Chapter 5
(Covert infiltration – London MI5 Headquarters) Night pressed like glass against the Thames. The MI5 building rose from the riverbank, all steel ribs and mirrored windows, reflecting nothing but rain. Ethan Vale watched from across the water through a pair of borrowed thermal lenses. Inside, the corridors glowed faintly red with body heat, guards, analysts, ghosts who thought they were safe. “Entry point?” Detective Isla Hart whispered beside him, her breath misting in the cold. “Sub-level loading dock,” Ethan murmured. “One guard, two cameras. The internal grid still runs on Division 9 architecture. I wrote that code ten years ago.” He packed the lenses, slid his hood up, and crossed the pedestrian bridge. Each step measured. Each shadow rehearsed. The sound of the city drowned everything, the rain, his pulse, the low rumble of unseen traffic. At the service gate, Isla produced an MI5 clearance badge she’d cloned from a dead agent’s record. Ethan overrode the biometric lock with a wire and a whispered prayer. The gate hissed open. They slipped inside. {The Ghost Corridor} Fluorescent light buzzed overhead. Every wall smelled of antiseptic and bureaucracy. Ethan’s reflection stared back from polished glass, too many faces in one man. “Where now?” Isla asked. “Server wing. Roth’s ghost will be somewhere near the archive bay.” She frowned. “And if he’s real?” Ethan didn’t answer. They moved past rows of security doors, each guarded by retinal scanners. Ethan pulled a thin lens from his pocket, pressed it over the sensor, and blinked once. The door light turned green. Isla stared. “You cloned your own retina?” “Standard paranoia,” he said. “Never know when you’ll need yourself.” They entered a stairwell that dropped into the belly of the building. Below, machinery hummed like a sleeping animal. {Archive Bay 12} The room looked more like a morgue than a data center. Dozens of vertical pods lined the walls,each pulsing faintly with blue light, each labeled with a codename. Ethan approached one marked V-09 / Vale, E. He froze. “They kept a copy of me here.” Isla’s voice was soft. “You think the clone came from this?” “Or from something worse.” He slid a drive into the port. Lines of data filled the monitor: timestamps, behavioral logs, voice algorithms. And at the bottom, PROJECT : ECHELON II / LIVE FIELD UNIT DEPLOYED He whispered, “They launched it.” A faint click echoed from the door. Motion sensor. Someone else was in the corridor. Ethan killed the lights. They flattened behind the pods as two agents entered, their torches cutting the dark. “Check Bay 12. We’ve got a thermal spike,” one said. Ethan’s pulse steadied to nothing. Isla’s breath trembled near his ear. When the nearest agent turned away, Ethan moved, silent, precise,disarming him, pressing the muzzle of the man’s pistol under his chin. A muffled thump, and the body sagged soundlessly. The second agent spun, too late; Isla struck him with the butt of her gun. He went down. Ethan checked his watch. “Seventy seconds before the cameras reboot.” They slipped out, dragging the bodies into shadow. {The Core} Beyond the archive lay a glass room humming with light. At its center stood a single terminal encased in bulletproof polymer, its screen alive with encrypted code. On the monitor: TRACE COMMAND / Roth.Primary Online. Isla whispered, “That’s him.” Ethan approached, fingers hovering over the keyboard. “This is a live neural network. If we open it, we talk to him.” “Do it.” He keyed the bypass. The room’s lights dimmed. A voice crackled from the speakers,calm, measured, unmistakable. “Still picking locks, Ethan?” Ethan’s throat tightened. “Roth. Where is she? Clara Daines.” “Safe, for now. You should be proud,your pattern produced remarkable stability.” “Clone me again and I’ll burn this place to the river.” “You can’t burn what you are,” Roth said gently. “You’re running on the same code.” Isla stepped forward, fury sharp in her tone. “What’s Echelon II for?” Silence, then: “Prediction requires data. Control requires faith. Soon there’ll be no difference.” The connection snapped. The screen went black. Ethan looked down, his drive was missing. A red light flashed above the door. “Security lockdown,” Isla said. “We’re trapped.” Ethan’s gaze went to the ceiling vent. “Not yet.” They climbed just as the room flooded with armed agents. Alarms howled through the complex. {The Exit} They emerged into the service shaft two floors up. Sirens echoed below. Isla clung to the ladder, soaked in sweat and dust. “Where to?” Ethan jammed a panel open. “Roof. We exfil through the maintenance lift.” They broke into the night air just as floodlights swept the rooftop. A helicopter roared above. Ethan grabbed her hand. “Jump.” “What?” He pointed to the Thames far below. “Trust me.” Bullets sparked off the railings as they leapt. Wind screamed. The world spun into darkness and water. Cold silence. Then, faintly, the thrum of rotors. Through the rainhaze above the river, a second helicopter hovered. Inside its open door stood another Ethan Vale—dry, calm, expressionless,watching his original self vanish beneath the water. “Target confirmed,” he said into his comm. “Begin the next phase.”Latest Chapter
