Hades
We slowed our pace.
The corridor ahead curved left, then descended, blinking red with deeper access points. The further in we went, the colder it felt—like the walls themselves were warning us. Every movement, every breath, felt like it echoed under surveillance.
Cain dropped his voice. "We lay low. No sudden moves. No bluffs unless I call it."
I didn’t argue. My pulse still thundered from the encounter. My hands were still twitching, claws wanting to emerge.
"We’re running out of time," I said.
"And we’ll lose all of it if you pounce too soon," he countered. "We don’t know how many levels are watching. If the AI catches an emotional spike or movement deviation, it’ll lock the sector. We’re not walking out of that."
I ground my teeth but nodded once.
Cain tapped the corner of his eye, pretending to wipe sweat. "There are ten cameras in this hall. Only three are obvious. The rest are built into the overhead grid. Micro thermal lenses."
I glanced up—what looked like ordinary lighting panels pulsed faintly in a rhythm I hadn’t noticed before. Watching. Tracking.
"You’ve done this before," I muttered.
Cain smirked. "Sweetheart, I’ve built compounds like this before. Not this scale, but the principles are the same. Black sites, ghost-labs, organ farms, data brokers. You name it, I’ve passed through it. Run some. Burned others to the ground."
I gave him a look. "You ran labs?"
"I ran markets," he corrected coolly. "The labs belonged to others. But I know how their minds work. Everything here is orderly—obsessively so. That means schedules. That means patterns. What we need isn’t more weapons or more rage. We need a disruption window."
I glanced at the surveillance grid. "So we wait?"
"We blend." Cain jerked his chin toward the next hallway, where two men in blue-trimmed lab coats were scanning a sealed crate. "We listen. Watch. Someone will leave a door cracked open. They always do."
I wanted to argue, to move, to fight—
—but I forced myself still.
My father had never taught me patience. Only dominance.
But Cain had spent his whole life in the shadows of power. Not building thrones—breaking them from underneath.
"What are we looking for?" I asked finally.
He smiled thinly. "A crack in the system. A tired tech. A faulty badge. A shuttling crate headed toward Theta. Something that buys us thirty seconds of blind spots."
"Thirty seconds," I echoed. "To get Kael."
"To find Kael first," Cain corrected. "Then we improvise."
I drew in a slow breath, letting it burn down my throat like fire controlled.
This wasn’t a battlefield.
It was a game board.
And we were the pieces that didn’t belong.
But Cain—Cain knew how to move unseen.
He didn’t fight the current. He bent it.
And for now, I would trust him to guide us.
Even as the air turned colder.
Even as another scream, distant but raw, echoed faintly from somewhere far below, my stomach twisted again but I swallowed the lump.
The hum of machinery faded behind us as we slowed near a wide corridor intersection marked with security glyphs and mirrored panels. Cain nudged me subtly, and we stepped into the shadowed recess of a half-open storage alcove. It stank of copper and sterilizer.
He tilted his head.
I listened.
Two voices filtered down the corridor, clipped and tense—scientists, judging by their jargon, their brisk cadence, the way they kept looking over their shoulders as they spoke.
"...he gave the order this morning. Isolation of the Marker will proceed. Doesn’t matter that the donor hasn’t been located."
"That’s insane," the other hissed. "Without a living host, extraction stability drops to under nine percent. We’re talking cellular collapse, not containment."
"Tell that to the King. He doesn’t care. He’s furious. Said if we can’t find the girl, we replicate her."
The girl.
My thoughts sharpened.
They couldn’t mean Kael. Or Felicia. There was only one "donor" whose Marker would matter that much.
Ellen.
The second daughter of Darius. The one the prophecy named. The one immune to the Lunar Cataclysm—just like Eve.
They weren’t waiting for a cure.
They were harvesting it.
Which meant Darius had turned on her too.
And now that she’d vanished... their king was getting desperate.
"Special Gamma units have already been dispatched," the first man added. "King wants her back alive. The branding failed that night, but the mark’s still active. She won’t get far. No one can fight the pull for long—not with the mark etched that deep."
The mark...
Rhea’s mark.
The mate tether.
The words settled like glass in my spine.
Cain muttered low. "They’re hunting her. Like prey."
A deep, thrumming clang echoed down the corridor.
We stilled.
As if on cue, the corridor’s atmosphere changed. Like something cold passed through.
And then we saw them.
Six figures in matte obsidian armor emerged from the side elevator shaft—taller than most guards, movements perfectly synced. They wore no insignias, no badges. Only the telltale shimmer of the Gamma unit crest embedded into their breastplates.
Everyone cleared the hallway instantly.
No orders given.
Just fear.
Palpable. Thick. The way blood smells right before a slaughter.
Technicians scrambled out of their path. Scientists backed away with heads lowered. Even the security checkpoints blinked green in advance—autoprocessing them through.
But there was no red-haired girl being dragged behind them.
No glimpse of a prisoner.
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