Chapter 3: The Blackout
The city felt different after the heist.
Kai moved through the crowds like a ghost, their hood up, their steps quick but careful. The memory still pulsed at the edge of their consciousness, uninvited and sharp. Every shadowed figure looked like a threat. Every drone hum sounded like a tail.
But the job wasn’t over — not yet.
The client had given them a meeting point for the handoff: a shuttered subway platform beneath Sector Nine. It was the kind of place people forgot existed — a relic of the city’s pre-implant age, filled with dust and graffiti.
Perfect for secret deals.
Kai arrived early. Their instincts told them not to linger, but they needed to finish this, to get their payment and disappear before the memory in their head became a death sentence.
The platform was quiet. Too quiet.
Kai scanned the space — the broken benches, the flickering lights, the empty tracks. No one.
They waited.
Minutes passed. Then half an hour.
Still no sign of the client.
Kai’s chest tightened. This wasn’t normal. The black market was dangerous, sure, but clients didn’t just vanish. Not when this much money was involved.
“Maybe they’re late,” Kai muttered, though the words rang hollow.
And then the lights went out.
Not just the platform lights — everything.
The entire sector plunged into darkness.
For one long, terrible moment, there was silence. Then came the hum of approaching boots, precise and heavy, echoing off the tunnel walls.
Kai’s body went cold.
They didn’t wait to see who it was.
They grabbed their pack and ran.
---
The operatives moved fast — faster than normal street enforcers. Kai caught glimpses of them in the strobing emergency lights: black armor, mirrored visors, corporate insignias glowing faintly on their chests.
Roan Dynamics security.
Of course.
They were here for the memory.
Kai darted down a maintenance tunnel, lungs burning. Behind them came the sharp buzz of a taser drone, then the crackle of electricity as it struck the wall inches from their head.
Too close.
Kai hurled themself sideways through an open vent shaft, landing hard on the metal grating below. Pain shot up their leg, but they kept moving, crawling until the shaft opened into a side corridor.
They could hear the operatives behind them, their voices calm and coordinated over encrypted comms.
“Target is moving east.”
“Block exits three and five.”
“Do not terminate. Retrieval only.”
Retrieval.
They didn’t want Kai dead — not yet.
That was almost worse.
---
Kai made it to the surface through a storm drain, emerging into the rain-slick streets of Sector Nine. The blackout had spread — entire blocks were dark, traffic lights dead, storefronts shuttered.
Perfect cover.
They melted into the panicked crowd of civilians who had come out to see what was happening. The operatives were close — Kai could feel it — but the chaos gave them just enough space to slip away.
By the time they reached their workshop, their hands were still shaking.
They double-locked the door, activated the jammer field, and collapsed into the nearest chair.
They’d been set up.
The client was gone. The payment was gone. And Roan’s people knew exactly who had taken the memory.
Someone had sold them out.
But who — and why?
Kai’s gaze fell to the siphon rig on the workbench. The memory file was still stored there, perfectly intact.
If the client wanted it badly enough to hire them, and Roan wanted it badly enough to send a kill team… then it was worth more than Kai had guessed.
And maybe, just maybe, it was their only leverage.
---
They spent the next hour scrubbing their digital footprint, deleting logs, rerouting dead drops. It wouldn’t stop Roan Dynamics, not completely, but it might buy them time.
Then they did something they’d never done before.
They played the memory again.
It came rushing back like a tide, sharper this time, clearer:
The conference room. The faces. The cold certainty in Roan’s voice as he laid out the plan.
“…every citizen’s neural implant will be patched. The behavioral protocols will activate automatically. Compliance rates will reach ninety-nine percent.”
Kai paused the playback, heart pounding.
Behavioral protocols.
That meant control — real, absolute control. They weren’t just talking about pacifying riots or calming citizens. They were talking about rewriting free will.
And they were nearly ready to deploy it.
Kai sat back, the weight of it all pressing down on them.
For years, they’d kept their head down, stayed neutral, never caring what people did with the memories they stole.
But now the city itself was in danger.
And suddenly, neutrality felt like cowardice.
---
The next day, the newsfeeds were ablaze with reports of the blackout. Officials blamed a systems malfunction, but Kai knew better.
The blackout had been a cover — a distraction to mask the hunt for them.
Everywhere they looked, they saw security drones sweeping alleys, scanning faces. Their name would be on a list now, flagged in every database that mattered.
They couldn’t stay here.
But leaving wasn’t enough.
If Roan’s plan went forward, it wouldn’t matter where Kai ran. There’d be nowhere to hide.
They needed to do something unthinkable.
Expose the memory.
---
Easier said than done.
Corporate-controlled newsfeeds wouldn’t touch something this big without proof, and even then, the story would vanish in hours if Roan Dynamics wanted it to.
Which meant finding someone outside the system — a whistleblower, a hacker collective, anyone with reach and a reason to care.
Kai thought of an old contact, someone who owed them a favor: Jessa Venn, an underground journalist who ran a pirate feed from an abandoned weather station beyond the city grid.
It was a long shot, but it was all Kai had.
They packed light — the rig, some credsticks, a burner comm — and slipped out into the night.
The streets felt hostile now, every shadow a threat. Somewhere above, a security drone swept past, its red beam cutting across the alley before moving on.
Kai took the long way out of the city, through forgotten service tunnels and disused metro lines, the memory file burning like a secret in their pocket.
They had no idea what would happen next.
But one thing was clear:
The perfect job was over.
This was survival now.
---
Why This Chapter Works
Chapter 3 raises the stakes dramatically by transforming Kai from a skilled thief into a hunted fugitive. Here’s why this chapter is crucial for the story’s momentum:
1. Escalation of Conflict
In Chapters 1 and 2, Kai was in control — planning the job, executing it cleanly, and even walking away unscathed. Chapter 3 strips that control away. The blackout ambush turns the hunter into the hunted, forcing Kai into reactive mode and escalating the narrative tension.
2. Betrayal as a Catalyst
The disappearance of the client and payment adds a layer of betrayal, making the conflict personal. Kai’s skills were used against them, which motivates them to go beyond just running and start thinking about fighting back.
3. World-Building Through Action
The corporate security operatives, blackout, and public chaos expand the sense of scale. We see just how powerful Roan Dynamics is and how far they’re willing to go to retrieve what was stolen. The city feels alive and dangerous, full of surveillance and systems designed to keep people in line.
4. Deepening Character Arc
This is the first chapter where Kai’s moral compass shifts. They’re no longer just trying to get paid — they’re realizing the memory represents a threat to everyone, not just a payday. This sets up Kai’s transformation from self-serving thief to reluctant hero.
5. Perfect Setup for Chapter 4
Chapter 3 ends with Kai making the decision to seek out Jessa Venn, creating a natural bridge to the next part of the story. It keeps the tension high while pointing to the next narrative goal: getting the truth out before Roan’s people catch them.
Rain lashed against the city’s forgotten outskirts, turning the dirt roads into rivers of mud. Kai’s boots were soaked, their hood drawn low, their pack heavy with the memory siphon.
The abandoned weather station was exactly where they remembered it — a leaning metal tower surrounded by rusted fences and weeds as tall as Kai’s shoulders. The main building was dark, except for a single yellow light in a window upstairs.
Jessa Venn was still here.
Good.
Kai approached cautiously, checking the perimeter. No fresh tracks in the mud, no humming security drones perched nearby. Still, they couldn’t shake the feeling of being watched.
They knocked twice, then once — the signal they’d agreed on years ago, back when they were both nobodies trying to survive in the cracks of the city.
For a moment, silence.
Then the door creaked open, revealing Jessa, a thin woman with copper hair tied into a