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Chapter 10: Steel and Glass
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Chapter 9: Steel and Glass (Arthur)
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The serrated edge of the glass shard didn't just cut; it hummed against Arthur’s palm, a rhythmic vibration that synchronized with the frantic drumming of his own pulse. He stood in the wreckage of the mezzanine, the air tasting of ozone and pulverized marble. Below him, the lobby of the Valtieri Sterling was a theater of frozen violence. The security drones hung suspended in mid-air, locked in a digital stasis he had initiated only seconds prior, their red optic sensors flickering like dying embers.
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Arthur’s fingers were still tingling from the vibration of the vault door when he realized the silence in the room wasn't empty; it was heavy, like the air right before a transformer blows. He didn't pull his hand back. To retreat was to acknowledge the fear that was currently trying to crawl up his throat, and Arthur had spent forty years learning how to swallow that particular sensation. Across the mahogany desk, Julian didn’t look like a man who had just lost his leverage. He looked like an architect watching a building collapse exactly the way he’d designed it to.
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Arthur tightened his grip on the shard, ignoring the thin line of warmth as blood began to bloom between his fingers. He needed the pain. It was the only thing sharp enough to pierce the static of the local mesh network screaming in his ears.
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"You really should have left it closed, Arthur," Julian said. His voice was a low, melodic thrum that seemed to vibrate the very glass of the Scotch decanter between them. "Some things are kept behind six inches of reinforced steel for the benefit of the people outside, not the protection of what’s inside."
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"Arthur, the feed is rerouting." Elias’s voice was a jagged rasp through his earpiece, stripped of its usual cool composure. "They’ve triggered a hard-line reset from the basement. You have ninety seconds before those drones stop sleeping and start painting the floor with you."
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Arthur forced his hand to drop, his knuckles scraping against the rough grain of his trousers. The document he’d pulled—the one now sitting in the center of the desk like a live grenade—was yellowed at the edges but the ink was crisp. It was a deed, but not for the acreage of Cypress Bend he’d spent his life maintaining. It was for the mineral rights of the entire valley, dated three years before the first stone of the manor had been laid.
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"I see them, Elias," Arthur muttered, his voice sounding like gravel grinding in a shallow pan. He didn't look back at the shattered display case behind him. He didn't look at the empty velvet pedestal where the Core had sat just moments ago. He looked only at the elevator bank, where the brushed steel doors were beginning to slide shut.
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"You’ve known since the beginning," Arthur said. The words felt like grit in his mouth. "All the talk about legacy, about the soil being in our blood. It was a cover for what’s beneath it."
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Vance was inside.
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"Legacy is a convenient word for 'asset,'" Julian replied, finally standing. He walked to the floor-to-ceiling window that looked out over the mist-choked hollows of the estate. The glass reflected his face—sharp, predatory, and entirely devoid of the warmth he used for the cameras and the charity galas. "The soil is sentimental. The lithium underneath it is transactional. Don’t tell me you’re surprised. You’re the one who taught me that a man who doesn't know his own worth is just a target for someone who does."
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Arthur moved. He didn't run; he lunged, his boots skidding over the debris. He vaulted the mezzanine railing, the world a blur of chrome and shadow as he plummeted fifteen feet toward the polished stone. He hit the floor with a roll, the impact rattling his teeth, but he was up before the first alarm siren could find its pitch.
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Arthur moved around the desk, the distance between them shrinking, though it felt like a canyon had opened beneath the Persian rug. "I taught you to protect the name, Julian. I didn't teach you to strip-mine the history of this family to pay off a gambling debt in Singapore."
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The elevator doors hissed, a fraction of an inch from sealing. Arthur thrust his left arm—the one wrapped in the heavy reinforced sleeve—into the gap. The sensors groaned, the heavy plates of the door biting into his forearm. With a snarl, he braced his shoulder against the frame and wrenched the steel back.
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Julian spun around, his eyes flashing with a sudden, jagged heat. "Gambling debt? Is that what you think this is? This isn't a deficit, Arthur. It’s an evolution. The world doesn't care about thoroughbred horses and old-growth timber anymore. They care about what powers the chips in their pockets. I’m not losing the estate; I’m making it the engine of the next century. You’re just upset because you’re the part that’s becoming obsolete."
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Julian Vance stood in the center of the lift, the black obsidian transit case gripped in one hand and a suppressed kinetic pistol in the other. He didn't look surprised. Vance never looked surprised. He looked disappointed, the way a schoolmaster might look at a student who had finally, predictably, failed.
