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By the time Elias blinked away the white spots and regained his footing, the street was empty. The black sedan was gone, leaving nothing behind but tire tracks filling with rainwater and the smell of ozone.

Right on cue, the heavy iron doors of the warehouse groaned open. A figure stepped out into the downpour, wrapped in a dark, high-collared trench coat. The figure didn't look left or right, but walked with absolute purpose toward a black sedan waiting at the curb.

The image looked like nothing more than a corrupted file when viewed on a monitor—a mess of digital artifacts, broken pixels, and jagged color bars. But printed out, held physically in his hand, Elias could see the faint, ghostly outline of a face buried beneath the noise. It was the calling card of a phantom programmer known only as The Architect. Elias checked his watch. 02:00 AM. s070_041_lg.jpg

It was the only physical evidence left behind from the digital heist that had crippled the city's power grid.

The face staring back at him was not a person at all. It was a smooth, featureless ceramic mask, painted with the exact same glitched, neon-streaked patterns from the photograph. By the time Elias blinked away the white

Elias didn't hesitate. He slipped out of his car, keeping low, his boots splashing quietly in the puddles. He needed to get close enough to clone the transmitter signal from the suspect's pocket.

The figure stopped mid-motion. Slowly, they turned around. Under the dim, flickering streetlamp, Elias felt his heart stop. A figure stepped out into the downpour, wrapped

The rain had been falling for three days straight, turning the narrow alleys of the city into slick, reflective rivers of neon. Detective Elias Thorne sat in his parked car, the rhythmic sweep of the windshield wipers doing little to clear his view of the warehouse across the street. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a worn, glossy photograph labeled simply .