The Plaza Bar might have been on a different planet; gleaming chrome, polished dark wood, and ambient light shone like hard currency. Reid arrived at exactly 10:00 p.m.
The bar was teeming with the usual crowd: tech guys laughing loudly over craft cocktails; tourists taking in the scene with smartphones; a handful of willing dolls sitting close to the entrance; and the rest a mix you’d find in any watering hole.
Reid, in his worn-out jacket, stood out like a smudge on a newly cleaned screen.
He cast a lonely gaze over the bar, hoping a face would pop - none did, and nothing seemed out of place. Who was he meeting? Then, his cheap phone buzzed. He glanced at the screen. A new text message eyed him. New instructions:
Buy a copy of Tech Magazine at the kiosk
Order a bottle of beer at the bar
Use the card in your back pocket (PIN 0000)
He fumbled in his back pocket and fished out a Visa card. How and when it had gotten there puzzled him. Something wasn’t right. He became instantly alert, every nerve screaming: was that guy in the corner watching him? The woman at the end of the bar? Paranoia crept in, and he felt as naked as a bug under a microscope.
Five minutes later, he settled comfortably at a corner table with a clear view of the entrance, flipping through the magazine and sipping the beer he’d bought with the card.
Time crawled: 10:26… 10:53… 11:53. No one approached. Apart from the card earlier, nothing else. No signal.
The overwhelming wave of stupidity began to wash over him. Of course, it was a trap. Or a prank. Or nothing at all—just another dead end in a life already overflowing with them.
He drained the bottle, the last drop tasting of disappointment. He’d had enough. He pushed away from the stool, shoulders slumped, and made for the exit door—ready to retreat back to his mucky apartment of anonymity.
A hand brushed his arm—light but deliberate. He turned, his heart banging against his ribs. He braced for Vaughn’s smirk or worse, the glint of a gun. Instead, he found himself facing a woman that might have been carved from ice. In her late sixties, smartly dressed in a charcoal tailored suit, her silver hair swept back into a sleek low bun. Her eyes held no warmth—only cold and calculating intensity.
“Mr. Brecken” she said. Her voice was low, cultured, invested with the unmistakable authority of someone accustomed to issuing commands. It sliced through the murmur of the bar like a blade. “, I’m Celia Sterling of Sterling Dynamics. And I believe we have a problem that only the real genius that built CipherCore can fix.” She paused deliberately, allowing the implication of her words to sink in. “And we are willing to make your revenge very, very productive.”
Before Reid could recover from the shock—the implications of her words, the sheer audacity—a sleek black luxury car rolled quietly to the curb beside them.
Its windows were deeply tinted, opaque. The back passenger door slid open, revealing a cavernous, plush interior. Inside, illuminated by the glow of a softly lit screen, sat a man.
Dante West.
He did not require an introduction. Power exuded from him like a physical presence—icy, contained, and utterly ruthless. He was impeccably dressed, his face sharp and unyielding, his eyes were like dark wells that seemed to draw in light. He regarded Reid not as a human but as a wretched object of appraisal—asset or liability.
“Get in, Mr. Brecken,” West commanded. It wasn’t a request but a decree. His voice was even, without accent, yet it carried the finality of a vault door slamming shut. “Your life of obscurity ends tonight.”
Reid, still dazed, stood motionless on the rain-soaked sidewalk. City lights smeared across the wet pavement. The woman—Celia Sterling’s promise of vengeance – very assuring -battled the primal fear screaming in his bones. West’s presence wrapped around him like an iron cocoon.
Reid was in a dilemma, a man heading into the jaws of a monster. Step forward, and every shred of control will shatter. Step back—but to what? Into eviction, junk meals, and the slow death in obscurity?
He glanced once more at Celia Sterling’s cold eyes – they offered no comfort, except the promise of consequences. Then he stepped toward the open car door-- a portal to power? Or to ruin? To Chloe’s and Marcus’s destruction? His fists clenched at his sides.
The door began to close on its own, a silent countdown.
Chloe’s laughing face at the gala exploded in his mind: security guards gripping his arms, his world crashing down. The fury caged for years unleashed itself. It wasn’t hope that propelled him but desperate, savage rage. With a low, hoarse cry drowned by the city’s noise, Reid lunged.
He dove into the dark leather interior just as the door sealed with a soft, final thunk. The locks engaged in a deafening snap. The car slid away from the curb—smooth, silent—swallowing him in Seattle’s drizzling night.
West watched him with a mirthless, lean smile. “Welcome onboard, Mr. Brecken,” he said, every word measured. “Do not disappoint us as you have disappointed yourself.”
An opaque, smoked-glass partition rose from the console, sealing Reid in the sound-proofed compartment. Outside, city lights blurred into a watercolor smear of neon and shadow.
On the gleaming bar surface, unobserved by anyone, Reid’s cheap phone buzzed urgently. The screen glowed with one last message before fading:
DON'T AGREE! IT’S A TRAP!
