LOGINBehind the counter, the espresso machine screeched, drowning out the gray noise of Nova City's morning rush.
Lina Rossi sat in the back, watching the street through the rain-streaked glass. Across from her, Marvin James—the Herald’s star-eyed intern—was busy murdering a plastic straw with his teeth. He was halfway through a ten-minute rant about his rent hike and Perla’s impossible deadlines.
"Three features on the gala, Lina. Three!" Marvin hissed, his eyes wide with caffeine. "How many ways can I describe Councilman Blankenship’s tie without blowing my brains out?"
To anyone else, it was just a mentor comforting a burned-out rookie. Lina didn't look at him. She looked at the reflection of the door. No black sedans. No heavy shadows in suits.
"Welcome to the meat grinder, kid," Lina said, her voice flat. "Perla doesn't want reporters. She wants stenographers who don't ask questions."
"I didn't go to J-school for this," Marvin sighed, dropping the mangled straw. "I want to do the real stuff. You know, like the Pier 7 piece."
Lina leaned in. The table was sticky with spilled sugar. "Real journalism in this city gets you a one-way ticket to a morgue, Marvin. It gets men following you home. It gets your phone tapped and your life dismantled."
Marvin stopped fidgeting. He looked at the gray hollows under Lina’s eyes. "Is that why you disappeared? Are you in trouble, Rossi?"
"I’m radioactive," Lina said. "Sit here much longer and you’ll start glowing too. So I’m going to give you a choice. You can finish that ice water and go back to writing about caviar, or you can help me."
Marvin swallowed hard. His eyes darted to the exit, then back to Lina. The fear was there, but so was the itch—the one that makes people do stupid things for a headline. "What do you need?"
"I need to get into the Herald archives. Underground. Perla swapped the codes, but the physical locks on the service stairwell are old. I need a distraction at the front desk to pull the night shift away for five minutes."
"You want me to... help you break into our own building?" Marvin’s voice cracked. "Lina, they’ll blacklist me. I’ll be delivering pizzas by Monday."
"You won't be breaking in. You're an intern with a late-night deadline and a craving for overpriced takeout," Lina corrected him. She didn't look at him as she slid a folded, grease-stained napkin across the table. Inside was a map of the basement and a frequency for the security walkies.
"Midnight," she said, her tone as casual as if she were editing his lead paragraph. "When your delivery guy shows up, make sure the lobby guards are busy with a 'spilled coffee' incident or a broken elevator. Channel four on the radio."
Marvin stared at the napkin. His hand trembled as he reached for it, palming the paper and shoving it deep into his pocket.
"Got it," he whispered."Good. Don't be late," Lina said. She grabbed her coat and stepped out into the drizzle, leaving Marvin alone with his melting ice and a very dangerous secret.
The rain wasn't a "relentless drizzle"—it felt like needles stabbing Lina’s neck. She pressed against the wet brick of the alley, ice water trickling down her collar.
She tapped the cheap Bluetooth earpiece. "Marvin. Talk to me. Don't die on me now."
The breathing on the other end sounded like a broken bellows. "I can't do this, Rossi. My palms are soaking the sofa. Stan’s just sitting there... he’s got a taser. It looks big enough to fry me."
"It’s a taser and a thermos, Marvin. He’s a retired mall cop, not a Navy SEAL." Lina hissed, trying to anchor the kid’s sanity. "Watch the elevators. Don't stare at the side door. The more you look at it, the more you look like a thief."
"I feel like my forehead says 'Guilty' in neon..."
"You're a sleep-deprived intern waiting for carbs. Own it. Stick to the plan."
11:58 PM. A beat-up scooter backfired at the corner, sounding like a gunshot.
"Pizza's here. Move."
Inside the lobby, a guy in a neon poncho burst in, boots squeaking like a dying animal on the marble.
"Hey! Order for Floor 50! P. Shaw!" the driver bellowed, his Brooklyn accent shattering the quiet.
"Building’s closed. Leave it on the desk," Stan didn't even look up.
