CHAPTER TWO: THE OTHER GHOST
He didn't use his real name anymore.
That had been erased, traded, left behind in places that didn't ask questions.
Now, he was just Nex—a whisper in the black-market channels, a shadow in
the breach logs, a man who never showed up on thermal scans or facial
databases. He was in his mid-thirties,
angular but strong, with quiet eyes that held weight—not the kind that asked
for attention, but the kind that watched everything. His clothing was plain,
muted. His movements efficient, never wasted. Everything he needed, he carried
inside: the timing, the patience, and the refusal to panic. He wasn't a genius. He was disciplined. He
didn't predict the future. He just prepared for every version of it. That had been enough.
Location: Singapore –
Virelux Corporate Vault – 3:16 AM
The city below didn't matter. He moved through it like he belonged to the
sky instead. He Perched on a rooftop,
coat catching the wind, and scanned the building's shell. Five cameras.
Fourteen motion paths. Two heat signatures. One chance—thirteen seconds
wide. He dropped, landing soundless on
the 22nd-floor terrace, and approached a glass wall designed to read executive
retinas. He didn't have one, but his contact lenses flickered, cycling through
six stolen eye profiles. The system hesitated, misread him, and then defaulted.
The door hissed open. Inside, he caused
the camera feed to loop three seconds of empty hallway—playing back in real
time. When he reached the fingerprint reader near the end of the hallway, he
raised a gloved hand. A thin filament warmed to body temp and matched the exact
skin pattern. The scanner blinked green.
Sublevel 2. The vault room held no
guards. Just a door and a chance. He tapped the disc on his palm. The Shard.
Not invisibility—just silence. The sensors no longer noticed him, so there were
no alerts because there was no movement registered. He became background noise.
At the center of the vault there was a small, sealed case no bigger than a
shoebox. Quantum-locked. He crouched and pulled a slim tool from his coat, and
cooled the surface by three degrees. Faint heat traces appeared, the finger
patterns from the last access. He mimicked them, matched the pressure, and
timed the sequence in reverse.
Click.
The case opened to reveal a polished data
core the size of a matchbook, with no markings. Worth millions and potentially
catastrophic. He slid it into his jacket
while at the same time leaving behind a trace—his ghost signature; a brief loop
of his presence to fool the vault sensors. Enough time to vanish. Outside, the hallway cameras watched him walk
the opposite direction. Three blocks away,
he stepped into the warm night. No
alarms. No breach. No trace. One hour
later, in a high-rise suite overlooking the marina, Nex set the core on the
table and peeled off his gloves. The job was done and the client would get what
they paid for. Once again, the world had
no idea he'd ever been inside.
Later –
Nex's Home, California – 5:14 AM
The compound rested
behind 10-foot walls, nestled in the hills above the city—a minimalist estate
of slate, dark glass, and silence. It didn't have a paper trail or a name on
the title, and was purchased under a five-tier shell corporation, so the house technically
didn't exist. 5,000 square feet sat on a
full acre of land, surrounded by trees deliberately grown to jam long-range
visuals and thermal tracking. Nex's
nondescript middle class business car pulled into the furthest space of a 4 car
garage, seemingly out of place next to a Brabus 900 prototype Mercedes and a
midnight black Lamborghini Reventon. He entered through a biometric gate,
stepping into a space that most would call luxury—clean angles, cool ambient
light, Japanese stonework, and a cascading wall of filtered water. But Nex
hadn't designed it for comfort. He designed it for control. He walked barefoot through the high-ceilinged
foyer, ignoring the master suite, the chef's kitchen, and the custom library
with books arranged by pattern, not genre.
Only one room ever mattered here. The Office.
From the outside, it
looked like a high-end executive's sanctuary with a polished obsidian desk,
wall-mounted screens, minimalist art, and leather furniture worth more than
some cars. But inside the structure were layered secrets. He slid into the
chair and placed the core in a cold-lock case beneath the floor. Then tapped
the screen.
The upload ticked
upward—97%, 98%…
Complete.
Seven figures hit the
offshore account.
He didn't blink.
Then—a new alert.
Encrypted. Heavy
packet shielding.
GhostArc-87.
He decrypted the
message.
From:
GHOSTARC-87
You've
been watching the board. Time to play your final move.
Unlisted
biotech site. Domestic. High security. Pathogen class: Beyond military-grade.
Codenamed:
CerebrumX.
Payout:
$21.5 million. Clean. Final.
Data
file awaits. Confirm to receive.
Nex leaned back. The
house was silent except for the hum of the distant waterfall and the server
heartbeat under his feet.
This wasn't just
another job.
He recognized the
offer for what it was. Given what was at stake, he didn't hesitate to raise the
pressure, typing a single word into the reply field. This wasn't a phrase, or an acknowledgement
of acceptance.
It was a codeword he
hadn't touched in ten years. But for a job like this, you named your price —
and he was aiming to retire. He rolled the dice.
GAMBIT.
It's meaning was
evident in the reply.
It came almost
instantly.
FORTUNE
FAVORS. 43 million
The file began to download. He got up and
walked confidently to the Master Bedroom.
Outside, the moonlight shown through the trees, casting an army of
shadows onto the manicured grounds.
Inside, on a custom California King sized bed, a different shadow closed
his eyes.
Later
That Morning the file was ready.
A couple
paragraphs populated the screen, followed by large data files containing
current security systems, civil building modifications, structural layouts, and
more.
PROJECT: CEREBRUMX
Inside:
• Mission Briefing: A
clandestine R&D facility in Northern California, buried beneath an
innocuous agricultural lab. Security protocol: level black. Staffed by former
intelligence contractors and deep-shell AI watchdogs.
