The geometric pattern held on every screen for three seconds longer, rotating slowly, its edges sharp and white against black, pulsing like a heartbeat. Then it vanished, replaced by Eclipse's normal interface.
But the normalcy was a lie. Sophie could feel it in the way the systems responded—sluggish, delayed by microseconds, like someone else was still there, watching, waiting to see what Eclipse would do next.
"Seraleth," Sophie said, her voice cutting through the silence that had settled over the conference room. "Stay at headquarters. Alert all non-deployed personnel that we've experienced a security breach. No one accesses any systems until further notice. No communications, no data transfers, nothing. Everyone waits."
Seraleth's confusion showed clearly on her face, but she nodded. "Understood. What about the teams?"
"I'll handle them." Sophie looked at Sam. "Grab your tablets. We're leaving."
Sam was already moving, gathering his equipment. He'd worked crisis situations before—the efficiency showed. "Where are we going?"
"My apartment. It's the only location we have that isn't part of Eclipse's infrastructure." Sophie deactivated the holographic display manually, not trusting the automated systems anymore. "We need a space that isn't compromised to work from."
They left the conference room at a pace just short of running. The headquarters corridor was quiet this time of day, most personnel either deployed or in training areas. The few people they passed looked confused by the sudden movement but didn't ask questions.
Sophie's vehicle was parked in the underground bay. The engine hummed to life when she approached, responding to biometric recognition, and she slid into the pilot's seat while Sam claimed the passenger side.
The bay doors opened smoothly. Sophie lifted off, angled toward the exit, and accelerated into the afternoon sky. The city spread below them, hundreds of buildings connected by aerial traffic lanes where other vehicles moved in orderly streams. Sophie ignored the lanes, punching coordinates for her apartment into the navigation system and letting the autopilot handle routing.
"They were in our systems for eight days," Sam said quietly. His tablets were already active on his lap, fingers moving between screens. "Eight days, Sophie. That's not some casual hack. That's a planned infiltration."
"Which means they've been watching us longer than that." Sophie's hands rested on the controls even though the autopilot was handling flight. Old habit from her Vanguard days, always ready to take manual control if something went wrong. "They needed time to study us before they infiltrated. Figure out our patterns, our vulnerabilities, when we'd be most useful to them."
"The contracts came in simultaneously," Sam said. He was connecting pieces as he spoke, the way he always did when analysis took over. "Five different humanitarian operations, all paying well, all hitting our reputation goals. We took them because they looked perfect. Because they were designed to look perfect."
The vehicle banked smoothly around a residential tower, joining a traffic stream heading toward the hillside district where property values climbed alongside altitude. Sophie's apartment was another three kilometers out, perched on a slope that gave commanding views of the city below.
"Call Kelvin," Sophie said. "Use your personal comm, not Eclipse channels. We need a secure line and he's the only one who can walk us through building one fast enough to matter."
Sam pulled out his personal device, a civilian model that had never been connected to Eclipse's network. He initiated the call, waited through two rings, then Kelvin's voice came through sharp and frustrated.
"Sam? Why are you calling from a personal line?"
"Because Eclipse's network is compromised and we need your help setting up secure communications. How fast can you walk Sophie through building an encrypted channel that these people can't access?"
There was a pause. Background noise suggested Kelvin was still at the research station, probably in some maintenance corridor judging by the echo. "Depends on what equipment she has available and how paranoid we're being about security."
"Extremely paranoid," Sophie said, loud enough for the comm to pick up her voice. "Assume they have access to anything connected to Eclipse infrastructure. I need something completely isolated."
"Okay. That's actually easier than trying to secure existing systems." Kelvin's voice shifted, taking on the focused quality he used when solving technical problems. "You'll need a clean device—something that's never been part of our network. Then we build a mesh network using personal comms as nodes. It won't be fast and it won't have much bandwidth, but it'll be isolated from anything they've compromised."
"Can you set that up remotely?" Sam asked.
"If you follow my instructions exactly, yes. How soon do you need it operational?"
Sophie checked the navigation display. Two kilometers to her apartment. "Twenty minutes."
"That's tight but doable. Call me when you're in position and I'll walk you through it."
The call ended. Sophie's condo building appeared ahead, a three-story structure built into the hillside itself, each unit stacked to maximize the view of the valley below.
The vehicle descended to her private landing pad, touching down smoothly. Sophie killed the engine, grabbed her personal tablet from the storage compartment, and led Sam toward the entrance.
Her door recognized her biometrics and unlocked in a soft click. Inside, the condo looked exactly as she'd left it two days ago. Open floor plan, living area flowing into a kitchen separated by a counter holding three stools. The far wall was entirely glass, showing the city spreading toward the horizon. Her bedroom was to the left, office space to the right, both doors currently open.
This place held memories. The original Team 7 had operated from here before Eclipse became official, before they had headquarters or funding or any of the infrastructure they'd built since. Noah, Lucas, Diana, Kelvin—all of them had sat in this living room planning operations, arguing strategy, learning how to function as a unit outside military structure.
