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Fracture System: The Sovereign Code

Talien_Auravale
They called him null. Riven Cross failed his ability assessment at sixteen and has spent three years doing the math on a problem that has no clean solution: his younger sister needs Tier Three medical treatment, Tier Three is locked behind a ranked access wall, and null-classified individuals don't climb ranked access walls. He works freight shifts. He runs the numbers. He waits for a variable that hasn't shifted yet. Then he walks into an alley he was supposed to walk away from. The woman backed against the wall is Lyra Ashbourne — silver hair, two years of running behind her eyes, and the specific stillness of someone who has been in enough bad situations to know that movement before the right moment is worse than no movement at all. Three Sovereign Order operatives with a suppression field active stand between her and the exit. The math says walk away. Riven Cross walks toward it instead. The moment he grabs her wrist, something four centuries old wakes up inside him. The Fracture System — a supernatural ability architecture so powerful that the Sovereign Order split it deliberately three centuries ago to neutralise it — recognises the neural architecture it was built for. The active fragment activates in Riven. And Lyra, who has been carrying the system's other half in her bloodline since birth, feels it the way she has felt it twice before with two other people: like a lock recognising the shape of a key. Except this time it doesn't stop after a second. This time it doesn't stop at all. Here is the problem: the system grows through proximity. The closer Riven is to Lyra, the faster he levels up. The faster he levels up, the stronger the resonance pulse that broadcasts their location to every faction in the city that has been waiting three years for exactly this signal. Every level he gains makes her harder to hide. Every level he gains makes her harder to leave. Six levels in eight days. The Order's containment window closes faster than they can adapt. Faction propositions arrive with better furnishings and the same locks. And underneath all of it, in the foundational code of the registry that has been deciding who gets what in Novan City for three centuries, a witness record sits waiting — three hundred years of documentation of everything the Order has done with the power it was never supposed to have. The Fracture System is the only thing that can release it. But only if both halves choose to. Together. This is a story about a boy who was never null and a girl who stopped running. About two AI entities — one ancient and strategic, one sharp and isolated for three hundred years with extremely strong opinions — who have been waiting for exactly this host. About an institution that built a city on a lie and spent three centuries hoping nobody would find the proof. About the specific kind of arithmetic that looks at an impossible situation and walks toward it anyway. And about two people who discovered, eight days into knowing each other, that the choice the system was built for and the choice they were making for themselves had been the same choice all along.
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