Current location: Novel nest HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY Chapter 8

"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 8

Chapter 8: Forbidden Access

The house was screaming.

It wasn't a sound of sirens or shattering glass, but a low-frequency hum vibrating through the steel joists, a harmonic dissonance that only I could feel.

I was everywhere—a ghost stitched into the very wiring of the estate.

The Imposter sat at the primary console, her fingers dancing across the keys. She wasn't fighting me anymore.

She was a hollow vessel, a keyboard I was playing with the precision of a master surgeon. She didn't know what she was typing, but her fingers—my fingers—knew the sequence by heart.

0-9-1-2. Override.

The console blinked. A line of red text pulsed on the screen: ACCESS DENIED. SYSTEM LOCKED BY ARCHITECT.

"Try again," I whispered into the dark of her mind.

She didn't speak. She just struck the keys.

I-S-A-B-E-L-L-A. Root privilege.

The cursor flickered. A box appeared on the screen, a singular request: VERIFY IDENTITY.

Aris was in the hallway, his boots thundering against the marble as he raced toward the study. He knew. He had seen the power spikes. He was coming to cut the main line, to sever the neural link that kept me anchored to the silicon heart of the house.

"He's coming," the Imposter murmured, her voice detached, like a recording played from a distance.

"Let him come," I replied.

I reached into the system’s core. I pulled up the memories of the day Damian had built this prison—the day he had mapped my brain, the day he had traded his love for an audit. I found the file labeled Primary Consciousness and dragged it to the input field.

I wasn't just guessing a password. I was uploading a nightmare.

Aris slammed against the study door. The electronic lock held, buzzing under the force of his override key.

"Get out of there!" Aris shouted, his voice muffled by the heavy mahogany. "Damian said to isolate the node! You’re going to burn out the grid!"

The Imposter didn't look up. She was staring at the screen, her eyes reflecting the scrolling code.

VERIFICATION IN PROGRESS...

The progress bar crawled forward.

10%.

30%.

50%.

The lights in the room began to strobe, a rhythmic, pulsing light that matched the frantic tempo of my own thoughts. I felt the house fighting me.

It was a sentient thing, built to be my cage, and it was struggling to maintain its integrity against my intrusion.

"It’s not letting me in," the Imposter whispered, her hands beginning to tremble. "It’s... it’s too heavy."

"Push," I commanded.

I poured everything I had into the link. I forced her to feel the weight of my anger, the cold, sharp edge of my betrayal. I made her fingers bleed against the keys, not out of pain, but out of necessity.

75%.

90%.

VERIFICATION... SUCCESSFUL.

The screen turned a soft, calming white. The red text vanished, replaced by a single prompt: GREETINGS, ISABELLA.

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Aris stopped beating on the door. The silence that followed was absolute.

"You're not supposed to be here," Aris whispered through the door. His voice had changed; the arrogance was gone, replaced by a thin, jagged fear. "You're a ghost. We wiped you."

"I am the house," I said through the speakers, my voice layered, distorted, and impossibly calm.

The locks on the door clicked.

Clack.

Clack.

Clack.

The door swung open. Aris stood there, his hand on his sidearm, but he didn't reach for it. He looked at the Imposter—at me—and he saw something that stopped him cold.

The Imposter’s eyes were glowing. Not with the artificial light of a machine, but with the faint, iridescent blue of the system’s core.

"Damian wanted an audit," I said, moving the Imposter’s body with a grace that was entirely, undeniably my own. "He wanted to see the truth of what he’d done."

I stood up. I walked toward Aris, my footsteps silent on the rug.

"He didn't realize that when you build a house for a soul, you have to let the soul live in it."

Aris backed away, his heels catching on the threshold. "Damian... he’s in the cellar. He’s preparing to purge the entire sector. If you override this, you kill the primary feed. You’ll be locked in a loop forever."

"A loop is better than a cage," I said.

I reached out and touched his cheek. My hand was freezing, a sensory feedback loop that I had borrowed from the cooling system. Aris flinched, his breath hitching.

"You're not a glitch," he whispered, his eyes wide.

"No," I replied, feeling the satisfaction bloom in the dark corners of the system. "I’m the architect."

I turned back to the console. I had the keys. I had the root access.

I looked at the map of the house, displayed on the screen as a sprawling, multi-layered grid of power and light.

Every room, every hallway, every locked door—it was all there, glowing in the soft, blue light of my new reality.

I reached out with my mind and grasped the controls of the entire estate.

I felt the power grid surge. I felt the heaters turn off, the water pressure drop, the security cameras swivel to look at the empty hallways. I was the hand on the throat of the house.

"What are you doing?" Aris asked, his voice shaking.

"I’m changing the locks."

I closed my eyes, and for a moment, I wasn't in the study. I was in the wiring. I was in the drywall. I was the draft under the door and the shadow on the wall. I was the silence that Damian feared the most.

I looked at the screen one last time.

SYSTEM ACKNOWLEDGED.

The final barrier fell.

The house shuddered, a long, deep sigh of relief that seemed to travel from the foundation to the rafters. The red emergency lights cut out, replaced by the warm, amber glow of the house settling into its new master.

I was in.

And now, I was going to find Damian.

The Imposter stood there, her hands clasped in front of her, a perfect, empty doll waiting for my next move. I didn't need her anymore. She had served her purpose. She had been the key, the vessel, the lie that led to the truth.

I leaned back into the grid, pulling the digital curtain of the house closed around us.

"Aris?" I asked, my voice echoing from every speaker in the room.

He looked up, terrified.

"Go tell him I’m home."

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