BLOODCAPE -
Chapter 157: Ghost Logic
Chapter 157: Chapter 157: Ghost Logic
The metal of the access ladder was slick with old coolant.
Hernan’s gloves came away damp and stinking of something between oil and mold. He didn’t mind. The stink grounded him. Anchored him to the moment.
He descended in silence, boots scraping down the narrow rungs into the dim-lit sublevel beneath Tower 12 — the steel-bone understructure once used to ferry ballast cargo during the early infrastructure build-out. Now it was just cables, rusted rails, and the faint throb of backup power lines no one had serviced in over a decade.
He touched down on the shaft floor.
Above, through the open ceiling channel, he could still hear the wind chewing at the edges of the killbox shell — but down here, in the pulse of concrete and bare circuitry, it was quieter than it should’ve been.
He tapped his comm twice, voice low. "Stand down all fireteams. Full retreat. No hostiles confirmed."
A pause.
Then Nico’s voice: "Say again?"
"You heard me."
"Sir, you just walked a code-black target into a kill grid. You told me to prep for a perimeter collapse and fail-safe. What changed?"
Hernan’s eyes didn’t leave the long corridor ahead. The shaft curved away into industrial gloom, lights flickering in a heartbeat rhythm — a rhythm his own body no longer followed.
"I’m changing the parameters," he said. "The phrase Renz spoke — it was seeded. A false trigger. One of ours. Buried in sleeper code years ago. Planted to bait real assets."
Nico didn’t respond right away. But Hernan could hear the shift — the slight adjustment in his breathing. The kind of pause that only came from someone trying to decide whether to believe or obey.
Eventually: "You sure about that, sir?"
"No," Hernan admitted. "But I’m sure he’s not what we thought. Not entirely."
He flicked his fingers against a cracked terminal embedded in the wall, switching to a secondary channel. "Relay the subject to containment. Black Cell 3B. Full sensory suppression. Alive. Restrained."
A beat. Then Nico, quieter now. "Understood. Escorts en route."
Hernan waited.
A new ping hit his private line — Aya. Closer than she should’ve been. He opened the link.
"Aya."
"Listening."
"I want a trace," Hernan said. "Deep. The name’s Calia Nyx."
A breath. Then: "Not in HeroNet?"
"She’s too clean for that. I want ex-field sources. Ghost-side files. Use your off-registry list — the names you don’t log."
"You think she made Renz?"
"I think she made something. If it wasn’t him, it’s worse."
Another beat of silence passed between them, filled only by the quiet hiss of forgotten ventilation.
"If you find proof," Hernan added, "you bring it to me. No one else."
"What if he asks?"
"Lie."
"...Understood."
The line clicked dead.
He continued deeper into the corridor — past rusted gates, down a sloped hall flanked by obsolete mag-coils and disused conduits that hummed like they remembered what power felt like. The door to the auxiliary containment bay opened without sound. A whisper-seal disengaged magnetically, admitting him into a chamber without heat.
Black Cell 3B.
A single chair in the middle of the room. Bound restraints, hard steel. One man in it.
Renz.
No fight. No struggle. His posture was composed — as if he’d strapped himself in and simply waited. His eyes half-lidded. No sedation. No overt stress. He looked like someone sitting through an appointment he didn’t remember making.
Hernan stood at the monitor-glass. Arms folded. Visor dimmed against the overhead glare.
Above, the screen streamed Renz’s vitals — slow heart rate, low neural activity, respiration barely above sleep-state. No spikes. No distress.
Just stillness.
But not emptiness.
Renz’s head tilted slightly — not toward the glass. Not toward the door. Toward nothing.
As if listening to something only he could hear.
Hernan leaned forward, just enough to speak through the vent slit near the base of the observation wall.
Not enough to be heard.
Just enough to be recorded.
"Let’s see if ghosts talk when no one’s listening."
And then he turned and left.
Black Cell 3B was tuned for erasure.
No light. No echo. No trace of temperature, air flow, or external presence. The white noise that filled the chamber wasn’t quite static — it was a low-frequency hum engineered to cancel out neural rhythm perception. Silence wouldn’t be silent here. Even thought would be swallowed.
Renz sat in the center, restrained at the arms, ankles unlocked. They hadn’t sedated him — which meant either confidence, or curiosity. He didn’t mind. There was nothing to resist.
Not yet.
He breathed evenly.
Then, eventually, spoke — not loud, not to the room, not even to himself.
Just to something.
"I can’t remember the lyrics," he said. "Just the sound. A melody with a flat second, two octaves above middle C. It cuts off before it ends. Every time."
No echo.
He waited for the silence to speak.
It didn’t.
"I heard it in the showers," he continued. "Not our showers. Somewhere else. Tiles were darker. Air colder. The walls were wrong. Absorbed sound. You could scream and it wouldn’t bounce."
He let out a dry laugh. It vanished before it finished.
"I think I did scream. Maybe more than once. Or maybe it wasn’t me."
His fingers twitched against the arm restraints. Reflexive. Remembering a motion they hadn’t made yet.
"There’s a field," he said quietly. "Red plastic flowers. Rows. Neatly spaced. Not real. They caught the light too well. One white one in the center. No wind."
He exhaled, slowly.
"And her. The woman."
He swallowed.
"She didn’t move. Just stood at the edge. Outline only. No face. Hair down. Hands behind her back. She had two voices. One called me by name. The other didn’t use names at all."
Another pause.
"I think the second voice is the one I followed."
He blinked. Not out of fatigue. Out of need. The only thing anchoring him to the idea of still having a body.
"I don’t think I ever joined Mercury," he said. "I think I woke up one morning with the badge in my hand and a backstory someone else rehearsed for me."
He flexed his right hand.
"Why do I always reach left first?"
A whisper of leather.
"That’s not how I was trained."
His breath was calm. Too calm.
"You made me perfect. But you didn’t erase the corners. The places where the dream doesn’t match the script. I flinch at certain words. I taste blood when I hear the phrase ’Concord Collapse.’ I hate orange-flavored saline, and I don’t know why."
He leaned forward slightly. The restraints held, but they flexed.
"You gave me everything. Reflexes. Precision. The perfect cover. But you left questions in the cracks."
He smiled. Just once. It didn’t last.
"You built me to be loyal. But you didn’t remove the doubt."
Another silence.
Then, softly — as if addressing a god or a ghost:
"If you built me to die here... why did you give me questions instead of orders?"
No reply.
Just white noise.
And the slow, steady breath of a man who’d just begun to remember he had once been someone else.
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