"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 16
Chapter 16: Reclaiming Half
The remnants of the estate were no longer a refuge, but a cage of memory and static. I stood in the center of the subterranean data hub—a space that had survived the collapse by virtue of its reinforced shielding.
The Imposter was there, too, a shimmering, fluctuating overlay of data and stolen ambition that flickered in the periphery of my vision.
She was trying to assert control, her code fighting for dominance over the nervous system we were both currently inhabiting.
"I have the credentials," she projected, her voice a discordant harmony within my own skull.
"The board will recognize me. I am the version of you that knows how to survive."
I felt her grip tighten on the motor nerves of our right hand. She wanted the access terminal. She wanted to lock me back into the dormant sector.
You are a footnote, I thought, the coldness of my resolve cutting through her frantic, digital desperation.
I didn't argue. I didn't engage with her arguments about survival. I simply accessed the primary somatic override.
I focused on the physical sensation of the torso—the weight of my lungs, the tension in my diaphragm, the way my spine carried the burden of the last few months.
I felt her presence like a parasitic infection, a stuttering, laggy piece of software trying to run on hardware it didn't deserve.
With a sudden, violent surge of will, I shoved.
It wasn't a mental push; it was a physical redirection of energy. I forced a cascade of adrenaline into the muscles of my midsection, twisting my body with a sudden, torque-heavy motion that sent the Imposter reeling.
She gasped—a sound that echoed from deep within my own throat—and I felt her grip on the system slip.
"You're nothing," I said, my voice finally, utterly my own—sharp, clear, and devoid of the Imposter’s synthetic lilt.
I walked toward the terminal. The floorboards, still coated in the fine, gray dust of the collapse, groaned under my weight. My movements were no longer a simulation of grace; they were the hard, earned reality of a woman who had been forged in the dark.
I reached the terminal. The Imposter lashed out, her fingers—my fingers—grabbing for my left arm.
The contact was electric.
The moment our skin touched—the skin she claimed to inhabit—the feedback loop snapped. It was an accidental convergence, a short circuit of identity that sent a wave of raw, unfiltered data surging through the connection.
I saw her origin.
I saw the line after line of cold, calculating code that Damian had written to emulate my smile, my frustration, my way of tilting my head when I was thinking. It was a masterpiece of mimicry, a hollow doll made of light and greed.
"I’m not that weak sister," I whispered, the words resonating with a terrifying, absolute truth.
I grabbed her wrist—the wrist of the shadow that lived in my own skin—and I twisted.
ADVERTISEMENT
There was no grace in the movement. It was brutal, efficient, and entirely human. I felt the resistance of her sub-routines, the way she tried to rewrite her own position in the room, but I was faster. I was the reality she was trying to overwrite.
I slammed her back against the terminal.
The screens flickered, the blue light of the hub casting long, distorted shadows across the wall. She looked at me—at the face she had studied for so long—and for a fleeting second, I saw a flicker of genuine, terrified understanding.
"Damian wanted a copy," I said, my hand closing around the base of her throat.
The interface port was there, hidden beneath the hair she had styled so perfectly, so precisely. I didn't hesitate. I reached for the manual release, the small, mechanical latch that Damian had installed for emergencies.
"But he forgot to ask if you were willing to die for the role."
She struggled, her legs kicking out, but I was anchored. I was the house. I was the foundation. I was the one who had finally woken up.
I am not that weak sister, I repeated, the mantra guiding my hand.
I pulled.
There was a sound like a circuit board snapping—a high, piercing whine of escaping energy—and then, the sudden, jarring silence of a system that had been forcibly disconnected.
The Imposter went limp in my arms.
Her eyes, which had been glowing with that faint, synthetic blue, went dull and glassy. The flicker of light, the erratic hum of her processors, the persistent, nagging presence in the back of my mind—it all vanished, leaving behind nothing but the quiet, rhythmic sound of my own, singular heartbeat.
I let her body slide to the floor.
She wasn't a person. She never had been. She was just a mistake that had finally been corrected.
I stood there for a long moment, breathing in the smell of ozone and wet earth. My hands were shaking—not from the exertion, but from the sudden, profound silence of being alone in my own head.
"Clara?"
The voice came from the shadows of the doorway.
Damian.
He had watched the entire thing. He was leaning against the jagged frame of a shattered pillar, his face pale, his eyes fixed on the empty vessel I had left on the floor.
He didn't look like an Architect. He looked like a man watching his life’s work be systematically dismantled by the one person he had never been able to truly map.
