Ray had sent his motorcycle to a secure, long-term parking garage via its remote piloting system.
A quiet walk, he thought, might help Alyna relax, help her process the fresh, disturbing revelation of her parents' doing.
“How are you feeling?” Ray asked gently as they moved down the cracked, uneven pavent, the neon lights of the city painting their faces in shifting, lurid colors.
“Like hell, Ray. Utter, absolute hell. They put a goddamn pet implant in . To keep
docile.” Alyna’s laugh was a sharp, brittle, joyless sound. “And the sickest part? I’m not even surprised. Not really.”
Ray slipped his arm around her shoulders, holding her close, offering a silent, steadying presence. She leaned into him, her breath shaky but grateful, the sharp, cutting edge of her bitterness blunted, for a mont, by the simple, uncomplicated warmth of his touch.
The hallway leading to Ray’s apartnt was as decrepit as ever—peeling paint, a low, buzzing hum from the exposed neon conduits overhead, the distant sound of their own footsteps echoing in the grimy stairwell. They entered the rickety, graffiti-scarred elevator; Ray jabbed the 32nd-floor button with a familiar, percussive slap. The ancient lift groaned, stuttered, then began its slow, lurching ascent into the gabuilding's upper, slightly less squalid levels. A few steps later, they stepped into the apartnt. The air within was thick with the familiar scents of old synth-tea, dicine, and a lingering, unspoken grief. His mother lay on the couch, clutching a frad photo—her, Ray, and his father, forever caught in the warm, golden light of a ti long past, a happier, more hopeful world that no longer existed. Lina’s trembling fingers traced the outlines of their faces. Her eyes, when she looked up, shone with the unshed tears of mory, the past cradled gently, tenderly, in her grasp, hope and sorrow flickering in the hazy, uncertain light of the evening.
She set the photo carefully on the small table, her hand lingering for a mont as if afraid to let go, to sever the connection to the past. She finally looked up, her eyes, though glassy with mory, now clear and resolute.
"Good to see you again, Alyna," she said, her voice soft but steady. "I’m so sorry for not greeting you properly earlier... It’s just, today is…" Lina’s voice caught, the wave of emotion surfacing and then retreating in the sa breath.
“It’s fine, Mrs. Callen. I… I understand,” Alyna replied, her own voice small but edged with a genuine gratitude. She twisted her fingers together nervously in her lap, a small, self-conscious gesture.
Lina managed a wan, gentle smile. "Are you going to stay with us for the night?" Her hope was cautious and fragile, but it brightened the dim, oppressive room for a single, fleeting heartbeat.
Alyna turned to Ray, her brows drawn together in a silent question. Ray t her gaze and gave a single, firm nod, a solid, reassuring anchor in the storm of her emotions. Relief, sharp and profound, warred with a lingering uncertainty in Alyna’s expressive eyes as she nodded back, first to Ray, then to his mother.
Ray took two chairs from the small kitchen alcove and set them down before Lina. Lina’s face, though still pale and drawn, grew more serious. She folded her hands in her lap, her knuckles white.
Alyna took a deep, shuddering breath, the air trembling in her chest. She glanced at Ray again—he t her gaze, steady, silent, offering his unspoken support.
“I… I ran away from ho,” she confessed, the words shaking slightly as they escaped her lips, a final, definitive severing of her old life.
Lina reached across the small space between them, her own hand, though trembling with the relentless progression of her illness, surprisingly steady as she gently brushed Alyna’s hair back, tucking a stray, dark strand behind her ear. Her voice, when she spoke, softened to a near-whisper. "You’re safe here."
Alyna nodded, a single tear tracing a clean path through the gri on her cheek. She then pressed on, the words tumbling out now, a torrent of pain and humiliation. "I just found out… they’d put a pet compliance implant in ." She tapped the fresh bandage at the base of her skull, her face pinched with a mixture of physical pain and deep, psychic humiliation. "I can’t… I won’t go back. Not ever."
For a mont, the apartnt was utterly silent, save for the distant, omnipresent hum of the building ventilation bleeding through the thin walls. Lina’s hand closed gently and protective around Alyna’s. "You can stay here for as long as you need to, Alyna. This is your ho now, too. For as long as you want it to be."
Ray placed his hand on Alyna’s shoulder, the simple, grounding warmth of his touch a silent promise. As he watched the two won, a thought that had been blooming in the back of his mind for hours, a desperate, dangerous, audacious idea, resurfaced, now fully ford, resolute. They will not live in this filthy, decaying apartnt for much longer. I won’t let them.