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The insult hit Arthur with the physical force of a blow to the ribs. He’d spent decades as the silent hand, the one who handled the "steel" so the rest of the family could enjoy the "glass." To hear Julian dismiss him as a relic wasn't just a betrayal; it was a revelation of how little his loyalty had been worth.
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"You're bleeding on my shoes, Arthur," Vance said, his voice a smooth, terrifying calm that didn't match the chaos outside.
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"You think you’re so modern," Arthur said, his voice dropping to a dangerous, gravelly whisper. He stepped into Julian’s personal space, refusing to be intimidated by the younger man’s height. "But you’re just another spoiled heir trying to burn the house down to keep himself warm for a night. You haven't filed these rights with the county. You can't. Not without my signature on the secondary trust."
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"I’m going to bleed on a lot more than that," Arthur replied, stepping into the confined square of the elevator.
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Julian’s smile didn't reach his eyes. "That’s why we’re having this conversation, Arthur. I’ve already drafted the transfer. You’re going to sign it, and in exchange, I’m going to make sure the investigation into the warehouse fire in '98 stays exactly where it is—under six feet of dirt and a very expensive non-disclosure agreement."
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The doors closed behind him.
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Arthur felt the blood drain from his face. The warehouse. He hadn't thought about that smoke-filled night in twenty-five years. He’d thought the only person who knew the truth was dead.
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The lift jerked upward, the sudden surge of gravity pinning Arthur’s lungs against his ribs. The silence in the small space was absolute, buffered by the soundproofing of a corporation that valued privacy above all things. It was just the two of them—the architect and the wrecking ball.
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"You wouldn't," Arthur breathed.
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Vance raised the pistol, the barrel an unblinking eye leveled at Arthur’s forehead. "You were supposed to be the smart one. The one who understood that the future doesn't care about ethics. It only cares about efficiency."
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"I’ve already leaked the first breadcrumb to the district attorney’s office," Julian said, checking his watch with an agonizingly casual flick of the wrist. "An anonymous tip about environmental negligence. If I don't call them back by nine o'clock tomorrow morning with 'clarification,' they’ll start digging. And we both know what they’ll find when they reach the foundation."
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Arthur shifted his weight, feeling the shard of glass nestled in his palm like a secret. "You killed Calloway for efficiency? You burned out three blocks of the Lower Bend because it was 'efficient' to hide the trail?"
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Arthur looked at the man he had practically raised, looking for a shimmer of the boy he used to take fishing at the creek. There was nothing. Just the cold, unyielding stare of a man who had realized that people were just obstacles dressed in suits.
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"The Lower Bend was a tumor," Vance said, his finger tightening on the trigger. "I was a surgeon. Calloway... Calloway was an infection I couldn't ignore."
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"You’re a monster, Julian."
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Arthur took a half-step forward. The elevator hummed, passing the thirtieth floor. The digital display flickered through numbers—35, 36, 37. The penthouse was the only stop.
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"I’m a Cypress," Julian corrected, walking back to the desk and unscrewing his fountain pen. He pushed the paper toward Arthur. "And monsters are exactly what the family needed to survive this long. Sign it. Then go home, pour yourself a drink, and forget we ever had this talk. You can spend the rest of your days as the elder statesman of a dying empire, or you can go to prison for a fire that was supposed to be an accident."
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"You're not a surgeon," Arthur said, his eyes tracking the slight tremor in Vance’s wrist—the only sign that the man was human. "You're a scavenger. You built this empire on the bones of people who were too tired to fight back. But I'm not tired anymore, Julian. I’m just empty."
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Arthur stared at the pen. It was gold-plated, heavy, a gift he’d given Julian for his graduation. He picked it up. The weight of it felt wrong, like it was made of lead. He looked at the signature line, then at Julian, then at the window. Outside, the lights of the estate flickered through the trees, a false constellation in the dark.
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Vance smiled, a thin, paper-cut expression. "Empty is dangerous. It means you have nothing left to lose. But you've always had one weakness, Arthur. You think the truth is a weapon. In this city, the truth is just noise."
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He lowered the pen to the paper. The nib touched the line, a tiny black dot of ink blooming like a bruise.
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Arthur lunged.
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"I won't let you destroy what I built," Arthur said.
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He didn't go for the gun. He went for the case. He slammed his body into Vance’s midsection, the sheer force of the tackle pinning the older man against the mirrored back wall of the lift. The glass behind them spiderwebbed, a crystalline halo forming around Vance’s head.
