Chapter 1115: Whitehielm (1).
The corridor seemed endless, stretching like a vein cut through the spire. Each panel glowed faint with residual power, humming softly, the last whispers of a machine not yet aware it was dying. Cain’s blade caught the glow, silver edge whispering with every step he took. Behind him, the others moved in silence, their breathing shallow, their bodies taut with the weight of decisions made moments ago.
The Grid was screaming, though not in sound. Its scream lived in the lights stuttering along the walls, the hum that pitched unevenly, the vibrations trembling beneath their boots. Steve glanced at the displays, sweat cutting lines across his soot-stained face. "We hit it harder than I thought," he muttered.
"Good," Roselle said flatly. Her pistol swung in arcs, her eyes sharp, her voice stripped of anything but edge.
Hunter kept to the rear, his silence growing heavier, the kind that begged to be broken but never was. Cain didn’t look back at him. He couldn’t afford to. His attention was on the faint tremors rippling ahead—the way the air thickened as if the spire itself was bracing for retaliation.
Susan pressed closer to the wall, rifle steady. Her voice carried low but steady. "If the Grid falls in sections, they’ll collapse the upper floors on us."
"They’d collapse them anyway," Cain said. He didn’t slow his pace. "Difference is whether it kills us quick or buys us enough time to finish."
The words lingered between them, half truth, half challenge. No one answered. They knew better than to soothe themselves with optimism.
The corridor bent sharply, opening into a chamber that stretched upward like a hollow throat. Cables draped from the ceiling, thick as roots, glowing faintly where power still flowed. At the center stood a tower of servers, humming like a swarm of insects. The Grid’s heart.
Steve froze, eyes wide, fingers twitching toward his kit. "This is it. The hub feeding the council’s command lattice."
Roselle raised her pistol toward the tower as though a bullet might bring it all crashing down. "So we cut it?"
"No," Steve snapped. "If we sever it here without reroute, the failsafes kick in. Backup uplinks light up, and we’ve bled for nothing." He looked at Cain, voice tightening. "We need a controlled burn. Pull memory, erase command, break the spine without giving them a way to crawl again."
Hunter finally spoke. His voice was low, almost reverent. "If you erase memory, you erase more than the council’s grip. Families will lose histories. Streets will lose maps. Doctors lose archives. The city loses itself."
Roselle rounded on him. "And if we don’t? The city keeps bleeding until it dies slow. Stop pretending compromise saves lives."
Hunter’s gaze didn’t waver. "It does."
Cain stepped between them, his presence cutting like steel. "Enough. We don’t get to argue about ghosts when the living are at our heels." He turned to Steve. "Do it. Burn it right."
Steve nodded, dropping to his knees at the base of the tower. His tools clattered against metal, sparks snapping as he opened the casing. His hands moved fast, too fast, driven by both urgency and fear.
The first echo of pursuit reached them then—boots striking steel, shouts rolling like thunder down the shaft they’d left behind.
Susan stiffened, aiming toward the sound. "We’ve got less than two minutes."
Roselle cursed under her breath, pistol swinging toward the doorway. "They’ll come in waves."
Cain lowered his blade, grounding himself in its weight. He felt the city’s pulse beating through the spire, the rhythm of something ancient and vast struggling against their intrusion. He didn’t let it shake him.
The first Daelmont hunters burst into the chamber, armored, eyes gleaming with Grid-fed lenses. They opened fire in a storm of light. Susan’s rifle cracked, dropping the first. Roselle moved like a shadow, every shot precise, each recoil a punctuation.
Cain surged forward, blade flashing. He cut clean through armor and bone, moving with a ferocity that made the hunters stagger. Every strike was final. Every step forward was a claim.
Behind him, Steve shouted, "Almost there!" His voice strained, half drowned by the chaos.
Hunter crouched near him, eyes scanning the circuits, lips moving with calculations unspoken. Cain caught the flicker—Hunter wasn’t just watching. He was memorizing. Cain filed it away, even as he drove his blade into another hunter’s chest.
The chamber filled with smoke and light. Roselle pressed against the tower, reloading with movements drilled into instinct. Susan’s rifle barked, emptying casing after casing. Still, the hunters poured in.
Cain cut them back, body burning, breath harsh. He didn’t need to glance at Steve to know the cost of every second they held.
Finally, Steve let out a ragged cry. "Done!" His fist slammed a breaker, and the tower shuddered. Lights flickered, pulsing erratic, before collapsing into darkness.
The Grid screamed. This time it was sound—a deep, mechanical howl that rattled the chamber, made the air quiver, made Cain’s teeth ache. Screens went black. Cables writhed like veins drained of blood.
The hunters faltered, lenses flickering, movements jerking as commands stuttered. Cain struck them down without hesitation.
Silence fell, broken only by their harsh breathing.
Steve sagged, sweat dripping onto the dead machine. "It’s done. They won’t crawl back from this."
Hunter’s face was pale in the dark, his silence louder than any protest.
Cain raised his blade, its weight almost unbearable now. He looked at each of them in turn. Susan, bruised but unbroken. Roselle, eyes sharp with victory’s edge. Steve, trembling with exhaustion. Hunter, carrying a silence that spoke of betrayal not yet acted.
"This city doesn’t belong to them anymore," Cain said. His voice was iron. "But it doesn’t belong to us either. We cut it free. Now we see if it lives."
The chamber seemed to breathe, emptied of its false pulse. Above them, the spire groaned, a titan waking from broken chains.
They didn’t smile. None of them had earned it yet.
They moved into the dark, into the city’s raw silence, and Cain knew every step ahead would decide what kind of world they were truly building.