"Leave it? I rode across the city for three bucks tip! It says 'Personal Delivery' right here!" The driver started slapping the counter.
"I said leave it!" Stan stood up, moving away from the monitors to argue.
Now.
Lina bolted. Her boots hit the wet pavement with a muffled slap. She jammed the copied key into the service lock—her hands were shaking so hard it took two tries to find the slot.
Click.
She slipped inside, hugging the wall.
"Stan, look, maybe Shaw ordered it before she left. She's been a nightmare lately," Marvin chimed in, shoving his glowing phone screen into the guard's face to block his view. "Look, the address matches..."
Lina stayed low, scurrying into the security booth like a stray cat. The desk was a mess of half-eaten sandwiches and ash. She saw it: the white plastic card on a coiled lanyard.
She snatched it. The plastic was warm, smelling of the guard’s cheap tobacco.
She didn't linger. She backed out, heart hammering against her ribs, and dove into the stairwell.
"Alright, fine! Leave the damn pies and get out!" Stan’s muffled roar was cut off as the fire door hissed shut.
Lina leaned against the cold concrete, gasping.
"Card secured, Marvin. Take the pizza and get back to your desk. Don't call me again."
"Oh god..." Marvin sounded like he was going to cry. "I almost threw up on him. Good luck, Rossi."
The line went dead. Lina started the descent.
Sub-level three. The air was dry, cold, and tasted of old paper and neglect. A massive steel door stood before her, the red sensor glowing like an angry eye.
She swiped the card.
Beep. Green.
The door groaned open with a heavy metallic sigh, revealing a lightless void—the Herald’s cemetery of secrets. Lina pulled the brass key from her boot, her fingers tight on the cold metal. She was in the dark now, and the truth was somewhere in the dust.
Their leader didn't look back. He shrugged, turned, and walked out into the rain. His eleven men followed, their shapes folding into the fog.Taro pressed his spine flat against the splintering wood, eyes wild. "They're leaving. They're breaking the line.""They're mutinying!" Yosuke ripped his empty magazine out and slammed a fresh one home. "The Chairman ordered this raid. They can't just walk!""The Chairman's an old man reading spreadsheets in a glass tower," a voice said in Taro's earpiece, level, almost bored.Taro's chest went cold. "Kato. Your boys are breaking formation. They're leaving us exposed. Get them back inside.""They're doing exactly what they were told." Kato's voice carried no weight at all, no urgency, nothing Taro could push against. "They're leaving you in the dirt."A bullet tore through Taro's shoulder pad before he could answer. "You're selling out Ichiro.""We answer to Shinjiro now, Taro. Not the old man." Something in Kato's tone almost passed for amuseme
Trent sat in his parked sedan across from the precinct, a cheap digital recorder pressed against the phone's receiver. Four days of unanswered calls to Wallace had used up whatever patience he'd started with. Through the foggy windshield, the building's windows were mostly dark except for the duty desk on the ground floor.It had taken him most of an afternoon to get here — a procurement filing nobody but a city clerk had read in years, a name buried on the fourth page of a maintenance bid that had no business being there: Meridian Holdings, the same name he'd later match against a routing code on a Sentinel Cement customs log a contact had let him glance at for ninety seconds and no longer. He didn't have the whole picture. He had enough pieces of it to sound like he did, which, for what he was about to try, would have to be sufficient.He dialed the precinct's main line and pitched his voice low, flat, official-sounding in a way that had worked on smaller departments before."This i
Water dripped from the cracked ceiling, splashing into the dark subway tunnel.Kenji leaned against a rusted train car, flicking a silver lighter open and shut.Headlights cut the dark. A black SUV rolled over the muddy tracks and killed the engine. Shinjiro stepped out in tactical gear, Kato right behind him with a duffel bag.Shinjiro marched straight to his uncle. "The old man gave the green light. He wants Dominic Moretti dead.""What's the play?" Kenji snapped the lighter shut."Midnight, flat out, at Pier 4," Shinjiro said. "Ichiro bought out the whole dock tonight. He wants a bloodbath.""He wants a free pass, kid." Kenji's eyes narrowed. "But we aren't fighting his war."Shinjiro reached into his vest, pulled out a folded sheet of paper, and slammed it against the train car. A list of names."The Chairman doesn't trust anyone," Shinjiro growled, tapping the top. "The old bastard planted eyes inside my own Vanguard crew."Kenji stepped closer. "Who's leaking?""Taro's running t