• Target: A pathogen
unlike any other. Code-named CerebrumX. Originally designed as a cognitive
enhancement therapy. Result: uncontrollable neural evolution. Halted in
pre-human trials.
• Value: Off-market
projections suggest it's worth exceeds $1 billion—if stabilized.
• Side Notes: Three
previous infiltration attempts logged in the last eight years. All failed. All
presumed dead. Internal timestamps suggest time dilation anomalies within
certain test chambers.
One final line pulsed
at the bottom of the document:
Recovery
is possible. Survival is not guaranteed.
Nex studied the data and absorbed it. To say
the job was difficult would be laughable. It was unprecedented. He leaned back,
watching the cascade of schematics and threat analysis rotate around him. And
for the first time in a very long time….
He felt curious.
Location:
Northern California – Perimeter Access Point – 01:14 AM
Rain whispered across the forest canopy
as Nex descended from a glider, landing in a low crouch at the edge of the
ridge. His cloak blurred with the dark
around him. Every movement was silent
and deliberate. His breathing stayed slow and controlled. He moved like he'd
done this a thousand times. He wasn't
sure how many successful jobs he'd done.
He'd lost count years ago. None
of that mattered anyway. To a
professional thief, which is what he was, only one thing ever mattered. Never get caught. The facility was up ahead. It was labeled agricultural on paper. Nothing of the sort in reality.
Two guards flanked a security station
near motion towers. Nex studied them for thirty-seven seconds.
Then slipped forward. A pulse from his
wrist device distorted their implants—just long enough to pass through their
blind spots. Inside, a locked elevator
responded to a forged signal embedded beneath his skin.
Kronos Vault 9.
Two stories down. Guarded by sensors,
air pressure triggers, and an artificial intelligence system watching for even
the slightest shift. But Nex was already
part of the silence. His steps matched
the rhythm of the floor. His presence left no trace. Five checkpoints passed
like breath. Then the chamber.
CerebrumX.
The vial of CerebrumX hung midair,
suspended in a cradle of electromagnetic fields, casting faint ripples in the
cold light.
Nex approached slowly. The air felt
heavier. Even time seemed to resist him.
He scanned for traps twice and found
nothing. Something was wrong. His
instincts had been honed to a razor's edge over the years, and they'd taught
him one powerful lesson. Ignore them, and you die. Right now, they were pulling at the back of
his mind, cautioning him to be vigilant.
There was more going on here.
What had cost the others their lives?
He decided not to touch the vial.
Instead, he circled it carefully, studying the way it hovered —
suspended midair like the moon orbiting Earth.
He scanned again for traps.
Nothing. This was the final
move. He
reached out, fingers steady, ready to sever the vial from its cradle. And
then—he froze. Something shifted.
A whisper of displacement in the air,
almost too faint to notice. He drew his hand back a fraction of an inch, every
instinct flaring to life, and narrowed his eyes. On the far edge of the
containment field, hidden beneath the obvious electromagnetic suspensors, was a
second system — smaller, older, almost forgotten. A mass-sensitive filament,
nearly invisible. A pressure kill-switch, woven into the base. The kind of trap
you don't find with scanners. The kind of trap that waited for arrogance. One
wrong lift — even a shift in the vial's weight — would have triggered a
cascading magnetic collapse. The whole vault would seal. The air would ionize. He
would die in seconds. That's why no one
before him had walked out alive. He
exhaled slowly, recalculating. He reached into his belt, pulling out a flexible
counterweight pad no larger than a coin. Without touching the cradle, he slid
it beneath the vial, syncing the pad's mass calibration with the vial's
gravitational reading — matching it gram for gram. Only when the readings balanced did he move. With
one clean silent lift, he removed the vial.
No alarm. No death. CerebrumX lay cold and alive in his hand. He carefully packed it in a shielded case,
and vanished into the tunnels—gone before the building even noticed it had been
touched. He didn't know who came before
him, but there was one thing he did know.
In this line of work, there was no margin for error.
He was thirty miles
out when he opened the secure case,and froze. CerebrumX was gone. He checked to ensure the containment seal was
intact. He scanned the case for any
breach or thermal loss. Nothing had been
tampered with, but the vial was empty. He checked the logs, sensors, and video
playback. Nothing. It hadn't been
stolen. It had simply… vanished. The
nanofibers in his gloves were still sterile. The interior of the case showed no
sign of disruption. The biometric locks read true. Yet the payload, the
one-of-a-kind biotech compound worth $43 million, was no longer inside. He
stood there for a full minute, perfectly still, while his mind calculated every
possible angle. He hadn't been outplayed.
This was something different, some type of systemic anomaly or a trick
of matter. A phenomenon he hadn't accounted for, but either way It didn't
matter. At this level of operation, consequences were no longer negotiable.
There were no second chances and there were zero options for recovery.
Retirement? That was a myth now. This was the truth. He wasn't free, he was compromised.
Six Hours Later – Remote Meet-Up Route,
Northern California Foothills
He was en-route to the meet point on Forest
road, constantly monitoring for overhead satellites or inbound signals. The only sound was the gravel under the tires
and the background growl of the suppressed engine. When he turned into the clearing,
he already knew he was getting set up.
He should've known the second his route was rerouted by a last minute
ping, but what was he supposed to do, run? He ran the odds as three SUVs boxed
him in. Their headlights flared and
eight men stepped out in tactical black with silenced pistols to greet
him. They spoke no words. These were
masters of another craft, and he didn't underestimate their deadliness. He stepped out slowly, hands in the
open…but…something was different. His
mind accelerated immediately. He saw 60
possible outcomes in a quarter second. 3
of them kept him alive. They didn't
expect what happened next.