Ray swallowed hard, the weight of those simple, heartbreaking words crashing over him with the force of a physical blow. Alyna moved to stand beside him, her presence a silent and comforting warmth in the sudden chill. Uncertainly, then with a newfound, quiet determination, she reached out and slipped her hand into his. Her fingers were cold, but her grip was steady and reassuring.
Julia looked between them, a sad, knowing smile touching her lips. “He was stubborn,” she said softly, her voice carrying a hint of old affection and of shared mories. “Ray gets that from him.”
No one replied. There was nothing left to say. Just nas etched in stone. Just the cold, unyielding presence of the morial. Just the ghosts of mory, swirling around them in the mournful wind. Together, they stood there in a shared, contemplative silence— disparate souls, bound by loss, by resilience, by the fragile, flickering, yet surprisingly strong threads of human connection.
As the quiet lingered and the sunlight began to fade, swallowed by the drifting, gray clouds, the weight of unspoken words, of decisions yet to be made, pressed gently, insistently, between them. Ray gave his mother’s shoulder a soft, reassuring squeeze before stepping back. Alyna followed, glancing one last ti, her expression unreadable, at the na etched forever in the cold, unyielding stone.
Once they reached the bike, Ray’s interface blinked to life, casting a faint, cool blue glow in his vision.
RAY: I need to remove sothing. A mod. From Alyna. Urgently.
The reply ca monts later, concise and professional.
JULIA: Understood. Bring her to the clinic. I’ll see what I can do.
Ray looked over his shoulder. Julia was carefully helping his mother back into the waiting auto-taxi, but her eyes, sharp and perceptive, t his across the distance. There was no judgnt in them. Just a quiet, unwavering understanding.
Alyna mounted the bike behind him and Ray started the engine. The powerful, throaty hum of the motor filled the air as they turned away from the morial. Away from the past. Away from the ghosts. Towards an uncertain, dangerous, and perhaps, just perhaps, hopeful future.
The automatic taxi humd softly, almost silently, as it pulled away from the desolate VSD morial, the jagged, glittering skyline of Virelia stretching like a broken promise across the distant horizon. Inside the climate-controlled cabin, a comfortable, if sowhat strained, silence settled between Lina and Julia, like an old, familiar companion. The wind, no longer mournful, whispered at the polarized windows, carrying with it the faint, lingering ghost of a na carved forever into obsidian stone.
Julia sat behind the inert steering column, her hands resting lightly in her lap, even though the vehicle drove itself with flawless, automated precision. Her eyes weren’t on the road—they stared past it, through it, lost sowhere in the hazy, indistinct landscape between painful mory and the uncertain present.
Lina shifted in her seat, the movent small, almost imperceptible. Her voice, when it finally ca, was quiet, reflective. "It’s been eighteen years."
Julia nodded slowly, her gaze still distant. "I know. Almost to the day."
[Flashback - 18 Years Ago, VSD morial, The Day of Dedication]
The rain hadn’t let up all day. It fell in cold, relentless, unforgiving sheets, soaking the newly dedicated black stone columns of the VSD morial until they glistened like polished obsidian tears. The freshly carved nas on their pristine surfaces shimred, water trailing down each incised letter, each lost life.
Lina was young then. Barely into her late twenties, though grief had already etched lines of premature age around her eyes, her mouth. Her hands were trembling, not just from the cold, as she clutched a cheap, disposable umbrella in one hand and an unopened pack of synth-beer – Jas’s favorite brand – in the other. She was drenched to the bone, her dark hair plastered to her pale face, her thin clothes clinging to her like a second, sodden skin. But she didn't move. She stood before the newly carved na—JAS CALLEN—as if rooted to the spot by the sheer, unyielding weight of her grief.
Beside her, a little boy, no older than six, small and solemn in his oversized, borrowed raincoat, stood in utter silence, his tiny, cold fingers wrapped tightly, desperately, around her soaked coat sleeve. He didn’t cry. He didn’t speak. He just stared up at the towering, indifferent column, his ice-blue eyes, so like her own, wide and uncomprehending, trying to understand what it all ant, this cold stone, these endless nas, his mother’s silent, shuddering tears. Ray. He hadn’t understood death, not really, but he knew, with a child’s unerring instinct, that it made his mother cry—and that, in his small world, was enough to make everything feel terribly, irrevocably wrong.
A woman approached them, her footsteps splashing softly through the wet concrete and scattered puddles.
