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Cracking His Code
Cracking His Code
Author: Quinn Montclair

Chapter 1 – System Failure

last update publish date: 2026-02-12 18:59:00

Oliver

The code is singing.

It’s a rare thing, that perfect, rhythmic hum where the world outside the monitors ceases to exist.

There’s no New York City, no Chelsea penthouse, no traffic noise drifting up from twenty floors below. There’s only the stream of data, the cascade of encryption keys shattering under my fingers, and the adrenaline spiking in my blood like a chemical cocktail.

I lean back in my Herman Miller chair, the leather creaking softly, and adjust my glasses. The blue light from the three-monitor array washes over me, reflecting in the lenses. I can feel the heat of the processors working overtime, a small, contained fire that I control.

"Come on, you corrupt, sanctimonious prick," I whisper, my fingers flying across the mechanical keyboard. The click-clack of the keys is the only sound in the room, a frantic staccato that matches the hammering of my pulse.

I’m deep inside the private server of Senator Augustus Scott.

The man is a pillar of the community, a champion of family values, and, if the encrypted ledger I’m currently decrypting is anything to go by, he’s a lecherous, sexually deviant, corrupt fuck who pays very dangerous people a lot of money to make his problems disappear.

He’s also in cahoots with a foreign government, feeding them information in exchange for eye-watering amounts of money.

My best guess is Russia, but I haven’t found the smoking gun yet. It’s only a matter of time.

This isn't a job. Nobody hired me to do this. I’m not wearing a white hat, and I’m certainly not working for the alphabet agencies my mother so desperately wanted me to join.

I’m doing this because it’s lucrative and I can. Because men like Scott think they can build fortresses out of firewalls and hide their rot behind 2048-bit encryption and nobody will be able to get to it.

I take personal offense to that kind of arrogance. I’m yet to find a system that can keep me out.

It’s how I pay the rent on my luxury apartment in the West Side of Manhattan. Finding what important people want to keep hidden and making them pay me not to let the world know their secrets.

Some people say bribery is an ugly word, I totally disagree. I see it as entrepreneurship.

They have too much money and believe that gives them the right to do shitty things. I have a lifestyle I want to maintain and a way to tease out their secrets. Quid pro quo.

I’m a parasite who leeches off bigger parasites. I’m okay with that.

I’m right in the heart of the system now. Forcing open the final files before I start copying all of it. I lean in closer, my breath catching. This is it. The thread that unravels the sweater.

"Got you," I murmur, reaching for the enter key to initiate the final d******d.

And then the world ends.

It doesn't flicker. It doesn't fade. It snaps.

The monitors die instantly. The whir of the cooling fans cut out, replaced by a silence so sudden and so absolute it feels heavy, pressing against my eardrums.

I freeze. My hand is still hovering over the keyboard, suspended in the dead air.

"No," I say, the word sounding hopeless in the vast, quiet apartment. "No, no, no."

I wait for the backup generator. I spent a fortune on a UPS system that could power a small field hospital. It should have kicked in within milliseconds. The surge protectors should be humming. The backup lights should be flickering on.

Nothing.

I grab the high-powered torch I keep in my desk drawer and click it on, the beam cutting through the dust motes in the air. I shine it under the desk. The UPS is dead. The indicators are black.

This isn’t a power outage.

A power outage doesn't bypass a localized battery backup. A power outage doesn't happen the exact moment I touch the core of a Senator’s illicit activities.

My stomach drops, a sickening sensation of weightlessness, like stepping off a curb that’s higher than you expected.

They didn't just block me. They fried me.

"Level 4 kill switch," I whisper, the realization cold and slimy in my gut.

I stand up, my chair skidding back across the hardwood floor.

I know exactly what just happened. I triggered a passive monitoring daemon in Scott’s system. It didn't alert an admin. It didn't start a trace. It sent a surge back down the line, a digital death impulse designed to fry the hardware on the intruder's end.

But that’s not the worst part. The worst part is that for a kill switch to work that accurately, it needs a lock. A handshake.

They saw me.

They didn't just see a nameless IP address bouncing off a proxy in Estonia. They saw through the tunnel. They saw the endpoint. They know where the signal terminated.

They know where I am.

I’ve been doing this for five years and nobody’s ever uncovered my identity.

Fuck!

I look around the apartment. It’s a beautiful place. Minimalist, expensive, safe. I’ve spent the last two years turning this place into a fortress. I have the best locks money can buy. I have cameras in the hallway. I have a doorman named Reggie who thinks I’m a day trader.

None of that matters now.

If Scott’s people are sophisticated enough to run a kill switch like that, they’re already sending a cleaning crew.

I have to move. Now.

I sprint to the bedroom, my socks sliding on the polished floor. I throw open the closet door and shove aside the rows of designer jackets and vintage denim. I reach for the back panel, popping the false wall loose with a trembling hand.

Behind it sits the bag.

My mother, the terrifyingly competent spy, gave it to me for my twenty-first birthday. She didn't give me a car or a watch. She gave me a black, nondescript tactical backpack filled with cash, burner phones, and three passports with faces that looked like mine but names that didn't belong to me.

You have a talent for trouble, Oliver,” she’d said, her voice dry and clipped. “When you inevitably step on a landmine, don’t wait for the explosion. Run.”