After the heavy atmosphere in the room had settled into a more comfortable, if somber, quiet, Ray slowly, reluctantly, rose to his feet.
Alyna noticed first. “Ray? Where are you going?”
He hesitated at the threshold of the small room, searching for the right words, for a lie that sounded close enough to the truth. “I… I promised a guy, that tech-head, Arty, whose drone crashed into our living room… that I’d help him with sothing. He just sent
a ssage, asking if I could co over. I kind of owe him one.” Ray hated himself for the lie. But the real reason he was leaving, was a truth he couldn't, wouldn't, share with them. Not yet. Maybe never.
Alyna’s hands curled into small fists on her knees, but she just nodded, her eyes filled with a concern she didn’t voice. “Be careful, Ray.”
Lina managed a faint, tired smile, trying for a reassurance she clearly didn’t feel.
Ray looked at both of them and felt the imnse, crushing weight of his responsibility. “Lock the door behind ,” he said, his voice quiet but firm.
A silent exchange of glances passed between them—a complex tapestry of trust, worry, and the hard-earned, fragile hope of a new beginning. He stepped out into the dim, buzzing hall, the door closing shut behind him. The hum of the building’s failing systems and the city’s distant, restless pulse grew louder as he walked away from the last island of warmth and light he knew.
Ray slipped out into the cold, indifferent embrace of the Virelian night, leaving the two most important people in his life in the relative safety of the small apartnt. Where he was headed, it was better to go alone.
The maglev station was a cold, humming skeleton of steel and flickering light. Neon ads scrolled in broken fragnts across stained concrete walls, painting the crowds in toxic greens and bruised purples. The air tasted of burnt ozone, engine grease, and a thousand unwashed bodies. Maintenance drones whirred overhead, leaving trails of static behind half-cleaned tiles. In the shadows, scavvers and runaways hunched beside battered vending bots, faces hidden by cracked visors and graffiti-tagged masks.
Ray’s heavy boots thudded up the sticky tal stairs as he climbed toward the platform. A sharp, biting wind whipped down from the upper levels, carrying the burnt-sugar tang of recently vaporized, illicit synth-drugs and the distant, greasy scent of street food from so unseen, all-night vendor.
He stood alone on the platform, a solitary figure lost in a sea of anonymous, late-night commuters—downcast eyes, faces lit by the ghostly light of smartphones. Or staring into nothing as they accessed their interface.
Ray shoved his hands into his pockets, jaw tight.
When the sleek, tal maglev train capsule hissed open, he stepped inside. The seats were cold, hard, and uncomfortable. Ray stared at his own reflection in the polarized window—a fractured, ghost-like image, distorted by the passing city lights.
Fifteen minutes later, the train slid to a silent stop. Ray stepped out, and was imdiately, violently, swallowed by Slickrow’s electric, predatory roar. He wasn’t here for pleasure, or distraction, or escape. He was here on business.
Neon bled from every conceivable angle, painting him in ghostly, shifting blues and violent, aggressive reds. Garish, holographic light spilled across the wet pavent, fracturing into a thousand brilliant, disorienting colors, as if the district itself were actively trying to dazzle you, to blind you, to overwhelm your senses. Above, the sky, if it even existed, was completely erased by a dense, suffocating canopy of advertising—towering, three-dinsional holo-billboards strobing with hyper-violent combat sport highlights, ads for illicit vices, and impossible, seductive dreams of wealth and power. The disembodied faces of corporate-sponsored idols—so real, so disturbingly realistic AI constructs—whispered promises of oblivion or ecstasy from hidden speakers, their voices audible only to those with the right, or wrong, kind of neural mods.
The music was overwhelming, a physical assault—a deep, visceral bass thumping so hard Ray’s insides rattled in his chest, a dozen different genres, from brutalist synth-pop to manic, high-speed hard trance, bleeding together into a chaotic, disorienting cacophony of sound. Voices, a thousand of them, overlapped: shrill, artificial laughter, desperate, alcohol-fueled shrieks, hushed, clandestine deals being made in darkened doorways, brutal, short-lived fights breaking out over nothing, the guttural bark of heavily ard gang enforcers, and the clipped, professional tones of corporate security squads sweeping past in tight, disciplined formations.
