CHAPTER 29
Author: Ng
last update2025-03-06 23:33:56

An Unseen Hand

Something is wrong.

I know it the moment the patrol unit spots me.

Their helmets tilt slightly, their scanners flaring red. The nearest officer moves, reaching for his weapon—too fast, too precise.

And then—

Glitch.

It’s like the world hiccups.

The patrol unit freezes mid-motion. Their bodies flicker, just for a split second, like a skipped frame in a broken video. Their weapons don’t come up. Their commands don’t execute.

I don’t wait to question it.

I run.

My heart slams against my ribs as I dart into a side alley, my boots kicking up debris. Kane is already ahead, moving like she expected me to follow.

I hear a voice behind me—metallic, confused. “Recalibrating.”

I don’t look back.

The city stretches out before us, towering skyscrapers slicing into the night sky. Neon signs flicker, casting fractured reflections onto the wet pavement. We cut through the backstreets, slipping through shadows, moving faster than the system can correct itself.

I should be dead.

The patrol unit should have taken me down.

Instead, something—someone—glitched the system in my favor.

By the time we stop, we’re several blocks away, hidden in an abandoned parking garage. My hands are still shaking.

Kane leans against a concrete pillar, catching her breath. “Tell me you saw that.”

I nod, wiping sweat from my brow. “They froze. Just for a second.”

She exhales, pacing. “That shouldn’t happen. Their response time is programmed to be flawless.” Her eyes flick to me, sharp with realization. “It was a system error.”

“No.” I shake my head. “It wasn’t an error.”

Her gaze narrows.

I swallow hard. “Someone helped us.”

A long silence.

Then Kane speaks slowly, carefully. “You think it’s another user.”

I don’t want to say yes.

Because if there is another user—if someone else hacked the system to intervene—then that changes everything.

It means I’m not alone in this.

It means there’s someone out there with access to the same kind of power.

But why help me?

I press my fingers to my temples. A dull ache builds behind my eyes. “There was a name on the list, remember? The one marked unknown.”

Kane nods, her arms crossing. “And now you think they’re still alive.”

“They have to be.” I exhale, trying to steady my thoughts. “The system doesn’t glitch. Not unless someone makes it glitch.”

She tilts her head, considering. Then her jaw tightens. “Or it’s a trap.”

I hate that she might be right.

But before I can respond, something slams through my skull.

A flash of memory—

Not mine.

I see a corridor, stark white, lined with steel doors. A woman’s voice, hushed and urgent. “They know. We have to move.”

A feeling of running, but my feet aren’t my own. My hands reach for something—a keypad? A terminal?

And then—

Darkness.

I gasp, snapping back to the present.

Kane is staring at me. “Tony?”

I press a hand against the cold concrete wall, steadying myself. My vision is swimming.

“What the hell just happened?” she demands.

I shake my head. “I don’t know.” But the truth is already clawing its way into my mind. “I saw something.”

Her brows furrow. “Like… a premonition?”

“No.” I swallow hard. “It wasn’t the future. It wasn’t even mine.”

The realization sinks in, chilling me from the inside out.

“I think I saw a past user’s memory.”

Kane doesn’t answer right away. I can see her processing it, running the logic in her head. “That’s not possible,” she says, but there’s no conviction in her voice.

I push off the wall, my pulse hammering. “And yet, it happened.”

She doesn’t argue.

Because we both know that with the system—anything is possible.

I flex my fingers, still feeling the echo of that past movement, that split-second sensation of being someone else. If this keeps happening…

If I start experiencing more of these memories…

What does that mean for me?

Before I can voice that thought, Kane stiffens. Her posture shifts from concern to alertness.

I don’t have to ask why.

Because the moment she reaches for her gun, I hear it too.

A sound like footsteps—except softer, more controlled.

Like a predator moving in for the kill.

The air around us tightens.

I turn, pulse pounding.

And standing at the edge of the dimly lit garage—half in shadow, half illuminated by the neon haze of the city—he’s there.

Zero.

His coat barely moves in the artificial wind from the street below. His expression is unreadable, but I don’t need to see his face to know what this means.

He let me go last time.

That isn’t happening again.

Kane raises her gun, but Zero doesn’t react.

Instead, he just tilts his head.

Like he already knows how this ends.

Like he’s already seen this play out.

Like I’m just another variable in a sequence he’s already memorized.

My throat tightens.

Because this time, I don’t think he’s here to test me.

This time, he’s here to finish the job.

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