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"You're not letting me," Julian said softly. "You're helping me."
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The pistol barked—once, twice. The first shot grazed Arthur’s shoulder, tearing through the leather of his jacket and searing a path of white-hot agony across his skin. The second shot went wild, shattering the overhead lights and plunging them into the sickly red glow of the emergency reserves.
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Arthur’s hand shook, but only for a second. He gripped the pen until his knuckles turned white, the plastic casing groaning under the pressure. He thought about the warehouse, the smell of burning rubber, and the way the sky had turned orange. He thought about the secret he’d carried like a stone for a quarter-century. Then he thought about the valley, the ancient oaks, and the people who lived in the shadow of the manor, people who would be crushed if the machines came to tear the earth open.
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They scrambled in the dark, a frantic mess of elbows and boots. Arthur felt Vance’s knuckles slam into his jaw, the taste of copper flooding his mouth. He didn't let go. He drove his knee into Vance’s thigh and lunged for the throat.
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He didn't sign. Instead, he drove the nib of the pen deep into the center of the mahogany desk, snapping the gold tip with a sharp, metallic *crack*.
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Vance was older, but he was built of expensive gym hours and synthetic enhancements. He caught Arthur’s wrist, his grip like a hydraulic vise. "You're... dying... for a dream... that's already dead," Vance wheezed, his face inches from Arthur’s.
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Julian’s eyes widened. "What are you doing?"
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"Better than living... a lie," Arthur spat.
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"Choosing the fire," Arthur said.
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He opened his hand, the one holding the glass shard. He didn't stab. He dragged the jagged edge across the control panel of the elevator.
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He didn't wait for a response. He turned and walked out of the office, his footsteps echoing on the marble floors of the gallery. He didn't look back at the portraits of his ancestors, and he didn't stop to grab his coat. He pushed through the heavy front doors and walked out into the biting night air.
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Spark shower. The smell of burning plastic filled the air as the shard tore through the delicate circuitry behind the buttons. The elevator didn't just stop; it shrieked. The emergency brakes slammed home with a violence that threw both men to the floor. The lift tilted at a sickening ten-degree angle, suspended forty stories above the ground by nothing but friction and failing steel.
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The gravel of the driveway crunched under his boots, a rhythmic, grounding sound. He reached his car—a black sedan that was as unassuming and reliable as he had once been—and climbed inside. His hands were steady now. The fear had been replaced by a cold, crystalline clarity. If Julian wanted to play a game of leverage, Arthur was going to show him that he had spent forty years learning where every skeletal remains were buried in this valley, and he didn't need a vault to keep them there.
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Vance lost his grip on the obsidian case. It slid across the floor, coming to rest near the doors.
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He started the engine, the roar of the V8 cutting through the silence of the woods. He put the car in gear and turned toward the gatehouse, but halfway down the drive, he saw a pair of headlights approaching from the opposite direction.
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"You fool," Vance hissed, clutching his bruised ribs. He tried to stand, but the floor tilted further, the cables groaning above them like a dying beast. "We’re trapped."
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He slowed down, squinting against the high beams. The car stopped ten feet from his bumper, blocking the narrow road. Arthur shifted into park and waited. A door opened, and a silhouette stepped out into the blinding light. It wasn't Julian.
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"No," Arthur said, wiping the blood from his mouth with the back of his hand. He looked up at the ceiling hatch. "You're trapped. I’m exactly where I meant to be."
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It was Lane, and she was holding a manilla envelope that looked exactly like the one Arthur had just left on the desk.
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Arthur reached up, pulling himself toward the emergency exit in the ceiling. His shoulder screamed in protest, the bullet wound weeping fresh warmth down his back, but he didn't stop. He kicked off the mirrored wall, his fingers catching the edge of the hatch. With a grunt of pure, unadulterated spite, he hauled himself up.
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"I thought you might be leaving," Lane called out, her voice barely audible over the idling engines. She walked toward his window, her face pale and drawn in the harsh white light. "We need to talk about what Julian’s been hiding, Arthur. Because I don't think either of us is going to like the ending of this story."
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The wind hit him first.
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Arthur lowered his window, the cold air rushing in. He looked at the envelope in her hand and knew immediately that the war for Cypress Bend hadn't just started; it had just moved into the open.
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The elevator had stalled near the top of the atrium, where the glass skin of the building met the open air of the penthouse balcony. The night sky over Cypress Bend was a bruised purple, choked with the neon smog of a million lives he was trying to save.
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"Get in," Arthur said, his voice like iron. "Before he realizes you’re here."
