Jace Varn sat on the roof of a crumbling tenement, legs dangling over the edge, the city of New Cascadia sprawling below like a neon-lit beast. The data stick and memory chips were still in his jacket, heavy as guilt. After Milo’s cryptic warnings about players and brain chips, Jace’s head was spinning. He needed a minute to breathe, away from the streets’ chaos. The roof was quiet, just the hum of drones and the distant blare of holo-ads. Up here, he could think, even if thinking took him places he didn’t like going.
The night air was cool, carrying the tang of salt from the bay and the sharp bite of burnt circuits. Jace leaned back on his hands, staring at the flickering skyline—sky-towers glowing for the rich, slums drowning in shadows below. He hadn’t slept since the squat, and Milo’s words kept gnawing at him. Players. Power. Trouble. He didn’t want to buy into it, but that glitch he’d seen—code flickering in the air—felt too real. His mind drifted, unbidden, to the past. To the kid he used to be, before New Cascadia chewed him up and spit him out.
He was nine when it started falling apart. Back then, he wasn’t Jace Varn, street hustler. He was just Jace, a scrawny kid with a mom who smiled too rarely and a dad who worked double shifts at a factory cranking out drone parts. They lived in a tiny apartment on the edge of the slums, walls so thin you could hear the neighbors fighting. His dad, Marcus, was a big guy, all calloused hands and tired eyes, always promising they’d move up to a better block. “Just a few more months, kid,” he’d say, ruffling Jace’s hair. Jace believed him. Kids do.
Then the accident happened. Jace was at school, doodling on a cracked datapad, when the principal pulled him out. Factory explosion, they said. Faulty machinery. Marcus didn’t make it. Jace didn’t cry, not then. He just sat in the principal’s office, staring at the floor, feeling like someone had punched a hole through his chest. His mom, Lila, fell apart after that. She stopped smiling altogether, started working late at a dive bar, coming home smelling like cheap liquor and cheaper stims.
Jace learned fast that the city didn’t care. Rent was due, food wasn’t free, and a kid with no parents watching him was easy prey. He was eleven when Lila vanished. No note, no goodbye. Just an empty apartment and a stack of unpaid bills. Jace waited a week, thinking she’d come back. She didn’t. He never found out if she ran, got nabbed, or just… gave up. He stopped asking eventually. Asking hurts too much.
By twelve, Jace was on the streets, learning the hard way how to survive. New Cascadia was a meat grinder, and kids were just grist. He ran with a crew of other strays for a while, picking pockets and swiping food from market stalls. The older kids taught him the basics—keep your head down, move fast, trust nobody. He was good at it, too. Small, quick, with a knack for spotting an easy mark. But the crews didn’t last. People betrayed you, or they got caught, or they just disappeared. By fourteen, Jace was on his own, and he liked it that way. Nobody will let you down if you don't let them in.
He learned the city’s rules like a second language. Stick to shadows to dodge drones. Never hit the same mark twice. Don’t flash your cash unless you want a knife in your back. He picked up tricks—how to hotwire a vending machine, how to talk his way out of a gang shakedown, how to spot a corp camera’s blind spot. He wasn’t proud of it, but he wasn’t ashamed either. It was just life. You hustled, or you sank.
Now, at twenty-seven, Jace was still here, still moving. The city hadn’t killed him yet, but it kept trying. He rubbed his thumb over a scar on his knuckle, a souvenir from a fight with some punk who thought he could take Jace’s score. He’d won, barely. That’s how it went—win or lose, no in-between. The data stick in his pocket felt like another fight waiting to happen. Milo’s talk about players and brain chips didn’t help. It sounded like the kind of thing that could change everything—or get you erased.
Jace’s mind flicked back to a moment when he was fifteen, holed up in an abandoned shop during a rainstorm. He’d found a broken datapad, its screen cracked but still glowing with an old game. Some dumb shooter, all pixels and fake heroics. He’d played it for hours, losing himself in a world where you could hit reset and try again. Real life didn’t work like that, but for a kid with nothing, it was a nice escape. Maybe that’s why the player stuck with him. A game you could win, for real? An edge in a city that always stacked the deck against you? It was tempting, even if it sounded like a pipe dream.
He shook his head, chuckling bitterly. “You’re losing it, Varn,” he muttered. Chasing stories was for suckers. He had real problems—like what to do with the data stick. Riko still wasn’t answering, which meant Jace was on his own. He could try another fence, but that’d spread word he was holding hot goods. Not smart. He could ditch the stick, toss it in the bay, but that’d mean walking away from triple pay. And Jace didn’t walk away from a score, not when it could keep him afloat for weeks.
The city’s hum filled the silence—drones, traffic, the faint pulse of music from a bar below. Jace’s eyes caught a flicker across the street, a glitch like the ones he’d seen before. Numbers, maybe, or code, flashing in the air for a split second before fading. He blinked, heart kicking up. Nobody else on the street seemed to notice, just kept trudging through the neon haze. He was tired, that’s all. Had to be. But the glitch felt like a warning, like the city was trying to tell him something.
He stood, brushing gravel off his hands. Sitting up here wasn’t solving anything. He needed to move, find Riko, figure out what the hell he’d gotten himself into. The data stick was trouble, no doubt, but trouble was what Jace knew best. He’d survived this long by staying one step ahead, trusting his gut, and keeping everyone at arm’s length. That’s what kept him alive when his parents weren’t, when the streets tried to break him.
As he climbed down the fire escape, boots clanging on rusted metal, he couldn’t shake the feeling that he was being watched. Not by drones, not by gangs—something else. Something that saw him, not just as another drifter, but as a piece in a game he didn’t yet understand. He hit the street, pulling his hood up, and melted into the crowd. New Cascadia was waiting, and Jace Varn wa
sn’t about to let it win.