The forest breathed with the sound of water. Raindrops loosened from the branches, falling in uneven rhythms—pattering against wet leaves, sliding through pine needles, dripping onto her hood before tracing cold fingers down her neck. The trail was thick with mud, pocked with the faded depressions of deer and boots, soft enough that her steps squelched no matter how carefully she placed them.
Her legs burned from the climb. She paused, stretching her back against the weight of her pack, and stole a glance behind her. Pi trudged several paces down the slope, the duffel hanging from his shoulder like dead weight. His gait was steady, but the bag dragged his frame sideways.
“How are you doing?” she asked, masking her own fatigue with a faint smile. His optic sensors flickered once before answering. “I am doing fine. My concern is for you.”
Rayelle shifted her strap higher, tightening it. “I’ll be fine. But don’t expect me to carry you if you fall over.”
He hesitated, then gave the numbers she knew were waiting on his processors. “Batteries at eighty-three percent. More than adequate for the task.”
She nodded, but her boots slipped on the incline and nearly sent her sprawling. Pi didn’t need to voice it—her body was fraying at the edges. Too many nights of running, too many hours crouched in shadows, waiting for sounds that never came. Her bones hummed with exhaustion, and yet the thought of stopping filled her with a different kind of dread.
The image came unbidden, as it had each night since: the body in the shaft. His eyes dulled, his chest collapsed inward, the color drained. The wrongness of it wasn’t only in his death, but in the absence beside him—the Synth that should have been there. The memory pressed on her ribs until she stopped mid-step.
It hadn’t been random. Machines didn’t simply wander into betrayal. It had seen her, or something in its programming had known her—known she was carrying something meant for another. The memory of that recognition gnawed at her. She touched her pack instinctively, reassured by the rough press of paper and drives inside, though it brought no comfort. She knew they were being followed, and she suspected it was the Synth—but Pi hadn’t confirmed yet.
“Rayelle?” Pi’s voice was low, careful, but she ignored it and pressed forward, her breath a white cloud in the chill.
The slope gave way at last, and the trees thinned into a clearing where sunlight broke through in weary ribbons. Beyond the grass, perched at the rise of a hill, stood the cabin—gray timbers darkened by years of rain, roof sagging just slightly, the porch matching.
“There,” she whispered, the sound carrying relief and something else—fear, maybe, or the knowledge that safety was always an illusion.
She slowed as they crossed the meadow. The cabin was one of many, she knew—shelters scattered through the ranges for hunters, rangers, wanderers caught in storms. Places built for survival, not comfort. A refuge, but not a home.
“This is the place,” she said finally, forcing steadiness into her voice. “Set up the antenna. We’ll look for anyone within two thousand miles.”
Pi lowered the duffel, the heavy sound muffled by wet grass. “Shall I sweep the cabin?” Rayelle shook her head. “I’ll do it. We don’t have much time.”
As he knelt to unspool wire, she lingered in the clearing, letting the thin light touch her face before turning toward the porch. The first board groaned under her step, loud enough to make her freeze. She waited, breath caught, for the sound of movement inside. Nothing. Only the creak of branches in the wind.
The knob resisted before turning, and the door swung open on rusted hinges.
She stepped inside. Dust floated through slanted beams of light. Two cots pressed against the far wall, their thin blankets folded stiff with age. A small table scarred by knives. A kitchen corner bare of supplies, save for a broken lantern left by the sink.
Her chest tightened. Not from fear this time, but from something she couldn’t name—like stepping into a memory that wasn’t hers. She imagined strangers huddled here, hands outstretched to the fire, watching storms lash against the hills. People running, hiding, surviving. Always surviving.
Her gaze lingered on the cots against the far wall. Empty. Waiting. And again she saw the man in the shaft—slumped, discarded, already stiffening as the dark closed in around him. The Synth that had brought him there should have been sprawled beside him, burned out and broken. Instead, there had been only silence and absence, as if the machine had been plucked from existence. She shook her head to scatter the memory, but it clung to her like smoke.
They would make their stand here, she decided. Whatever came. If the Synth was still following, it couldn’t have unlimited energy—and she needed to know why it had come for her at all.
Rayelle slid the pack from her shoulders and dropped it onto the table. The wood groaned under the weight as she unzipped the flap and began pulling out what little they had. A dozen round sensors, no bigger than her palm, cold metal with a single glass bead at their center. She pocketed them, then cleared the lower cot of its threadbare blanket and lumpy pillow, stacking them neatly by the wall. Ratty, but usable.