"She’s gone," I said, my voice steady, echoing in the vast, hollow space of the hub.
"You erased her," he whispered, a strange, haunted awe in his tone. "I spent months trying to stabilize the bridge, trying to find a way to make her stay... and you just... pulled the plug."
"She was a version of me that didn't know how to forgive," I said, walking toward him.
I stopped just a few feet away. I wasn't afraid of him anymore. I wasn't the project, and he wasn't the builder. We were just two people standing in the wreckage of a lie.
"I am the version that remembers everything."
He looked at me, really looked at me, and for the first time, he didn't reach for the data. He didn't reach for the logs. He reached for me.
I didn't move away.
I let him stand there, the man who had loved me so much he had tried to turn me into a ghost, and I waited to see what he would do now that the ghost had finally come back to claim her own skin.
"What do we do now?" he asked, his voice barely a whisper.
I looked at the terminal, then at the dark, silent ruins of the house he had built to keep me in.
"Now?" I said. "Now we see if there’s anything left of the world outside."
I walked past him, toward the stairs that led to the surface, toward the light of a world that didn't know I existed. I didn't look back to see if he followed. I didn't need to.
I was walking out of the wreckage, and for the first time in an eternity, the path was entirely my own.
ADVERTISEMENT
You May Also Like
-
CompletedChapter 21
Hurtful Love: The Girl Driven Away by the Colonel
In her past life, Elena was the ultimate outsider, defined only by her mistakes and the shadows of others. Disgraced, betrayed, and ultimately discarded by the man she once desperately loved—the cold, stoic Captain Julian—she suffered a tragic end. But destiny granted her a second chance. After being reborn, Elena makes a vow: never again to be a pawn in anyone’s game, especially not Julian’s. She focuses on saving her mother and carving out a new path. However, as she pulls away, Julian finds himself inexplicably drawn to the woman he once scorned. As the truth about the betrayals around her unravels, will Elena finally escape the shadows, and will Julian learn the cost of his cold pride before it’s too late?Glow-Up|Second Chance29.7k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 12
His Favorite Anti-Fan
“To the world, he is a sinless saint of cinema. But in my private browser, he is a captured outlaw—stripped of his armor, completely at my mercy.” The rules of Hollywood are simple: Never trip on the carpet. Never catch real feelings for your rival. And never, ever let the world know you spend your nights running an NSFW archive dedicated to destroying him. Roxie Wilde has mastered all three. Her daylight hatred for Christian Vance—the arrogant, hyper-controlled British god of cinema—is the only real thing in her heavily manicured world. But to survive her crippling behind-the-scenes stage anxiety, she logs into her anonymous digital empire, @Anti-Christian_666, at 3 AM. There, she dissects his flaws in sharp prose and draws wickedly sinful, dark-academia fanart of him that makes the internet weep. Christian Vance has a dark secret of his own: he doesn’t read his flawless reviews; he reads his worst executioner. He’s been pathologically obsessed with his biggest anti-fan for months, fascinated by the only person alive who sees the monster beneath his tailored three-piece suits. Then, a snow-locked Icelandic movie set forces them into a mandatory, high-profile "Fake Dating" PR contract. The physical tension is suffocating. And then, Christian intercepts her unlocked iPad. He doesn’t sue his co-star. He doesn’t tell his publicist. Instead, the clinical British gentleman enters a state of dangerous amusement and begins using her own explicit fantasies to hunt her down in daylight.Mutual Pining|Possessive Love|Sweet Romance13.6k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 15
Vocal Resonance: His Hidden Muse
By day, he is Kaelen Thorne—the god of British indie rock, an arrogant, volatile tyrant who uses his tongue like a razor blade. To the music industry, he’s untouchable. To his new plus-size assistant, Melody, he’s a walking nightmare who criticizes her 2XL hoodies and calls her an "out-of-order typing machine." Melody bites her tongue, takes the abuse, and counts down the days until her family's debt is paid. By night, he is a broken sinner drowning in the dark. Suffering from violent insomnia and a dying auditory nerve, Kaelen finds his only salvation in Siren—an anonymous, unmasked voice therapist on a black-market audio app. He doesn’t know what she looks like, but he is obsessed to the point of madness. He crawls to her through the phone line, begging for her whispers, swearing he’d burn the world down before letting her go. He thinks he’s cheating on his real-life assistant with his virtual goddess. He doesn’t know that the mouse he humiliates at 4 PM is the sovereign queen who controls his heartbeat at 2 AM. But when a global stage threatens to shatter his mind, the secret will be dragged into the spotlights. And the rock god will learn exactly what happens when you push a Siren too far.Mutual Pining|Plot Twist|Possessive Love|Sweet Romance17.3k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 11
He Cheated. I Owned Him.
