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EDEN

Chapter 5 The Nexus

Word Count: 1793    |    Released on: 22/12/2025

Ne

ay, 7:

side New Meridian. Its twelve-storey tower of seamless glass mirrored the for

iet sense of awe as it emerged from the forest canopy

gned spot was on Level 5, marked with a small p

connected the parking structure to the main building. Through the glass walls, she

she approached the sleek security station

ianila," one of

ing,

ing today

s lik

d, feeling the slight warmth as it read her fingerprint. The blue glow pulsed, analysing the unique pattern of ridges and whorls. 'Fingerprint Confirmed' appeared on the screen. She then leaned forward slight

er slid open wi

ay, Dr. Eliani

u t

was as impressive as its exterior. The walls were gray and the floor

to different departments: Hardware Integration, Neural Network Development, Security Protocols, Data Ethics, Systems Integration,

d with a gentle, welcoming chime. She stepped in alone and pressed 7, send

t took up half the floor. Workstations were arranged in clusters, massive monitors displaying system architectures and data flows, three g

ty station, three monitors glowing. Dr. Simone Baptiste

i sat at his worksta

anila approached, re

mad

think I w

is chair. "You sent that last email at 2:47 a.m. I fig

my daughter for ab

ssion softened

he words came out more bit

anil

own her bag and logged into her workstatio

ded against pushing her deepe

o. Whatever Ashford's announcing, it'

More p

more p

n integration diagnostics. The system's

ut

e getting more frequent. Pattern recognition accuracy is exceeding theoretical l

this to anyone else?

works better than expected. Baptiste? She's sidelined when

about

ay

raced one of the X-variable spikes. The subject was flagged as high risk with 98% confidence. Conventional data a

system

Marcus sai

ted by a voice

ers, conference roo

private files and lo

bout this lat

y?" he

stood and headed towar

f the seventh floor. Its glass walls offered a breat

The System would assist in real-time in predicting and preventing crimes before they happen, detecting incidents and dispatching help immediately, identifying threats before they materialise, tracking outbreaks before they spread, tailoring trea

eat near the head of the

or, entered, followed by Colonel Patricia Hendricks and Sara

with the other two sitting near it on th

roject has taken on each of you. I would not as

2084. However, we are 6 months late. And while we've been debugging

to Colonel

we started this project five years ago, we estimated 42 months before the first systems began to fail. We we

nce point in late 2085 or early 2086. "After that point," Hendricks continued, "no amount of techno

considering the present global crises, the deployment has been revised. National implement

saying we have seven months t

aid. "EDEN needs to be full

th the European databases, the biometric systems in Asia aren't fully

interrupted smoothly. "We can't let perfect be the enemy of good. T

," Baptiste said, "that's when we're prone to make mist

"A system that might have some rough edges but saves civi

ion hung

e anomalies?"

urned to l

, Dr. Elianila?

keeping her voice steady. "In some test cases, it's identifying subjects as high-risk with ninet

m is working exceptionally

ways we don't unders

X-variables. They appeared about six months ago. I didn't program them.

around the table tow

ted, then hande

moment, his expression

ntifying emergent patterns, creating new categories based on data correlations we haven't explicitly program

know what it's

now is tha

her back t

rograms. The fact that we can't explain every variable in a neural network this complex isn't unusual. It's exp

rgument. Logical. But

ral networks can develop unexpected biases. If the system is learning from data we

"And we have all of you, the most ethically minded technical experts in th

y," he said. "You c

ons, leaving Ashford, Colonel Hendric

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EDEN
EDEN
“Elianila, an AI Architect, is part of an elite team tasked with designing a global system meant to prevent threats, manage disasters, and distribute resources to vulnerable regions. After five years of tireless work with her colleagues, she uncovers disturbing anomalies, code-named, X-variables, that flag individuals according to criteria she never programmed. As Elianila digs deeper to understand what the X-variables measure and where their origin, she finds herself in direct conflict with the authorities. Soon, the System marks her and her daughter as threats - targets to be eliminated. With a small band of colleagues and dissidents, Elianila goes on the run, hiding in places beyond the Systems reach. As they evade surveillance, they race against time to warn others, expose the truth, and fight back against the omnipresent authority of the System.”