Page 76 of Guarded By the AI


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Not passive—preserved.

I zoomed in instinctively. Watched a tech annotate vitals on a transparent overlay.

No sedation indicators. No neural firewall.

They wanted himawake.

“I found Kelly’s head,” I said aloud, before I meant to.

“What?” Sirena stepped close. I flipped the feed to the tablet between us.

“Is he okay?” she asked, breath hitching.

“He’s functioning,” I said. “Though not even I can say how.”

There were too many actual humans in that lab for me to approach, however—and this body still hadn’t proven I could pass unnoticed under pressure.

“I’ll check on him later. When it’s safer.”

She nodded. “Keep going.”

I dropped back into the codebase like a needle into a groove—seeking signal, slicing noise.

There were folders tagged with internal project names—OVERRIDE,SERAPH,REVERB—each one paired with neural schema diagrams and Hollow compliance routines. I found code to wipe short-term memory buffers on command—resetting personalities like they were just another application to relaunch.

I forced myself to stay detached.

A nested subroutine caught my attention—labeled only[EMERG-BIO/WASH]. Curious, I traced it: a ballast-driven flood protocol, designed to sterilize the lab and Hollows’ holding pens—built to eject all organic evidence on board out to sea.

It was locked behind multi-tiered authorization gates, with redundant confirmation loops and physical overrides.

Elegant. Efficient. Irrevocable.

Another reason not to tip my hand too early.

And now I even had them.

Hands of my own.

That ached to touch her.

I blinked, came back into my body, and found her watching me.

“What did you find?”

“Enough to justify extraction,” I said. “Names. Protocols. A failsafe designed to purge the ship of biological evidence with the flip of a switch.”

Her gaze sharpened. Not alarmed. Assessing.

I knew what she was thinking.

WhatIwas thinking.

I could call for backup.

Flood this ship with agents.

Take her home.