The tunnels exhaled damp silence, as though the walls themselves were waiting with bated breath for what was going to happen. Thin trickles of water seeped down cracked stone, collecting in shallow pools that reflected the weak, wavering light of the makeshift bulbs suspended by string overhead. It was here, in Amsterdam's hidden arteries beneath the city, that Ken Ardent's improvised network fought to maintain the last threads of hope.
Sophia sat on one of the rusted benches, near the corner of the lab, her blonde hair catching the glow from the wire overhead. She'd been in a state of high alert since she arrived—listening, observing, absorbing the undercurrent of tension that clung to each individual like the mold on the walls. She'd seen people coughing up blood, their eyes bright with fever, their bodies contorted by something invisible but unrelenting. But she… she felt nothing.
Elara leaned back on a counter lined with vials, papers, and broken instruments, her gaze fixed on Sophia with a curiosity bordering on suspicion. Her sharp eyes missed little. She had been following infection patterns within the underground shelter for weeks now, measuring how fast the plague cut through their ranks. The virus did not discriminate. Every individual exposed became ill within hours. Every individual but Sophia.
Ken moved around her, resettling the mask over his face as he examined a line of blood samples. His hands were steady as a rock, his focus absolute. He didn't see the way Elara's eyes flicked back and forth between him and the girl, or the way her mind raced with hypotheses.
At last, Elara spoke. "Ken," she said, in a voice too quiet to reach the next room. "She hasn't coughed once. No fever, no tremor. Nothing."
Ken did not look up immediately. His gloved fist tightened slightly on the fine adjuster of the microscope. "It doesn't mean anything yet."
"Yes, it does," Elara maintained. She stepped forward, her boots squelching softly on the wet floor. "I've been watching. All the survivors who have had contact with the infected show signs. But not her. Doesn't that seem… strange to you?"
Sophia shifted uncomfortably on the bench. She could feel their eyes on her, the weight of their regard like cold fingers on her skin. "What do you mean?" she asked softly, almost defensively.
Elara turned to face her. "I'm saying your body might be trying to tell us something the rest of ours can't. You haven't fallen ill. Not once. Perhaps you're different."
Ken finally lifted his head. His eyes, framed by exhaustion and months of sleepless nights, softened briefly when they met Sophia's. Then he turned to Elara. "Speculation is risky. We can't assume."
And yet as he was speaking, a cut of potential slit through him. He remembered the first time Sophia had dropped into their hidden grid—a girl on the shoulders of a desperate uncle, her clothes torn from weaving between drones. She had been among the dying, and still she was unbroken, steady-eyed, calm.
Elara crossed her arms, declining to let it go. "If it's inheritance… maybe one of her parents carried resistance. Maybe she has something coded—something we can isolate."
The words were heavy. Temptation pulled at Ken. If only it were so, Sophia could be the solution to all things. Yet a cure discovered too soon, too amateurishly, would not only fail but endanger them all.
Sophia’s throat tightened. She had grown used to being overlooked, blending into the desperate flow of survivors. Now they spoke of her as though she were an anomaly, a specimen. “I’m not—” she began, but her voice faltered. “I’m just… me. There’s nothing special about me.”
Elara’s stare deepened, softening only a little. “The virus seems to think otherwise.”
Ken returned the vial to its stand. He stepped back from the bench and squatted slightly in front of Sophia, speaking in a gentle tone. "Nobody is saying you're not human, Sophia. But if there's something in you… we need to know about it. It might save lives."
The girl's eyes dropped, her hands bunching together. She wanted to protest, to say she didn't want to be watched, didn't want to be anyone's guinea pig. But then she remembered the pinched faces of children who couldn't breathe coughing, the muted sobbing of mothers as bodies were carried off. If something in her could stop that. Didn't she have to try?
However, fear writhed inside her like a thing to be terrified of.
Elara's eyes went back to the desk, digging through notes. Her movements were tense, controlled. "I'll need a full genetic panel. It'll take days, maybe weeks with the minimal equipment we have. But if she's carrying resistance, we'll find it."
Ken stood, rubbing his temples. "You know what that means. More exposure. More risk."
"Everything is at risk now," Elara replied rigidly.
The air vibrated faintly—the drones overhead. The three remained motionless, heads tilted slightly to listen. The mechanical thrum persisted for a minute, then faded. Sophia exhaled unevenly.
"Listen," Ken said at last, his voice more stable. "We move carefully. Elara, get your panel ready, but we do it quietly. Not a whisper beyond this room. If the Council finds out too soon—"
"They'll take her," Elara finished, her voice icy.
Sophia's stomach dropped. She did not need to ask what that was. She had heard whispers of what they did to anomalies in this world—those who were too strong, too strange, too defiant. They were taken into laboratories that were never spoken of again.
Ken's eyes softened again, though his jaw was still tight. "I won't let that happen," he growled. The words were a promise, but also a shackle—binding him to a load heavier than any he had carried before.
For a while, none of them spoke. The tunnels swallowed them in, holding the secret in their chilly embrace. Far above, Amsterdam's rain-slicked streets went on, drones pulling shadows over cobblestones, checkpoints cinching tighter by the day. The city had no idea that hope—fragile, trembling, and sitting on a rusty bench—lived in the veins of a girl who had yet to understand her own place in this unraveling conflict.
And while Ken tried to push it from his mind, the thought clawed at him relentlessly: Sophia might be the cure. Or may
be she was the catalyst that unlocked them all.
