''Date: Cycle 189. Phase: Dusk''
''Location: CivSphere A-19, Middle Ring''
''Access Mode: Private Neural Memo (Unshared)''
I didn’t plan to go looking for them. Not really.
The flyer was still in my coat this morning. I’d meant to throw it out. That was the safe thing. But something in me hesitated. I kept hearing the beat from last night—the one that slipped under my skin like it belonged there. My compliance script ran fine. Emotional readouts within bounds. But I couldn’t focus.
Instead of filtering it out, I went deeper.
At work, I accessed the archive buffer. Not technically illegal, just... discouraged. That’s where I found it.
A flickering file tagged with corrupted metadata. No author. No history. Just a dancer made of broken reports. Like someone had taken everything we were trained to design—templates, quotas, tonal harmony—and shattered them into something human.
"Unlearn the rhythm they sold you."
It felt like a message. For me.
Later, in the laundry node—where even the monitors sleep—I found the etching: wings, cut under a table. Below it, a frequency. I jacked in from my slate. No encryption. No locks. Almost like they wanted me to come.
And I did.
I entered a Veil shard I’ve never seen on any chart. Just endless soft rain on blank ground, and people... standing. Still. Silent. Dozens of them. Their wings weren’t corporate. They were hand-shaped, badly animated, cracked, real.
Then I got the message.
> “Welcome, George Fu.”
Someone knew my name.
A girl (I think?) with porcelain skin and dragonfly wings walked up to me. Her voice sounded like broadcast static from an analog era—half-lost, half-sweet. She asked me if I wanted the real.
I said yes.
She didn’t smile. She just handed me a location.
And now I’m here. In my pod. Alone. Lights off. No Veil. No music. Just this hacked module in my hands. It's a mirror backup shard—illegal software. If I install it, I’ll be able to slip under the system. Hide parts of myself. Bypass scans.
It’s the first real choice I’ve made in years.
I connected it.
Everything blinked.
I was standing in a Veil realm that was wrong—in the best way. Glitchy. Unfiltered. Wild. The architecture bent around memory, not zoning codes. Nulls walked without fear. Depth Witches wrote spells in data. I saw children shaping alleyways like sculptors. One even nodded at me like they’d known me all along.
And above us, faint but glowing, were those same cracked wings.
The RePatterners.
They spoke, not with a voice, but through the sound of the glitch itself:
> “Every system predicts you’ll fail. That’s how they designed it. But if you fail loud enough—if enough of you break pattern at once—they can’t patch it fast enough.”
I should feel terrified. Maybe I am.
But right now, all I feel is awake.
This is George Fu. Ladder Tier 3. Department of Synthetic Aesthetics.
Cube-born. CivSphere-raised.
And I just took my first step off the map.
I think I'm done just being compliant.
Let’s see what the city really is.
''Date: Cycle 190''
''Location: Mirror Veil Shard, Substructure Access Node 5''
''Entry Mode: Encrypted Neural Memo / Playback-locked / Shard-safe''
**Mission Codename: “Ghost in the Grid”**
Objective: Intercept and reroute citizen emotion-scores from a Ladder-class analytics subnode in Delta-6.
Status: Complete. Interference logged. No trace.
---
I wasn’t ready.
When they handed me the key—an executable script hidden inside a chunk of obsolete synthwave—I almost laughed. It looked like trash data. Even sounded like an old Stenweg party track.
But when I ran it, a door appeared in the Veil. Not a portal. Not a sanctioned jump gate. Just... a crack in the world, pulsing like an old bruise.
I stepped through.
It led me to Substructure Access Node 5, buried under the facades of Sector Delta-6. Above ground, the plaza was filled with schoolchildren running civility drills. Underground? Forgotten consoles still hummed, still scoring everyone’s faces as they passed overhead.
They were using an old feedback algorithm—scraping micro-expressions, calculating deviation from projected norms. Ladder-score modifiers. No citizen knew. Not even the Monitors who thought they’d shut the node down a decade ago.
I didn’t know if I could do it.
But then I thought of the dancer. The ones standing in that Veil rain. Of the kid who gave me the nod as if he’d seen me in his dreams.
So I ran the code.
It worked.
For seven seconds, the node thought it was part of a different subnet. It began rerouting all outputs to a dead endpoint—some archive server buried in Substructure-1, listed as decommissioned during the Fragmentation War.
The system didn’t crash. It just... forgot how to remember.
I took a copy of the output log. Not to expose it. Just to prove to myself that I’d done it. People’s names, numbers, deviations. All cleared. All gone.
Then I added one more.
**Fu, George. Emotional Compliance: Unknown.**
And I locked it there.
On the way out, I saw someone watching me.
Not in the Veil. In real space. A girl in a beret with a glowing eye-patch. She didn’t follow. She just touched her temple and vanished into a stairwell.
I’m not sure if she was RePatterner or Depth Witch. But she knew I was one of them now.
Back in my pod now. Cleaned up. Logged 9.1 hours of design work. Gained 2.6 Ladder Points. Uploaded a new Moodskin template: **"Collective Harmony v3.8."** The irony nearly made me laugh out loud.
But I didn’t.
We have to keep moving.
Tomorrow, they want me to shadow someone in the Department of Emotional Governance. I don’t know what that means yet.
But I do know this:
I’m not a ghost in the grid.
I’m a fracture.
And if I’m careful—if I’m lucky—I can make the whole thing crack.