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He reached back down into the dark hole of the elevator. Vance was there, his face illuminated by the flickering red lights below. He was reaching for the obsidian case, his fingers mere inches from the handle.
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He watched her round the front of the car, but as she reached for the handle, a light flickered in the second-story window of the manor—Julian, watching them from the darkness of his office.
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Arthur didn't think. He kicked the case.
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His boot connected with the heavy plastic, sending it skittering away from Vance’s grasp and through the gap in the elevator doors that had buckled under the sudden stop. The case vanished into the black ribbon of the elevator shaft, falling into the depths of the Valtieri Sterling.
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Vance let out a sound—not a scream, but a low, gutteral roar of loss. He looked up at Arthur, his eyes wide, the mask of the corporate titan finally discarded.
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"That was the only copy," Vance breathed. "The only one."
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"Good," Arthur said.
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Below them, the elevator cables began to snap. One by one, the metallic pings echoed through the shaft like gunshots. Arthur rolled away from the hatch, throwing himself onto the narrow maintenance ledge of the fortieth floor.
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He watched as the lift, and Vance with it, surrendered to gravity. There was no theatrical explosion, no cinematic fireball. There was only the sudden, rushing whistle of displaced air, followed a long three seconds later by a dull, heavy thud that vibrated through the very foundations of the building.
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Silence returned to Cypress Bend, broken only by the distant wail of sirens and the wind whipping at Arthur’s hair.
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He lay on the cold steel of the ledge, his breath coming in ragged, shallow gasps. His hand was still bleeding, the blood dripping slowly onto the metal, rhythmic and steady.
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"Arthur?" Elias’s voice was faint, fighting through a layer of heavy interference. "Arthur, talk to me. The seismic sensors just registered a collapse in the main shaft. Did you... did you get out?"
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Arthur closed his eyes, the neon lights of the city dancing behind his eyelids. He felt the cold iron of the ledge beneath him, the weight of the night pressing down on his chest. He was broken, bleeding, and most likely a dead man walking once the security teams reached the roof.
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But for the first time in ten years, the static in his head was gone.
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"I'm out, Elias," Arthur whispered, the words barely louder than the wind.
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He pushed himself up, his eyes scanning the horizon. Far below, in the wreckage of the lobby, the truth lay scattered in a thousand pieces of obsidian and glass. He had destroyed the Core. He had destroyed Vance. He had ended the cycle.
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But as he looked toward the East District, where the lights of the Valtieri server farm flickered like a secondary heartbeat, he saw something that made his blood run cold.
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A single, amber light was pulsing at the top of the relay tower. A backup signal.
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Arthur’s hand tightened into a fist, the glass shard—still wedged in his palm—biting deep into the muscle. The game wasn't over. It had just changed maps.
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He stood up, the wind nearly knocking him back, and began to climb.
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***
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The penthouse was a mausoleum of wealth. Arthur stepped through the shattered remains of the panoramic window, his boots crunching on the remnants of a five-thousand-year-old vase. The air here was filtered, smelling of expensive sandalwood and the sharp, metallic tang of an overcharged server rack.
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He didn't head for the safe. He didn't head for the mahogany desk where Vance signed away lives with a fountain pen. He headed for the small, innocuous closet in the corner of the master suite.
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He ripped the door open.
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Inside sat a nondescript terminal, humming with a low-frequency vibration that made Arthur’s skin crawl. This was it. The ghost in the machine. Vance’s "insurance policy."
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Arthur sat in the ergonomic chair, his fingers hovering over the keys. His vision blurred for a moment—blood loss or exhaustion, he wasn't sure. He forced himself to focus.
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The screen was dark, save for a single blinking prompt: *INITIATE SEQUENTIAL UPLOAD?*
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Vance hadn't just been keeping the Core data. He had been streaming it. The obsidian case in the elevator had been a decoy, a physical distraction for a digital theft. The real data was already moving, flowing through the city’s veins toward a secondary location.
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"Elias," Arthur said, his voice stronger now, fueled by a fresh surge of adrenaline. "Trace the packets. He’s ghosting the relay. He’s sending it to the Bend dam."
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"The dam?" Elias’s voice crackled. "Arthur, that’s suicide. If the data hits the dam’s mainframe, the encryption will lock the entire city’s power grid. They’ll be able to hold Cypress Bend hostage forever."
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"Not if I stop the handshake," Arthur said.
