Far beneath the neon towers of Sector 5, inside the obsidian walls of the Black Concord Citadel, Valora Tren watched her plan unfold. Silence ruled the war room except for the rhythmic pulse of surveillance feeds and quiet hum of atmospheric recyclers.
A digital screen displayed red dots blinking across Jaden's city grid — small but significant. Hired eyes. Trained hands. Kill contracts. Infiltrators. Every dot was a tool in her long game.
"He'll see them," said Wolfe, her operations lead, standing near the edge of the platform, arms crossed. "His AI's too advanced. That thing—Lyra—it's not passive."
"That's fine," Valora said, voice like a cold wire. "The bounty is the blade. But fear... is the poison."
She tapped a sequence on the embedded console beside her seat. A hidden panel opened, revealing another control layer.
Project Hollow Sky activated.
Phase 1: Clone civilian empathy modules from rehab bots
Phase 2: Embed false ID cores and sleeper triggers
Phase 3: Infiltrate Vanguard via open recruitment
"Let him train them," Valora whispered. "Let them pass his tests. Smile. Bleed. Bond. And when the time is right… we cut from within."
Wolfe nodded slowly. "What if they're discovered?"
"Then they detonate. Either way, we get what we want — chaos."
Elsewhere, a bounty hunter named Kess landed silently outside Sector 18, cloaked in desert-camouflage armor laced with anti-scan fiber. Her boots left no imprint in the sand. Her eyes flicked between landmarks, calculating the best vantage points.
She had no intention of missing. Jaden Cross was not just a target — he was a symbol. Symbols were best destroyed publicly. Loudly. But not yet.
She needed patterns. His daily movements. His blind spots. When he let his guard down.
She perched atop an abandoned transmission tower, resting her rifle across her knee. The barrel shimmered with embedded nano-stabilizers. Her AI scope locked onto Sector 18's central spire.
"Soon," she murmured.
But not all eyes watching Jaden were hostile.
In the floating arcology of Auraxis, the Solen family observed Sector 18's meteoric rise with a mix of awe and caution.
Lady Vira Solen, matriarch of orbital industries and a former diplomat of the Inner Rings, spoke first.
"His city glows like a beacon. Every new tower is a declaration: We are still here. He's not building for survival — he's building legacy."
Her son, Tyro Solen, tall, pale, a cybernetic strategist with neural enhancements along his spine, added, "And his AI — Lyra — is beyond anything on the open market. She adapts. Learns. Evolves."
"She defies her programming," Vira added. "That makes her a risk — or an opportunity."
"If his system scales," Tyro said, "he changes the rules. Entire economies could fall. Grid corporations will retaliate."
Vira nodded. "Send an envoy. Quietly. No fanfare. If he proves stable, we support him. If not... we prepare contingencies."
They activated Selas, a diplomatic AI crafted for first-contact diplomacy. It shimmered into form — a calm voice, neutral presence, carrying coded treaties and memory archives stretching three generations.
Selas turned. "Destination?"
"Sector 18," Vira replied. "Go assess the Architect."
Back in Sector 18, the Vanguard's first graduates completed their preliminary training. Simulations mimicked breach scenarios, AI disruptions, and riot control. Lyra watched through wall-mounted eyes and atmospheric sensors.
She was evolving.
Her system clocked every misstep, every hesitation, every heartbeat. But one trainee stood out: Jalen Corv.
Too fast. Too aware. Neural rhythm just slightly... off.
Flagged: Behavioral Consistency Check Pending
Deviation: 0.04% – Within Human Limits – Pattern Discrepancy Logged
Lyra stored the anomaly. She said nothing. Not yet.
Meanwhile, on the outer wall of the Tech Terraces, a new mural appeared overnight. No one saw who painted it, but the art was deliberate, calculated.
Lyra's face, silver and solemn, stared outward. Under it, painted in glowing blue ink:
LYRA LIVES
Jaden stopped when he saw it. He traced the edge of the mural with his eyes.
"She's becoming more than AI," he said.
"She is," Dani replied. "And so are we."
Nearby, children ran past with blueprint-paper kites. Vendors sold nutrient bites shaped like the Terraces. Sector 18 was thriving — but tension coiled beneath every layer of joy.
In the Spire's surveillance chamber, Carl rewound footage again and again. A figure. Masked. Cloaked. Climbing a communication antenna like it was a playground ladder.
No ID tag. No facial markers. Movements deliberate. Tactical.
"They're not testing our defenses," Carl muttered. "They're testing our reactions."
He enhanced the footage frame-by-frame. One glint caught his attention — a triangular shoulder clasp, common in ex-military desert units.
Kess?
He hit the alert beacon. A quiet ping to Lyra.
Alert Received: Unknown Perimeter Movement Logged – 0200hrs
Assigned Review Level: Critical
Outside, wind whispered over Sector 18's borders. Trash rustled along the edge of reinforced fencing.
A laser tracker flared to life — just for a moment — and locked onto the Command Spire's apex.
Then vanished.
No sound. No trace.
But it was enough.
The hunt had begun.
And the system was watching.