Follow
Chapters
Share
EDEN Novel Cover

EDEN

Elianila, an AI Architect, is part of an elite team tasked with designing a global system meant to prevent threats, manage disasters, and distribute resources to vulnerable regions. After five years of tireless work with her colleagues, she uncovers disturbing anomalies, code-named, X-variables, that flag individuals according to criteria she never programmed. As Elianila digs deeper to understand what the X-variables measure and where their origin, she finds herself in direct conflict with the authorities. Soon, the System marks her and her daughter as threats - targets to be eliminated. With a small band of colleagues and dissidents, Elianila goes on the run, hiding in places beyond the Systems reach. As they evade surveillance, they race against time to warn others, expose the truth, and fight back against the omnipresent authority of the System.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Two Years Before Implementation

April 2085

Elianila was awoken by the voice of her four-year-old daughter who had jumped onto her bed.

"Mama!"

"Yes, dear?" she said wearily, her eyes still closed.

"Mama, wake up."

She forced her eyes open, and turned onto her back. She was met by the grinning face of her daughter.

She smiled back, then glanced at the wristwatch she'd been too tired to remove the night before. It read: 6:15 a.m.

"Why is my daughter awake early in the morning on a Saturday?" she teased.

"Missed you, Mama," Zara said in a small voice, sitting on her stomach.

"Oh...my dear," she said, taking her daughter's hands in hers and squeezing them gently. "Really?"

She nodded.

Elianila pulled her gently to her side, and wrapped her arms around her. Zara smelled like baby shampoo and the lavender lotion her mother, Regina, used after bath time.

"I missed you," Zara said, burrowing into Elianila's chest. "You were gone for a hundred days."

"Not quite a hundred," Elianila said, smoothing down Zara's hair. "Maybe two days."

"That's still a lot." Zara pulled back to look at her mother. "Why do you go away so much?"

How do you explain saving the world to a four-year-old?

"Mama has important work. I'm helping build something that will keep people safe."

"Like a superhero?"

"Something like that."

"Can I see your cape?"

"Superheroes don't always wear capes. Sometimes they just work really hard."

"Play with me?" Zara asked.

She glanced at the clock. 6:22 a.m. She needed to be at The Nexus by eight for Ashford's meeting. That left ninety-eight minutes to shower, get dressed, maybe eat something, and make the forty-five minute drive through morning traffic.

But Zara was looking at her with the innocent-hopeful eyes of a child.

"Ten minutes," Elianila said. "Then Mama has to get ready for work."

"Okay!" Zara scrambled off the bed and ran to the corner of her room where her toy box was. She returned with an armful of stuffed animals and dolls, dumping them on the bed with the unselfconscious enthusiasm of toddler-hood.

For ten minutes, Elianila immersed herself in the childhood game. She made the elephant talk in a silly voice. She helped Zara's favourite doll have tea with a teddy bear. She listened to a rambling story about daycare that involved a major social crisis over a stolen blue crayon.

She watched her daughter's face, lit up with imagination and joy, and tried not to think how many moments like this she'd missed.

"Okay," she said, glancing at the clock again. 6:35 a.m. "Mama needs to shower now."

"Five more minutes?"

"I already gave you ten."

Zara's face fell into an expression Elianila had come to dread - the one that said I knew this wouldn't last long.

"How about this," Elianila said quickly. "You go downstairs and tell Grandma what you want for breakfast. I'll be down in twenty minutes and we can eat together before I leave. Deal?"

"Deal!" Zara gathered her toys and scampered toward the door, then turned back. "Mama? I love you."

"I love you too, sweetheart. More than anything."

She sat on the edge of the bed, head in her hands, feeling the weight of five and a half years pressing down on her shoulders. The kind of exhaustion sleep couldn't fix. A weariness that had seeped into her soul.

She was thirty-eight years old, tall and strong-shouldered, with deep brown skin and her father's sharp cheekbones. But staring at her reflection in the dresser mirror, she just looked tired. Dark circles shadowed her eyes, and gray threads wove through her natural curls, which she usually kept pulled back in a tight bun.

More than anything, she'd told Zara. Was that true? If she loved Zara more than anything, why was she always choosing to be somewhere else?

She stood abruptly, pushing away the thought.

The bathroom was still humid from her mother's earlier shower. She turned the water hot, hoping to steam away the exhaustion and the lingering guilt.

She descended the stairs dressed in a tailored navy pants, white blouse, blazer draped over her arm, and wearing low heels; her hair pulled back into a neat bun.

She could hear Zara's voice from the kitchen, chattering away.

"-and then Tyler said he needed the blue crayon. Because he was making the ocean. But I was making the sky. And the sky needs blue too. So Miss Jennifer said we had to share. But..."

Elianila entered the kitchen to find Zara at the table in her booster seat, methodically arranging Cheerios on her place-mat in some pattern only she understood. A bowl of the cereal sat to her right, a cup of milk to her left, and scattered O's covered most of the table's surface.

"Morning again, my dear."

"Mama! Look!" Zara pointed to her Cheerio arrangement. "It's a flower!"