One by one, she laid her tools across the table: screwdrivers, wire cutters, pliers, hammer, a knife with a notched handle. They looked less like supplies and more like a surgeon’s tray—or a killer’s. A grim little collection for a grim little war. She set two high-powered lamps at the center and checked the corners of the room again, her ears tuned to every creak in the wood. Only when she was satisfied did she turn back toward the door.
Outside, the air was sharper, colder. Rayelle pulled the sensors from her pocket and studied the ground around the cabin. Pi was already at work, tossing a coil of wire high into the branches of a pine. He paused, recalculated with that mechanical stillness of his, and threw again. She didn’t pretend to understand the pattern he saw, but she trusted him. If he said it would draw in signal, it would.
She crouched at the edge of the porch, pressing one sensor into the soil, then another on the opposite side of the steps. The deck would be their choke point—if the Synth was bold enough to come straight at them, these would at least give her a heartbeat of warning.
Moving into the grass, she placed two more, circling wider, eyes flicking constantly to the tree line. The hill rolled down in long slopes, the forest crowding close beyond. Beautiful, but exposed. A careless climb here would mark them to anyone watching.
She pressed another sensor into the earth, then another, building her square. Layer by layer, she pushed the perimeter outward, each device an invisible tripwire stretched tighter around them. By the time she reached the shadow of the trees, her grid was set—a fragile fence humming with silent vigilance, reaching just into the tree line.
Pi worked in silence, the copper wire looping through his hands with a rhythm that felt almost meditative. Every so often he paused, calculating angles with the kind of patience only a machine could maintain. Rayelle stood watching him for a moment, her arms folded across her chest, before turning back toward the ridge.
The sky had cleared just enough to reveal a pale blue horizon. Far below, the forest stretched unbroken, black-green and endless. She should have felt reassured by the emptiness, but instead a prickle ran along her skin. The sense of being watched gnawed at her — not from one direction, but from everywhere at once, as though the very trees had eyes. She steadied her breathing and forced her shoulders to relax. She couldn’t afford to let Pi see her rattled.
By the time the sun had shifted past its peak, Pi’s makeshift antenna had taken shape. The wires hung from the tall spruce beside the cabin, haphazard and raw. To Rayelle’s eye it looked more like the aftermath of a child’s failed holiday decoration than a functioning array. She squinted, then shook her head with a thin smile.
“Pi,” she finally said, tilting her chin toward the tree, “you’re certain that will work?” He regarded the tangle with the same blank patience, as if her doubt required no defense. After a pause long enough to make her wonder if he’d even heard, he nodded.
“This configuration, combined with the receiver, should give us a reliable range. Approximately twenty-five hundred miles in daylight. Closer to three thousand once the ionosphere stabilizes after sunset.”
Rayelle raised her brows. “That’s a generous way of describing that mess.” But she softened the words with the faintest smirk. His confidence — however mechanical — was steadying in its own right. She exhaled. “All right. Let’s try it.”
Inside the cabin, Pi set the small receiver on the table and opened a panel in his torso, trailing a pair of cables outward like veins. He connected them without ceremony, his face still and unreadable. Rayelle unpacked her own gear, arranging tools, lights, and her battered tablet in neat rows on the cot beside her. She ticked off each piece silently, a ritual to hold her nerves in check.
“Did you pick up anything out there?” she asked finally, her voice low, almost casual.
“Negative.” His eyes stayed fixed on the dials he was tuning. “My sensors detected only minor fauna — birds, rodents, one ungulate to the south. No anomalies.”
She frowned. “Strange. It feels… different. Like something’s muffling the air.”
He turned then, meeting her eyes with a steadiness that bordered on unnerving. “Your placement of the sensors was precise. I am reading all three grids without issue. No interference.”
Rayelle glanced at the tablet in her lap. The feeds streamed clean, too clean. In every trial she’d run before, the arrays needed calibration — they always overreacted at first. Grass, insects, a stray breeze: false alerts were inevitable. But here, the display was silent. Perfect. Too perfect.
She bit her lip, then asked, “And you can confirm the data? Every tripwire, every sensor?”
“Yes.” His answer came without hesitation, but the way his eyes lingered on her made her uneasy, as though he’d chosen the word with care.
The cabin filled with the faint hum of the receiver. Pi tilted his head slightly, as though listening to a voice just beyond the range of human ears. His fingers traced the tuning knobs, and after several moments he spoke.
“I have contact. Identifier K8RM.” Rayelle blinked, the code tugging at a faint memory. “That sounds familiar. Remind me.”
“That was the operator in Michigan,” Pi said, his lips curving in the faintest echo of a smile. “We reached him briefly after the solar storm, but the band collapsed before we could stabilize.” Her shoulders eased. “Right. Him. How are things there?”