I yank off my pajama bottoms, because of course I’m hacking a government official in my pajamas, and scramble into a pair of black jeans. I pull on a thick hoodie and lace up my boots, my fingers fumbling with the knots.

I hate the way my hands won’t stop shaking, the way my breath is coming in short, shallow gasps. I’m supposed to be the cool, detached observer. I’m the guy who watches the world burn from behind a screen. I’m not supposed to be in the fire.

I grab the knife from my nightstand. It’s a sleek, expensive folding blade I bought because it looked cool on a website. I’ve never used it for anything other than opening A****n packages. It feels ridiculous in my hand, a toy weapon for a boy playing soldier. I shove it into my pocket anyway.

I move back into the living room, keeping low. I don't turn on any lights. I creep toward the window, my heart hammering against my ribs like a fist against a door. I peel back a single slat of the blind, just enough to see the street below.

It’s raining. A light, miserable drizzle that slicks the asphalt of 23rd Street. Traffic is light. A taxi splashes through a puddle. A couple walks by under a shared umbrella.

And there it is.

A black SUV is idling on the corner, directly across from my building. The headlights are off. The engine is running. I can see the white puff of exhaust from the tailpipe.

As I watch, the rear door opens and two men step out. They move with a synchronized efficiency that screams military training. One of them looks up, his gaze locking instantly on my window.

I jerk back, letting the blind snap shut.

They’ve clearly already been studying the plans to this building and they know where every entrance and exit is.

I can’t use the elevator. They’ll have someone watching the lobby, and they’ve surely already hacked the building’s security system. The elevator is a trap.

I’ll have to take the stairs.

I open the door. The hallway is empty. I slip out, closing the door silently behind me. I don't waste time locking it.

I’m on the twentieth floor. That’s a lot of stairs, but I’m very invested in staying alive.

I push through the stairwell door and let it close slowly, guiding the mechanism so it doesn't click. Then I run.

I take the stairs two at a time, gripping the railing so hard my knuckles turn white. I spiral down into the belly of the building, flight after flight. By the tenth floor, my thighs are burning. By the fifth, I’m gasping for air, the sound of my own breathing roaring in my ears.

I hit the bottom landing and burst into the subterranean level of the building. It’s a maze of storage cages and utility pipes. The air is hot and smells of garbage. I navigate through the gloom, heading for the delivery exit that dumps out into the alley behind the building.

I reach the heavy steel door and push the panic bar. It opens with a metallic screech that sounds like a gunshot in the quiet night.

I spill out into the alley. The rain hits my face, cold and shocking. I stumble, catching myself on a dumpster. I’m outside.

But I’m not safe.

I scan the alley. It’s still empty, a narrow canyon of brick and fire escapes. I start to run toward the street, splashing through puddles that soak my expensive boots instantly.

I reach the mouth of the alley and skid to a halt.

A sedan is parked across the entrance. The window rolls down. I see a face, pale, impassive, eyes like glass. A hand starts to raise something black and metallic.

I don't think. I throw myself backward, scrambling behind a stack of wooden pallets just as the thwip-crack of a silenced round chips the brick where my head was a second ago.

"Shit!" I scream, scrambling on my hands and knees back into the darkness of the alley.

They have the back covered. They have the front covered. They’ve boxed me in.

I look up. The fire escape of the adjacent building is rusted, hanging ten feet above the ground. It’s a death trap. But the alternative is the man with the silencer who is currently opening his car door.

I run for the dumpster, vaulting onto the plastic lid. It buckles under my weight, slippery with rain. I jump, my fingers scrabbling for the bottom rung of the ladder.

Cold iron bites into my palms. I swing, my shoulder wrenching painfully, and haul myself up. I don't look down. I climb, the metal groaning under me, vibrating with every step.

I hear footsteps in the alley below. They’re calm. Unhurried. They know I have nowhere to go.

I scramble over the railing onto the first landing and don't stop. I climb to the second floor, then the third. I see an open window, a kitchen, warm light spilling out, the sound of a television.

I don't hesitate. I swing my leg over the sill and tumble inside, landing on a linoleum floor that smells of garlic and onions.

An old woman screams, dropping a ladle.

"Sorry!" I gasp, scrambling to my feet. "Emergency! Fire! Sorry!"

I bolt through her apartment before she can process the soaking wet man in her kitchen. I unlock her front door and burst out into a different hallway, in a different building.

I run until my chest feels like it’s filled with broken glass. I run until the sounds of Chelsea fade into the general roar of the city. I dive into the 14th Street subway station, vaulting the turnstile and nearly colliding with a group of drunk college kids.

I don't stop until I’m on a train. Any train. I don't even look at the letter.

I collapse into a plastic seat in the corner of the car. The lights flicker overhead.

I pull my knees up, wrapping my arms around my bag. I’m shivering violently now. I look at my reflection in the dark window opposite me. My hair is plastered to my skull. My face is pale, my eyes wide and hollow. I look like a junkie coming down from a bad high.

I check my pockets. Phone? Gone. I left it. Smartwatch? I smashed it against the railing of the fire escape and tossed it into a sewer grate three blocks back.

I’m a ghost.

But ghosts shouldn’t feel this cold.

I’m alive. For now. But as the train rattles deeper into the underground, one thought loops in my brain with terrifying clarity.

I just kicked a hornet’s nest the size of the U.S. government, and there’s no stopping the swarm now.

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