Alessandra jerked slightly, just enough to kill the atmosphere. She swung sharply toward the monitors, shattering what remained of the spell. "They're withdrawing," she reported, her voice cool and controlled once more, though a subtle flush lingered high on her cheekbones. "Typical of West: create havoc, observe reactions, and then disappear." She indicated the screen depicting the final dark figures rappelling down the cliffs toward unseen vessels. "I bet the damage assessment will be minimal—largely theatrical."With the moment shattered, Reid felt foolish and exposed.His Max-mask felt heavier.“You said you knew things about CipherCore—about bringing Chloe and Marcus… down,” he said, forcing his voice to remain level and businesslike.Alessandra nodded, her eyes on the screens and her back still to him.“I do, but trust is something you have to earn first, Reid. You’ve seen Max. You know he hasn’t disappeared. You know what they’ve done.”She turned at last—her face wary but dete
To Reid, Bricks’s order was like a physical attack, resonating through his bones. The red strobe lights cast the hallway in an ominous, blood-red glow. His pistol held low but firm, commanded Reid's attention.Alessandra's push still echoed in his muscles, her ruffled order "Behave like Max would! Explode! Dominate!" wrestling with the primal compulsion to freeze or run.Sentiment is extinction. The words in Max's journal cut through the panic. Become him.Reid didn’t think. He reacted. He channeled the cold, burning fury smoldering in Max’s logs.He drew himself up to his full height, the bio-modulators pulling his shoulders back and his face hardening into a mask of authoritative outrage.He didn’t look toward Max’s cell. He locked his Max-modified eyes onto Bricks’s, radiating a contempt so intense it momentarily checked the guard’s advance. “What goddamn status report?” Reid spat. His modulated voice, laced with poisonous disdain, slashed through the chaos of the alarms. He took
He was the spitting image of the man Reid was turning into. His hair, however, was unkempt, and the smart sportswear had been traded for a plain grey patient’s gown.His laser-focused eyes remained but were shrouded in a feral, desperate, and uninhibited rage.He slammed the door again; the noise resonated through the glass with a resounding THUD. He turned toward the observation window, his wild eyes sweeping the darkness behind the glass as if he sensed someone there.Reid kept watching him.His lips curled, forming silent, angry words. His face was so like the one Reid knew, and yet entirely different. The face Reid saw through the glass now held the pain and fury of a contained wild beast.Without warning, a cool, nearby voice spoke from behind him: “He has good days and bad days, Reid. Today is especially bad.”Reid spun around, his heart leaping into his throat.Alessandra stood holding two glasses of rich red wine. She hadn’t changed—still perfectly put together—but her face wa
The suite was a gilded cage within the vast fortress; no luxury spared. State-of-the-art technology integrated discreetly into the walls and furniture. A glass wall provided a dizzying, captivating view of the roiling ocean.Reid felt naked. He knew cameras were watching, microphones were eavesdropping, and Bricks stood sentry outside the door like a silent, hulking jailer.A sprawling king-size frame draped in midnight-blue velvet sat at the room's center. Its ornate headboard of burnished bronze curved like protective wings.He stretched out on the bed and closed his eyes. Millions of thoughts blasted through his mind; Zain's warnings burned hotter. Max must have left clues.Beneath the plush mattress, biometric sensors fine-tuned temperature and support, aligning with every shift of his form. Two pillows cradled his neck, each quietly monitoring his pulse and whispering posture corrections through the neural AI in his skull.He stood and let out a deep sigh, sweeping his gaze acros
West acted fast. With one decisive tap on the console, he plunged the room into semi-darkness, lit only by the faint glow of status LEDs.The silence after the holographic feed ended was denser than the bunker’s concrete walls. Reid froze like a statue, Alessandra Sterling’s probing stare still rattling him. His synthesized Max voice had hardly masked the tremor beneath. Refresh our access now— right now? In real time? The AI’s deficiencies screamed in his mind.“Improvisation, Mr. Brecken,” West snarled, his words chipping at the air like shards of ice. “It was a dangerous gamble, but it succeeded this time.” He swiveled his chair, the dim light casting deep shadows across his impassive face. Behind Reid, Bricks emerged from the gloom—a silent, hulking reminder of the stakes. “Your cover story holds for now. But Charles isn’t easily fooled. That hesitation… may have registered.”Reid switched to Max’s modulated voice, the biomodulators buzzing softly beneath his skin, molding his exp
Finally, Zain brought a sleek, menacing neural-interface headset. "This will sync you with the behavioral AI. It learns from Sterling's recorded data—meetings, interviews, private logs we have acquired. It will suggest responses, mannerisms, and knowledge in real time. Think of it as a co-pilot for your…role."The headset clamped in place. A cold jolt hit Reid, then a flood of information—stock symbols, technical jargon, names, and faces—poured into his consciousness, overlaid with a calm, synthesized masculine voice whispering potential responses in his inner ear, Max's voice merging with his own thoughts. It was intensely disorienting, like sharing his skull with someone else.West summoned Reid over to the main console. Bricks's shadow loomed over him."Observe," West instructed, setting up holographic images—Max Sterling in a boardroom, his eyes cutting through evasion like a laser. "Your target state: ruthless efficiency, directed anger, charisma used as a weapon."He froze on a