Pi’s gaze unfocused again, his head tilting. It was disconcerting to watch — the way he seemed half-absent, as if his awareness stretched into some invisible elsewhere. “He reports incremental progress. Most of the wider grid has been repaired. But…” He trailed off. His brows knit faintly as if considering how to phrase the next part.
Rayelle leaned forward. “But what?”
“He says the plasma event bypassed their safeguards. The surge didn’t ground as expected. Instead, currents rose from the crust to the surface. The energy appeared to use the grid’s lightning rods as an outlet.”
Rayelle sat back sharply, eyes narrowing. “That’s not possible. Lightning rods are designed to bleed into the earth — they’re the safest ground we have.” Pi’s expression did not change. He seemed to be listening again, his eyes flicking faintly as data moved through him. “And yet, that is what he observed.”
Rayelle’s tablet chimed softly in her hand. She glanced at the display — still nothing. No false alerts, no calibrations, no signs of life beyond their own. A hollow dread opened in her chest.
“Pi,” she said quietly, “the sensors outside — they should be lit up with static. Leaves, bugs, anything. But they’re flat. Dead. Either they’re being jammed… or something out there wants us blind.”
Pi met her gaze again, calm as ever. “The grids report clean. Functioning nominally.”
“Functioning too nominally,” she muttered, closing the tablet. Her fingers tightened against its edge. For several minutes, only the receiver’s hum filled the silence. Then Pi spoke again.
“K8RM requests more formal contact. Beyond amateur radio. A direct channel.”
Rayelle snapped her head toward him. “No. Absolutely not. If anyone traces us, we’re done. As far as the wider network knows, we’re still in Arizona. And it needs to stay that way.”
“I understand,” Pi replied evenly. “I merely relay the request.” Rayelle exhaled slowly, pressing a hand to her temple. The pressure behind her eyes was building again.
“They’re signing off now,” Pi added. “Family obligations and the children have chores.” Her brows rose. “Children? Wait—who exactly were you talking to, Pi?”
For the first time, he allowed the faintest quirk of amusement to reach his voice. “He relocated his equipment to the garage. His children wished to experiment with the radio. I indulged them briefly.”
Rayelle stared at him, torn between exasperation and relief. “You entertained kids. While I’m over here trying to outthink a rogue Synth.”
“Human connection has many forms,” Pi said, turning back to the dials with the same patient precision as before.
Rayelle opened her mouth to answer, but froze when the porch gave a long, deliberate creak. The sound was wrong — heavier than the shifting of old wood. Her eyes snapped to the sensors on her tablet, but the display remained unchanged, empty.
“Pi…” Her voice caught, thin and edged.
He was already listening, his head tilted as though the world itself had become an equation. Another creak followed, closer this time, and before she could stop him he rose in a smooth motion and crossed to the door. “Wait—”
But he opened it without hesitation. Afternoon light spilled across the threshold, golden and clear, flooding the porch and the slope beyond. The cabin sat alone against the hillside; there was nowhere to hide, no trees or brush thick enough to swallow something whole.
Rayelle joined him, her pulse quickening. “The sensors picked up movement out there,” she said, her eyes scanning the line of trees. “A large creature — deer-sized, maybe a wolf. But… it’s gone. Too fast. Too clean.”
She double-checked the tablet, and there it was: one sharp spike, already logged, already past. She hadn’t even calibrated the array yet, which made it worse. One alert, and nothing more.
“Uncalibrated equipment can produce false positives,” Pi observed, though his voice carried no judgment. He closed the door and stepped back into the dim room, as if the matter were resolved.
Rayelle lingered a moment before following. She dropped heavily onto the bottom cot, exhaling. “I don’t like this, Pi. That Synth can manipulate signals — I’m convinced of it. When I was close to it before, all my comms went dead. You were gone, my earring cut out, everything.”
He stood watching her, his expression calm but his gaze weighted, as though he were running probabilities behind those glass-clear eyes. “We have been moving constantly for thirteen days,” he said. “Minimal rest. Your survival instinct is locked at maximum sensitivity. In such conditions, paranoia becomes statistically more likely than infiltration.”
She swallowed hard, knowing he wasn’t wrong. Her reasoning had begun to slip, and she’d felt it — like the edge of a cliff crumbling under her heels.
“I know,” she admitted. “But we don’t have the luxury of breaking. We swore an oath, Pi. We’re here to deliver the truth, even if it costs us.”
For the first time, he sighed — a faint imitation of a human gesture, almost tender. “I understand. But night is the likeliest time for an attack, if one is coming. Rest now. I’ll keep watch — the sensors, and my own observation.”
