Dr. Elara Vance stared at the file icon on her screen. It looked innocuous—a tiny, zipped folder named . But its presence on the secure intranet of the Aethelburg Institute of Botanical Ethics had just triggered a silent, priority-one alert.
Issue 17 was different. It had no author listed. It had no abstract. And it had been deleted from every server, every backup, and every printed log the day after it was created. Officially, it never existed. Unofficially, the Institute’s founder, Dr. Silas Thorne, had called it “the fruit that sees you back.”
Elara double-clicked.
Beneath the image were the clinical notes.
She opened her eyes. The hallway was dark. But from the direction of the vault, she heard a soft, wet cracking sound—like a seed splitting in the dark, growing toward light that wasn’t there. Issue 17 Forbidden Fruit.rar
Elara slammed her laptop shut. But the image was burned onto her retina: the glowing arils, the bruised skin. Forbidden. And yet, somewhere in this building, in a locked vault she’d walked past a hundred times, a single seed of Issue 17 remained. Silas had kept one. “For reference,” he’d said.
She almost believed it.
She told herself it was the pipes.