Elianila studied the somewhat abstract design. "It's beautiful."

"Grandma says I can have banana after I finish my cereal."

"That sounds like a good plan."

She moved to the coffee maker and poured a cup.

The kitchen was small but tidy, morning sunlight slanting through the window over the sink. Photos covered the refrigerator, mostly of Zara at various ages, a few of hers and her mother.

Her mother appeared at the doorway. She took in Elianila's appearance with one sweeping glance - the professional clothes, the coffee cup, the car keys on the counter. "Home for a whole night," Regina said, in a neutral voice. "Should I mark the calendar?"

"Morning to you too, Mama."

Regina moved to the refrigerator, pulled out a banana, and began slicing it for Zara.

"At what time did you get in?"

"Around three."

"And you're leaving again already."

It wasn't a question.

"I have an emergency meeting at eight. Ashford wants to discuss final deployment timeline."

"Mm-hmm." Regina set the banana slices in front of Zara, who immediately began mashing them with her fingers. "And when will you be home?"

"I'm not sure. Late, probably. We're six months behind schedule and..."

"You're always six months behind schedule," Regina interrupted. "Five years now. Five-and-a-half years of 'just a little longer' and 'almost done' and 'six more months.'"

Elianila set down her cup. "This time is different..."

"Is it?" Regina looked at her questioningly. "Because I remember you saying the same thing when Zara was born. That you'd slow down after she came. That you'd be more present." She gestured at the little girl absorbed in her banana massacre. "That child is four-years old, and she treats seeing her mother like a prize."

"That's not fair..." she complained.

"Isn't it?" Regina pulled out the chair across from Elianila and sat, fixing her daughter with a look that had never failed in thirty-five years. "I'm proud of what you've accomplished. But that baby needs her mother more than the world needs your computer system."

"It's not just a computer system..."

"I know what it is. You've explained it a hundred times. It's important. It's going to save lives. It's going to change everything." Regina leaned forward. "But, who's going to save your relationship with your daughter while you're busy saving the world?"

Silence fell over the kitchen, broken only by Zara's humming and the sound of banana being thoroughly demolished.

Elianila wanted to argue. Wanted to explain this was more than career ambition. That civilization itself was collapsing. That if EDEN failed millions would die. Instead, she said quietly, "Four more months. Final deployment is August. After that, it's done. I can..."

"Four more months?" Regina's eyebrows rose. "And then what? Another project? Another crisis? Another reason why work comes first?"

"That's not...I don't..." she stopped, frustration building." What do you want me to do, Mama? Quit? Walk away when we're this close? Tell them to find someone else when the whole world is depending on this?"

"I want you to remember what actually matters." Regina stood, and moved to the sink.

Elianila drained her coffee cup, and gathered her things. "I need to go. Traffic will be bad."

"Running away from the conversation won't change the truth of it."

"I'm not running away..."

"Mama?" Zara's small voice cut through the tension. "Will you be home for dinner?"

Elianila crouched beside her daughter's chair, meeting those trusting brown eyes. "I'm going to try really hard, okay? But if I can't make it, Grandma will make you something good, and I'll see you before bedtime."

"Promise?"

"I promise I'll try my best," she said carefully.

Zara nodded, seemingly satisfied, and went back to her banana destruction.

She stood, kissed her forehead, and headed for the door.

"Elianila," her mother called after her.

She turned.

Regina stood in the kitchen doorway, looking older and more tired than Elianila wanted to acknowledge.

"Just remember," her mother said softly. "The world got along for thousands of years without your computer system. But that baby only gets one childhood. And she only gets one mother."

She nodded, not trusting her voice, and left.

Behind her, she heard Zara's cheerful voice: "Grandma, can we go to the park today?"

"Of course, darling. Of course we can," her grandmother responded.