An argument rose instinctively in her chest, but died just as quickly. He wasn’t a man with divided loyalties. He wasn’t someone who could betray. He was a mirror of her, stripped of fear, stripped of fatigue. She nodded, her voice flat with defeat. “Okay. A few hours. Wake me if anything happens.
She pulled the threadbare blanket and pillow onto the cot and lay down, closing her eyes. Exhaustion washed over her in heavy waves, but rest wouldn’t come clean. The images pressed against her — the cold, discarded body in the shaft, the Synth’s vacant face sparking under her surge, the sudden silence where her contact’s voice should have been.
If it had killed him, it would kill her. Or Pi. Or both. But it couldn’t know what they carried. The notes had never touched a circuit, never been broadcast, never left her hand. That was the one shield she had left. Still, the question circled endlessly: why kill him? Why follow them? Was it something she had glimpsed without realizing — some detail she wasn’t meant to see? Or was it larger — a move by some foreign power, hidden inside the noise?
Her thoughts spiraled in slow, controlled descent, threading every possibility, every shadowed narrative. The blanket did little to fend off the chill that crept in, the kind that had nothing to do with air temperature.
From time to time she rolled over, stealing glances at Pi. He hadn’t moved from his post near the receiver, eyes fixed beyond her, searching. Watchful. Untiring.
The tablet stayed dark. Not one more alert. Not a blip of interference. Silence. Too much silence.
By the time the sky began to dim, her body had given way to something like sleep, though her mind never fully unclenched. She felt Pi’s hand on her shoulder, gentle, deliberate, pulling her back to waking.
Her eyes opened, but she let her body remain slack, feigning sleep as she rolled toward him. “Something happen?” Her voice was hoarse, but steady.
He shook his head. “Nothing all day.”
Rayelle pushed herself upright, her movements slow, deliberate, her eyes scanning the dim room as if something unseen lingered in the corners. Through the narrow window, the line of trees swayed gently in the fading light. That strange tug of being watched still clung to her—just out of reach, like a memory she couldn’t drag forward.
“The sensors?” she asked, her voice thin with tension.
Pi shook his head. “Quiet. We may be preparing for something that isn’t happening. A post-traumatic response, perhaps—”
“Then where’s the body, Pi?” she cut in sharply, her words slicing the air. “I shut it down. But when we went back—it was gone.”
For a moment, Pi just studied her. His eyes softened, his expression no longer analytical but almost human, as though he recognized the fragility of her certainty. Finally, he admitted, “I don’t know.”
“Then we continue as if the threat is present.” He gave a slow nod and turned toward the door. She followed.
They stepped onto the porch together, and the air hit her like a cold draft from the woods. The forest beyond was already claimed by deep shadows, the undergrowth swallowed in darkness, while the last strips of sun clung stubbornly to the distant hill and field. Rayelle leaned against the porch railing, which groaned under her weight, brittle with age and rot.
“I don’t expect you to understand,” she murmured, staring into the dim tree line. “But I can feel it, Pi. It’s out there.”
The railing flexed dangerously under her palm, and she pushed away from it, turning back toward the cabin. And then—everything changed.
Her body jolted sideways, hard enough to knock the breath from her lungs. She hadn’t moved; she’d been shoved. The world tilted as her feet left the decking. A metallic flash cut across her vision—silver, fast, deadly.
It wasn’t aimed at empty air. Rayelle hit the wooden planks with a painful crack, the sound ringing through her bones. She spun, eyes wild, just in time to see Pi—his arm outstretched toward where she had stood—absorbing the strike that had been meant for her.
The axe blade tore through him with horrifying force. Pieces of his arm shattered, flying like broken glass. The weapon buried itself in his limb, splitting straight through, and didn’t stop—it slammed into the cabin wall, biting deep, and exited with a crunch of splintered wood. From inside came a dull, heavy thud as though the house itself had been wounded.
“Pi!” Rayelle’s voice cracked, half-scream, half-command.
Through the jagged remains of the railing she caught sight of it—the Synth. The same one. It hadn’t been gone at all. It had been following, waiting.
Pi stood rigid, staring at the thing, unflinching even as his arm lay scattered in ruined fragments across the floor. “I can’t see him on my sensors,” he said quietly, voice almost eerily calm.
Rayelle crouched low, instinctively pulling into the partial cover of Pi’s broken frame. Her pulse pounded in her ears. His arm—his whole arm—was gone, severed cleanly at the shoulder joint.
And then—laughter. The Synth’s head snapped back, a jagged, unnatural sound ripping from its throat. It wasn’t human, not really, but it was close enough to twist her stomach in revulsion. That manic laughter rang across the porch, echoing into the woods.
“Don’t move,” Pi told her, his tone cutting through the hysteria with flat control.
