Nocturne never gave anyone a real night's rest. It just hummed and buzzed—like a busted circuit board patched together with frayed wires and cheap parts, desperately clinging to life. The alleys spat steam and static, neon leaking down cracked walls in uneven runs that looked more like mistakes than art, like a half‑finished sigil someone got bored of. Lucien Blackmoore slid through it all like he was soaked into the grime itself—because maybe, in some way, he was. His coat stuck damp and heavy across his shoulders, rainwater still dripping from the collar. Last night's downpour hadn't washed anything clean. Not the streets, not the ghosts crawling underfoot, and sure as hell not him.
The city smelled like burnt ozone, rusted synth‑oil, and that slow rot that creeps in when big corps bleed every scrap dry. Holosigns flickered and sputtered over busted doorways and collapsed vendor stalls, blinking half‑alive, as if barely holding on by a thread. Overhead, drones circled in lazy, careless orbits, their red eyes glowing hungry—always watching, always hungry, always scooping up whatever secrets they could swipe. The ledger throbbed steady against Lucien's ribs, a living pulse counting souls, debts, strings pulled and broken.
LEDGER STATUS UPDATETarget: Syndicate proxy cell, Sector 12 – ETA inbound 5 mTask: Set decoy dealInformant Tess: Loyalty stable, readiness 73%Collections Due: 1 (smuggler Kael)Warning: "Your boons burn innocents."
Lucien swallowed hard. That last flicker burned quiet: an unmistakable accusation. He'd signed so many deals, chained so many souls—but it never felt like this before. Someone had already bled. He didn't know who. He didn't know why. But this time it felt personal.
He found the stairwell above a cracked gutter vent and ducked below into Undergleam—the migrant warrens beneath Valthara's neon heartbeat. Screeches and muffled curses bounced around in dripping tunnels, spat echoes of the world above. The stairwell landed him on damp cobbles slick as oil. He looked down the length of the corridor: shadows hugging the walls, unspeaking sentries hiding in grime‑choked alcoves. He should've heard drones. The faint mechanical whir that edged his hearing wasn't them—yet.
But the Ledger reported silence: no drones detected nearby. A lull.
LEDGER: "No drone activity. Proxy ambush risk: 68%."
He exhaled slow. That was enough—68% wasn't safe. He needed bait. Something to draw them into a trap he could control.
Up ahead, a low alcove held crates—old tech, black‑market scraps tagged with his mark. Perfect. He dropped a datapad on one case, its holo interface blinking as though alive, always a heartbeat away from broadcast.
Moments passed. No sound except his boots. And a faint flicker on his vision: glyph‑wards lighting in bronze lines along his sleeve—ready, waiting.
He activated them, silent wards flickering out along the walls—decoy readings, fake telemetry feeding drone echoes back to the syndicate's systems. Ideally they'd scramble the trackers.
LEDGER: Glyph Decoys Deployed – 4 active wards. Ambush window: 2 minutes.
Just then, Tess surfaced from shadows. Loyal as a blade's edge. Her dark eyes locked on his.
"You set the trap?" she whispered.
He nodded once. "Your loyalty's my shield."
She gave tight nod, knife whispering glinting in hand. "Good. I'll stand watch."
His throat clenched at her promise. It was real. Would be real. Her loyalty—his tool. "Stay sharp."
She melted back into gloom. Lucien counted on her.
He leaned against the wall, eyes flicking back to the datapad. Glyph readings confirmed: drones shuffling. Echoes pinging anomalies onto Syndi grid. The bait worked.
LEDGER: "Drone patterns shifted. Ambush positions locked."
He moved fast, ducking behind crates, tracing the ghost-lights the decoys cast on streaming dust. Then light—pale, flickering. A drone dipped low, its red eye scanning the alley. The wards traced it, echoing a false move deeper into Undergleam. It paused. Hesitated. Moved along.
Minutes later there was crackling on com‑feeds. Tess got word. They didn't know he was a step ahead.
Then another drone trespassed. Mid‑scan, it paused near the glyph wards—became confused. The ward cloud puffed, obscured its sensors. The readout registered failure.
LEDGER: "Ambush delayed by ward effectiveness 82%."
Lucien's heart thrummed. He edged forward and saw them—four masked brutes stepping in. Blasters drawn, aimed straight at Tess.
She froze. Fear burned bright in her eyes.
He burst out. "Behind you!" Tess ducked.
He fired a flash‑burst, filament hot in the strobe of his gun. The assailants faltered.
Amid the confusion, he slipped between Tess and the attackers, standing tall, grit‑spit calm.
One thug aimed. Tess shielded him. Gunfire echoed, dust rained.
He lunged, snapped a wrist—bowing the first away.
But as bullets flew, something carved itself across his vision: a shard of red‑hot symbol burned into a crate.
A Cassian cipher. Ugly, jagged. Scribing fear into the stale stone.
LEDGER: "New cipher spotted. 'Her trust breaks.'"
The words in his vision rang icy through his mind.
He acted fast: a snap glyph sprang—net‑trap spun from silver wires, catching the attackers mid-blast. A short pulse, flash of power—wards holding their aim steady, limbs frozen.
He yanked Tess back. She stumbled, stunned, eyes wide.
"Trust me!" he spat, cloak whipping around them.
She caught on, belief etched in taut line of shoulders. They sprinted. The drones reeled back. The ambush collapsed in silent disarray.
They raced down the tunnel, feet slapping wet stone, heartbeats loud. When they slowed, they found cover in a deeper tunnel, damp echoes brushing walls.
Once safe, Tess dropped the makeshift shield‑pack. She faced him, chest heaving.
"You set that trap for me?" she asked, voice trembling.
He nodded, voice soft. "Your loyalty was my shield."
Her eyes glistened. "I'd—" she began, voice breaking. "I'd follow you anywhere."
He met her gaze, guilt flaring. She'd risked herself for his trap. Her risk was my win. The ledger pulsed quietly, almost sorrowful.
LEDGER: "Her trust stung."
He stared at the glyph‑net collapsing in the damp corridor. A tool saved her—he owed her more than she knew.
They absorbed the weight in silence, breath thick.
Finally, he slid closer. "Cassian's chaos is my mess."
She looked up, wary, voice soft. "So what now?"
He exhaled, shoulders dropping. "Time to fix the flaws."
He pulled his gaze upward to the flicker of neon shadows bleeding through cracks above. They'd won the skirmish—risked everything. But this was the war.
LEDGER:Counter‑plan stored:– Track cipher pattern zones– Bait proxy brokers using false intel– Collapse proxy network via backdoor sabotage– Publicize token‑forgery evidence
Ledger pulsed its final note: "Fix your flaws."
Lucien locked eyes with Tess. It wasn't forgiveness. It was a call to arms. She nodded, ready. Her loyalty, hard-earned, bound by battle and choice.
Above them, drones loitered, uncertain. Below, Undergleam's corridors hummed with secrets. They stepped forward—in pairs—Lucien leading, Tess close behind, the pulse of the Ledger guiding each footfall through the darkness.