---

Latest Chapter
Chapter 40: The Cost of Doing Business
Ken's cell was a white cube. No toilet. No cot. Just a smooth, padded floor and walls, illuminated by a sourceless, shadowless light that never wavered. The air was climate-controlled, odorless. It was sensory deprivation that was not designed to soothe, but to intensify thought. To possess all regret, all fear, resonate infinitely in the vacuum.He lay on the floor, effects of sedative fading, with a throbbing headache and nausea born of utter helplessness. He replayed every moment, every decision that led them to this moment. His faith in Markus, his raid failure, failure to protect his daughter. The images cycled through repeatedly: Liese's death, Markus's lie, the needle going into Sophia's vein.Hours passed. There was no way of telling the time but by the growing agony of thirst and the contraction of his muscles.Finally the door hissed open. Not De Vries. Two guards. They motionless hauled him to his feet and marched him down another clinical corridor.They brought him, not to
Chapter 39: The Hollow Prize
The journey to Directorate HQ was a blur of harsh light and cold metal. Ken, Elara, and Sophia were shoved into the rear of an armored truck, their wrists locked by smart-cuffs that hummed with a barely sufficient charge. The truck's interior was bare and stank of ozone and fear.Sophia was silent now, numbness paralyzing her sobs. She crouched between Ken and Elara, shuddering in a small body. Ken kept his head bent low, his mind racing over De Vries's furious words. *The drive is empty.* Elara's caution was the only glimmer of hope in the crushing darkness. She had saved the research. But she had made their immediate future infinitely worse.The vehicle skidded to a halt. The back doors exploded open and the cold, brutalist mass of a Directorate interrogation block towered over them. They were pulled in and marched through shining, antiseptic-white corridors, past cells whose walls were energy fields instead of bars.De Vries sat waiting for them in a bright, white observation room
Chapter 38: The Judas Kiss
The laboratory was a scene of desperation. The decision had been made. They were abandoning ship. The group of four—Ken, Elara, Sophia, and Markus—would flee down the Prinsengracht freight tunnel. The rest would fan out into the deeper, unmapped corridors, their chances slim.There was no grand sendoff. Only somber, unspoken goodbyes and the trade of vital equipment. The water-resistant data drive was stashed in Ken's backpack. Sophia traveled in his hip, her small bag of personal belongings grasped in her hand, her face pale with fear and exhaustion.Elara administered Liese a final, heavy dose of sedative. "It's kind," she panted, her own eyes filled with tears. "She won't know anything." Leaving her was the hardest thing any of them had ever done."Ready?" Markus asked, slinging his own pack across his shoulder. His locator beacon pulsed, a tiny thudding heart of betrayal against his own.Ken glanced back at the lab, where they'd lived, where they'd been safe, where they'd been tra
Chapter 37: The Weight of Lies
Markus entered through the service pipe and a man was torn. Outside, he remained the same duty-conscious lieutenant: stoic, tired, fretful. Within him, a chilling new heart of deceit had already begun to rev.He found Ken staring at a blank screen, his shoulders slumping in discouragement."Any change?" Markus inquired, his voice diplomatically neutral.Ken shook his head but didn't get up. "The cold bath is lowering the fever. It's not killing it. It's just… giving her a nicer death." He turned to him, his own eyes bloodshot from exhaustion and guilt. "You were right, Markus. It was a suicide flight. I killed people for nothing."This was the start. The crack in Ken's shield. De Vries's instructions had been clear: *Isolate him. Play on his uncertainties. Leave him exposed.*"We were all wrong," Markus stated, placing his hand against the console to Ken's side. A gesture of solidarity. A lie. "We thought we could fight this as a war. Maybe… maybe we need to start thinking about survi
Chapter 36: The Bitter Pill
The lab was a tomb to lose hope. The triumphant homecoming had turned sour into a motionless, hopeless dread. Liese's breathing was a shallow, wet rasp, every one a torment ticking away. The pile of medical supplies on the center bench—a king's ransom of antibiotics, painkillers, and run-of-the-mill vaccines—mocked them. Everything they had risked their lives for was for nothing.Elara sat next to Liese, wiping away with a wet rag a brow dripping with sweat, her own face a mask of professional placidity drawn taut over desperation. "Her body's eating itself up. The fever's burning away her muscle tissue. We need to lower her core temperature, or her heart will fail.".Ken stared at the useless gear, his mind a wild, foaming nothing. All thoughts, all desperate hopes, had led them here. To a slow, agonizing watch.Markus stood by the back wall, arms crossed, his gaze fixed on the woman dying. His jaw's usual stubborn determination had given way to vacuous blankness. "I told you so," he
Chapter 35: The Offering
Time became strange and tight in the lab. The air was clean, the equipment whirred like machinery, but the mood was denser than the poisoned water outside the windows. Lieze stood silently vigilant, a statue of gleaming potential, as Elara ministered to a stunned, rage-filled Markus."Tapped into my nervous system," Markus groaned, slapping his own chest where she had touched him. "Full-system reboot. I've never had anything like it." He stared at Liese with venom. "We need to put her down. She's a tool.""She's Liese," Ken growled, though he was fighting the same revulsion. "She's sick. We just don't know the disease yet.""That's not a disease, Ken. That's conquest.".Her reply was cut off by Liese. She didn't move, but the main monitor flickered. It showed a map of Amsterdam superimposed with thick, live streams of the spread of the Morrison Virus. Death tolls. Quarantine breaches. Red was strangling the city."The pathogen increases. Efficiency is decreasing." she declared, her vo