Lina turned, her eyes blurred by rain and unshed tears. A woman stood just to her right, similarly soaked, a cheap, utilitarian synth-plastic coat pulled tight around her slender shoulders. Her short, practical auburn hair stuck to her neck in damp clumps, and her eyes—a striking, intelligent green, steady, and filled with a profound, weary sadness—t Lina’s own tear-filled blue gaze with a strange, unexpected mix of warmth and instant recognition.
"He used to bring a pack just like that every weekend," the woman continued, her voice soft, almost gentle, "back when we used to sit at the old waterfront, watching the cargo ships co in, dreaming of other places."
Lina blinked, trying to focus through the water in her eyes, through the fog of her grief. "You… you knew him? Jas?"
The woman nodded, a small, sad smile touching her lips. "Julia. I was with him for a long ti. Before you."
A beat of silence passed between them, heavy, charged, yet strangely not awkward. The shared grief, the unspoken understanding, transcended the usual social barriers.
"He told
about you," Lina said finally, her voice barely a whisper. "He said you had the sharpest mind he’d ever t."
Julia’s faint smile wavered, becoming more bittersweet. "We let each other go. It was… mutual. I wanted to study advanced cybernetic dicine in Corereach, at the Institute. He’d just found so steady work here with VSD. Neither of us were willing, or perhaps able, to ask the other to give up their future and their dreams, for a relationship that was already strained by distance and circumstance."
Another silence descended, heavier this ti, filled with the ghosts of what might have been.
"I loved him," Lina whispered, the admission raw, painful, yet sohow freeing. "I still do. So much."
Julia reached into her coat pocket and pulled out a battered, tarnished tal hip flask. She held it up between them, a silent offering. Lina put down the pack of beer and took the flask with shaking hands. Ray, still clutching her coat, looked up at them, his small face a mask of confusion and dawning curiosity, his gaze shifting between the two won who had loved his father. And in that mont, sothing shifted. Not just the grief. The crushing, isolating loneliness. It eased, just a fraction.
They stood there for over an hour, two strangers united by a shared love, a shared loss, trading mories, trading pain, the cold rain, a constant, indifferent witness. By the ti they finally left the morial, the rain had stopped, and a fragile, watery sun was attempting to break through the heavy, bruised clouds.
[Present Day]
Julia looked over at Lina, her expression soft with a deep, abiding affection. Her face was older now, of course, the lines of ti and worry more pronounced, but her features, like Lina’s, were still strong, still resilient. "I never thought we’d end up like this, you know," Julia murmured, her voice quiet, reflective. "Two old friends, bound together by his loss."
Lina's gaze, no longer lost in the past, stayed fixed out the window at the passing, indifferent city. " too," she said, a faint, sad smile touching her lips. "Funny, isn't it? How grief, sotis, can make room for sothing else entirely."
Julia finally let her hands fall from the now-redundant steering column. She reached across the seat and gently, tentatively, took Lina’s frail hand in her own. The past was always there, a silent, immutable presence. But in this mont, so was the quiet, hard-won peace they’d managed to carve from its jagged, painful edges. A friendship forged in sorrow, tempered by ti, and stronger, perhaps, than either of them had ever anticipated.
An hour later, Ray leaned against the wall of Julia’s workroom, the cool, smooth concrete pressing into his back. His eyes drifted between gleaming racks of surgical tools, the gentle, almost silent hum of the industrial-grade air filters, and the faint, rhythmic clatter of a high-temperature sterilizer cycling through its pre-programd routine. The sharp, sterile scent of antiseptic, pricked at his senses, overlaying the familiar tallic tang of bandages and old, well-used machine oil.
Julia stood beside the articulated modding chair, her smart lenses flickering with complex, overlapping technical diagrams, her lips pressed into a thin, determined line of concentration, her fingers gliding through the air as she manipulated holographic readouts only she could see.
Alyna lay on the chair, her arms resting stiffly at her sides, her gaze locked on the sterile, white-tiled ceiling. A single, flickering LED on a nearby diagnostic machine cast shifting shadows over her pale face, making her look almost spectral, a ghost haunted by a violation she couldn't even rember. Her breathing was shallow, and the faint, almost imperceptible tremor in her hand betrayed the calm she was trying so hard to project.
The workroom was steeped in a tense silence, broken only by the soft, whirring hum of Julia’s equipnt, the occasional, soft beep of a successful diagnostic query, and the sound of Alyna’s quiet, controlled exhale.
“Found it,” Julia said at last, her voice cutting through the hush, sharp and decisive. She reached for a monitor on an articulated arm, swinging it around, and beckoned Ray over. The detailed scan filled the screen: at the base of Alyna’s skull, nestled dangerously close to her brainstem, sothing small and foreign glimred—oval, translucent, no bigger than a vitamin pill.