You may also like

A Debt in Red Novel Cover
8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.
Faking Love To Save The General Novel Cover
7.5
For five years, I was locked away in the freezing royal dungeon, starved and used as a bloody plaything by the kingdom's sadistic Cabinet Minister, Brandt Fischer. He tortured me daily for one twisted reason: I simply looked like someone else. When he visited my cell to casually announce my father's execution and drag a silver dagger across my neck, he expected me to beg. Instead, I laughed, sank my teeth directly into his carotid artery, and was violently thrown against a jagged stone wall to my death. As my skull cracked and my blood stained the moss, I thought about my so-called family. The moment Brandt had demanded me, my father, the Duke, handed me over without a single hesitation to save his own political career. I was nothing but a disposable pawn, left to rot in the dark while the monsters who ruined my life thrived. I died suffocating on my own blood and absolute, destructive vengeance. Then, I opened my eyes. I was lying in my silk-sheeted bed, reborn as my fifteen-year-old self. Today was the exact day Lord Daryl Langley, the God of War, would be ambushed and crippled—the event that allowed Brandt to seize ultimate power. I immediately stole a horse, rode to the palace gates, and threw myself directly in front of Daryl's moving carriage. "I just didn't want to see a hero die like a slaughtered pig." I didn't care if I had to shatter my own ankle to hijack his convoy. This time, I was going to save the general, and he would become the blade I use to slaughter them all.
His Betrayal Forged My Ruthless Soul Novel Cover
7.3
Seven years ago, my fiancé, Don Dante Moretti, sent me to prison to take the fall for my adopted sister, Chiara. He called it a gift-a way to protect me from a worse fate. Today, he picked me up from prison only to abandon me at my family's estate. His reason? Chiara was having another one of her "episodes." My parents then informed me I'd be staying in the third-floor storage room, so as not to disturb the fragile girl who stole my life. They celebrated her "recovery" with a lavish dinner party, while I was treated like a ghost. When I refused to join, my mother hissed that I was ungrateful, and my father called me jealous. They assumed I couldn't understand their venomous whispers. But prison was my university. I learned Spanish. I understood every word. It was then I realized I wasn't just a sacrifice; I was disposable. The love I once felt for all of them had turned to ash. That night, in the dusty storage room, I logged onto an encrypted channel I'd set up years ago. A single message was waiting: "The offer stands. Do you accept?" My hands, scarred and steady, typed back, "I accept."
Sweet Revenge: Marrying My Ex's Ruthless Nemesis Novel Cover
7.1
I worked eighty-hour weeks on Wall Street just to keep my sick brother alive, enduring endless humiliation from the wealthy family that adopted us. But when I went to surprise my boyfriend of three years, I found him kissing my spoiled adoptive sister, Tatum. They were celebrating their engagement to merge their powerful families. To keep me quiet, my adoptive mother, Eleanor, threatened to freeze my brother's medical trust fund unless I attended the party to play the supportive sister. Instead, I discovered Eleanor had been embezzling from my brother's life-saving fund to cover her own bad investments. The nightmare worsened when a drunken Ryder cornered me in my apartment stairwell. "Once I marry Tatum, Eleanor is giving me control of Liam's trust fund to buy out my father's board members." He planned to drain my brother's medical money, dump Tatum, and keep me as his mistress. For a decade, I suffered their abuse hoping for a shred of decency, only to realize they were plotting to leave my brother to die on the streets for corporate greed. Calling the police wouldn't stop these billionaires. I needed absolute power. Remembering the dark, predatory gaze of Jaren Jarvis—the ruthless billionaire who had watched me fight back at the party—I canceled my call to 911. If they wanted to destroy my only family, I was going to use the devil himself to crush theirs.
Taming His Beta General Novel Cover
7.8
"I won't accept your rejection, Lorraine. You are the one I want." "Then you are as mistaken as the Moon Goddess. I am not fit to be anybody's mate. I... I am a killer. It is what I do." "I understand. You are a soldier. Which soldier has not killed to protect? I will never hold that against you." "Wrong. I am a cold-blooded murderer. Being a soldier is just the perfect excuse." *** Lorraine Spears has spent most of her life as a rogue, surviving by her wits and strength. When devastating war gave her a chance to join the coalition army, her fate became entwined with the alpha queen, Athena. Rising from a mere rogue to right-hand general and beta of the queen's pack, Lorraine lives for duty alone. Yet beneath her stoic exterior, the past haunts her. Then the Moon Goddess plays her hand, mating Lorraine with the most infuriatingly arrogant alpha she has ever met. Determined to resist him, Lorraine refuses to let a fated mate distract her, while Logan refuses to let her go. Just when she thinks she might have paid enough for her past sins, bloodcurdling vengeance returns, and everything she thought she knew about her family is revealed as a lie. Reeling from betrayals, unexpected new family, and an obsessed enemy on her heels, Lorraine must decide whether to trust a bond that threatens her clarity or embrace her predicted happily never-after.
The Disguised Girl: Captivating The Billionaire King Novel Cover
7.7
Dasia's twin brother, Gerald, was an e-sports prodigy, the rising star of the Glory team. But during a crucial moment, he was framed by his own teammates. They orchestrated a trap that completely destroyed his reputation and left his right hand brutally crushed. Instead of getting him medical help, the club threw him out into the freezing rain, bleeding and disgraced. The manager labeled him useless trash and slapped him with a five-million-dollar termination fee to bleed him dry. Stripped of his pro status, the wealthy bullies at his prep school relentlessly targeted him, mocking his crippled hand and beating him down. Dasia watched her twin brother cry in his room, his life and dreams shattered by the people he trusted. A violent, suffocating rage boiled in her chest. How could they smile while crushing his hand? Why should the victim be treated like a rotting piece of garbage while the perpetrators get rich and celebrated? She didn't shed a single tear. She stood in front of the mirror, took a pair of scissors, and ruthlessly hacked off her waist-length hair. She wrapped her chest in coarse medical bandages until her ribs screamed, and pulled on his oversized black hoodie. "Everything you took from him, I am going to take back with interest." The girl in the mirror was gone. She was Gerald now. She secretly passed the brutal online tryouts for Glory's biggest rival, the elite Blackflame team, and signed their official contract. The revenge had officially begun.