CHAPTER 4
Rain struck the windshield in steady, furious lines as Isla drove through the empty streets of Shoreditch. Ethan sat in the passenger seat, the hard-drive clutched in his hands like something alive. Neither of them spoke. The city slid by, amber streetlights, reflections in puddles, the dark pulse of a sleepless metropolis. “Where now?” Isla asked. “Somewhere with air-gapped power,” Ethan said quietly. “If Roth’s people can reach us through networks, we go dark.” She nodded, turning into a narrow lane between shuttered cafés. The tyres hissed over water; the car stopped behind an abandoned print shop. Ethan was out before she cut the engine, scanning rooftops. The tension in his posture was animal, pure instinct. Inside, the air smelled of ink and dust. He found the breaker box and killed the main line. The world fell into silence, broken only by the distant thrum of rain. Isla crossed her arms. “You think they’ll track the drive?” “They’ll track me.” He set the hard-drive on a counter, connecting it to a stripped-down laptop. “Division 9 built redundancy into every file. If I access this, a trace ping fires back to whoever’s watching.” “So… we don’t open it?” He met her eyes. “We open it fast.” The D******d The laptop screen glowed pale blue. Lines of code scrolled like falling rain. Ethan’s fingers moved with mechanical precision, bypassing firewalls, looping the trace back through dead IPs. Isla stood behind him, watching the data unfold—names, dates, maps. Then a word flashed: ECHELON II ACTIVE. Isla leaned closer. “That’s what Marcus mentioned.” Ethan nodded slowly. “Echelon I was global surveillance. Phones, cameras, satellites. Phase II isn’t just watching, it’s predicting.” “Predicting what?” “Behaviour. Emotion. Memory.” He tapped a file labelled PATTERN SEED. “They’re modelling human choices through neural data. The Trace isn’t about storing agents, it’s about using them as templates.” Isla frowned. “Templates for what?” He looked up, eyes dark. “To build more.” A loud metallic clang cut through the silence. Both froze. Isla’s hand went to her weapon. Ethan whispered, “Back door.” They moved in sync, weapons raised. Another clang,closer. The door burst inward, light flooding in. MI5 Tactical. “On the ground! Hands where I can see them!” Ethan’s stomach dropped. He recognized the lead agent’s stance, the way he angled his weapon, Division 9 training. His training. Isla aimed but hesitated. “You said they’d erase you, not chase you!” “They need the drive,” Ethan hissed. Bullets shattered glass. Ethan grabbed Isla’s arm, dragging her behind a steel press. Sparks burst overhead. “Rear exit!” he shouted. They sprinted through the back, rain exploding on their faces. Ethan vaulted a fence, pulling Isla up after him. Sirens wailed in the distance. They hit the street and ran. The Chase They cut through a maze of alleyways, feet splashing through puddles. The city became a blur of neon and rain. Ethan’s breath came sharp and fast; every muscle remembered escape. A drone swept overhead, its beam slicing the darkness. Isla ducked under a scaffold. “They’ve got eyes everywhere!” “Then we blind them.” Ethan ripped a signal jammer from his coat, slammed it against the wall. The drone flickered, spiralled, crashed into the street in sparks. He grabbed Isla’s hand. “Move!” They dove into the underground, an old Tube station sealed after the war. The air was cold, metallic, filled with echoes. “Why here?” Isla asked. “Division 9 used this place for off-grid storage,” he said. “They won’t risk a firefight.” They descended into the tunnels, flashlights cutting thin beams through dust. Graffiti covered the walls, symbols, old code numbers, ghosts of operations past. Ethan stopped at a locked gate, knelt, and picked it open in seconds. Beyond lay a room lined with broken monitors and filing cabinets. A single generator hummed weakly. On the desk: a map of London, marked with red dots. Isla pointed. “Those locations… are CCTV hubs.” “Exactly,” Ethan said. “Echelon II isn’t testing agents anymore. It’s feeding on civilians. Every camera, every phone, collecting emotional data. They’re training predictive AIs on human fear.” She stared. “That’s impossible.” He met her gaze. “So was putting ghosts in machines.” The Hunter Footsteps echoed down the tunnel. Ethan killed the light. Shadows moved beyond the doorway, three, maybe four figures. Silenced weapons. He whispered, “They found us.” “How?” “They’re not tracking the drive.” He tapped his temple. “They’re tracking me.” The memory of Marcus’s message flashed in his mind: You are the lock. He motioned to Isla. “Go