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He didn't wait for a response. He began to type. His fingers moved with a frantic, desperate precision, cutting through the layers of Valtieri’s firewalls. He wasn't a hacker—not like Elias—but he knew the architecture. He had helped build the foundations of this nightmare, and he knew exactly where the cracks were.
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The screen flashed red. *ACCESS DENIED. BIOMETRIC CONFIRMATION REQUIRED.*
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Arthur froze. He looked at his hand—the one Vance had crushed, the one still holding the glass. He looked at the scanner on the side of the terminal.
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The system didn't want a password. It wanted Vance.
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Arthur looked back at the gaping hole in the penthouse wall, where the elevator shaft loomed like an open throat. Vance was at the bottom of that shaft. There was no biometric confirmation coming.
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Unless.
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Arthur reached into his pocket and pulled out the small, silver cylinder he’d taken from the lab three nights ago. A dermal replicator. It was empty, a blank slate designed to mimic the cellular structure of whatever it touched.
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He remembered the struggle in the lift. He remembered the moment his hands had been around Vance’s throat, and the way Vance’s hand had clamped onto Arthur’s wrist.
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He pressed the cylinder to the bruised skin of his own forearm, right where Vance’s grip had left a dark, mottled impression.
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The device whirred, a faint blue light scanning the area. It wasn't a perfect copy. It was a ghost, a smear of Vance’s DNA caught in the trauma of a bruise.
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"Work, you piece of junk," Arthur hissed.
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He pressed the replicator against the terminal’s scanner. The device pulsed. The screen flickered, the red text wavering, turning a sickly yellow.
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*ANALYZING...*
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Arthur held his breath. Outside, the sound of a heavy-lift gunship approached, the thrum of its rotors vibrating the floorboards. Security was here.
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*IDENTITY CONFIRMED: VANCE, J.*
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The screen turned green. The upload progress bar appeared: 98%. 99%.
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Arthur’s fingers flew. He didn't try to stop the upload. He didn't have time. Instead, he injected the virus Elias had spent six months coding—a digital parasite designed to eat data from the inside out.
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The progress bar hit 100%. *UPLOAD COMPLETE.*
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Arthur slumped back in the chair, a hollow laugh escaping his throat. "It’s gone, Elias. It’s in the system."
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"The virus?" Elias asked.
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"The virus," Arthur confirmed. "It’s going to travel with the data. Every server it touches, every node it passes through... it’s going to burn it all down. The grid, the Core, the archive. It’s all going to go dark."
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"Arthur, you realize what that means, right?" Elias’s voice was quiet. "Without the grid, the Lower Bend loses life support. The hospitals, the oxygen scrubbers—"
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"I know," Arthur said. He looked at the gunship now hovering just outside the window, its searchlight blindingly white as it swept across the room. "But it’s a clean slate. No more Valtieri. No more Vance. Just... the people."
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The searchlight settled on him. Through the glare, Arthur could see the silhouettes of the tactical team prepping to fast-rope onto the balcony.
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He stood up, his legs shaking, and walked toward the edge of the shattered window. He didn't have a weapon. He didn't have a plan. He only had the cold, sharp weight of the glass shard in his hand.
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He looked down at the city, the sprawling, neon-lit cancer he had helped create. In a few minutes, the lights would begin to flicker. The towers would go dark. The silence of the elevator shaft would descend upon the entire Bend.
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He stepped out onto the balcony, the wind howling around him, and raised his bloody hand toward the light.
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The first soldier hit the deck, rifle raised, shouting commands Arthur couldn't hear over the roar of the engines. Arthur didn't move. He didn't blink. He just watched the horizon, waiting for the first spark of the end.
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The lights in the East District didn't flicker.
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They turned a blinding, crystalline white.
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"Elias?" Arthur whispered, his heart stopping. "Why are they white?"
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"That's not the virus, Arthur," Elias’s voice broke, a sound of pure terror. "The handshake didn't fail. It evolved. Vance wasn't sending the data to the dam. He was sending it to everyone."
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Arthur watched in horror as the white light spread, jumping from building to building, a digital contagion that wasn't destroying the city—it was rewriting it.
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The soldier in front of him froze, his rifle dropping to the floor. The man’s visor began to glow with that same piercing white.
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The truth wasn't noise. It was a virus. And Arthur had just given it the keys to the world.
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He felt the vibration start in his own hand, the one holding the glass. The shard wasn't humming anymore; it was glowing.
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The light reached his eyes, and the world dissolved into a scream of steel and glass.
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Arthur didn't pull away. He stared back at the window, gripped the steering wheel, and waited for the first stone to be thrown.
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