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Blood Circuit: The Nanogene Accord

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Blurb

In the fractured glow of Neo-Vegas—a city where chrome towers pierce irradiated skies and pleasure palaces hum with black-market tech—geneticist Elara Voss makes a lethal discovery: herself.

When a clone with her face and milky-white eyes ambushes her in a high-security lab, injecting her veins with sentient silver fluid, Elara’s reality unravels. The nanogenes rewriting her DNA trigger jagged memories: sterile rooms, a voice murmuring “Iteration Eight is compliant,” and the gut-deep certainty that her mind is a patchwork of stolen lives. Her creator, reclusive tech oligarch Lucien Caine, hasn’t just cloned her body—he’s weaponized her consciousness as the linchpin of a hive-mind designed to consume humanity.

Now a fugitive, Elara allies with Kael Sorensen, a rogue NeuraCorp operative whose cybernetic enhancements hide a betrayal that could kill them both. Together, they descend into Neo-Vegas’ underbelly—a neon-choked maze of gene-labs, data dens, and flesh markets where the infected mutate into hybrid horrors. The nanogenes in Elara’s blood, however, are evolving faster than the chaos around her. They whisper promises of godhood: Merge with us. Rewrite the rules of existence.

But Lucien’s plan runs deeper. Every clone of Elara—discarded in morgues or lurking in the shadows—is a fragment of a rebellion coded into her genome. To stop him, she must confront a truth more vicious than betrayal: her “flawed” clones aren’t failures. They’re her only allies.

As Neo-Vegas collapses into a battleground between augmented zealots and gene-purged rebels, Elara faces an impossible choice. Destroy the swarm and erase every life stitched into her DNA—including her own—or let the nanogenes consume her, becoming the apex predator in Lucien’s new world order.

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CHAPTER 1: MIRROR IMAGE
The laboratory air bit with antiseptic chill as Elara Voss swiped her credentials across the scanner. The reinforced door hissed open, revealing the quarantine chamber bathed in clinical blue light. She paused at the threshold, clipboard clutched against her lab coat, momentarily disoriented by what waited inside. Her own face, perfectly replicated, lay motionless on the examination table. "Subject appears stable," Elara murmured into her wrist recorder, approaching the clone with practiced detachment. "Vitals nominal. Neural activity consistent with deep stasis." The clone's chest rose and fell in shallow, mechanical rhythm. Its skin—her skin—looked waxy under the harsh lighting, identical down to the small scar above her left eyebrow. Elara had supervised dozens of cloning procedures at NeuraCorp, but this was different. This specimen had been created with unprecedented genetic precision. A perfect mirror. She consulted the monitors displaying neural patterns and biochemical readings. Everything appeared within expected parameters, yet something felt wrong. The back of her neck prickled with unease. "Commencing neural interface diagnostic," she announced, more to steady herself than for the record. She reached for the neural probe resting beside the examination table. The clone's eyes snapped open. Elara froze, probe suspended mid-air. The clone's irises were milky blue—not her natural brown—and tracked her movements with unnerving precision. "Subject displaying unexpected consciousness," she said, voice clinically steady despite her racing heart. "Initiating sedation protocol" The clone convulsed. Its back arched violently, limbs rigid, mouth wrenching open in a silent scream. Before Elara could reach the emergency protocols, silver fluid erupted from the clone's nostrils, mouth, and tear ducts. Not random splatter—the metallic substance moved with purpose, arcing through the air toward her. "Containment breach!" Elara stumbled backward, but the nanogene fluid struck her lab coat with impossible accuracy. The fabric sizzled where the silver substance made contact, burning through to the skin beneath. "Security override alpha-seven-nine!" Emergency sirens wailed as containment shields began lowering from the ceiling. Too late. The silver fluid had already penetrated her protective clothing, searing her forearm with cold fire. Elara clawed at her lab coat, tearing it off even as the nanogenes burrowed into her flesh. "Full quarantine!" she gasped into her communicator, watching in horror as silver tendrils snaked beneath her skin, following the path of her veins. The pain was exquisite, a freezing burn that raced toward her heart. The clone's body was dissolving now, collapsing into a puddle of quicksilver that slithered across the floor with predatory intent. Not an accident—the nanogenes were hunting her. Elara staggered toward the emergency console as the first wave of dizziness hit her. Something was invading her neural pathways, spreading from her bloodstream to her brain stem with terrifying efficiency. She reached for the biometric scanner, fingers trembling as darkness crowded the edges of her vision. The moment her palm made contact with the scanner, foreign images exploded behind her eyes. A different laboratory. Her hands, younger but unmistakably hers, programming nanogene prototypes. A man's voice behind her: "They're perfect, Elara. The key to immortality." Impossible. The memory felt authentic, visceral—the cool texture of the programming interface beneath her fingers, the distinctive scent of the catalytic solution used in early-stage nanogene development. But it wasn't hers. Couldn't be. She'd only joined NeuraCorp's Replication Division three years ago. The containment shields activated with a resonant hum, bathing the room in ultraviolet light that froze the advancing silver tide. But the nanogenes already inside her continued their invasion, burrowing deeper with each heartbeat. Another memory fragment exploded behind her eyes: "Your consciousness is too valuable to lose," the same man said, his face still shadowed. "We've encoded everything—not just the market algorithms, but you. The real you. Your memories, experiences... your soul, if you believe in such things." "And if I don't consent?" Her voice, but not her words. "Then we'll find another vessel. One more... compliant." Elara collapsed to her knees as the foreign memories collided with her own. The clone wasn't just a failed experiment. It was her. An earlier version of herself, carrying encrypted memories of a life she couldn't remember living. The laboratory door burst open. Through tear-blurred vision, she saw Lucien Caine silhouetted in the doorway, his tailored NeuraCorp uniform immaculate as always. "Elara!" Genuine fear colored his voice as he rushed toward her, heedless of quarantine protocols. "Stay back!" she warned, even as another memory surfaced. Lucien's face, younger but unmistakable, leaning close to hers. "Your father's legacy is safe with me," he whispered. "And so are you." His lips on hers, passionate, possessive. The image struck her with physical force. Lucien had recruited her personally for NeuraCorp, but they'd never been intimate. She'd only met him three years ago. Unless... "What's happening to me?" she gasped as he reached her, silver tears leaking from the corners of her eyes. Lucien's expression shifted from concern to clinical assessment as he examined the nanogene infiltration patterns on her skin. "You're remembering," he said quietly. Not a question. "Remembering what?" Each word was agony as the nanogenes rewired her neural pathways, flooding her consciousness with data—stock market predictions, molecular formulae, and deeper still, encrypted fragments of relationships, betrayals, and a desperate plan to preserve something valuable. Something that powerful people would kill to obtain. "It wasn't supposed to happen this way," Lucien said, producing a medical injector from his pocket. "The nanogenes were programmed for gradual integration, not... this." "What wasn't?" Another memory hit her: a child's hand in hers, a little girl with her eyes and Lucien's smile. "Your past," he replied, his voice suddenly cold and clinical. "Your consciousness has been transferred seven times, Elara. This is your eighth iteration." The revelation struck her with the force of physical blow. As darkness claimed her vision, one final memory crystallized with terrible clarity: Lucien standing over her previous body, a neural extraction device in his hand, his expression not loving but calculating. "You're not just my colleague," she whispered as consciousness slipped away. "You're my murderer." The lab's emergency containment system completed its activation sequence, sealing the room hermetically. The laboratory floor glistened with silver puddles that slowly crawled toward the emergency exit, leaving microscopic trails etched into the metal.  ◆ What consciousness was hiding inside the clone, and why was it programmed to attack its original?

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