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Chapter 1 - PROLOGUE

Sumatran Rainforest – 2089

The air smelled like damp earth and life. Even thirty meters underground, Rora could still feel the pulse of the rainforest above – the hum of insects, the distant call of a hornbill, the rustle of leaves that had survived every disaster humanity had thrown at them.

She stared at the screen in front of her, where thousands of glowing green dots swarmed across a 3D map of the planet. Each dot was a Bio-Nexus nanobot, no bigger than a grain of sand, designed to weave themselves into the fabric of ecosystems and heal them from within.

"Stability rate at 98.7%," her assistant Lia said from across the lab. "The test site in the burned peatlands is already sprouting new mangroves. In three days, the water will be safe to drink again."

Rora smiled, running a hand through her dark curls. Ten years of work – of late nights, failed experiments, and endless fights to keep her research away from people who'd only see it as a tool for profit. She'd built this lab in the heart of her homeland for a reason: here, nature reminded her what she was fighting for.

"Prepare for global deployment," she said, typing a sequence into her console. "We'll start with the worst-hit regions first – the Sahel, the Amazon, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch—"

The lab's alarms blared. Red lights flashed across every screen. Lia's face paled as she pulled up a security feed.

"Rora… they're here."

On the monitor, armored vehicles crashed through the rainforest canopy above. Men in black uniforms with the logo of Omni-Core Industries – the world's biggest tech corporation – poured out, cutting through the hidden fences like they were made of paper.

"They must have hacked our satellite feed," Lia whispered.

Rora's jaw tightened. She'd always known this day might come. Omni-Core had spent years pushing fake "green tech" that did nothing but drain resources and line their pockets. They'd never let a real solution exist – not when there was money to be made from the crisis.

"Initiate Protocol Omega," she said, her fingers flying across the keyboard. "Upload all Bio-Nexus data to every public server on the planet. If they want it, they'll have to share it with everyone."

"But Rora – that'll expose everything. Your lab, our team—"

"My work was never meant to be hidden," she said, hitting the final button. The screen flashed green: UPLOAD COMPLETE. "Now we fight to make sure it's used the right way."

The sound of explosions shook the underground facility. Dust rained from the ceiling as the lab's reinforced doors began to buckle.

Rora grabbed her father's old keris from the shelf – a gift he'd given her before she left for MIT, carved with images of the Rafflesia flower. She'd kept it as a reminder: strength could be gentle, but it could also be unbreakable.

"Ready?" she asked Lia.

Her friend nodded, picking up a plasma wrench from the workbench. "Born ready."

As the doors crashed open, Rora took a deep breath – of earth, of rain, of home. The future of the world was in her hands. And she'd never let it fall into the wrong ones.

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