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The waiting felt like a special kind of torture. A constant, slow drip of anxiety was wearing down their nerves. For three straight days, every little sound made them think sothing was wrong. The ring of a phone would make them jump. The creak of the old motel settling sounded like soone’s footsteps coming closer. Every ti a car slowed down on the street outside, a jolt of cold fear shot through their hearts. They were living on high alert, their senses stretched to the limit and jumping at every shadow.

Evelyn’s laptop sat on the workbench with its screen dark, like a sleeping dragon. But underneath, the digital trap they had set was active and waiting silently for their enemy to take the bait. The city map was hidden in its mory, ready to flash a location the mont the ghost they were hunting stepped into the snare.

To keep himself from going crazy, Ace poured all his energy into repairing broken electronics. This was a kind of problem he understood. A shattered screen, a dead battery, or a corrupted circuit were all puzzles with solutions he could feel in his hands. He found private comfort in the familiar, almost unnoticeable warmth that spread from his palms into the devices. This was a power he could control, a real strength in a world where he felt powerless against threats he couldn’t see or fight. He lost himself in the rhythm of finding a problem and fixing it, and the outside world faded away until all that mattered was the flow of energy from his hands, nding what was broken and creating order from chaos.

anwhile, Silva had fully embraced his self-appointed role as head of security and morale. He had used a can of bright yellow spray paint to carefully outline the new ergency exit he had carved into the back wall, and he labeled it, "EXIT: FOR SERIOUS ERGENCIES (Or Really Bad Coffee)." He started a "security log" on a whiteboard that was mostly filled with silly entries. For example, he wrote, "10:15 AM - Pigeon landed on roof. Looked suspicious. Flew away after staring for 5 mins," and "2:30 PM - Heard a loud BANG! (Was dropping a wrench. False alarm. Sorry.)" His goofiness was a nervous reaction, a way to whistle in the dark, but it also kept the atmosphere from becoming completely suffocating.

Evelyn was like a statue of concentration. She had set up a secondary, offline laptop that was a cheap model bought with cash from a pawn shop. She used it only to monitor the trap on her main machine. She barely moved, and her eyes constantly flicked between the two screens as she watched for the tiniest flicker of activity, any sign that their digital intruder had returned.

It was on the afternoon of the third day that the silence finally broke.

In the quiet workshop, Ace was testing the speakers on a refurbished tablet, filling the room with the tinny sound of a pop song. anwhile, Silva was carefully drawing a detailed frowny face in his logbook next to his entry about the pigeon.

Without warning, Evelyn suddenly went rigid and straightened her back. "She’s here," she whispered. Her two simple words cut through the air like a knife.

Ace and Silva froze imdiately. The cheerful music from the tablet suddenly seed absurdly loud and completely out of place. Ace fumbled to shut it off, plunging the room into a tense and waiting silence.

"On the secondary laptop," Evelyn said, her voice tight and low with a mixture of fear and triumph. "Soone is accessing the honeypot server. They are opening multiple files incredibly fast. It doesn’t even look like she’s reading them, just scanning everything all at once."

She pointed a trembling finger at the screen of the offline laptop. A command prompt window was scrolling lines of text far too quickly for any human to possibly read. Their trap had been sprung. Silica was in the vault.

"Is it working? Is the beacon active?" Ace asked, his heart hamring against his ribs. This was their one and only shot.

"The signal is active and is now trying to trace the connection back to its source," Evelyn explained. Her fingers flew across the keyboard of the secondary machine as she entered commands to follow the beacon’s pulse. A city map flashed up on the screen. The solid red dot marking their workshop began to blink rapidly. Then, a second dot appeared. It was faint and fuzzy around the edges, flickering in and out of existence like a weak signal. It wasn’t a precise address but a blurry circle covering a large, run down area across the city—the industrial district near the old docks.

"She’s there!" Silva said, pointing excitedly at the screen. "Sowhere inside that blur! We found her!"

"But that’s a huge area," Ace said, his hope mixing with frustration. "That blob covers dozens of warehouses and old factories. We can’t possibly search half the docklands."

Evelyn, who was muttering more to herself than to them, said, "The signal is weak because it’s fighting her defenses. She is trying to block it." She was engaged in a silent, digital duel, and they could only watch from the sidelines. The second dot on the map flickered, stuttered violently, and then vanished completely.

Evelyn slamd her fist on the desk in sheer frustration. "She killed it! She found the beacon and shut it down! She was just too fast."

A wave of crushing disappointnt washed over the room. Their clever plan and long shot had failed. The ghost had escaped.

But Evelyn wasn’t done. She narrowed her eyes, focused on the main laptop—the one Silica was still actively raiding. "She’s still in the honeypot. She’s too arrogant to leave because she thinks she’s won by blocking our trace. Right now, she’s just sitting there and browsing through our fake files like she’s window-shopping."