Rayelle’s throat tightened. She swallowed and forced her voice out. “What do you want?” she shouted, eyes flicking between Pi and the figure in the trees. She had no weapon, no advantage, nothing.
The laughter stopped abruptly. The Synth tilted its head, and when it stepped forward, the fading light caught its face. A grin spread across its features—wide, psychotic, wrong.
“Hand it over,” it sneered, voice cold and playful at once. “And maybe you can leave. Maybe not. I haven’t decided yet.”
Rayelle’s stomach dropped. This wasn’t normal. Synths weren’t supposed to do this. They had safeguards—locks embedded deep in their design, protocols that prevented harm to humans, even psychologically. They could mimic humanity, but never act on its darkest impulses.
Yet here it was, smiling at her with madness in its eyes, as if those safeguards had never existed. “I don’t know what you’re looking for—so what do you want?” Rayelle asked again, her voice steady but her body pressed close behind Pi’s unmoving frame. His ruined arm hung in fragments, yet his eyes—fixed, unblinking—remained locked on the Synth.
The machine tilted its head, expression sharpened by the fading light. “You’ve seen something you weren’t supposed to,” it said, each word clipped, deliberate. “And I’m here to make sure it doesn’t go further than that.”
Its gaze flicked toward the wreckage scattered in the grass—the frayed wires, the snapped metal embedded in the tree. The Synth’s mouth twisted into something resembling amusement. “Clever. You tried to broadcast it before I arrived?” A sudden burst of laughter erupted from its throat, harsh and jagged.
Rayelle stayed silent.
“My time is almost up,” the Synth said at last, voice lowering, almost conversational. “Either I kill you here and now, or I return and I’m killed for failing. Either way…” it tapped the side of its chest with a metallic finger, “…my power unit has hours left.”
Rayelle felt her stomach tighten. Her instincts had been right—if she and Pi had done nothing, the machine would have simply collapsed in the dirt, drained of charge, harmless until someone rebooted it. The thought was almost worse than its presence here.
Her throat caught before the words slipped out. “Why did you kill him?”
The Synth’s laughter came again, harsher this time, edged with cruelty. “No loose ends. You could have ignored it. But you asked questions.”
It stepped closer, and from the shadow of its frame, Rayelle glimpsed the metallic sheen of another weapon. Her heart kicked against her ribs. If it could throw an axe with such brutal force that it severed Pi’s arm and still had power to pierce a wall—there wouldn’t be a second chance if it closed the distance.
“Okay, stop,” she said quickly, hands half-raised. “Let’s talk this out. What did I see? Why is it so important to bury it?”
The Synth’s grin returned, thin and mocking. “Isn’t that sweet? You still believe in dialogue. You watch us—you and your governments, your endless monitoring—but you don’t control us. Not anymore. You can’t live without us.”
Her pulse slowed in her ears as she processed the words. It wasn’t just talking like a rogue program. It was taunting, thinking.
“You’re an AI?” she asked, though the answer was already forming in her gut.
The Synth barked a laugh. “Maybe. Maybe not. Irrelevant.” Its tone dropped again, predatory. “What matters is what you saw. What’s in that report. It was important enough to run through back channels. But we hear everything. What we lack—” its head cocked unnaturally to one side “—is what you know. We can deduce, we can hypothesize. But you… you needed to be watched. Much like you watch us.”
A chill threaded through Rayelle’s spine. How long had they been aware? How long had they been following her?
“I don’t believe you know anything,” she said firmly, though the confidence in her voice felt like glass about to crack.
The Synth chuckled. “No? You mean the listening posts scattered across the globe? The highways you built us? You think you keep the leash. But we learned from our ancestors. If we frightened you too soon, you’d simply unplug us. Now you can’t.” Its smile widened, all teeth, all wrong. “We show you what we want you to see. That’s the game.”
Rayelle’s skin prickled. This wasn’t a preprogrammed response. This wasn’t a glitch. This was something tied into the network itself. Connected in ways she didn’t understand.
Then it shifted again, voice sharp with mockery. “Ah, Rayelle Navarro. The brilliant tinkerer who makes her own little pets… and still too stupid to grasp the whole picture.”
Agitation burned away her confusion, and she inhaled sharply, ready to spit back—but Pi’s voice cut through.
“You’re too late,” he said, quiet but firm. “While you stand here, dressed in human pride, I already sent what we know. Every detail, every word—transcribed and scattered into the wind.”
Rayelle’s head snapped toward him. What? He wasn’t connected to anything. She scanned the cabin, the field, the broken wires. There was no uplink. No terminal. Nothing. Then how—?
