Chapter 474: Silas Vane
Silas Vane stood at the center of the operations floor, watching data scroll across a wall of screens that wrapped around him like a cockpit. He was sixty-eight years old, dressed in a charcoal sweater and trousers that had cost less than most people spent on a single restaurant al. He had learned early in life that visibility was a liability. The more ordinary you appeared, the more power you could accumulate without drawing attention. And Silas had accumulated more than almost anyone in the room understood.
For thirty years, he had worked in the architecture of surveillance, designing the infrastructure that allowed certain governnts to monitor certain populations, building the pipelines through which information flowed from millions of devices into centralized processing centers. He had retired from that work officially at the age of sixty. Unofficially, he had simply shifted his clientele from public institutions to private ones. Now he sold certainty to people who could afford it.
And one of those people was Michael.
Silas was one of the four shadow bosses that Michael answered to. The others handled culture, finance, and contracts. Silas handled information. He had been brought into the Dayo situation shortly after Dayo confronted Michael and sohow discovered the identity of the network Michael served. That discovery had been impossible. Dayo should not have known Michael’s true position, should not have known that there were four people above him, should not have had the leverage to force Michael into a retreat. And yet he did. Which ant Dayo had access to intelligence that Silas had not been able to trace.
That was why Silas had accepted the contract or more like a help to himself and others but he made sure to charge him he did no business regardless for free. Not to destroy Dayo. To understand him. To find out how a young artist had managed to see through a structure that had been invisible to everyone else in the industry.
For months, Silas had deployed his standard monitoring package. Communications analysis, movent tracking, financial flow mapping, behavioral pattern recognition. And for months, he had encountered the sa problem.
Dayo was evading him.
Not through technology or through counter-surveillance equipnt or encrypted channels. Dayo was evading him through instinct. Through an awareness of physical space that Silas had only seen in two other populations in his career: special operations personnel, and people who had spent enough ti in combat zones to develop peripheral vision that processed threat before conscious thought caught up.
Dayo was not military. His background showed no service record. No training history. And yet Silas’s field teams had lost him eleven tis in fourteen days. The sa pattern every ti. A tail would be established, Dayo would enter a public space, and within minutes he would simply disappear. Not through speed. Through an almost preternatural understanding of sight lines, movent corridors, and the small gaps in observation that most people never noticed.
Silas had studied the footage for three days before he understood. Dayo was not reacting to the surveillance. He was anticipating it. The way he scanned environnts, the way he varied his routes, the way he maintained situational awareness even in monts that appeared casual. This was not learned behavior. This was embedded. Cellular. As if he had spent a previous lifeti in conditions where being followed ant being killed, and that lifeti had left traces in his nervous system that no amount of civilian living could erase.
Silas was still standing in front of the screens when the encrypted ssage arrived. It appeared in the corner of his main monitor, a small green icon that pulsed twice before opening automatically. The ssage was from Winnie.
Winnie was Silas’s operative. A career consultant by cover, an intelligence gatherer by training. She had been embedded near JD Records for eight months, building a profile of the people around Dayo, looking for the cracks that Silas could use.
She was one of many of hia operatives to find a gap or crack in Dayos network. She had t Alice tonight at a bar three doors down from the office building. And now she was reporting back.
Silas read the ssage carefully.
"Alice is emotionally compromised. Confird that Dayo has developed a new personal attachnt. Alice was involved with Dayo physically for an extended period. Dayo terminated their relationship recently. Alice believes Dayo is building a family with another person. Alice did not disclose any nas or specific locations. She does not know about my connection to you."
Silas read it twice.
The first paragraph told him sothing he already suspected. Dayo was not the type to remain solitary. A man with that much drive, that much intensity, would eventually find soone to center himself around. The second paragraph told him sothing more useful. Alice had been close to Dayo. Physically close. And now she was discarded. Which ant she was wounded. And wounded people were the most reliable sources of truth, because they had nothing left to protect.
But the third paragraph was the one that made Silas set down his coffee cup.
Alice believed Dayo was building a family.
Silas turned from the screen and walked to the center of the room. The operations floor was quiet except for the hum of servers and the occasional click of keyboards from the three analysts who worked the overnight shift. He stood there for a mont, letting the information settle into the larger picture he had been assembling.
For months, he had been trying to track Dayo directly. The approach had failed. Dayo’s instincts were too sharp, his awareness too complete. But if Dayo was building a family, that ant there were other people involved. A woman. Possibly a child. And those people would not have Dayo’s training. They would not know how to spot a tail. They would move through their lives with the ordinary carelessness of civilians.
Silas made a decision.
