They found a dry alcove deep in the old subway tunnels, miles away from the police scanners.
Zeph slid down the wall, exhaling a long, shaky breath. He held his burnt hand up to the dim light of a service bulb. The skin was red and blistered, angry-looking.
Kaelen dropped his pack and immediately knelt beside him. He pulled out a small first-aid kit. His movements were jerky, aggressive.
"Give me the hand," Kaelen ordered.
"It's okay, Kae," Zeph said, leaning his head back. "It doesn't hurt anymore."
Kaelen paused, holding the bandage. "It's a third-degree burn, Zeph. Of course it hurts."
"No, really," Zeph tapped his temple. "The… voice. It turned off the pain receptors. Said they were 'distracting'."
Kaelen froze. He looked at Zeph's hand, then at his face. "It turned off your nerves?"
"Yeah. Pretty handy, right?" Zeph chuckled weakly. "Get it? Handy?"
Kaelen didn't laugh. He slammed the first-aid kit shut. "That's not natural, Zeph. Pain is there for a reason. It tells you when you're dying."
"Well, I'm not dying," Zeph said, his smile fading. "I'm surviving. Thanks to it."
Kaelen stood up, pacing the small space. The shadows of the tunnel seemed to stretch toward him. "You wouldn't have needed saving if you hadn't touched the box. I told you. I ordered you."
"And I saved us!" Zeph snapped back, his own temper flaring. The AI was feeding him data—Kaelen's adrenaline was spiking. He was looking for a fight. "You were going to sacrifice yourself back there. What was your plan? Die and leave me alone?"
"My plan was to do my job!" Kaelen shouted. His voice echoed down the empty tracks. "I protect you. That is the deal. I am the shield. You are the… the…"
"The load?" Zeph suggested quietly. "The liability?"
Kaelen stopped pacing. He didn't deny it. He just looked away, jaw clenched.
"Observation," the AI's voice was smooth as silk in Zeph's mind. "Subject Kaelen Thorne is experiencing a 40% drop in self-worth. He requires validation to function efficiently. Suggestion: Pat his head and say 'Good dog'."
Zeph snorted. "I am not doing that."
"Doing what?" Kaelen asked sharply.
"Nothing," Zeph muttered. "Just… thinking."
"I'm going to scout ahead," Kaelen said, grabbing his stun baton. "Stay here. Don't touch anything. Don't talk to the voices."
He walked off into the darkness, leaving Zeph alone in the pool of yellow light.
Kaelen walked until his legs burned. He was angry. Angry at Zeph for being reckless. Angry at the AI for existing. But mostly, he was angry at himself.
Inefficient. That's what Zeph had said.
Kaelen kicked a rusted metal can. It clattered loudly.
He stopped. The tunnel here was different. The air was colder. The walls weren't concrete anymore; they were covered in a strange, shifting black moss.
He stepped closer. It wasn't moss. It was… shadow. But it was moving.
A low hum vibrated in his chest. It sounded like a whisper.
…hungry…
Kaelen frowned. He raised his flashlight. The beam of light hit the black patch on the wall—and vanished. The darkness ate the light.
"What the hell?" Kaelen whispered.
He should turn back. His instincts—his tactical training—screamed at him to leave. Unknown threat. Retreat.
But another feeling clawed at his gut. Curiosity. And something darker.
Zeph has a supercomputer in his brain, a voice in his head whispered. Zeph doesn't need you anymore. You are obsolete. Unless…
Kaelen reached out. His hand trembled.
The black substance seemed to reach back. Tendrils of shadow uncoiled from the wall, drifting toward his fingers like smoke.
…power…
"I'm not afraid," Kaelen lied to the empty tunnel.
He touched it.
COLD.
It wasn't like ice. It was the cold of deep space. The cold of a grave.
The shadow latched onto his fingertips. It didn't burn like Zeph's AI; it numbed. It shot up his arm, turning his skin grey.
Kaelen tried to pull back, but he was stuck.
"Gah!" He gritted his teeth, pulling harder.
The shadow pulled back. It wanted him. It felt his jealousy, his fear, his desire to be strong. It felt like a perfect match.
…Void… accepts…
Kaelen's vision went black. He fell to his knees, gasping, as the darkness flooded his veins. He didn't scream. He wouldn't give the darkness the satisfaction.
Instead, he clenched his fist. He forced the shadow to submit. He was Kaelen Thorne. He didn't get controlled. He controlled.
"Mine," Kaelen hissed, his eyes squeezing shut.
When he opened them, the tunnel was the same. The black moss was gone.
Kaelen looked at his hand. It looked normal. But when he clenched his fist, the shadows between his fingers didn't move. They stayed, solid and heavy.
He felt… heavy. Anchored.
He stood up. He felt stronger. Not fast like Zeph. But unstoppable. Like a landslide.
He turned back toward the camp. A dark smile touched his lips.
"Okay, Zeph," he whispered. "Let's see who the liability is now."
