Your clearance has been lifted," the guard declared, his face impassive. "You need to vacate the premises.""There has to be a mistake
Chapter 220: The Epicenter
The hush was the first to be shattered. Not the silence of the city—that had been broken for days by war—but the silence of the digital world. The state's hold on the realm of information had been total, a single monolithic wall of carefully groomed news and choreographed terror. All broadcasts, all public frequencies, a mouthpiece for the regime.Until it wasn't.It began as a flicker. A ghost in the machine. A fleeting, momentary burst of static on a state television channel, showing a smiling, restored family, that appeared for a single frame into the burnt-out shell of the Oudemanhuispoort. And then it disappeared.Hundreds of individuals saw it in a crowded, nervous apartment in Jordaan. They stared at each other, confused. A malfunction.Then it happened on a street news terminal in a loyalist neighborhood. The display of De Vries's latest address on "final pacification" dissolved into a torrent of genetic code. A, C, T, G, streaming too fast to read, but unmistakably biochemica
Chapter 219: The Border Burns
The concept of "Amsterdam" was gone. There remained only an archipelago of walled islands in a sea of anarchy, each canal no ribbon of beauty but a moat of fire. The state lockdown, intended to assert complete control, had instead provided a template for the world's hostile forces. The bridges were now the borders, and all borders were burning.It began over the Blauwbrug, the lovely Amstel bridge. An advance party of Pan-American "advisors," clad in unmarked grey armor, had secured the eastern terminus. Their mission: establish a beachhead for a full diplomatic and medical convoy proceeding into the Grachtengordel. From the west, a state rapid-action team, backed by loyalist militias wearing orange armbands, took shelter. They saw no humanitarian mission, but an invasion.A single shot—its origin forever suspect—exploded across the water. The response was instant and devastating.The Americans showered with a hail of suppressive fire, their modern rifles chattering, bringing the elab
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