Page 166 of Broken Sentinel

A flicker of something crosses Trent's face, quickly suppressed. "My loyalty to Unity supersedes personal attachments. You know this."

"Indeed." Mercer gestures for him to stand. "Though I remain curious about the extent of your neural integration. The modifications should be affecting emotional centers as well as physical capabilities."

Trent rises with fluid grace that would have been impossible before the modifications. Every movement precise yet somehow predatory, a perfect blend of Sentinel training and Splinter adaptation.

"The emotional responses remain," he acknowledges. "But they're contained. Useful rather than distracting."

"Excellent." Mercer turns to the tactical display dominating one wall. "And Thorne's daughter? You believe she'll return?"

"She will." No hesitation, no doubt. "I gave her just enough hope to ensure it. That moment of 'breaking through' the programming was...convincing."

Mercer's expression reveals nothing of his thoughts. "The other Haven children remain beyond our reach for now. But with you as our template, Project Duality can advance regardless."

"The integration is stable?" Trent asks, though he already knows the answer. He can feel it, the modifications settling into his cellular structure, becoming part of him rather than foreign additions.

"Remarkably so." Mercer activates a different display, showing genetic sequences in constant flux. "Your Sentinel enhancements provided an ideal foundation. The predator adaptations we extracted from captured Splinters integrated perfectly. And the adaptive capabilities modeled afterThorne's daughter..." He pauses, something like genuine appreciation in his voice. "Truly revolutionary."

Trent studies the display with clinical detachment, seeing his own transformed genetics laid bare. No longer purely human by Unity standards, yet not Splinter either.

Something else entirely.

"And the neural reconfiguration?" he asks.

"Complete," Mercer confirms. "Though we noted some resistance during the final phase. Interesting, given your history of perfect compliance."

Trent's expression remains neutral. "Expected variation within acceptable parameters. The integration was complex."

"Indeed." Mercer studies him for several seconds longer than necessary. "You understand your mission, then?"

"Perfectly." Trent's posture straightens. "When the Haven children attempt to retrieve me, I will allow them to 'succeed.' Infiltrate their secondary sanctuary. Locate the remaining network components. And when the moment is right..."

"You'll bring Thorne's daughter back to us," Mercer finishes. "Along with any other Haven children you can secure."

"Yes, Director."

Mercer turns away, mission parameters established. "Report to Medical for final evaluation. We need to ensure the modifications remain stable under field conditions."

Trent acknowledges the order with a perfect Unity salute, then turns to leave. At the door, he pauses, a momentary hesitation so brief it would be invisible to anyone without enhanced perception.

But Mercer notices. Of course he does. "Is there a problem, Sentinel Vanguard?"

"No, Director." Trent's expression reveals nothing, the perfect mask back in place. "Just reviewing tactical considerations."

Alone in the corridor, moving toward Medical withmeasured steps, Trent allows himself a single unguarded thought—a memory of Zara's face when she saw him break through the programming. The hope in her eyes. The desperation.

The love.

He pushes the memory away. Mission parameters require clarity. Sentiment is inefficient.

And yet, as he reaches Medical, as technicians prepare to evaluate his new capabilities, as Unity prepares to implement the next phase of Project Duality, something stirs deep within his newly modified mind.

A question, perhaps. Or a doubt.

Or maybe just the ghost of the man he once was.

The technician's scanner beeps as it passes over his temples. "Neural pathways showing unusual activity," she notes. "Recalibration may be required."

"Temporary fluctuation," Trent dismisses. "Focus on physical capability evaluation."