Ace recognized the look on Evelyn’s face. It was the sa fierce, determined expression she had when she designed their security trap. "What are you doing?" he asked her.

"If she wants to read our fake emails, then I’m going to send her a ssage she can’t ignore," Evelyn replied. Her voice was cold and sharp. She began typing on the main laptop, not with complex code this ti, but with simple, clear words.

Ace watched over her shoulder as she typed a ssage directly into a fake client email stored in the honeypot server.

You’re good. But you’re not a ghost. We have seen your location. We know you’re in the docks. The next ti you co knocking, we’ll be ready.

She hit enter, sending the ssage directly to the intruder in their system.

For ten full seconds, nothing happened. The command prompt on their other laptop stopped scrolling. The hacker, Silica, had frozen, clearly surprised by this direct contact.

Then, a new line of text appeared on their main screen. It wasn’t code. It was a response, typed directly into the sa fake email thread.

A shield is only strong if it knows where the blow is coming from. You are playing a ga you cannot win. Aegis will fall.

The cold, threatening words hung on the screen for a mont, feeling utterly personal. Then, the connection was cut. The main laptop’s screen flickered back to its normal desktop. Silica was gone, and the conversation was over.

The workshop fell into a dead silence. That direct, personal communication felt more terrifying than any silent hack.

"She talked to us," Silva whispered, his face white as a sheet. "She’s... real. And she wants to break us."

Before anyone could process this chilling exchange, Ramos’s cheap burner phone erupted in a sharp, buzz from the workbench. The harsh sound was so violently out of place after the tense digital standoff that all three of them jumped.

Ace stared at the cheap plastic phone as it vibrated against the wood, dragging him back to a different, more imdiate danger. The two worlds of his life were violently colliding. The digital ghost had just vanished, and the very real, physical threat of the cri lord was calling.

He picked it up, his hand feeling cold. The ssage was brief and left no room for argunt.

Co to The Grind House by yourself in 30 minutes.

It was from Marcus. The order was clear, but ’The Grind House’ was Evelyn’s café. It was her place of work and her sanctuary away from all of this.

Evelyn was watching him, her face pale. "What is it?"

"It’s Marcus," Ace said, his voice hollow. "He wants to et at the coffee shop in thirty minutes, and he says I have to go alone."

The color drained completely from Evelyn’s face. "No, Ace, no. It’s a trap. He knows about and my job. By telling you to co alone, he’s really telling you that he knows exactly where to find if you don’t."

The threat was clear and terrifying. Going alone to the eting was bad enough, but refusing would bring Ramos’s danger directly to Evelyn’s doorstep. He was reminding Ace that his targets weren’t just digital—they were physical people with addresses, and they were terrifyingly vulnerable.

Ace looked from Evelyn’s terrified face to the now-blank screen of the laptop, where a digital enemy had just promised to destroy them. He was caught between two different kinds of monsters, each one capable of ending everything he cared about.

"I have to go," he said, the words tasting like ash. He felt he had no other choice.

"You can’t!" Evelyn pleaded, her voice rising in panic. "After what just happened? This is the worst possible ti! Silica could co back any second!"

"It’s because of what just happened that I have to go!" Ace shot back, the imnse stress of the last few days finally boiling over. "We have a hacker who knows where we are and a cri lord who knows where you work! I can’t fight them both at once. I have to play one ga at a ti, and right now, Ramos is the one with the most imdiate and violent consequences!"

His logic was brutal, but it was undeniably true. Silica was a shadowy threat for tomorrow, but Ramos was a hamr swinging today.

Silva, for once, was completely speechless, looking back and forth between them as if he were watching a terrifying tennis match.

Ace grabbed his jacket, his movents stiff. He felt the familiar, hidden energy under his skin, but it seed useless now, a re party trick in the face of this kind of danger. How do you fight a eting? How do you use a secret power when the threat is just a conversation?

"Lock the door behind ," he said to Silva, his voice firm as he forced a calm he didn’t feel. "Don’t let anyone in but . You know the code word." They had established a verbal all-clear signal days ago for exactly this kind of situation.

Evelyn didn’t try to stop him again. She just looked at him, her expression a heartbreaking mixture of fear, anger, and a terrible, resigned understanding. She knew he was right. The monster at the door was always more urgent than the one in the wires.

Ace stepped out into the afternoon sun and pulled the heavy steel door shut behind him. He heard the solid, definitive thunk of the lock engaging. He was alone on the cracked pavent.

He had just faced down a ghost in the machine, and now he was walking straight into the lion’s den with nothing but his wits and a secret he dared not use. The battle was underway on all fronts, and he was the only soldier they had to send into the fray.

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