The hallway felt too clean.
Not the kind of clean that ca from soap or bleach, but this clean had edges... and teeth. The lights overhead humd in a high pitch sound that was starting to get on Sera’s nerves. Even the air tasted like tal and filtered air and sothing pressed tight until it forgot what dirt was.
Sera followed the soldiers because they expected her to, and because she wanted to see where all this was going. Luci had been taken through a side door—his cage slled like cold steel and old fear—but he hadn’t fought.
He had looked back once, ears low, and she had tapped her fingers twice against her thigh. A promise. He understood.
The guards flanking her walked stiffly, rifles angled down but ready.
They slled nervous.
Maybe not outwardly, but under the armor, under the filtration masks, their bodies leaked small things—salt, stress, readiness. Things the creature inside her catalogued with lazy interest.
The corridor stretched forward in a long line of welded containers and reinforced doors. Bright lights buzzed overhead. The floor vibrated with a low chanical pulse.
Functional. Purpose-built. Boring.
But parts of it were interesting.
Sera tilted her head as they passed a small box mounted high on the wall. A vent. Round, thick, layered like gills. The air coming through it had a different weight than the rest of the hallway. She inhaled softly.
Filtered. Triple-stage. Viral removal. Moisture reduced.
Her creature humd. They dry the air to starve the contagion. Effective. Ugly.
She smiled faintly. "Ugly can still work."
A soldier on her left stiffened, not sure if she was talking to him.
Zubair had already been taken into a cell. She’d watched the door close behind him. His expression hadn’t changed, but the temperature in the hallway had shifted the mont he disappeared.
Alexei followed next. Silent, unreadable, his eyes tracking every angle of the space even as the door sealed over him.
Lachlan went after that, grinning in a way that showed too many teeth. Joking on the outside, hating the enclosure on the inside. He’d mouthed sothing at her before the lock clicked shut—don’t break anything yet.
His pulse had betrayed him, though. Too steady. Too ready for whatever ca next.
Elias was the last of the n. He walked beside her for another five ters, jaw tight, eyes scanning vents, lights, equipnt. His creature whispered harsh, amused comnts the whole way, and Elias ignored every one of them.
He didn’t look at Sera when they separated him out. He didn’t need to. His attention flicked to the soldiers, the caras, the equipnt carts, the angles of approach. He was already morizing the layout without aning to.
His door closed with a hiss.
The hallway went quieter.
The soldiers on either side of Sera didn’t look at her directly. They focused on her boots, the floor, the space just to the left of her shoulder—places where looking didn’t make them feel like prey.
Their nervousness wasn’t fear of attack. It was fear of misstep. A sense that one wrong movent would make the world tilt.
Her creature tasted it. They fear consequence, not you. Not yet. Give them ti. Sotis, it take humans longer to understand that they aren’t the top predator.
At the end of the corridor stood Director rcer.
He hadn’t followed at a rush. He hadn’t barked orders. He hadn’t even raised his voice. He had simply taken the shorter route through the facility and arrived here first, hands clasped behind his back.
He watched her approach the way a man watched incoming weather—asuring, not intimidated, not relaxed.
"Cell twelve," he instructed the guards, without raising his tone.
They flinched anyway.
The door to Cell Twelve unlocked. The seal broke with a soft crackle of air pressure. Cold, dry air slid out, brushing her skin. Sera paused at the threshold, curious.
The room was rectangular, maybe four ters by three. Clean tal walls. A reinforced window the size of her palm. A bed bolted to the floor. A strip of light across the ceiling. A vent above the door. The faintest hum under the bed, running through the fra like a pulse.
Her creature leaned closer in her mind. This room is a question. They want to see how you answer it.
Sera stepped inside.
The guards closed the door behind her, sealing her into the cold air. Sothing clicked into place—a lock deeper than the physical one. A system coming alive now that she was inside.
Dr. Kearns appeared in the observation strip outside her window.
The dic held a tablet tight to her chest, knuckles white under her gloves. Her eyes didn’t quite et Sera’s. She kept glancing at the readings on the tablet, at the scanners overhead, at the vent, anywhere except directly into the cell.
She entered only when a second guard keyed her through the airlock.
"You’ll feel a drop in temperature," Kearns told her, voice thin but steady. "It’s standard. Level Three containnt."
Sera blinked at her. "This is three?"
Kearns swallowed. "Yes."
"It’s small."
"I know."
The scan lights activated. A thin white strip flickered on overhead, moving down the length of the ceiling and then back up again. Sera watched the ripple of brightness travel across the walls, then across her skin.
The machine humd.
Kearns frowned at the tablet.
"Your thermography doesn’t make sense."
Sera lifted her hand and turned it palm up. "It makes sense to ."
Kearns didn’t look up. "The temperatures aren’t... stable. You’re warm. Then your fingertips drop eight degrees. Then rise again. Your pulse is steady, but it’s reading as if—"
Her voice cut off.
The machine hiccuped.
Lights flickered.
A distorted whine crawled through the speakers above the bed.
Kearns stared at the screen, mouth tightening. "That’s not possible."
The creature chuckled. She uses that phrase too much. This world forgets how much is possible when what you know breaks.
Next ca the blood draw.
Kearns approached with a sterile kit. Her hands shook only once, a small tremor in her fingers before she steadied them. "I need your arm."
Sera extended it. Kearns swabbed, inserted the needle, collected the sample. The machine chirped in a pattern Sera didn’t recognize.
Kearns recognized it.
Her face changed.
She didn’t speak. She didn’t announce the anomaly. She didn’t react outwardly. But she did lift her wrist to her mouth and press the com-button on her sleeve.
"Director rcer," she reported, voice tightly controlled, "you need to see this."
She didn’t hold the tablet out for Sera to view. She angled it away, shielding the screen with her body.
Sera didn’t mind. She watched Kearns instead.
Her creature tasted the air around the dic. She is afraid, but not of you. She is afraid of being wrong in front of him.
rcer’s voice crackled through the intercom.
"Proceed to Level Four diagnostics."
Kearns froze.
One second. Two.
Then she nodded, though no one could see her except Sera.
"Understood."
She moved quickly now, retrieving the neuro-read plate. "Place your hand here."
Sera rested her palm on the cool tal. The plate vibrated softly, tiny needles of sensation rippling across her skin.
The machine glitched again.
Kearns winced.
Her creature whispered: This system was built for infection that spreads, not an infection that thinks.
A trio of soldiers entered the outer room.
They didn’t announce themselves. No orders barked. They just filed in, rifles low, steps careful.
Their eyes landed on Sera’s stance.
She hadn’t moved, but she had shifted—weight slightly forward, chin angled, breath held in a way that made her more... centered.
Sothing in them recognized the change before their minds caught up.
Three rifles rose a fraction of an inch.
Kearns sucked in a breath. "No—she isn’t—just let finish—"
rcer’s voice cut through the tension.
It wasn’t loud.
It wasn’t rushed.
It was the exact tone a commander used when giving an order that didn’t allow for interpretation.
"Hold her still."
The soldiers moved.
Not to attack.
To secure.
Sera didn’t fight. She watched the way they approached—angles wrong, spacing wrong, predictable, human. She let them close in because she wanted to see what happened next.
Above her, the ceiling panel clicked.
Two tal arms slid down, jointed and precise, ending in restraint loops.
Kearns stumbled back a step.
"Director—protocol doesn’t call for—"
"Level Four," rcer reminded her. "You know the rules."
The arms extended toward Sera’s wrists.
Her creature pressed against her mind, curious rather than alard. Let them try. It is always interesting when they try. At least they aren’t at the sa level as Dr. Orhan... yet.
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