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And Iattack.

Not the drone. Not the sim.

Kael.

I grab him by the chest rig andslamhim into the dirt. Sand sprays. He chokes, eyes wide.

“Whoa—Draykorr?—!”

I’m on him, knuckles raised, ready to strike. The edge of a roar in my throat.

But he doesn’t fight back.

He just stares.

“Hey,” he breathes. “You’re not there. You’rehere. Sim’s off. Look.”

My chest heaves. The world swims.

And I see it.

His hands raised. No weapon. The sim paused. Frozen.

I back off.

Shaking.

He scrambles up, panting, brushing sand off his rig.

“Damn,” Kael mutters. “Guess I found out which button not to push.”

I don’t answer. I can’t.

My hands are trembling. My body’s steel, but mymind—my mind is fractured glass.

The locker roomreeks of ionized sweat and sterilizer.

I sit on the bench, head low, towel clenched in my hands.

I can’t breathe right.

I can’tseeright.

I don’t want pity. Or analysis. Or whispered words behind glass walls.

I want tocontrolit. Toownit.

To never lose myself again.

Footsteps echo down the hall. Light. Precise.

Rynn.

I know it’s her before she speaks.

She pauses at the edge of the row.

“Your neural sync logs flagged an anomaly.”