Chapter 140 The Editor
The sun feels real. The wind is cold. My eyes see the brown of the dirt and the blue of the sky. No more codes. No more violet light. We are just a man and a woman in a half-burnt house. We should be happy. We should be free.
But the man with the leather bag is standing in our path. He says he is a reporter. He says he wants our story. Then he whispers about a second draft.
My heart stops. I look at the silver whistle in his bag. It is the same shape. The same metal. But it is quiet.
"What did you say?" Evan asks. He steps in front of me. His hands are rough from working the wood. He is a carpenter's son now. He is strong. But his eyes are wide with a new kind of fear.
The stranger smiles. He has very white teeth. He looks like a man who has never spent a day in the sun. "I said the Architect is a perfectionist. He didn't like the way the last story ended. Too much mess. Too much noise. He thinks this version is much cleaner."
"There is no Architect," I say. My voice is steady, but my fingers are shaking. "The bridge is gone. The name Marlowe is gone. We are nobody."
"Exactly," the man says. He pulls a notebook from his bag. "A perfect blank page. No history. No Board. Just a quiet village and two people who don't belong here."
"Who are you?" Evan demands.
"Call me the Editor," the man says. "I'm here to make sure the story stays on track. No more time-traveling. No more breaking the glass. You just live your quiet lives. You grow old. You die. And the Architect gets to watch his masterpiece from the shadows."
"He's alive?" I whisper.
"In a way," the Editor says. He looks at the Great Oak tree. "He is the silence between the words. He is the shadow under the leaves. He gave up his body to give you this world. Don't waste it by asking questions."
The man turns and walks away. He doesn't look back. He disappears into the morning mist like he was never there.
We stand in silence for a long time. The village is moving around us. I hear the hammer of the blacksmith. I hear the laughter of children. It sounds like a normal day. But the air feels heavy. It feels like we are living inside a painting that hasn't dried yet.
"He's lying," Evan says. He leads me back into the house. "He has to be lying. We saw the bridge collapse."
"Did we?" I ask. I look at my hands. "Or did we just move into a smaller cage?"
We go into the kitchen. The smell of woodsmoke is still there. But I see something on the table. It is a small, black box. It looks like my old camera, but it is made of a different wood. It is dark. It is heavy.
"I didn't put that there," Evan says.
I touch the wood. It is cold. There is a note tucked into the lens.
Capture the truth, Cassia. Even if it hurts to see.
I open the back of the camera. There is no film. There is only a small glass vial. Inside the vial is a single drop of violet ink.
"He left us a way out," I say.
"Or a way back in," Evan replies.
He goes to the corner and picks up the old violin. He tries to play a note. He wants to hear the music of the earth. He wants to feel the wood against his chin. He draws the bow across the strings.
The sound is not music.
It is a click. A sharp, metallic click.
Evan drops the violin. It hits the floor with a hollow thud. He stares at his hands. "Cass. I can still hear them. The insects in the water. They're inside me."
"No," I say, rushing to him. "You're human, Evan. Mrs. Higgins gave you the soil. You're real."
"Then why do I feel like I'm made of gears?" he asks. He looks at me, and for a split second, his eyes flash with a violet light. Just for a heartbeat. Then they are brown again.
I pull him close. I can feel his heart. It is beating fast. It is a human heart. But under the beat, there is a rhythm. Dot. Dash. Dot.
He is still a beacon. The reset didn't clean his blood.
"We have to leave," I say. "We can't stay in Willow Lane. The Editor is watching. The Architect is watching."
"Where would we go?" Evan asks. "The whole world is his draft now. There is nowhere that isn't his."
"The mountains," I say. "The Guardians. They aren't part of the story. They are the salt and the stone. They are the only ones who don't have a role."
"We can't climb that ice again, Cass," Evan says. "I'm not a replacement anymore. I'll freeze."
"Then we find another way," I say.
I look at the black camera on the table. I know what I have to do. I have to take a photo. Not a photo of the village. Not a photo of the sunrise.
I have to take a photo of the Editor.
If he is part of the story, he has a flaw. Everything the Architect builds has a flaw. I just have to find it.
