BLOODCAPE
Chapter 92 – The Quiet Debrief

Chapter 92: Chapter 92 – The Quiet Debrief

The room wasn’t built for comfort.

It was built for containment — of sound, of emotion, of secrets.

Thick black walls smothered even the softest whisper. The floor, soft steel composite, absorbed impact. No clatter of boots. No echo. No distraction. Just sterile air, cold light, and the low murmur of deep-analysis processors humming like a nervous heart.

Four figures stood in a half-moon around the central table.

At the front, a high-resolution projection hung in silence. Hernan, mid-stride in District 3, arm extended in a calculated arc. Opposite him, the silhouette of a child — caught mid-motion in the half-second before impact.

Behind the still frame, the shadows seemed to lean in.

Commander Ryl stood to the side, arms folded, gaze fixed and unblinking. Her optic lens emitted a soft whine — not malfunction, but capture. Recording everything.

Beside her, Dr. Camilla Varn, Zodiac psychology division — long coat, sleepless eyes, no tolerance for ceremony. Her expression was glass.

Two silent techs at the rear managed frame tags, heart rate overlays, and micro-expression diagnostics. Neither dared interrupt.

And in the center stood Leo.

Zodiac Leo.

Unmoving.

Watching.

One muscle in his jaw ticked like a clock about to ring.

Camilla’s voice broke the silence.

"Play it again."

The footage ran at a quarter speed. No audio. Just the logic of movement.

Step.Child.Gun raised.Rotation.Disarm.Wrist.Crack.

The screen froze.

Camilla’s fingers danced across her tablet.

"That’s not instinct," she said. "That’s preconditioned memory. He didn’t adapt. He executed."

Ryl didn’t look away from the screen. "He neutralized a threat."

Camilla’s tone sharpened. "He neutralized a scenario. With zero hesitation, zero variability. Not even a twitch of internal doubt. That’s not training — that’s programming."

She gestured. The screen split into biometric overlays.

"Look. Cortisol baseline: flat. Heart rate delta: unregistered. Pupils constricted before contact, not after."

Ryl lifted her chin. "You think he’s a plant?"

"No. I think he’s something worse."

Camilla stepped closer to the image. "He behaves like someone who’s trained to hide their training."

Leo finally moved. Tapped the center of the table. The playback restarted.

Slower now.

Frame by frame.

No flinching. No adjustment. No hint of uncertainty.

Just surgical rhythm.

Like the decision had been made long before the moment arrived.

They watched it twice more.

On the third run, Camilla spoke again.

"Most cadets aim to impress. They perform with ego. Arrogance. He doesn’t. He calculates."

Ryl’s voice was low. "You afraid of him?"

"I don’t fear masks," Camilla said. "But I pay attention to ones that don’t come off."

Leo didn’t respond. He was already walking toward the back wall, toward a console sealed behind biometric lock.

Ten minutes later, the room was empty.

Only Leo remained.

The lights dimmed into the walls. The screen showed a still image — Hernan gripping the boy’s wrist, body mid-rotation, execution flawless.

Leo stood at the center of the dark.

He zoomed in.

Frame 1427.

Hernan’s face.

Not blank.

Not smug.

Not uncertain.

But behind the practiced calm, buried so deep the algorithm hadn’t flagged it, there was something else.

Satisfaction.

Not the kind that comes from doing a job right.

The kind that comes from finally getting to do it.

Leo turned to the secure console. Logged in manually. Accessed the file that had no right being this clean.

Rook Vale.

Standard background. Standard screening. No parents on record. Drafted from the Vano ruins under the Deferred Hero Protocol. Combat scores exemplary. Emotional evaluations "stable."

Too stable.

He tunneled down.

Hit an encryption wall.

Then something deeper.

A partial overwrite. Genetic data archived — incomplete.

Only one line had survived.

SUBJECT LINK: Solaris-Class Bio/Combat Sync Profile — ARCHIVE LEVEL 3 (RESTRICTED)

Leo stared at it.

Not surprised.

Not alarmed.

But... something.

Something old stirring beneath the surface of his composure.

He let the silence stretch.

Then returned to the screen. Played the moment again. Slower.

One step. One wrist. One choice.

A shadow flickered in the child’s eye — red light. Surveillance lens. Not visible to most.

Leo caught it.Watched it blink.

Always watched.

The access lounge hummed softly.

It was after 2 a.m.

Most cadets were asleep, or pretending. The only movement came from soft drone lights flickering behind the half-dimmed privacy glass of Terminal 4.

Tessa sat inside, hunched low, eyes dry from hours of screen light. Her hand trembled slightly against the keypad, but she ignored it.

What she’d seen earlier still lived behind her eyes.

The mission.The child.Hernan’s face after.

Too calm. Too willing.

Not even interested in whether they’d passed. Not even curious about the test.

He’d looked like someone checking a box.

She keyed in her sister’s override string — the one she wasn’t supposed to have.

Delta trace, Varn priority ghost string.

The screen blinked.

ACCESS GRANTED – TIER-2 PROTOCOL OVERRIDE

She exhaled.

This was reckless.This was stupid.

But her gut had started screaming two days ago and hadn’t stopped since.

She started simple.

Search: Rook Vale.

The results came back too fast.

Public footage. Clean highlight reels. Orientation logs. Sanitized behavioral tags. No youth record. No biometric drift. Not even a misfiled allergy record.

Too perfect.

Too manufactured.

She tried again.

Search: Zodiac Internship Draft – Selection Logs

Vale hadn’t been on any list.

Until three hours before the announcement.

Insert Authorization: [ZC-1 AUTH INSERT - TIMELOCK: 0037h]

Leo’s override. But unsigned. Untraceable.

She stared at it.

Then shifted focus.

Search: District 3 – Combat Events (5 to 10 years ago)

Most results were locked. But one came up flagged:INCIDENT: SOLARIS ECHODecommissioned. No access.

She tapped it anyway.

The screen flickered.

Only one thumbnail image survived.

It showed a charred hallway. A collapsed figure. Smoke damage. Partial breach scars.

But behind it, above the rubble, through a half-broken glass panel...

A symbol.

Interlocking rings. A sunburst.

Tessa’s eyes widened.

She’d seen that before. On a memorial wall they’d taken down. Something old. Something buried.

Solar Paragon.

She didn’t know what it meant.

But her gut did.

This was tied to Hernan. To Rook Vale. To whatever he wasn’t telling anyone.

She printed the image.

Folded it. Slid it into her jacket.

Logged off.

Erased her access string. Wiped her fingerprints.

Then walked out into the hall.

She didn’t hear the soft pivot above her — the ceiling drone shifting its lens to follow.

Didn’t feel the quiet blink of the red light above her head.

Didn’t know someone else had been watching her... too.

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