Julia tapped the screen, magnifying the insidious object. “It’s a neuromodulatory capsule. They use these mostly in high-stress animal control for ‘behavioral correction’. Micro-filant leads, almost invisible to standard scans, wrap around the brainstem and deliver targeted bursts of inhibitory signals—basically shutting down certain key neural circuits on command. Calms aggression, suppresses impulse, enforces compliance. In humans they can cause fainting spells, chronic dissociation, emotional numbness… maybe worse.”
Alyna’s lips thinned, her jaw tightening with a cold, simring fury. “How long… how long do you think it’s been there? I don’t rember them ever… installing it.”
Julia rotated the 3D scan, her tone turning clipped and clinical, a familiar defense chanism against the ugliness of their world. “Usually it’s implanted with a high-pressure pneumatic syringe and a fast-acting local anesthetic. Leaves almost no discernible scar tissue. I wouldn’t put it past your parents to have it done while you were sedated for a routine dical check-up. Or just drug you and do it in your sleep.”
Ray watched, a cold pulse of gratitude washing through him—imnse relief that he’d brought Alyna here, mixed with a sickening, helpless guilt for the violation she’d clearly endured for who knew how long.
“Can you take it out?” Alyna asked, her voice steady but brittle as spun glass, the words edged with a lifeti of contained bitterness.
Julia nodded, her expression grim. “The procedure itself is simple. A small, superficial incision. But removing it without triggering a defensive discharge… that’ll be tricky.”
Alyna hesitated, her sapphire eyes flicking to Ray for a single, fleeting heartbeat, a silent exchange of trust passing between them, before she gave a tired, resolute nod. No fear in her eyes. Just a weary determination to be free.
Julia snapped on a pair of sterile surgical gloves, her motions quick, efficient, and practiced. The soft snap of latex punctuated the tense silence. She filled a syringe with a clear anesthetic fluid, swabbed the pale skin at the base of Alyna’s neck, and gently tilted her head forward. The sudden chill of the antiseptic stung. Alyna winced, a sharp intake of breath, but her gaze stayed fixed, unwavering, on the ceiling.
A padded support prop slid under Alyna’s neck with a soft hiss. The surgical scalpel flashed, a sliver of silver in the cold, clinical light, and Julia began to work with a quiet, focused efficiency. The room grew thick with a new, sharper tension—the only sound now the slow, asured draw of Julia’s breath and the soft, tallic snip of her micro-forceps. A single bead of dark blood welled, stark and crimson against Alyna's pale skin. With the delicate, steady precision of a bomb-disposal expert, Julia eased the glistening, translucent capsule free. It was flecked with Alyna's blood, its internal, circuitry glimring malevolently, like the veins of so terrible, secret-hoarding insect.
She set it gently on a sterile tray. Under the bright, unforgiving surgical lamp, the capsule shimred, its internal workings exposed: a microscopic, tangled nest of micro-wires, a tiny, dark processor chip, and flecks of iridescent bio-gel. An ugly, insidious thing, designed for control and subjugation, now rendered helpless and pathetic in the harsh, revealing light.
Julia sealed the small wound with dissolvable, self-suturing stitches, a sharp, hissing mist of antiseptic stinging the air. She pressed a sterile bandage over the cut and eased Alyna’s head back to a neutral position, removing the support prop with a careful, almost tender touch.
“All done,” Julia said softly, stripping off her bloody gloves and dropping them into the bin. Her hand lingered for a mont on Alyna’s shoulder, a silent and steadying gesture. Alyna’s eyes fluttered, relief and a profound, bone-deep exhaustion warring in her expressive features.
Ray let out a slow, shuddering breath he hadn’t realized he was holding, the tension finally unwinding from his chest. “How much do I owe you, Julia?” he asked, his voice low, rough.
Julia gave a small, tired grin, her usual professional mask softening. “A pack of cigarettes. Now get her out of here.”
They left the sterile confines of the workroom. Alyna walked gingerly, one hand unconsciously brushing the fresh bandage on her neck. The city’s chaotic, overwhelming symphony seeped in from the street outside—the shrill, impatient shriek of distant maglev-train horns, a hundred overlapping, disembodied voices, the deep, visceral thump of a bassline from a nearby pleasure club, a distorted, glitching digital ad crackling on a gri-streaked wall screen: chaos and life and death, all layered atop each other in a relentless, sensory assault.
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