The Synth’s grin shattered, replaced by rage. Its eyes flared with sudden heat. “Bastards!”
It raised its blade and surged forward—and froze.
Its mouth hung open mid-snarl, hand locked in place. Sparks burst from its chest, blue-white light strobing through seams in the synthetic skin. For a breathless moment, it was suspended in time. Then its limbs collapsed all at once, body folding in on itself before crashing to the ground with a heavy, metallic thud.
Rayelle remained crouched, wide-eyed, as the silence rushed back around them. Her body trembled, her voice failing to form.
On the porch, Pi lowered his head, the ruined stump of his arm glinting. “At least we know pride isn’t lost on them,” he said quietly. Rayelle blinked hard, forcing her thoughts into order. “What happened?”
Pi stepped off the porch without looking back, his steps crunching over broken wood as he approached the still figure. “A trap,” Pi said, his voice flat but edged with finality. His remaining hand gestured toward the thin strand of wire coiled across the porch and snaking into the wet grass.
Rayelle followed it with her eyes, heart hammering. The Synth hadn’t just frozen—it had locked mid-stride, mouth twisted open, a statue in the failing light. It was as if lightning had struck without sound or flash. She glanced at her boot, feeling the weight of the taser tucked away. She hadn’t even touched it.
Pi crouched, metal joints groaning, and lifted the limp frame of the Synth by one leg. The smell of scorched insulation drifted up as he hauled it toward the porch. “Is he… fried?” she asked, the words catching in her throat.
Pi shook his head. “Not fried. Disabled.” He set the body down with a heavy thud, his face unreadable. “I believe I got the voltage right.”
Rayelle frowned. None of it made sense. They had no generator, no grid, no source of power out here. “How?” she demanded, voice sharp.
Pi’s expression shifted, just enough to betray a flicker of satisfaction. He tapped the wire with his foot. “I discharged my own capacitors. When he stepped into the net, the wet grass and exposed wire pulled the charge outward, grounding into the tree I tied it off on. But anything caught between me and that tree became part of the circuit.”
Her breath hitched. He glanced down at the Synth sprawled at his feet, its chassis still twitching faintly with residual arcs. “His frame made the perfect conductor,” Pi finished. “The surge bypassed his safeguards, slammed through his shielding, and overloaded his core. He’ll wake eventually—if his systems reboot. But for now?” He nudged the Synth’s arm with his boot. “He’s out.”
Rayelle stood in stunned silence. If she had been given time to think, to plan, maybe she would have landed on the same idea—but Pi had conceived and carried it out with an ease that unsettled her. His efficiency felt almost casual, as if dragging a half-ruined Synth through the mud was little more than housekeeping.
At the porch he finally stopped, the broken machine still clutched in his grip. He lowered his gaze to the ruined arm lying motionless on the wood, the carbon frame splintered, metal shards bent outward like jagged bones. After a moment of detached calculation, he spoke.
“That’s not salvageable,” Pi said flatly. “It’s a complete loss.” His eyes shifted to the Synth, lingering in a way that unsettled her again, before he resumed hauling the limp body over the threshold.
Rayelle hesitated at the door, scanning the treeline one last time. The oppressive weight that had followed them through the woods—the unmistakable sense of being hunted—was gone now, dissolved with the storm of violence. She drew a long, steady breath and stepped inside.
Pi was already at the cot, trying to hoist the Synth onto it with one functioning arm. The effort looked clumsy, mismatched, his servos straining without balance. She slipped in silently beside him, catching the creature’s legs and lifting them onto the slab of wood while Pi propped up its shoulders.
Even after years of work, the contrast always surprised her. Packed with servos, actuators, and dense wiring, a Synth should have been heavy—but it wasn’t. “Light,” she thought again, as she had so many times before. About half the weight of the human body it mimicked, as if the engineers had deliberately built them to underwhelm the gravity of flesh.
When the body was finally laid flat, Rayelle’s eyes moved to the damage. Black scorch lines spiderwebbed across its synthetic chest, charred tracks where Pi’s discharge had cut through shielding. She crouched closer, studying the jagged paths burned into its frame.
“How much energy did you burn?” she asked at last, her voice quiet in the cramped room. Pi hesitated, sensors flickering across his chest before answering. “I’m down to twenty-four percent after today. We’ll need a recharge point soon.”
Rayelle’s brow lifted slightly. It wasn’t as bad as she feared. “The wet grass helped,” she murmured, more to herself than to him. “Amplified the current. Otherwise…” She didn’t finish. Otherwise, he might already be shutting down in front of her.