We spend the day trying to act normal. I help the neighbors with their laundry. Evan fixes a broken fence for Mr. Miller. We talk. We laugh. We pretend we don't see the silver bird watching us from the roof of the church. We pretend we don't hear the clicking in the river.
As the sun sets, the village goes quiet. The lamps are lit. It looks like a postcard from a dream.
I sit on the porch with the black camera. I wait.
The Editor appears at the edge of the woods. He is standing by the lilies under the Great Oak. He is looking at the spot where Mrs. Higgins vanished. He looks sad.
I raise the camera. I don't look through the lens with my eyes. I close them. I use the memory of the white light. I feel the violet ink in the vial start to pulse.
Click.
The flash is not white. It is a deep, dark purple. It lights up the garden for a second.
The Editor turns. He isn't angry. He looks at me and nods.
"Good shot, Cassia," he says. "But you won't like the development."
He walks into the shadows and is gone.
I take the camera inside. I go to the small darkroom Evan built in the cellar. I am afraid. My hands are shaking as I pull the glass plate from the camera. I put it in the tray. I wait for the image to appear.
Slowly, the shapes form.
It is a photo of the garden. It is a photo of the Editor.
But in the photo, the Editor isn't a man.
He is a mirror.
And in the mirror, I don't see the garden. I don't see the future.
I see a woman standing in a high-tech lab. She is wearing a white coat. She has my face. She is looking at a small, glass box on a table. Inside the box are two tiny figures. A man and a woman. They are standing in a tiny garden.
The woman in the white coat is smiling. She is holding a pen. She is writing in a folder.
The name on the folder is: Project Midnight Tide - Trial 138.
I drop the photo. It shatters on the floor.
"Evan!" I scream.
He runs down the stairs. "What is it? What did you see?"
I point to the shards of glass on the floor. I can't speak. My throat is tight.
Evan looks at the pieces. He looks at the image of the woman in the lab. He looks at me.
"Cass," he whispers. "If that's the truth... then who are we?"
"We're not even replacements," I say. "We're just... ideas."
Suddenly, the house starts to shake. Not like an earthquake. It feels like someone is picking up the building. The walls groan. The ceiling starts to peel away, but there is no sky behind it. There is only a bright, clinical white light.
A voice booms from above. It is a woman's voice. It is the voice of the woman in the photo.
"Trial 138 is a success," the voice says. "The subjects have achieved self-awareness within the reset. Prepare for the Harvest."
"The Harvest?" Evan asks. He grabs me. He pulls me close. "What is the Harvest?"
The floor beneath us starts to turn into liquid ink. The cellar is disappearing. The village is disappearing.
"Evan, the whistle!" I shout.
He reaches for his pocket, but his hand passes right through the fabric. He is turning into light again. The gold is back. The violet is back.
"I can't hold on, Cass!" he screams.
A giant silver hand reaches down through the white light. It isn't a violet hand this time. It is a real hand. A human hand. It is reaching for Evan.
"Subject B is ready for extraction," the voice says. "Subject A is to be deleted."
"No!" I scream. I grab the silver whistle from the floor. I don't play it. I stab it into the ink beneath my feet.
The white light turns red. An alarm starts to ring. It sounds like a hundred sirens.
"Breach!" the voice shouts. "The subject is attacking the interface! Terminate the trial!"
Everything goes dark.
I feel myself falling. I am not falling through the air. I am falling through numbers. I am falling through memories. I am falling through every chapter we have ever lived.
I hear Evan’s voice in the dark.
"Cassia! Find the Source! It's not in the mountain! It's in the—"
His voice cuts off.
I hit a hard floor. It isn't red soil. It is cold metal.
I open my eyes.
I am in a room filled with screens. Thousands of them. Every screen is showing a different version of Willow Lane. In one, we are happy. In one, we are dead. In one, I am the Librarian.
I look at my hands. They are real. I am wearing a white coat.
I look at the table in front of me. There is a glass box. Inside the box, a tiny man is kneeling in a tiny garden. He is looking up at me. He is crying.
He has Evan’s face.
I look at the folder on the desk. It says: Cassia Marlowe - Head of Simulation.
I look at the mirror on the wall.
My eyes are white.
What if the Architect wasn't my father, but me, and what happens when the creator realizes she is the villain of her own love story?