Threads in Neon: The Night Sweep
City 91 pulses; the lights never go off. Near the docks, rain sweeps over the towers. Kiro, age seventeen, leans into the wind. He’s got nerve, a sharp grin, and no money.
He’s not alone. Tama trails two steps behind, as usual. No talking yet. She checks her neon-blue cyberdeck, making sure the cracked glass works. Trust is thin tonight.
Kiro wants proof his missing brother, Jo, didn’t delete himself–like police said last week. Only, the city’s fights go deeper than old grudges. You get the hints early. Graffiti, shut doors, vendors tossing digital wares under weighted tables. Can you feel sweat on the screen?
A memory drive leaks from Kiro’s frayed coat. The light is orange, then red, then blinks once. “Just a tracker?” Tama asks. He shrugs. They slip along the boundary fence, shivering from weak shield fields. Night in City 91 is all loud lights and lost codes.
Tama is a ghost hacker, out of prison six months. Kiro needs her too much for comfort. “Why’d I agree to this?” she mutters, chin raised.
Conflict rolls up fast. The synth-cops’ shadows circle from left, guns tucked quick. Corporates. Not actual uniforms–these hired types shop for marks. Tama flicks her deck. Cracks fizz and spark.
Kiro nods. “We’re following Jo’s last footprint. Not chickening out, right?” There’s a hitch. The cops move in, gloved hands up, voice amps sputtering. The scene cuts close, faces blank behind rough helmets.
Before words stick, someone drops smoke–dark as soot. A girl slips out, mask flashing. Lane, Jo’s ex-site partner. She flashes a grin. “You kids owe me now. Follow or fry, your call.”
Tama shoves Kiro. Alleyways curl. Neon graffiti slides past. Lane’s got kits in her coat, eyes never settle. Silence stretches; bootsteps only noise. What’s trust cost in this low city?
They hit a market, wet with static, screens flicker grainy crime rates. Lane unlocks a run-down hub. “You looking for Jo? Think again. He tinkered with ExaNet, the core below. It watched what he uploaded. Now you chase the city’s shadow nerve, not just a kid.”
Kiro’s temper rides up. “I want him back.” Lane’s lips move, then freeze. Online voices feed through static. “He hacked a patch the big corps fear. Got it on a code shard, hid it deep.”
Tama keeps her hack up, hands nimble. With every coded tap you hear her agitated breath. Can digital memory pass regret? You ever feel regret through tech?
Firewall cracks. Kiro opens up the trace in front of snowed screens. A noise–rattle of drones out back. Signals interfere. Jo’s impromptu message drifts on cheap fiber-optic. “Too late!”
Arc kicks off. Streets surge with shadow-guns and crooks called Voids. Tama cold-shocks a riot drone mid-rush. A fight. Glass and plastic fly. The city loves this glitter.
Kiro finds the coded message. Quick encryption: LocalNet, Port 98, code phrase ‘Black Gumlight’. Is this enough to break into ExaNet’s doghouse-node?
Lane shakes, points at Jo’s old digging tools in the crate. She says, “Listen up. One wrong byte and the core nukes everything we’ve built.” Cocky, right? Out of options, Tama scowls.
Kiro grips the shard, slicing his thumb, focus sharp. Passwords ring in Tama’s head. Are they bought, stolen, or found? Lane keeps her eye at the backdoor.
Drones circle, warning lights spinning orange across fissured concrete. Lane shoves a stack of loaded code. “This buys you a minute. You crash, I run. Loyalty’s up.” Kiro throws up his com-tab, sends the phrase. Drums in ears, sweat in palms. Through glitch, an old voice punches out. “Bro–watch out.”
Cops close fast. Tama jams an ice-breaker at the code lock. Sparks, crack like snapping rope. Sirens start up, louder by the tick. Thirty seconds. Can the message even be saved?
The old patch surfaces, filling a vend-bot with bright gold shimmer. As Kiro lunges–screen blurs, rifles blink green lasers on their backs. Jo didn’t run; he’s possessed–uploaded into City 91’s cannibal tech. “Welcome to my ghost, brother. Survive before the rip.”
Kiro’s mission tears. Find Jo, fix him, or reboot him. Tama hauls him out through scuffed streets as alarms bust wide and the riot swallows vendors whole. The gear is fried and nerves jolt. Lane runs; their ally, maybe, if she circles back.
The city curves away at dawn. Another trace buzzes loud and brutal in Tama’s mesh. Jo is in the next transmission, but someone else is now listening. Fade out. Will they try again, or gives up and zero out? Buys you a week of bad dreams. Who do you trust when walls have eyes? Are you hooked yet?