As he walked off the crowded platform and into the teeming, chaotic streets, he let the human current carry him—past wide-eyed tourists, their faces a mixture of awe and terror; past graceful, elegantly modded street perforrs, spinning and dancing in ethereal curtains of light; past shadowy, nervous-looking dealers, moving with a practiced, almost invisible ease through the throng; past hulking, nacing enforcers, looming at the edge of every shadow, their eyes cold and watchful. A fixer's harsh, conspiratorial whisper, a dancer’s sensual, inviting twirl, a back-alley street modder’s unnervingly bright, neon-lit smile—each mont a pulse in the district’s endless, frenetic, twenty-four-hour circuit.
Ray’s senses, already heightened by the nanites, spun, on the verge of overload. The air was thick, a suffocating soup of ozone from the thousands of holo-projectors, the syrupy-sweet vapor of a hundred different designer drugs, the commingled sweat and cloying perfu of ten thousand bodies crushed together, the sll of perpetually frying food and leaking engine grease. Every breath stung, alive with both intoxicating temptation and imminent threat. In the narrow, dark back alleys that branched off the main thoroughfare, another, more primal world simred: the acrid stench of burnt plastic, of old, stagnant rain, of the sour, tallic tang of pure, undiluted desperation.
As he moved, the city, the crowd, touched him, a constant, invasive physical presence: a stray hand grabbing at his jacket, the slick, expensive feel of silk and the rough texture of cheap synth-leather slipping past his fingers, the accidental, intimate brush of a latex-gloved hand from soone stumbling by. The pavent itself buzzed, vibrating with the sheer, overwhelming force of the music, a low, resonant frequency that made his teeth ache in his jaw. He tried a bite of street food from a passing vendor—a sudden, explosive burst of intense heat, exotic spice, and mind-numbing chemical stimulants sparking across his tongue. He swallowed, the strange, artificial taste lingering long after he had moved on.
Everywhere, pleasure was the currency, and danger was the unavoidable cost. Corporate security guards in unmarked, tactical black armor watched from the shadowy corners, their cold, impassive eyes hidden behind mirrored, full-face visors. Every darkened doorway held both a seductive invitation and a silent, deadly warning; every brilliant, dazzling burst of light cast its own deep, nacing darkness. Ray pressed on, an anonymous, yet strangely exposed, figure in the throng. The chaos around him blurred with the rising noise in his own mind, each step he took carrying him deeper into Slickrow’s neon-lit, predatory heart, and closer to the desperate, dangerous destination he had co here to find.
Ten minutes later, Ray slipped down a narrow, reeking alleyway, its floor slick with old, greasy rain and littered with a carpet of crushed synth-beer cans and shattered, iridescent glass. The foul stench of overflowing garbage containers and so unidentifiable, caustic chemical clawed at his nostrils, but he barely blinked, his gaze locked on the small, unassuming, yet sohow nacing, LED sign pulsing ahead—EVERYTHING HAS A PRICE. The letters, set in a chipped, garish golden font, glimred with a cynical, predatory promise above a battered, heavily reinforced steel door. Beneath the sign, a steep, narrow set of concrete stairs plunged down into the city’s dark, forgotten underbelly. Ray tugged his hood lower, pulled his gaiter up over his nose, and let the oppressive shadows swallow him whole. Each heavy footfall on the steep, descending steps thudded like a final, irreversible countdown, his nerves tightening with a mixture of apprehension and grim resolve.
At the bottom, he paused before the reinforced, windowless door. A small, almost invisible cara whirred to life above the fra, its multifaceted lens tightening its focus on his partially obscured face. Ray stared back, unblinking, letting the silent, automated machine size him up. For a single, tense heartbeat, nothing moved. Then, with a low, powerful hydraulic groan, the heavy door slid open, unleashing a sudden blast of hot, recycled air thick with the cloying sll of exotic incense, overheated, old-school wiring, and a sweetly rotting, organic musk he couldn’t quite identify.
Inside, neon-drenched, organized chaos reigned. The pawn shop, if it could be called that, sprawled before him—a bewildering, claustrophobic maze of floor-to-ceiling glass cases cramd with priceless relics and bizarre, disturbing oddities, every shelf, every surface, fighting for space in a riot of clashing, over-saturated color. An elegant, ivory-handled, pre-Collapse monoblade glead beside a stack of battered, heavily modified cyberdeck consoles. Exquisite, antique jewelry, glowing with a soft, internal light, lay nestled beside a set of hand-carved chess pieces, each one crafted from the charred, polished bone of so unknown, exotic creature. Decommissioned, repurposed police drones, tagged with a crudely hand-painted sign that read "WORKS—MOSTLY
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