The mahogany desk felt cold under his palms. Director Gabe stared at his monitor, blue light reflecting off his glasses, scrolling through the station surveillance logs. Agent Wallace's activity profile showed a three-hour gap from last night — unauthorized terminal access deep in the mainframe, unexplained.Gabe leaned closer. He clicked over to Moss's field reports. Nothing. Total silence — not a single violent engagement, not one tactical encounter logged.He tapped his pen hard against the wood. "They're running their own goddamn game," he muttered.He snatched the desk phone, slamming his thumb into the intercom. "Send Wallace in. Right now. Stop blinking and get him through that door."A minute later, Wallace stepped into the office, hands deep in his coat pockets. Gabe sat back, tracking the agent's rigid posture."You've been poking around places you don't belong, Wallace. Three hours logged into the secure database yesterday. What the hell were you looking for?"Wallace shift
The rain had stopped by the time Wallace reached the 24-hour fitness center on the edge of the financial district. The neon sign above the entrance buzzed weakly, half its letters burned out. He pushed through the glass doors, dripping onto the rubber mat, and the night clerk behind the counter barely looked up from his phone."Forgot my key fob," Wallace muttered, flashing a membership card he'd had for three years and used maybe six times. The clerk waved him through without a word.The locker room smelled of bleach and old sweat. Empty at this hour — just the hum of a vending machine and a single shower dripping somewhere behind the tile wall. Wallace walked past the rows of lockers, counting under his breath, until he reached the last one in the back corner, half-hidden behind a stack of folded towels nobody had picked up in days.He'd rented this locker eight months ago under a fake name, paid cash every renewal. Nobody at the bureau knew it existed. Nobody at the bureau knew Wal
Sophia slammed her fingers onto the mechanical keys, the clattering filling the basement. The blue light from the monitors washed over her face.Lina leaned over the table, dragging a marker across a freshly printed spreadsheet."Vance wasn't lying," Lina muttered, staring at the numbers. "The routing numbers match the Panama shell entities perfectly. He wanted to keep his teeth.""I'm into the financial mainline now," Sophia said, hitting the enter key. Green numbers cascaded down the left screen.Lina pulled a steel chair forward and sat down. "Where's the money crashing, Soph? Track the final buyouts. Don't let the trail go cold."Sophia highlighted a dense block of data. "Ninety percent is landing in the corporate accounts for Sentinel Cement. Old man Ichiro is dumping everything he's got into locking down the concrete supply. He's buying the whole market.""And the other ten?" Lina stared at the glass. "There's a gap right here in the ledger. Isolate it. Now."Sophia switched to
Across town, Moss didn't bother knocking. She threw her weight into the glass door, slamming it open as she marched into the Internal Affairs corner office.Deputy Chief Adam Leo sat behind his mahogany desk, spinning a silver pen as he adjusted his tie. He didn't look up.Moss stepped up and slamm
Dominic hustled through the damp service tunnel, wearing a grease-stained maintenance uniform and following the old map Alexei had shoved into his hands.The low rumble of gunfire vibrated through the ceiling. Upstairs, Hugo was turning the fourth-floor corridor into a warzone.Dominic hauled himse
The progress bar on the screen hit a hundred percent.Adam Leo leaned back, a slow grin cutting his face as the green light pulsed on his monitor. He picked up the burner phone and dialed."The package is in your server," Leo said, his voice flat."Got it," the Tokyo liaison replied through the sta
The monitor glowed in the dark. Shinjiro leaned forward, his eyes glued to the security feed. On screen, Dominic was breaking—screaming at three contractors before slamming his phone into a concrete wall.Shinjiro laughed, tapping the mahogany. "Look at the piece of trash. He’s done. The whole More







