The air in the penthouse of the Vance Tech "Secure Residential Facility" was filtered to a degree of purity that felt artificial, almost medicinal. Stacy Miller sat at her sleek, minimalist desk, her fingers hovering over a keyboard that cost more than her first car. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city of Seattle was a blur of gray rain and neon lights, but inside, everything was a pristine, controlled white. It had been three days since the incident on the ridge—three days since she had been "rescued" by Arthur Vance’s private extraction team and brought to this "safe house."
"You're safe here, Stacy," Arthur had told her, his hand resting a bit too firmly on her shoulder. "That rogue faction that tried to snatch you... they won't get a second chance. My personal detail will ensure your focus remains entirely on completing the Ghost Protocol."
The focus, however, was hard to maintain. Every time Stacy moved from the office to the kitchen, she felt the silent presence of Marcus, the lead security operative. He stood by the door, a mountain of a man in a tailored charcoal suit, his earpiece a constant tether to a hidden network of watchers. He didn't speak unless spoken to, and even then, his answers were clipped and professional. He was her shadow, her protector, and increasingly, she suspected, her jailer.
Stacy leaned back, her eyes burning from the lines of code. The Ghost Protocol was a revolutionary encryption method that could effectively make a server invisible to any known tracking or hacking technology. It was Vance Tech's crown jewel, and she was the only one who held the final sequence in her head. She had fled to the mountains because she had begun to notice anomalies in the project's funding—shell companies and offshore accounts that suggested Arthur was planning to sell the protocol to a foreign entity rather than use it for the "global security" he preached about.
The black helicopter on the ridge hadn't been a competitor. She realized that now. The "rogue faction" Arthur mentioned was likely his own team, sent to "retrieve" her before she could leak what she had found. Their failure had forced Arthur to play the role of the concerned savior.
She needed to know for sure. Under the guise of a bathroom break, Stacy slipped her "company-issued" smartphone into her pocket. Back in her bedroom, she sat on the edge of the bed and pulled out a small, handheld device she had fashioned from a disassembled radio and a spare circuit board she'd hidden in her luggage. It was a crude but effective frequency scanner. As she swept it over the phone, the needle jumped. It wasn't just a GPS tracker; the phone was broadcasting a live audio feed. They were listening to her breathe.
Panic flared, but she suppressed it with the cold logic of a coder. If they were listening, she had to give them what they wanted to hear. She returned to the desk, tapping her fingers rhythmically as if deep in thought. "Almost there," she whispered to the empty room. "Just the final gate... and the Ghost will be live."
She began to type, but it wasn't the protocol. She was writing a script to bypass the apartment’s smart-lock system. The penthouse was "secure," meaning every door and window was electronically monitored. If she tried to walk out the front door, Marcus would stop her. If she tried the emergency stairs, an alarm would trigger. She needed a distraction, something big enough to pull the security detail’s attention away from the "asset."
Stacy accessed the building’s climate control system. She began to override the safety parameters of the massive industrial-grade server room located three floors below her. By disabling the cooling fans and bypassing the fire suppression sensors, she could cause a localized thermal event—a fire that would look like a hardware malfunction.
"Marcus?" she called out, her voice trembling slightly. "I'm feeling a bit faint. I think the AC is acting up. It's getting very hot in here."
Marcus stepped into the room, his brow furrowing as he checked his own tablet. "The sensors are reading normal, Ms. Miller."
"Check again," Stacy urged, pointing toward the floor. "I can smell smoke."
Just then, a muffled thud vibrated through the building. The power flickered, and the emergency lights bathed the white room in a sickly red glow. Downstairs, the server room had ignited. Alarms began to blare—not the piercing shriek of a break-in, but the rhythmic pulse of a fire emergency.
"Stay here!" Marcus commanded, his hand going to his radio. "Dispatch, I have a thermal event on level 42. I'm maintaining eyes on the asset. Send a secondary team to secure the perimeter."
But the fire was spreading faster than he anticipated—or so the sensors Stacy had manipulated told him. She had triggered the building’s "Total Lockdown" protocol, which was designed to vent smoke but also unlocked certain service corridors for firefighters.
In the chaos of the red lights and the shouting over the radio, Stacy didn't go for the door. She went for the laundry chute. It was a narrow, vertical shaft used for linens, leading directly to the basement service level. She had calculated the dimensions; it would be a tight, bruising descent, but it was the only path not covered by a camera.
She kicked off her shoes, took a deep breath, and slid into the dark. The metal walls scraped her skin, and the scent of detergent was overwhelming. She hit the bottom with a jarring thud, landing on a pile of damp towels. Groaning, she scrambled out and found herself in the dim, concrete basement.
She could hear the heavy boots of security teams rushing toward the elevators. Stacy moved in the opposite direction, toward the waste management bay. She found a maintenance uniform hanging on a hook, threw it over her clothes, and smeared grease on her forehead. When a security guard ran past, he barely glanced at the "worker" struggling with a large bin of trash.
She stepped out into the rain of Seattle, the cold air hitting her like a physical weight. She didn't look back at the towering Vance Tech spire. She walked two blocks, found a crowded subway station, and disappeared into the throng of commuters.
As the train pulled away, Stacy reached into her pocket and pulled out a small flash drive she had encrypted before the escape. It contained every shred of evidence regarding Arthur Vance’s illegal dealings. She looked at her reflection in the dark window of the subway car. She was no longer a "critical asset." She was a whistle-blower.
But as the train slowed at the next stop, she saw a man on the platform. He was wearing a black leather jacket and dark sunglasses, despite the subterranean gloom. He wasn't looking at the train; he was looking at his phone, his thumb hovering over the screen. Stacy felt the low-frequency hum of a vibration in her teeth—a sound she remembered from the ridge.
She stayed on the train, her heart hammering against her ribs. The game hadn't ended; it had just moved to a larger board.