left. When I move, run.” She shook her head. “Not leaving you.” “You will if you want to live.” He stepped out, drawing fire. The bullets hit the walls, ricocheting sparks. He returned two controlled shots, one target down. The others fanned out. A voice called through the darkness, calm and steady. “Stand down, Vale. You know how this ends.” Ethan froze. That voice, low, precise, familiar. He stepped closer, heart hammering. The man in tactical gear lowered his hood. Ethan stared into his own face. Same eyes. Same scar above the brow. Same expression,cold, efficient. The double tilted his head slightly. “They finished the template,” he said. “You should’ve stayed dead.” Isla’s voice broke through the shock. “Ethan!” He fired first. The clone moved faster than any human reflex, dodging, returning a burst that shattered concrete near Ethan’s head. Ethan dove behind cover, mind racing. If he’s me, he knows every move before I make it. He pulled a flash grenade, yanked the pin, and rolled it forward. The clone turned away,too late. Light filled the tunnel. Ethan grabbed Isla and ran deeper into the darkness. The Safehouse They didn’t stop until they reached the surface again, an old maintenance hatch spilling them into an alley near the river. The sky was bruised purple; dawn was creeping in. Isla collapsed against a wall. “That was you down there. Or something wearing your face.” Ethan’s hands trembled as he reloaded his weapon. “The Trace used my neural pattern. That means there could be more.” She swallowed hard. “How do we fight someone who thinks like you?” He looked up at her, rain streaking his face. “We don’t. We outthink him.” He pulled the drive from his pocket, wiped mud from its casing. “There’s one name in here that matters, the architect of Echelon II. If we find them, we find the core.” “And if we don’t?” “Then London won’t need ghosts anymore. It’ll make its own.” They crossed Westminster Bridge as the sun broke over the skyline. The city looked almost peaceful again, washed clean by the storm. Traffic started to hum. People hurried to work, unaware that every step, every heartbeat might already be predicted. Isla walked beside him, silent for once. “What if you weren’t the first?” she asked. Ethan frowned. “What do you mean?” “What if Division 9’s been replacing agents for years? What if none of them remember?” He stopped walking. For a heartbeat, he couldn’t breathe. Images flickered,faces from the past, teammates lost in Prague, his wife’s blurred smile before the mission went wrong. What if they were all still alive… somewhere inside the system? Before he could answer, his phone vibrated. No number. Just a text: HELLO, ETHAN. NICE TO MEET YOU AGAIN. He turned the screen toward Isla. The sender’s name appeared at the top. Gabriel Roth. Below it, a single attachment loaded ,a live feed. The picture shook slightly, grainy but clear enough. It showed someone walking into Ethan’s old locksmith shop. Ethan’s blood ran cold. The person turned toward the camera. It was the clone. And behind him, tied to a chair, was Clara Daines, alive. The feed froze on her terrified face. Then static.Latest Chapter
THE CITY THAT LISTENS
Chapter 68 The alarms didn’t scream. They breathed. A low, rhythmic pulse rolled through the tunnel, red light waxing and waning as if the walls themselves had a heartbeat. Naomi stood frozen, every instinct tearing her in opposite directions, run, fight, scream, deny. The man before them hadn’t moved, yet the space felt smaller with each pulse, compressed by his presence. Maya tightened her grip on Naomi’s arm. “Naomi,” she whispered, “say something.” Naomi swallowed. Her mouth tasted like copper. “Don’t, don’t let him separate us.” The man smiled faintly at that, as if she’d solved a riddle too late. He lowered his hand, and the alarms softened, settling into a steady hum. “I won’t,” he said. “Not yet.” Elena’s voice trembled. “You said he was dead.” “I said the case was closed,” Naomi replied. “I said the evidence ended him.” Her eyes never left his face. “I never said the truth did.” He inclined his head, acknowledging the distinction. “Truth is inefficient,” he said. “I
THE MAN IN THE TUNNEL