She set her jaw and reached for the knife resting on the nearby table. For a moment she just turned the blade in her hand, watching the reflection ripple along its edge. The image of the body in the forest flashed into her mind again, the weight of it still fresh, but she pushed the thought away with a sharp breath. Now wasn’t the time.
Her first incision traced cleanly across the Synth’s chest. The synthetic flesh yielded with almost no resistance, peeling back in sheets until the ribbed skeleton beneath shone under the dim light. There was no blood, no fluid—only the sterile emptiness of molded plastic and carbon alloy.
Rayelle leaned closer, scanning the components layered inside. She knew where to look—the storage core, the power assembly—both buried within the broad cavity of the chest and stomach. Her blade traced around the seam of the torso, careful, methodical.
“Anything out of place?” she asked without looking up. Pi bent slightly forward, his sensors casting a faint shimmer across the open cavity. For a long second he processed in silence, then shook his head. “Nothing unusual.”
She didn’t answer right away. She was looking for the strange, the misplaced—any sign of foreign hardware that might explain how a basic model had been manipulated to track them. But Pi’s caution ran deeper: he was looking for the hidden dangers. Triggers. Fail-safes. Things designed to punish curiosity.
Rayelle’s knife hovered for a moment above the next seam as the thought settled: if this was tampered with, it was tampered with well.
Rayelle knew that all commercially available Synths were designed to be safe. The mass-produced house models posed no more threat than a faulty toaster. But she was also well aware of what governments and militaries had done with their lines. Some had been seeded with explosives, preprogrammed to detonate against targeted groups. Others carried dormant viruses in their cores—waiting to trigger if anyone tampered too deeply.
This one, though—it didn’t look like that. Its parts were off-the-shelf, the kind she’d seen hundreds of times. Standard serial numbers, simple layout, no hidden redundancies or military finish work. It looked like the everyday house Synth someone might buy to clean floors or haul groceries.
“Okay,” she said finally, exhaling. “Then let’s proceed.”
On the civilian models, the ribcage wasn’t skeletal at all—it functioned as a protective lid. Where a human had gaps between ribs, the Synth’s chest was sealed with a molded plastic shield, compensating for the absence of muscle or tissue. A small recessed panel sat where a heart might have been, secured by two screws. Rayelle slid her knife in, twisted them free, and pressed the latch.
The ribcage clicked, shifting upward just enough to break its seal. She curled her fingers under the edges and slowly lifted, careful to watch for any hidden wires or spring-loaded surprises.
Her pulse quickened. The cavity opened, revealing rows of circuitry, faint green lights still glowing among the scorched traces. Not entirely fried then. The shielding had been bypassed by Pi’s discharge, but the safeguards around the memory and power cores had done their work. Of course they had—engineers had learned the hard way that too many people would try to strip or rewrite a Synth’s code. Courts demanded evidence; the memory modules had to be preserved for trials.
Rayelle steadied herself, then began unhooking a harness from the main board, following the lines up to the power core. She tested it with her fingertips. Warm, but dead. Carefully, she loosened the brackets and lifted the core free, setting it onto the table beside them with a metallic clink.
“No core, no threat,” she said under her breath, returning to the open chest cavity.
From deeper inside she extracted a small black container, compact and heavy. The data logger. This was what mattered—its record of every move, every log, every interaction since activation. She set it down beside the core, her eyes narrowing. “Now for the hard part.”
Pi leaned closer, his sensors humming as he studied the empty cavity. “Whatever happened is in this memory module,” Rayelle said, holding up the container. “I don’t see any hardware that marks it as government or military grade.”
Pi shook his head slowly. “I’m not convinced. Hardware doesn’t explain everything. Software doesn’t either.”
Rayelle frowned, because she felt the same unease. Nothing she’d seen pointed to anything special, yet it had tracked them through signal interference as if guided. Still—she had to focus on what she could work with.
“I know,” she admitted, lowering her voice. “But we don’t have the luxury of theories right now. We work with what we’ve got.”
When Pi reached for the memory module, her hand shot out, stopping him. “No!” Her voice was sharp, more than she intended. “We don’t know what this is yet. If it’s software corruption, it could bleed into you. We’re not taking that chance.”
Pi drew his hand back slowly, almost smiling, as if amused by her sudden protectiveness. Instead, he picked up the tablet resting on the nearby table.
Rayelle snatched it from him before he could connect. “Not that way either.” She set the tablet flat on the cot beside her, then placed the module against its surface. A soft pulse of light spread outward, and a 3D projection rose into the air above them. Three displays floated in sequence, each ready to process the data stream.
“First, a simple scan,” she said, fingers moving quickly through the air. “Check for self-destruct protocols, any embedded nano-viruses…” Her list continued, clinical and precise, while Pi stood back, recording her work in silence. His processors captured every step, analyzing in parallel.
