Page 165 of Broken Sentinel

"What now?" I ask quietly.

"Secondary sanctuary," Vex answers. "Regroup with the other Haven children. Figure out Unity's next move."

I nod, the logical part of my brain acknowledging the strategic necessity while my heart screams in protest at leaving Trent behind.

"Based on what we saw," Vex continues, voice unusually gentle, "Unity is accelerating Project Duality. Using their own version of the final protocol, not offering choice but forcing directed evolution."

"Can they even do that without the complete resonance network?" I ask.

"With eleven Haven children at the secondary sanctuary and your mother's research destroyed, it would be difficult," he acknowledges. "But with Trent as a successful test subject and Adrian Lin's knowledge of the original project..."

The implication is clear. Unity has pieces of the puzzle, perhaps enough to implement their twisted version of controlled evolution.

We ride in silence for several minutes, each lost in our own thoughts. As the landscape changes around us, a strange sense of resolve begins to replace my initial shock and grief.

"We're going back for him," I say finally. Not a question or a suggestion but a statement of fact.

Vex doesn't argue. "Yes. But not today, not like this." He gestures to his wounds, to the battered survivors in our transport. "We need to heal. Plan. Understand what we're truly facing."

I know he's right, but acceptance comes hard. Somewhere behind us, Trent remains in Unity's hands, being transformed into something he never chose to be. The irony is bitter—everything the final protocol stood against, everything mymother designed me to prevent, now being forced upon the man I love.

The thought catches me off guard. Love. Such a simple word for such a complicated feeling. When did I cross that line from partnership to something deeper? Was it during our synchronized neural connections as Sentinels? During our escape from Unity? In those quiet moments at the outpost when everything else fell away?

Does it even matter now, with Trent transformed into something else?

"What did they do to him?" I ask, the question directed as much to myself as to Vex. "I've never seen movement like that, not even from modified operators."

"Something new," Vex says grimly. "Based on what I saw, they're combining modification types. Sentinel precision with predator speed." He looks at me directly. "Possibly with adaptive capabilities like yours."

The perfect weapon. A soldier with the best of all modifications, controlled completely by Unity.

"We'll find a way to reach him," I say, determination hardening within me. "To break whatever programming they've implemented."

Vex doesn't contradict me, though his expression suggests he's less confident in that possibility.

As our transport continues its journey toward temporary safety, I find myself remembering Trent's last moment of clarity—that brief second when he broke through Unity's control to help us escape. If he could do that once, he could do it again. Whatever they've done to his body, to his mind, some essential part of him remains.

I have to believe that. I have to hold onto hope that the man who sacrificed everything for me multiple times isn't gone completely. That somewhere beneath Unity's modifications and control, Trent is still fighting.

Fighting to come back to me.

The transport slows as we approach a hidden valley—the rendezvous point where we'll transfer to more secure transportation for the journey to the secondary sanctuary. As we disembark, I take one last look toward the horizon where Resonance lies hidden in the distance.

"I'm coming back for you," I whisper, a promise carried away by the morning wind. "Whatever it takes."

CHAPTER 32

Trent Vanguard kneelsin the center of what was once Resonance's council chamber, now transformed into Unity's command center. The pain of the modifications has subsided, leaving a strange clarity in its wake. Every sense heightened, every movement precise, every thought focused with perfect Sentinel discipline.

And yet, something else moves beneath that discipline—a new awareness, a fluidity of thought and motion that feels both foreign and strangely right.

Director Mercer circles him slowly, studying his newest asset with clinical satisfaction. His footsteps echo on the polished floor, the sound unnaturally crisp to Trent's enhanced hearing.

"The escape was managed exactly as you predicted," Mercer observes. "Though I question the necessity of allowing the modified Splinter to live."

"He's essential to maintaining her trust," Trent responds, voice steady despite the lingering rawness in his throat. "When I bring her back, she needs to believe my 'recovery' is genuine."

Mercer stops, looking down at him with calculated interest. "Is it difficult? Maintaining this deception against someone you were once...close to?"