Chapter 67 The tunnel twisted like a throat carved beneath the earth, narrow and damp, the air thick with dust stirred by the collapse above. Naomi’s lungs burned as she sprinted forward, boots slapping the cold concrete. Behind her, Maya and Elena followed close, their breath ragged, their shadows flickering in the dim emergency lights lining the walls like dying fireflies.“Harris,” Maya gasped. “We have to go back for him,”“No,” Naomi said, voice cracking but firm. “He told us to run. You know what that means.”Elena flinched at the truth in those words.If Harris was still alive, he was buying them seconds.If he wasn’t… then he had already given everything he could.The tunnel sloped downward, the angle steeper than Naomi remembered from the old schematic Harris had shown them weeks earlier, back when hiding underground was still a theoretical fear, not a reality closing in on their heels.A deep metallic groan echoed through the tunnel walls.Not structural.Mechanical.Maya s
THE BASEMENT DOOR
Chapter 66 Darkness swallowed the house so quickly it felt intentional, precise, engineered, timed down to the heartbeat. Naomi’s breath hitched as the lights blinked off, leaving only the thin silver glow leaking through the cracks around the boarded windows. Maya grabbed her hand. Elena stumbled back, hitting the wall with a soft thud. Harris didn’t yell. He didn’t panic. He spoke with the cold authority of someone who had rehearsed this moment in nightmares. “Stay close. Move now.” He switched on a small tactical light clipped to his vest. A tight white beam cut through the dark, trembling slightly with his breath but steady enough to guide them. He led them toward the kitchen, toward the cellar door that sat half-hidden behind an old, dust-covered shelf. Another click cracked through the house. This one louder. Deeper. Mechanical. Elena flinched. “What is that? What did they turn on?” Harris didn’t look back. “A lock. Or a trigger. Either way, it means we’re running out
THE HOUSE THAT KNEW THEIR NAME
Chapter 64 Naomi didn’t understand why the quiet felt hostile, but from the moment the three of them stepped into the abandoned safe house, something was wrong. It was too still, like a place waiting for its occupants, not welcoming them.Detective Harris locked the door behind them, then moved through the room with the sharp, scanning focus of a man who expected danger in every shadow. He checked windows, corners, floorboards, every surface his eyes touched carried suspicion.Maya rubbed her arms, trying to shake the goosebumps rising there. “Harris, how long are we supposed to stay here?”“Long enough to figure out who’s hunting you,” he said, voice low. “And long enough for me to confirm if what I’ve been told is real.”Naomi turned to him. “What you’ve been told? By who?”He didn’t answer.Instead, he held up a small envelope. Thin, brown, sealed.None of them had noticed it on the kitchen counter before.Elena frowned. “Where did that come from? That wasn’t there when we walked
THE SECOND CALL
Chapter 64 Naomi didn’t realize she was holding her breath until Detective Harris finished speaking. The living room felt suddenly too small, the air too thin, as if the walls themselves were leaning in to listen.Maya was the first to find her voice. “What do you mean someone called asking about us? Who?”Harris didn’t sit. He stayed standing, tense, watchful, every muscle tight like he expected the situation to turn at any moment.“I don’t have a name,” he said. “The inquiry came through an encrypted line routed through three different servers. Whoever made that call knew how to hide. But they asked directly for you three. By full name. And they referenced the night of the incident.”A shiver rolled through Elena. “How would anyone outside the department know the details? That case wasn’t public.”“That’s the problem,” Harris said. “Someone on the inside is leaking information. Or someone on the outside has access they shouldn’t.”Naomi paced, fingers pressed against her temples. “
THE VISITOR AT THE DOOR
Chapter 63 Naomi’s fingers tightened around the edge of the door as the figure stepped fully into view. The early morning sun cast a long shadow behind him, turning his presence into something larger, heavier. Maya and Elena stood slowly, uncertainty knotting in their chests.“Detective Harris?” Naomi breathed, disbelief slicing through her voice.He nodded once. Serious. Focused. His dark coat looked too heavy for the warm morning, and the badge clipped at his belt glinted sharply in the sunlight. He scanned each of their faces, first Naomi, then Elena, then Maya, studying them the way only someone trained to read people would.“Sorry to show up unannounced,” he said, “but we need to talk. All three of you.”Maya swallowed hard. “About what?”Harris stepped inside without waiting for permission, though his presence didn’t feel forceful, just urgent. He closed the door behind him and let out a breath as though he’d been holding it for miles.“It’s about the incident,” he said. “The o
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