WebNovels

Chapter 2 - Chapter 2: The Weight of Loyalty

The fluorescent lights of the Central Tower's upper levels

shone harshly, their pale glow reflecting off the sterile white walls. Elara

adjusted her gloves, the smooth leather tugging against her skin as she made

her way toward the main data processing hub. Her boots clicked softly against

the polished floor, each step echoing faintly in the vast, empty corridor. She

had walked these halls countless times, yet today they felt heavier, as though

the air itself carried the weight of something unspoken.

She paused briefly at the door to the processing hub, her

gaze flicking to the security console beside it. The holographic display pulsed

faintly, awaiting her credentials. Elara raised her hand, her palm brushing

lightly against the scanner. The console flashed green, and the door slid open

with a quiet hiss.

Inside, the hub was a sea of holographic displays, each one

alive with streams of data cascading across its surface. Elara stepped forward,

her shoulders straightening as she entered the room. Several of her colleagues

were already present, their movements precise and calculated as they worked.

She nodded to them briefly before taking her place at the central terminal.

"Morning, Dr. Veylin," one of her colleagues said, his voice

clipped but polite. He was older than her, with neatly combed gray hair and a

face lined with years of discipline. His name was Dr. Lior Branson, and he had

been a mentor to Elara during her early years in the Tower. Though their

interactions were formal, there was an unspoken respect between them.

"Good morning, Dr. Branson," Elara replied, her voice steady

as she adjusted the terminal's settings. The holographic display shimmered

under her touch, the data rearranging itself into a more manageable format.

They worked in silence for a time, the hum of the system

filling the air. Elara's gaze darted across the streams of data, her mind

processing the information with practiced efficiency. Compliance metrics were

stable across most districts, but her attention was drawn to one in particular:

**Sector 7**.

The anomaly hadn't disappeared. If anything, it had

grown—its impact now spreading across adjacent districts. Elara frowned, her

gloved fingers hovering over the terminal as she magnified the data. Irregular

emotional responses, flagged but not neutralized. Her pulse quickened as the

patterns came into focus.

"This doesn't make sense," she murmured, almost to herself.

Dr. Branson glanced at her, his brow furrowing slightly.

"Another irregularity?"

Elara hesitated before nodding. "Yes. It's subtle, but it's

spreading."

Branson leaned closer, his expression tightening as he

examined the data on her display. He didn't say anything for a long moment, his

gaze flicking across the screen. Finally, he exhaled softly and straightened.

"We've seen anomalies like this before," he said quietly. "They're rare, but...

persistent."

"Persistent?" Elara repeated, her voice tinged with

confusion.

"They don't follow the usual patterns," Branson explained.

"Sometimes, no matter how many adjustments we make, they remain... unresolved."

Elara frowned, her mind racing. She had never encountered an

anomaly that couldn't be corrected. The system was designed to adapt, to

neutralize irregularities efficiently. The idea that something could evade its

control was... unsettling.

Before she could respond, a notification flashed across her

terminal: **Directive Update. Investigate Sector 7. Immediate Compliance

Required.**

Elara's stomach tightened as she read the message. The

council was aware of the anomaly, and now it was her responsibility to uncover

the cause. She nodded to Branson briefly before logging out of the central

terminal and gathering her materials.

The drive to Sector 7 was long, the sleek transport gliding

silently through the city's orderly streets. Elara sat in the back, her gaze

fixed on the grid-like patterns of buildings passing by the window. From here,

the city looked flawless, its symmetry soothing in its predictability. Yet

beneath that facade, she knew, cracks were forming.

When she arrived at the district, the atmosphere was

different. The air felt heavier, tinged with something intangible. Elara

stepped out of the transport and adjusted her gloves, her movements precise as

she approached the local regulation center. The building was smaller than the

Central Tower, but its design was identical—clean lines, sterile walls, the

faint hum of the system vibrating beneath her boots.

Inside, the regulation center was quiet. The staff greeted

her with polite nods as she made her way to the main terminal. Elara logged in,

her fingers moving swiftly as she accessed the anomaly reports. The data was

fragmented, incomplete, as though something had disrupted its flow. Her frown

deepened as she pieced the fragments together.

A name caught her attention: **Kael**. It was attached to

several flagged files, though the details were sparse. No occupation, no

residential allocation—only a series of timestamps marking his movements

through the district. Elara's breath caught as she magnified the profile. The

image attached was grainy, distorted, but his glowing green eyes shone vividly

through the haze. Unmistakable.

"Who are you?" Elara murmured under her breath, her voice

barely audible over the hum of the terminal.

The air around her felt colder now, charged with a tension

she couldn't explain. Her gloves creaked softly as she clenched her fists, her

mind racing. Whoever Kael was, he wasn't just an anomaly. He was something else

entirely.

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