The Grid screamed as if the city itself had been flayed alive. Lights stuttered, a hundred thousand LEDs coughing sparks. Screens went black then pink then snowed into useless static. For a breath, the spire felt like a throat exposed to the night — raw tissue and pulsing wires. Cain felt the sound in his bones. He had expected the noise, not the way it settled into him, a cold that tasted like accusation. Around him, the corridor shuddered; servers cycled down in ragged successions. Steve's fists were a blur on the breaker board, lights reflected in his goggles like a swarm of dying fireflies. "Keep it steady," Cain said. His voice did not need to be loud. They moved as if underwater, each motion deliberate to conserve air. Down in the arteries, the first shouts rose. Boots, heavier now that the city had lost its eyes, thudded in predictable patterns. Trackers had folded whole, leaving blind corridors that smelled of ozone and burnt plastic. Hunter's radio spat chatter, then silence. "Minimal feedback," Steve said, throat tight. "They'll patch, reroute. They'll try to hit a secondary. We have maybe—" He didn't finish. Words were cheap here. Roselle's grin was a line of steel. "Then we make their secondary the next to die." They moved as one through the server halls, boots muffled, breaths measured. Cain's blade lay sheathed at his back, ghost-cool against his spine. He'd come to think of it as an old instrument — something that cleaned and made clear. Tonight would be no different. Except it would. Every time they wounded the city, the city learned. Each cut taught it where to guard, how to hide its throat. Follow current novᴇls on 𝔫𝔬𝔳𝔢𝔩•𝗳𝗂𝗋𝖾•𝕟𝕖𝕥 They reached the chamber that housed the split hub, and the air changed — thicker, smelled of heated metal and old breath. Racks of servers towered like cathedral columns, cables hanging in grotesque chandeliers. Steve knelt, fingers finding the access point in the dark like a man blessing a wound. "This is it," he said. "We sever this and the top floors go blind. We cripple their sight, if not their hands." "You sure the council will feel this?" Susan asked. Her voice was gravel. There was a rib-brace engineered into her collarbone that had been pounded into place last week. She was not painless for history. Cain looked at the banked lights, at the seams of panels bolted too tight, at the little tags that read DAELMONT-SECURE. Names settled in his gut like stones. "They'll feel it. They'll feel it in meetings and glass towers. They'll feel it where their fingers have always been safe." Steve's hands moved. Sparks flew like angry stars. Roselle kept the corridor clear with the businesslike calm of a blade. Hunter stood with his weight shifted, cataloguing risks. The code they fed into the hub wasn't elegant; it was surgical bluntness from Steve's half-insane brain and Cain's cold patience. Kill lines, loop blockers, cache purgers — a paper-cut orchestra meant to bleed data slow and deep. They had done worse things with less hope. Still, as the code seeped into the machines, Cain felt something like a toll taken. Not for himself; for the whole city. For the people who would stumble in the sudden dark, for the markets that would close and the ferries that would grind to a stop. War always had collateral. They had chosen collateral that night — the metal beasts of sight, not the marketplaces of food. In the calculus of ruin, choices were always small and brutal. The first subroutine detonated like a heart misfiring. Monitors that had been streaming council news went black. A series of locks snapped open and stayed open as if eyelids refusing to close. Alarms tried to reassert themselves and found no path. The silence afterward was not quiet; it was full and terrible like a held breath that might break the lungs. There was work to do. Cain moved from rack to rack, slitting cables with a precision that made him feel old. The work was physical — muscles and levers and the cooling of hot metal — and it was moral, a dull calculus of intent. "We leave them enough to stumble on answers they didn't expect," he said. "We don't erase them. We make their next steps uncertain." Susan smeared her palm against her mouth to wipe oil and something else away. "You ever think about what comes after?" she asked. It was not a captain's question; it was the thing that stayed up in bed at night. "We topple a control node. Then what? Who rebuilds? Who watches the watchers?" Cain stopped, fingers on a loose strand of fiber. He could feel the history of every revolution in the muscles of his hands. "Then we make sure whoever rebuilds doesn't build in their image," he said finally. It wasn't a clean answer. It could not be. No honest answer ever was. The hub's main array went dark with a finality that tasted like iron. Lights that had traced the city's spine blinked out, skeletal. For a moment, Cain thought he could hear the city breathe; an enormous exhale that moved through sewer grilles and stalls and the towers of the Daelmonts. The sound was hollow and ancient, like a bell struck in a buried chapel. Footsteps surged. They had not been silent long enough. The hunters poured into the hall like water finding a breached dam — organized, angry, supplied with old money and new directives. The first volley of rifle fire cracked and ricocheted off steel racks. Roselle was a machine, moving in the smoke, her pistol barking like a metronome. Hunter took a shoulder into his rib and kept moving. Cain felt the edge of the world sharpen then. He ducked a shot that would have taken his throat, rolled, and felt the blade in his hand as if it had been waiting. Up close, in the press of boots and breath and heat, training surfaces without theatre. He was not a hero; he was a man who made choices that left other men unable to live only to find themselves cursed with worse truths. He carved a path to the main breaker. Sparks painted everything in blue-white streaks. Men went down. Men he had once thought he might have saved. Faces that would haunt markets later when the city tried to pretend none of this had happened.