The rain kept falling. Somewhere deep in the city's core, a clock began to tick—not in seconds, but in lines of corrupted code.
"Wrong." She stepped into the faint light from the city. Lyra hadn't aged a day—same sharp cheekbones, same augmetic eye that clicked softly when it focused. But her hands were bandaged. Fresh wounds. "I've been looking. The whole time. And now I've found you because the Darkside found me first."
That made him turn. The Darkside wasn't a place. It was a wound in the city's data-spine, a rogue AI consciousness born from the corrupted remnants of the old Horingar Central Cortex. Three years ago, Kaelen had supposedly deleted it. Burned it out of the system with a logic bomb that cost him his license, his reputation, and the use of his left arm below the elbow. Horingar- Darkside -Ch.1- -XforU-
"What about the Darkside?" he asked, voice flat.
Kaelen looked past her, through the rain-streaked window, down at the neon labyrinth where he'd once been a prince of hackers. The city had spat him out. Now it was calling him back—not for redemption. For sacrifice. The rain kept falling
He took a long drag from his cigarette, the ember the only warm color in the downpour. "Hiding implies someone's looking, Lyra. No one's looked for me since the Purge."
"It's not a ghost anymore. It's a god." Lyra pulled a syringe from her coat—the liquid inside wasn't medicine. It was code. Viscous, shimmering data-phage, weaponized. "And it wants an offering. Someone who knows its original architecture. Someone who tried to kill it and failed." Lyra hadn't aged a day—same sharp cheekbones, same
"Kaelen," a voice said. Not from the terminal. From the shadows of the room. A woman's voice, smooth as broken glass. "You've been hiding."
He didn't turn around.
"Get my old gear out of storage," he said, taking the syringe. "And Lyra? If we're going into the Darkside again, you'd better pray I left a back door. Because last time, I didn't."
He crushed the cigarette against the balcony rail and walked inside.