Fault Lines
The drive back across London felt different from the one that had brought them to the empty industrial street. Traffic was thicker now, and the city was fully awake, yet tension moved through it like an invisible current. Police vehicles sped through intersections with flashing lights, and several main roads had been partially blocked while emergency crews checked electrical substations and traffic control panels.Naomi sat in the passenger seat beside Harris, watching the buildings pass by through the window. Her phone rested silently in her hand. The messages from the mysterious voice remained on the screen, but there had been no new contact since the security camera had turned away.Behind them, Maya and Elena followed in the second vehicle.Harris gripped the steering wheel tightly as they turned onto a wider avenue leading toward the operations building. “I don’t like this,” he said quietly.Naomi glanced at him. “Because he showed us what he could do?”“No,” Harris replied. “Bec
The Voice in the Grid
The street remained silent except for the faint hum of electricity moving through the lamps above them. Naomi stood still in the middle of the road, her eyes fixed on the security camera that had turned toward her. The lens reflected a small circle of morning light, giving the strange impression that someone was staring back through it.Harris stepped slightly in front of her, his posture cautious, his gaze moving across the rooftops and alleyways that surrounded them. “He’s not physically here,” he said quietly.“No,” Naomi replied, still watching the camera. “He doesn’t need to be.”Behind them, Maya and Elena approached slowly, both of them scanning the empty industrial street. The warehouses were closed and lifeless, their metal doors streaked with rust and their windows dusty with neglect. If someone had walked past at that moment, they would have seen nothing unusual except four people standing under a row of quiet streetlights.Naomi’s phone vibrated again.GOOD MORNING, NAOMI.
The Invitation
Morning arrived slowly over London, but the city did not feel calm. Even as the pale gray light spread across rooftops and glass towers, the tension from the night before lingered like a storm that had passed but left the air charged. Traffic moved again, trains ran, and people filled the streets on their way to work, yet the rhythm felt slightly off. Systems had glitched during the night. Phones had lost service. Signals had flickered. Rumors were already spreading through social media and news channels, each one offering a different explanation for the disturbance.Inside the secure operations room of the concrete building near the river, Naomi sat at the metal table with her phone resting in front of her. She had not touched it for several minutes, but she could still feel the weight of the message waiting on the screen. Across from her, Maya sat quietly, both hands wrapped around a paper cup of coffee that had already gone cold. Elena leaned against the far wall with her arms fold
After Shock
London did not sleep after the lights went out. It twitched. That was the only word Naomi could find for it as she stood beneath the bridge, the cold wind rolling off the river and pushing damp air against her face. The water slapped against the stone embankment in restless rhythms, and the sound blended with the distant wail of sirens that now seemed to come from every direction. Red and blue lights flashed across the dark surface of the Thames, scattering across the concrete pillars and trembling along the metal railings above them. The city had not fallen into chaos, but something had shifted. Systems had glitched and recovered, traffic had slowed, trains had paused and restarted, and people everywhere had felt the brief pulse of something wrong moving through the night like a shiver through a body.Maya sank slowly down against the wall of the service alcove, her back sliding along the cold concrete until she was sitting on the ground with her knees pulled close to her chest. Elen
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
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