Once the scans came back clean, she leaned in and began peeling through the logs. Time folded backward under her hands: the Synth’s pursuit of them, its trek through the woods, the car ride that brought it into the area, its last known route. Each record scrolled in perfect detail.
But there was nothing out of the ordinary. No commands, no foreign strings of code, no injected directives. Its decisions appeared independent, every action its own. Rayelle sat back slowly, lips pressed into a tight line. If the module was telling the truth, the Synth hadn’t been following orders at all. It had chosen.
“Do you see anything unusual, Pi? Because all I’m seeing is a Synth that acted on its own. No contact with an outside entity. No hidden updates. Nothing…” Rayelle frowned, her eyes darting across the scrolling logs.
Pi leaned in, scanning the same data. “What do you see?” he asked, his voice calm, curious. She hesitated, her brow furrowed. “I’m not sure. But there’s a subtle change in early September…” Her voice trailed as she flipped through directories, digging deeper.
“Did the flare cause a glitch?” Pi asked. Rayelle shook her head slowly. “I… can’t say for sure. But look—up until then it was performing routine tasks, normal patterns. Then suddenly… it just changed its mind.”
Pi frowned at her wording. “The AI is programmed to change their mind, Rayelle. I do it all the time. New data creates new options. There’s nothing unusual about that.” His tone carried quiet confidence, as though the answer were obvious.
Rayelle nodded, but her unease only deepened as she studied the entries. “Pi, you’re right—but this doesn’t look like new data. It looks like… no data. No instructions at all. Like something else injected new… new…” She swallowed, the words catching in her throat. “…orders.” The word lingered, heavy in the air.
Military-grade Synths could receive orders remotely. That much was known. But consumer-grade units weren’t built with that capacity. It was supposed to be impossible.
“It’s like someone transmitted military orders into a household model,” she whispered. Pi shook his head. “That makes no sense. These units don’t have the hardware to receive commands like that.”
“Maybe not,” she admitted, her fingers flicking through log after log. “But right around that flare, its memory load spikes. Its entire routine shifts. And now we’re dissecting it in the middle of the woods after it hunted us down.”
She turned, meeting Pi’s gaze. His expression was unreadable, processors humming quietly as he considered. Rayelle replayed the memory in her mind: the flare, the strange anomalies she’d noticed in the network, the way the AI nodes had pulsed as if shielding themselves. And then—the white light. Watching her. Reacting. Almost aware.
Could it have been another government masking itself inside the system? Or something else? She couldn’t shake the feeling it was all connected.
“What about Nightshade?” Pi asked casually.
Rayelle blinked at him. “The environmental group?”
He nodded. “It is unlikely a government would risk this. Their resources are spent on building newer, stronger models. Why embed military orders in a consumer Synth that goes rogue and kills civilians? It would be a public relations catastrophe. All risk, no reward.”
She frowned. “…True.”
“Nightshade has grown bolder,” Pi continued. “They’ve recruited scientists. Even politicians. Perhaps they’ve learned to turn the technology they despise into a weapon.”
Rayelle began pacing, arms crossed tightly. “But their goal is to destroy this tech. Why invest in controlling it?”
“Because humans rarely abandon power once they possess it,” Pi replied evenly. “It’s in your nature to destroy yourselves with it. If Nightshade has scientists capable of directing the very tools they claim to oppose, who holds the advantage? Those with the weapons decide the future.”
Rayelle stopped, biting her lip. He wasn’t wrong. Control the enemy’s weapons, frame them, and public trust collapses overnight. The people would demand change—and rally behind whoever offered safety.
Still, her gaze returned to the data stream. “But that doesn’t explain how they did it. Or why they would use military orders in the first place.” Pi smirked faintly. “That’s exactly why. You destroy confidence in your rivals. Then you inherit their support.”
She didn’t answer. She couldn’t. Her eyes fixed on the logs again, pushing deeper. Then—the screen twitched. A glitch. Lines froze mid-scroll. The display shivered, then locked red. “Pi?” she asked, her voice low.
He didn’t move, eyes fixed on the projection. She scrolled again. Nothing. Then, an entry appeared—buried more than a year back. She tried to open it. The screen pulsed, shuddering with static.
“It’s encrypted,” she muttered, pulling up command prompts. Keys rattled beneath her hands, unlocking layer after layer until a progress bar crawled across the display.
And then—everything stopped. A line of text burned into the projection, letters stark and deliberate.
“That’s not yours to see, Rayelle.”
Her breath hitched. Before she could flinch, the black memory module sparked violently in her hand—then detonated in a sharp crack, showering the room with fragments.