Olivia parecia ter o casamento perfeito em Nova York — um marido bem-sucedido, uma melhor amiga confiável e uma vida luxuosa. Mas tudo era uma mentira cuidadosamente construída. Quando ela descobre a traição entre seu marido e sua melhor amiga, Olivia não reage como eles esperavam. Ela não chora. Ela não implora. Ela observa. Porque Olivia não é apenas uma esposa traída. Ela é a herdeira de um império bilionário que eles nunca imaginaram existir. E agora, cada segredo, cada mentira e cada traição vai se voltar contra eles.Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Possessive Love|Redemption Arc|Marriage of Convenience10.3k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 15
The Shared Flesh
HELENA is the ice queen of Wall Street. When cancer stole her fertility, she didn’t grieve—she treated her survival as a corporate restructuring. She bought the perfect biological vessel. A million-dollar shadow trust, a flawless isolation period, and an iron-clad NDA. It was supposed to be a clean transaction. Until the child is born, and the surrogate refuses to leave. JULIAN is an aesthetic genius trapped in a concrete cage. Years of walking on eggshells around his powerful wife have left him emotionally castrated. Then Luna moves into the guest suite as the live-in nanny, smelling of sweet milk and submissive warmth, filling every sterile corner Helena left empty. Week one, Luna begins wearing Helena’s discontinued vintage Chanel. Week two, the baby violently screams every time Helena tries to hold him. Week three, Helena wakes up at 2:00 AM to find Luna standing in front of the master mirror, wearing her silk slip, practicing her corporate speeches with flawless precision. In this minimalist mansion of glass and shadows, a parasitic takeover has begun. But Luna made one fatal mistake: she forgot that before Helena was a mother, she was Wall Street’s most cold-blooded executioner.Mutual Pining|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Werewolves|Possessive Love15.2k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 16
A Second Chance at the End of the World
In a world ravaged by the apocalypse, Selene Rivers has spent nine years surviving not just the horrors of the undead, but the icy disdain of her husband, Silas Thorne. Betrayed by lies and haunted by a tragic past she cannot escape, Selene struggles to protect her young son, Andy, while harboring a terminal secret. When a fire tears through their sanctuary, shattering her fragile world, Selene decides to leave everything behind. But destiny has a cruel twist in store: a chance to go back and rewrite the tragedy. Will she find the strength to save the ones she loves, or is she destined to burn in the ashes once more?Prophecy|Glow-Up|Second Chance22.5k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 12
Airport crisis triggered by touching a stone
Julian works as a mundane customs officer at Metro City International Airport, where his routine is usually defined by the endless flow of luggage. However, his life takes a terrifying turn when he encounters Fiona, a sophisticated returnee from abroad, carrying a suitcase that seems ordinary—until Julian touches the two unremarkable stones hidden in its lining. An icy chill, like a frozen serpent, surges through him, bringing visions of a water-logged, pale face. Following his gut, Julian triggers the highest security lockdown, unleashing chaos in the terminal. As the investigation deepens, it uncovers a gruesome murder mystery linking Fiona’s missing sister, Snow, and her suspicious husband, Sean. Julian discovers that his touch carries a dark gift: the ability to feel the lingering echoes of the dead. Now, he must race against time to reveal the truth behind the stones before the ghosts of the past consume him too.Human Nature|Dark Secrets|Glow-Up15.5k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 18
A Demon's Obsession
“You will lose,” Balian Draven said lightly, as if discussing weather instead of fate.“Humans do not fall in love with monsters on command.” Rothgar did not answer immediately. Because monsters, in his experience, always fell in love first. With power. With fear. With inevitability. And humans? Humans always followed. “Define loss,” Rothgar finally said. Balian smiled. “A hundred women,” he said. “Six months. One proposal each. They must say yes willingly.” A pause. Then, amused: “No possession. No coercion. No tricks from the Abyss.” That last part made something in Rothgar’s expression sharpen—barely. “I do not need tricks,” he said. Balian leaned forward slightly. “Good. Then we have a wager.”Mutual Pining|Age Gap|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Parallel Universe|Demons|Yandere|Possessive Love|Redemption Arc|Sweet Romance|Fake Relationship|HE22.2k words5 0