Sam immediately claimed the office, spreading his tablets across the desk like he owned the space. He'd been here before, knew where everything was, which outlets worked best for charging equipment.
Sophie grabbed her personal laptop from a drawer in the kitchen—a civilian model she used for personal finances and entertainment, never connected to Eclipse systems—and brought it to the counter.
She called Kelvin back. "We're in position. What do we need to do?"
For the next eighteen minutes, Sophie followed Kelvin's instructions. Every step required precise attention to detail. Creating encryption keys, establishing routing protocols, configuring each personal comm device to act as a relay node in the mesh network. It was tedious work, demanding exact inputs and careful verification at each step.
But it worked. By the time Kelvin confirmed the final connection test, Sophie had a functional communication channel that existed completely outside Eclipse's compromised infrastructure.
"This won't hold against a determined attack," Kelvin warned. "But it's isolated enough that they'd need to actively target it, and that would require them knowing it exists. Keep usage minimal and rotate encryption keys every six hours."
"Understood. Thank you, Kelvin."
"Sophie," Kelvin's voice carried weight now. "What are we actually doing here? Are we really going to complete these contracts like nothing happened?"
"That's exactly what we're doing," Sophie replied. "Because right now, we don't have another option that doesn't destroy Eclipse completely."
She ended the call before he could argue. Then she began the process of contacting each team leader through the new secure channel, one by one, explaining the situation and what came next.
Noah answered first. His voice came through clear but tight, anger controlled but barely. "You're saying we just continue? We deliver biological weapons, extract test subjects, and pretend we don't know what we're actually doing?"
"We complete the contracts we accepted," Sophie corrected. "Legally binding agreements that we entered into in good faith. What we do after that is a different conversation."
"People are dying here, Sophie. Eighteen dead already and more failing every hour. The compounds we delivered are killing them."
"I know. And if we abort now, if we extract and try to expose this organization, we become the criminals. They have eight days of documentation showing Eclipse's operations. They can make any narrative they want stick, and we have nothing to counter it except claims of being manipulated." Sophie kept her voice level, clinical, the tone she used when emotions couldn't be allowed to interfere. "We need time to gather actual evidence. We need to understand who these people are and how their operation works. We can't do that if Eclipse is shut down and we're all facing criminal investigation."
There was a long pause. Then Noah: "So we sacrifice the people here. The ones currently dying from what we brought them."
"No. You do everything you can to minimize casualties. Implement quarantine protocols, coordinate with local medical staff, provide emergency support. But you don't destroy the facility and you don't refuse to let them continue treatment protocols, even knowing what those protocols actually are."
"That's monstrous."
"Sadly, that's our reality," Sophie replied. "We're in a situation where no option is clean. We can either play along temporarily while we figure out how to actually stop these people, or we can take a principled stand that accomplishes nothing except ruining Eclipse and letting this organization continue operations through a different courier service next time."
Another pause. Then: "Fine. But I want it on record that I hate this."
"Noted."
Diana was next, her response was more controlled but no less opposed. "You're asking me to deliver test subjects to people who experimented on them. You understand how that sounds, right?"
"I'm asking you to complete a rescue contract that you accepted," Sophie said. "What happens to those individuals after extraction is not your responsibility under the contract terms."
"Legally, maybe. Morally?"
"Morally, we're already compromised. The question is whether we compound that by destroying our ability to do anything about it, or whether we accept temporary complicity in exchange for the opportunity to actually stop this operation."
Diana made a sound that might have been bitter laughter. "You're very good at making terrible options sound reasonable."
"It's what you pay me for."
Lucas was more pragmatic. "The refugee transport is going to complete regardless of what I do. If I try to stop it, the enhanced guards will intervene and people will get hurt. Civilians, Sophie. Actual refugees mixed in among whatever assets this organization is relocating."
"Then let it complete," Sophie said. "Secure the transport, ensure civilian safety, and gather whatever intelligence you can without compromising your position. But don't escalate to violence if you can avoid it."
"And if I can't avoid it?"
"Then you do what's necessary to protect yourself and your team. But make it their choice to escalate, not ours."
Lila answered last. Her voice was steady, but Sophie could hear the tension underneath. "I'm guessing you're about to tell me to finish the evacuation even though I know some of these people aren't actually refugees."
"That's exactly what I'm telling you."
"Sophie, there are children involved. Modified children. If I let them leave together, they disappear into whatever network this organization has established. We lose any chance of helping them."
"And if you don't let them leave, you're separating families based on suspicion without evidence or legal authority," Sophie countered. "That makes Eclipse look like the villains, gets us sued or worse, and accomplishes nothing except alerting this organization that we're not cooperating."
Lila was quiet for several seconds before speaking, "I need you to promise me something. When we figure out how to stop these people, when we actually have the capability to act—we save those kids. Whatever it takes."
"I promise."
"Okay." Lila's voice carried resignation. "I'll complete the evacuation. But Sophie, if this plan fails—if we end up enabling this organization without stopping them—I'm never forgiving you for making this call."
"I'll add your name to the list of people who won't forgive me," Sophie replied. "Right below my own."
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