Sweat dripped heavily from Seven’s forehead, stinging her eyes as she forced her aching body through another brutal rotation. Every muscle in her body screamed for reprieve, burning with an agonizing fire that threatened to buckle her knees. Yet, she knew better than to slow down. In this place, under the unyielding gaze of her handler, she had no right to rest. She had no right to complain. To show even a flicker of exhaustion was to invite a consequence far worse than physical pain.
"Focus, Seven!"
The harsh, booming command shattered the tense silence of the underground training facility. The voice belonged to Nimrod, her training coach. Nimrod was a towering man whose frame was built of solid, scarred muscle, and whose temperament was notoriously unyielding. When it came to their daily regimens, he was a merciless taskmaster. He operated under a simple, draconian philosophy: a single mistake on the mats meant a night of starvation. For a growing seventeen-year-old whose life depended on keeping her physical strength at its peak, hunger wasn't just a punishment; it was a psychological threat.
Seven instantly shifted her weight, dropping low into a defensive stance. She forced her breathing into a controlled rhythm, her eyes locking onto Nimrod’s upper torso to anticipate his next movement. Every fiber of her being was focused on one singular objective: she needed to take this man down. If she could somehow bypass his defenses and floor him, the session would end, and she would finally earn the right to rest. But it was an objective far easier said than done. Her entire body throbbed with deep, deep exhaustion, and despite all her tactical maneuvers over the past hour, she hadn’t managed to land a single decisive blow.
Nimrod was a formidable adversary, a highly decorated ex-navy officer who had spent decades mastering lethal hand-to-hand combat. His movements were calculated, efficient, and devastatingly precise. Against him was Seven—just a seventeen-year-old girl. On paper, it was a laughable match up. What real chance did a scrawny teenage apprentice have against a seasoned military veteran who was practically built for warfare?
Think, Seven! She fiercely reprimanded herself, biting the inside of her cheek until the copper taste of blood grounded her senses. Do not dare show weakness in front of him. If you give up now, he will break you.
She took a deep, stabilizing breath, drawing the cold, damp air of the training hall deep into her lungs before exhaling it in a slow, calculated hiss. She cleared her mind of the fatigue, filtering out the throbbing pain in her ribs and shoulders.
What happened next occurred in a split second, blurring the line between conscious strategy and raw instinct. As Nimrod lunged forward to execute a devastating heavy sweep, Seven didn't step back as she usually did. Instead, she leaned into the danger. With an impossible burst of speed that seemed to defy her physical limitations, she pivoted on her heel, slipped past his guard, and utilized his own forward momentum against him. Before she even fully registered the mechanics of her own movement, she delivered a fluid, lightning-fast strike to his pressure points combined with a sweeping leg lock.
With a heavy, echoing thud that shook the rubber mats, Nimrod crashed hard onto the floor.
Seven stood frozen, her chest heaving as she stared down at her coach. A stunned silence descended upon the room. Looking down, she caught the fleeting flash of pure, unadulterated astonishment crossing Nimrod's normally stoic face. He lay there for a moment, the wind completely knocked out of him, staring up at her as if looking at a ghost.
Even Seven was utterly shocked by her own performance. Her mind had been entirely focused on the simple, desperate desire to hit him or trip him, but the execution had been uncanny. She hadn't even consciously planned the specific sequence of the attack; her body had just reacted with a terrifying, unnatural fluidity. It was as if a dormant, highly advanced muscle memory had suddenly taken over her limbs.
She looked down at her hands, confused and slightly unnerved by what had just transpired. On the floor, Nimrod was grunting, visibly struggling to push himself back up to his feet, his pride clearly wounded alongside his ribs. Not wanting to stick around for his reaction or give him a chance to call for another round, Seven abruptly turned her back on him. Without saying a word, she hurried out of the ring and made a straight line for the privacy of the shower room.
As the lukewarm water cascaded over her tense shoulders, rinsing away the layer of sweat and grime, her mind refused to quiet down. The memory of that split-second counter-attack replayed on a loop behind her eyelids. Over the past few weeks, strange things had been happening to her—subtle shifts in her perception, sudden bursts of strength, and reflexes that defied the limits of what she had been taught. It was an anomaly she couldn't explain, a hidden well of instinct that felt both terrifyingly alien and intimately familiar.
Once she finished washing up, Seven dried off and packed her meager belongings into her duffel bag. She had no intention of lingering in the sprawling, cold mansion of Master Dark. Instead, she planned to retreat to the small, cramped apartment she rented in the city—a place she secretly funded and maintained just to have a sliver of space that felt entirely her own. She rarely stayed at the mansion unless explicitly ordered to do so. Despite the years she had spent operating within its walls, she was acutely aware of how little she knew about the true identities and hidden motives of the people surrounding her.
In the time she had spent serving this clandestine network, she had never once seen Master Dark's face. He was a phantom, an ominous presence who ruled their lives through proxies, encrypted comms, and absolute terror. In the dark, unforgiving world she had been raised in, survival relied on a set of immutable rules: you do not ask questions, you do not disobey orders, and you never, under any circumstances, complain.
To break a single rule meant forfeiting your life.
As much as Seven dreamed of escaping this invisible cage, of running away to a place where her hands weren't forced to steal or handle weapons, a heavy, suffocating weight always held her back. It was an invisible chain forged from fear, debt, and the unsettling realization that she had nowhere else to go. She had to endure everything. Even on the days when her spirit was utterly crushed, and she wanted nothing more than to lay down and surrender to the dark, she forced herself to stand. She forced herself to be strong.
The scenery in her mind shifted abruptly, dissolving the cold concrete of the mansion into a warm, brightly lit memory buried deep within the recesses of her forgotten childhood.
"Mama! Where are we going?" an innocent voice asked. It belonged to a little six-year-old girl with bright, wide eyes, her small hand clutching tightly to the fabric of her mother's dress.
"Don't ask so many questions, my sweet child," her mother replied, her voice laced with an intense, breathless seriousness that the little girl couldn't quite comprehend. "Just promise me that you will do exactly what Mama tells you to do, okay?"
"Yes, Mama," the little girl answered softly, her innocent eyes blinking up at her mother's pale, beautiful face.
The elegant woman was frantically packing clothes, jewelry, and documents into a leather travel bag, her hands trembling violently as she threw items together. The little girl simply sat at the edge of the large, plush bed, quietly observing her mother's erratic, panicked behavior with a mixture of confusion and growing unease.
But before the woman could even finish fastening the straps of the bag, a deafening, violent explosion rocked the foundations of their grand estate. The concussive blast shattered the distant glass windows, sending a tremor right through the floorboards. The little girl gasped, watching as her mother froze, absolute terror paralyzing her features.
"They're here..." the mother whispered, her voice cracking with despair as the distant sound of shouting and gunfire began to echo through the hallways.