Jace Varn was halfway through a fried noodle bowl when the call came in. The noodles were greasy, cheap, and probably half vat-grown, but after yesterday’s score, he was treating himself. He sat at a wobbly table in a hole-in-the-wall joint, neon signs buzzing outside, painting the cracked window in reds and blues. His phone—a beat-up piece of junk he’d nabbed from a pawn shop—vibrated against the table. Unknown number. Jace wiped his mouth, glanced around the mostly empty diner, and answered.
“Yo, Varn,” came a raspy voice. Riko, his fence. “Got a job. Easy money, in and out. You in?”
Jace leaned back, picking at a noodle stuck to his sleeve. Riko’s jobs were never “easy,” but the guy paid quickly, and Jace’s wallet was already feeling light. The memory chips from Tiko’s stall were still in his pocket—he’d meet Riko later to cash them out. “What’s the gig?” he asked, keeping his voice low. A couple of techheads at the counter were too zoned into their feeds to care, but you never knew who was listening in New Cascadia.
“Pickup,” Riko said. “Data sticks from a drop point in the docks. Client’s pay triple for speed. Just don’t ask questions.”
Jace’s gut twisted. Triple pay meant trouble, and the Docks were a maze of warehouses and gang turf, crawling with corporate security. Still, triple could mean real food for a month, maybe even a new phone that didn’t crap out every other day. “Fine,” he said. “Where and when?”
“Pier 17, old storage lot, one hour. Look for a red crate. Grab the stick, bring it to me. Don’t screw it up, Varn.” Riko hung up.
Jace shoved the last of the noodles in his mouth, left a couple credits on the table, and stepped into the street. The air was thick with the smell of salt and rust, the Docks not far from the bay where New Cascadia’s shipping heart still limped along. Above, drones zipped through the smog, their red eyes scanning for anything worth flagging. Jace pulled his hood up, merging with the crowd of workers and hustlers. The city never let you forget it was watching.
The Docks were a half-hour walk, cutting through alleys and past flickering holo-billboards pushing neural implants for “enhanced living.” Jace snorted. Enhanced living was for the sky-tower crowd, not guys like him dodging rent collectors and gang muscle. His mind flicked back to last night’s talk at the squat—those “players” the drifters mentioned, moving like they had a cheat code for life. He shook it off. No time for fairy tales. He had a job to do.
Pier 17 was a ghost town, all rusted cranes and abandoned crates stacked like tombstones. The storage lot was tucked behind a chain-link fence, half-collapsed and tagged with gang signs. Jace spotted the red crate, sitting alone under a flickering floodlight. Too easy. His gut screamed trap, but triple pay was triple pay. He scanned the area—nothing but shadows and the distant hum of a drone. He slipped through a gap in the fence, moving low, boots quiet on the cracked pavement.
The crate was unlocked, a data stick nestled inside on a bed of foam. Small, black, no markings. Jace pocketed it, his fingers brushing the memory chips still stashed in his jacket. He was about to bolt when a spotlight snapped on, pinning him like a bug. “Freeze!” a voice barked, amplified and cold. Corporate security.
Jace’s heart slammed into his ribs. He dove behind a stack of crates as boots pounded closer, maybe three or four guards. He peeked out, spotting their sleek black armor and stunning batons crackling with blue light. Not street thugs—these were corp goons, the kind who didn’t ask questions before frying you. Jace cursed under his breath. Riko hadn’t mentioned security. Either he didn’t know, or he’d set Jace up. Both were bad.
He crawled along the crates, keeping low. The spotlight swept back and forth, and he could hear the guards spreading out, their comms buzzing with static. “Target’s in the lot,” one said. “Lock it down.” Jace’s mind raced. The fence was too far, and the open lot was a death trap. He needed a way out, fast.
His eyes caught a drainage grate a few yards away, half-hidden under junk. Risky, but better than getting zapped. He waited for the spotlight to swing away, then sprinted, sliding to the grate and prying it open with a grunt. It was tight, but he squeezed through, dropping into a slimy tunnel that reeked of seawater and rot. The data stick and chips pressed against his chest as he landed, splashing in ankle-deep muck.
Above, the guards shouted, their lights flashing over the grate. Jace didn’t wait. He ran, the tunnel’s walls slick and echoing with his steps. His phone’s dim screen lit the way, barely enough to keep him from tripping. The tunnel sloped down, then up, spitting him out in another lot a hundred yards from Pier 17. He climbed out, gasping, and ducked behind a rusted shipping container.
The drones were louder now, circling closer. Jace’s pulse hammered, but he forced himself to think. He knew the Docks—there was a market a few blocks over, busy enough to lose himself in. He pulled his hood tighter and moved, sticking to shadows, weaving through alleys littered with trash and broken tech. The data stick felt like a brick in his pocket, too hot to hold onto. Whatever was on it, it wasn’t just some random file. The Corps didn’t send armed squads for nothing.
He hit the market, a chaotic sprawl of stalls and shouting vendors. The air was thick with the smell of grilled synth-meat and ozone from cheap electronics. Jace blended in, slowing his pace, just another face in the crowd. His phone buzzed—Riko again. Jace ignored it. No way was he meeting that snake until he knew what he was carrying. He slipped into a dive bar, the kind where nobody asked questions, and slid into a booth in the back.
The bar was dim, lit by flickering holo-screens showing some sky-tower sport nobody down here cared about. Jace pulled out the data stick, turning it over in his hands. Plain, no markings, but it felt… off. Like it was heavier than it should be. He was no tech wizard, but he’d seen enough black-market gear to know this wasn’t standard. His mind flicked back to the players again, that drunk, talked about brain chips and games. Was this tied to that? Nah, couldn’t be. Just paranoia from the chase.
A waitress swung by, dropping a glass of something that passed for beer. Jace nodded thanks, keeping his head down. He needed to think. The job was supposed to be simple—grab and go. Now he had corp goons on his tail, and Riko was probably sweating bullets, wondering where he was. Jace could ditch the stick, walk away, but that’d mean no pay and a pissed-off fence. Plus, he was curious. Stupid, maybe, but curious.
He sipped the beer, grimacing at the metallic aftertaste. The bar’s noise—drunk laughter, clinking glasses—helped him focus. He could sell the stick to someone else, maybe Lena’s contacts. She always knew people. But that’d burn his bridge with Riko, and he didn’t have enough friends to start throwing them away. He leaned back, closing his eyes. The city’s hum vibrated through the walls, a reminder that New Cascadia never stopped moving, never stopped chewing people up.
A shadow fell over the table. Jace’s eyes snapped open, hand slipping to the knife in his boot. It was just a drunk, swaying, muttering about “players” winning big in some back-alley deal. There it was again—that word. Jace’s skin prickled. He didn’t believe in coincidences, not in this city. The drunk stumbled off, but his words lingered, mixing with the unease in Jace’s gut.
He pocketed the stick and stood. He’d find Riko, get answers, and cash out. But as he stepped into the neon-soaked street, he couldn’t shake the feeling that he’d just stepped into something bigger than a bad job. Something in the city
Was hiding, waiting to swallow him whole.