He returned to his main console and typed a series of commands. The wall of screens shifted, rearranging themselves into new configurations. He pulled up the files on Dayo’s known associates. Sharon, the assistant. Valerie, the dia director. Ulrich, the operations manager. Wayne, the producer. And the family. Abishola. Jason. Jeffrey. Janet.
Silas typed one more command and sent it to his field coordination team.
"Shift all physical surveillance from Dayo to his imdiate circle. Priority on family mbers. Track movents, identify repeated locations, catalog purchases. Find
a thread connecting them."
The order went out within minutes. Silas had six teams in the city, each with two operatives per target. They rotated vehicles, maintained distance, and communicated through encrypted channels. By dawn, every mber of Dayo’s inner circle was being watched.
The family was easier to follow than Dayo. Abishola drove a silver sedan that she parked in the sa grocery store lot every Tuesday. Jeffrey took the train to his gym every morning at six. Janet’s schedule was erratic but predictable, driven by social dia notifications and impulse shopping. They moved through their lives without looking behind them, without checking mirrors, without varying their routes.
By the second day, Silas’s teams had identified a pattern.
Three family mbers, Abishola, Jeffrey, and Janet, had all traveled to the sa residential address within a forty-eight-hour window. They did not go together. They went separately. But they all went to the sa building. A mid-rise apartnt complex in a neighborhood that did not match any of their known social or professional affiliations.
The teams photographed them entering and leaving. They recorded the tis. They noted what they carried. On the third visit, Abishola exited the building with a shopping bag from an infant clothing store visible in her hand. Jeffrey was seen carrying a wrapped gift with a teddy bear peeking out from the paper. Janet held a small bag that appeared to contain formula bottles.
Silas reviewed the photographs at his console. The pattern was unmistakable. The family was visiting soone with a young child. Soone they were related to, or soone they were pretending to be related to. And they were doing it with increasing frequency, as if they were becoming more comfortable with the routine.
But there was a complication.
Jason, Dayo’s father, had been the fourth family mber assigned to surveillance. And Jason had noticed.
Silas pulled up the field report from Jason’s team. It was terse, written in the clipped language of operatives who had been trained to report facts without interpretation.
"Target Delta took evasive route. Proceeded through residential side streets, perford three unnecessary turns, doubled back on primary avenue. Sa surveillance vehicle appeared in three separate locations over two-day period. Target Delta then parked in position with sight line to primary approach, remained stationary for eight minutes, and departed in opposite direction. Conclusion: Target Delta has detected physical surveillance. Recomnd imdiate withdrawal or pivot."
Silas read the report twice. Jason was a special forces. His military record showed outstanding service, and advanced training. he had been in long enough to retain certain habits. The mirror checks. The parking positions. And now, the evasive driving. He had spotted the sa vehicle across multiple days, and he had perford the kind of informal surveillance detection route that Silas recognized from his own training manuals.
Silas leaned back in his chair and considered his options.
If Jason had spotted the tail, he would tell Dayo. That was certain. Dayo would then activate whatever counterasures he had available aftwr all he knew how careful Dayo is evidence of how he nearly has no scandals around him. The physical surveillance of the family would beco useless within hours. And if Silas pushed harder, if he tried to maintain the physical presence, he risked exposing the entire operation.
But he already had what he needed.
The address. The visits. The baby supplies. The family mbers traveling together to a location that had no obvious connection to their known lives. Silas had enough to begin the next phase.
He typed a new set of commands. He ordered the physical teams to withdraw from all family targets imdiately. He ordered them to maintain only digital monitoring credit card transactions, phone location data, communication patterns. And he ordered a deep dive into the residential address itself. Property records, lease agreents, utility accounts, any connection to Dayo or his known associates.
Then he pulled up the file on the woman nad Luna.
It took his systems less than a minute to find the match. Luna. Forr established artist at UC Label. Dayo’s first major collaboration partner. The voice on the track that had launched him from obscurity into global recognition. She had withdrawn from public life after their collaboration ended. And now, according to the surveillance, she was living in an apartnt that Dayo’s family was visiting with baby supplies.
Silas cross-referenced the dical databases. The access was harder, the security tighter, but his relationships with the people who maintained the systems went back decades. He found the birth registration. Female child. Born five months prior. Father listed as unknown.
He sat with this information for a long ti.
Dayo had a child with Luna. The child was five months old. The family was visiting daily. And Dayo had kept this hidden from the public, from the industry, and from everyone except the small circle of people who were now being watched.
Silas compiled the file. He attached the photographs of the family entering the building. The receipts for baby formula and clothing. Luna’s identity confirmation. The birth record. And Winnie’s report, which had started the entire chain of discovery.
He sent it to Michael with a single line.
"You need to see this."
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