Jace Varn trudged through the damp streets of New Cascadia, the memory chips in his pocket feeling heavier than they should. The neon glow of the market was behind him now, replaced by the dim flicker of busted streetlights and the low hum of drones patrolling above. His boots squelched in puddles that smelled like oil and regret. He’d shaken Kael’s crew, but his heart was still thumping from the chase. Close calls were part of the game, but they never got easier. He needed a place to crash, somewhere the city’s eyes couldn’t follow.
He headed for the Pit, a crumbling tenement on the edge of the slums where drifters like him holed up. It wasn’t home—Jace didn’t have one of those—but it was close enough. The building was a skeleton of concrete and rusted rebar, windows boarded or smashed, tagged with gang signs and faded holo-ads that hadn’t worked in years. Inside, it smelled like mold and burnt wiring, but it was off the grid, outside the drones’ main scan routes. That made it worth the stink.
Jace slipped through a side door, nodding to a couple of squatters huddled over a makeshift fire in a trash can. The air was thick with smoke and the tang of cheap booze. He climbed a staircase that groaned under his weight, dodging broken bottles and a guy passed out in the hall. Third floor, end of the corridor—his spot. A closet-sized room with a mattress so thin it might as well be cardboard, but it was his for the night. He dropped his pack, checked the chips were still in his jacket, and flopped onto the mattress. His stomach growled again. Food could wait. Sleep first.
The walls were thin, voices drifting through from the next room. A couple of drifters, probably, shooting the breeze. Jace closed his eyes, trying to tune them out, but their words slipped through the cracks. “You heard about that guy down on 7th?” one said, voice rough like he smoked too much. “Moved like he knew where every drone was. Grabbed a crate of tech and vanished.”
“Players,” the other guy muttered, low and wary. “They’re all over. Got some kinda edge, like they’re cheating life.”
Jace’s eyes cracked open. Players again. That word kept popping up, like a glitch in his day. He’d heard it before—bar talk, street whispers. Folks who acted like they were in on a secret, moving through New Cascadia with a purpose most didn’t have. He rolled over, pressing his ear closer to the wall, curious about himself.
“Cheating, how?” the first guy asked, coughing. “What, like they’re hacked into the city’s grid or something?”
“Nah, bigger than that. Word is, they got tech in their heads. Makes life like… a game or some crap. Missions, points, all that. You don’t see it unless you’re in.”
Jace snorted softly. Sounded like a fairy tale for techheads. Brain chips weren’t new—half the city had some kind of implant, mostly cheap ones that fried your nerves if you pushed them too hard. But a game? That was next-level crazy. Still, the idea stuck, like a song you can’t shake. He’d seen weird stuff in New Cascadia—ads that flickered wrong, people who moved too smoothly, like they knew something. Maybe there was something to it.
The voices faded as the drifters moved on to griping about the price of stims. Jace stared at the ceiling, where a c***k traced a jagged line like a scar. He wasn’t one for chasing rumors. Life was hard enough without buying into street myths. But he couldn’t help wondering—what if it was real? Some kind of tech that gave you an edge? He’d spent his whole life scraping by, dodging trouble, always one step from getting crushed. An edge sounded nice.
He shook his head, chuckling. “Get a grip, Jace,” he muttered. Next thing, he’d be chasing ghosts or buying into those cult ads about “ascending” through neural feeds. He needed to focus—get to Riko, fence the chips, score some credits. Maybe even hit a stall for a real meal, something that didn’t taste like it came out of a vat. His stomach growled in agreement.
A knock at the door made him tense. Nobody knew he was here. He slid off the mattress, quieted, and grabbed a metal pipe he kept stashed under it. Not much, but it’d c***k a skull if it came to that. “Who’s there?” he called, keeping his voice low.
“It’s me, dipshit,” came a familiar rasp. Lena. Jace relaxed, tossing the pipe down. He opened the door to find her leaning against the frame, all sharp eyes and a crooked smirk. She was in her usual getup—ripped jacket, boots caked in street grime, dark hair pulled back like she was ready to throw a punch. Lena ran drinks at a dive bar a few blocks over, but she always seemed to know more than she let on.
“You look like crap,” she said, stepping inside without asking. “Heard you had a run-in with Kael’s boys.”
Jace shut the door, shrugging. “Nothing I couldn’t handle. What’s it to you?”
She dropped onto the mattress, kicking her boots up. “Just check you’re not dead. You keep pulling stunts like that, you’ll end up in a dumpster.”
“Aw, you worried about me?” Jace grinned, leaning against the wall. “Didn’t know you cared.”
Lena rolled her eyes. “Don’t flatter yourself. I just don’t want to lose my best tipper.” She pulled a flask from her jacket, took a swig, and offered it. Jace waved it off. He wasn’t big on drinking—kept his head too foggy.
They shot the breeze for a bit, trading jabs about the city’s latest screw-ups. A drone crash last week took out a whole market stall. Some rich kid in a sky-tower got hacked and lost his whole crypto stash. Same old New Cascadia chaos. But Jace’s mind kept drifting back to the drifters’ talk. Players. Games. He didn’t mean to bring it up, but it slipped out.
“Have you ever heard about players?” he asked, keeping it casual. “Guys acting like they’re in some kinda game?”
Lena’s eyes narrowed, just for a second, before she smirked. “What, are you buying into street stories now? Thought you were smarter than that.”
“Just heard some talk,” Jace said, shrugging. “Sounds like nonsense, but people keep yapping about it.”
She took another swig, staring at the wall like she was picking up her words. “People yap about a lot. Doesn’t mean it’s real. You start chasing that kinda thing, you’ll end up like those techheads, frying their brains for a hit of code.”
Jace nodded, but her dodge didn’t sit right. Lena always had a way of saying just enough to keep you guessing. He let it drop, though. Pushing her never worked—she’d clam up or throw a bottle at him. They talked a bit more, mostly about nothing, until she stood to leave.
“Get some sleep, Varn,” she said at the door. “And maybe don’t steal from guys like Tiko. You’re going to piss off the wrong people one day.”
“Noted,” Jace said, flashing a grin. “See you at the bar.”
She flipped him off and was gone. Jace locked the door, settling back on the mattress. The squat was quiet now, just the hum of the city outside. He pulled out the memory chips, turning them over in his hands. Small, shiny, worth a couple of hundred credits. Enough to keep him going a bit longer. He tucked them away, trying to shake the unease creeping up his spine.
Those players, that game talk—it was probably nothing. Just drifters spinning stories to make the grind feel less pointless. But as he closed his eyes, the idea wouldn’t leave him alone. What if there was something out there, something bigger than the hustle? Something that could change the game for a guy like him?
He didn’t know it, but the city was already watching. Not the drones
, not the gangs. Something deeper, waiting to pull him in.