My name is Ethan Cross, and if I don’t stop the bleeding in the next sixty seconds, a hidden multi-billion-dollar empire is going to burn to the ground. Right now, I’m jammed inside a suffocating, rusted-out service elevator plunging down into an abandoned subway tunnel beneath Boston. My jacket is soaked through with warm, sticky blood, and my left shoulder feels like it’s being torched by a flamethrower. Above me, the metallic screech of broken gears echoes violently, drowning out the frantic, heavy breathing of Marcus, my former mentor turned ruthless hunter.
Just three minutes ago, Marcus’s fist had slammed into my jaw in a blind hallway, throwing me against a concrete wall. He didn’t want the flash drive in my pocket; he wanted me dead to erase the truth about the “Empire96” syndicate. “You’re an anomaly, Ethan,” Marcus snarled, his grip tightening around my throat as my vision began to blur into dark spots. “Just like those illegal skyscrapers they tore down in the nineties, you don’t belong in the skyline we built.” With a desperate surge of adrenaline, I had slammed my forehead into his nose, hearing the satisfying crunch of cartilage, before throwing myself into this elevator shaft. But Marcus is fast. The steel cables above me groan as something heavy drops onto the roof of the car with a deafening, metallic thud. The roof begins to buckle downward, a pair of combat boots punching through the thin ceiling panels right above my head.
The countdown has already begun, and the shadows are closing in faster than the blood can dry. What Ethan just uncovered is a conspiracy that goes deeper than anyone alive is prepared to handle. The rest of the story is below 👇
Part 2
The cold steel of Vance’s shotgun clicked against the back of my skull, sending a jolt of pure ice down my spine. The metallic stench of gunpowder mixed with the bitter Chicago wind. I could hear his heavy, rhythmic breathing right above me. He thought he had won. He thought a tech nerd like me would just crumble.
“You should have kept your eyes on the spreadsheets, Ethan,” Vance muttered, his voice devoid of any human warmth. “Some lines aren’t meant to be crossed. This country runs on systems you can’t even begin to comprehend.”
I didn’t answer. Instead, I focused on the agonizing heat blooming in my thigh. My fingers, slick with my own blood, slipped into my jacket pocket, gripping the heavy, solid-steel tactical pen I always carried. I had one shot. One fraction of a second before he pulled the trigger and painted the brick wall with my brains.
“Look at me,” Vance commanded, nudging the barrel harder against my head.
I turned my torso slowly, mimicking a man who had completely given up, letting my hands rise in mock surrender. But as my eyes met his cold, remorseless gaze, I drove the steel pen upward with every ounce of strength left in my body.
The heavy metal point buried itself deep into the soft tissue beneath his kneecap.
Vance roared in agonizing pain, the shotgun blasting blindly into the ceiling as he stumbled backward. Shrapnel and plaster rained down on us. I didn’t waste a heartbeat. I lunged forward, tackling him around the waist. We slammed into the concrete floor together, the air rushing out of my lungs in a violent gasp. Vance was a trained operative, twice my size, and even with a ruined knee, his instincts were lethal. He threw a massive, heavy fist that caught me square in the ear. My vision went white, a high-pitched ringing exploding in my head.
He scrambled for the dropped shotgun, but I scrambled faster, kicking him violently in his wounded knee. He howled, collapsing sideways. I grabbed the encrypted device from the floor, pushed through the blinding pain in my leg, and threw myself through a broken window into the pitch-black alleyway outside.
I ran, my breath coming in ragged, freezing gasps, collapsing into the back of a waiting, unmarked black sedan three blocks away. Behind the wheel was Maya, a brilliant linguistics professor I had dragged into this nightmare because of the bizarre nature of the encrypted files.
“Drive!” I choked out, pressure-locking the door as blood pooled on her leather seat.
She slammed on the gas, the tires screaming against the asphalt as we tore into the Chicago night. As she navigated the dark labyrinth of the city, she looked at me, her face pale under the passing streetlights.
“Ethan, I started decoding the secondary layers of the network’s communication protocol while you were inside,” Maya said, her voice trembling. “It doesn’t make sense. It’s encoded using a highly specific, ancient syntax structure—an isolated linguistic dialect that shares absolutely zero roots with any Western language. It’s structured like a secret dialect from the Ural regions, completely closed off from modern tracking algorithms. And that’s not all.”
She threw a printed document into my lap. I stared at the names listed under the “Empire96” syndicate’s payroll. High-ranking senators, tech billionaires, federal directors. But at the very top of the hierarchy, the architect of the entire shadow network, was a name that made my heart completely stop.
It was my father. The man who supposedly died in a mysterious car crash fifteen years ago.
“He’s alive, Ethan,” Maya whispered, her eyes wide with terror as she checked the rearview mirror. “And he isn’t hiding from the government. He is running it.”
Suddenly, a massive, armored SUV blindsided us from a side street, slamming into the passenger side with a sickening crunch of tearing metal. The force of the impact lifted our car off the ground, spinning us into a chaotic, terrifying spiral toward the concrete barrier of the highway overpass.
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Part 3
The world spun in a violent, sickening blur of shattering glass and deploying airbags. The deafening roar of grinding metal echoed through my skull as our sedan slammed into the concrete barrier, rocking violently before grinding to a halt. Smoke poured from the crumpled hood.
My head throbbed with a fierce, blinding agony. I blinked away the haze, smelling the sharp, acrid scent of burnt rubber and chemical fluids. “Maya!” I choked out, my voice raspy.
Beside me, Maya was slumped against the deflated airbag, groaning but conscious, a dark bruise already forming on her forehead. “I’m… I’m okay,” she gasped, struggling to push herself up.
Before we could even unbuckle our seatbelts, the heavy passenger door was violently ripped off its hinges. A towering figure reached into the wreckage, grabbing me by the collar of my jacket and dragging me brutally out onto the cold, hard asphalt. I hit the ground hard, the impact jarring my injured thigh and sending a white-hot flash of pain through my body.
I looked up, coughing violently through the smoke, expecting to see Vance or one of his mercenaries. Instead, standing over me, flanked by two armed operatives in dark tactical gear, was a man whose face I had only seen in fading photographs.
He looked older, his hair silvered at the temples, but the piercing, calculating grey eyes were unmistakable. It was Arthur Cross. My father.
“Hello, Ethan,” he said, his voice smooth, calm, and utterly devoid of the warmth a father should have after fifteen years. “You always were too smart for your own good. I taught you to look for patterns, but I never intended for you to follow them all the way to me.”
“You’re dead,” I spat out, tasting copper as blood welled up in my mouth. I tried to stand, but an operative immediately planted a heavy tactical boot firmly onto my chest, pinning me to the freezing pavement.
“A necessary illusion,” Arthur replied, stepping closer, looking down at me as if I were a flawed piece of code. “To build something of this magnitude, one must become a ghost. The Empire96 network isn’t a criminal syndicate, Ethan. It’s a scaffolding. A silent architecture built into the foundations of this country’s infrastructure, keeping it stable, keeping it under control. We control the data, the logistics, the hidden heights of power that ordinary citizens never see.”
“By killing anyone who uncovers it?” I yelled, struggling against the heavy boot pressing into my sternum. “By sending Vance to blow my head off?”
Arthur sighed, a cold, dismissive sound. “Vance acts on protocol. You became a variable that threatened the integrity of the entire system. That linguistic encryption you found? It’s a legacy system I designed—a perfect, isolated code that no modern AI or federal surveillance can flag because it doesn’t recognize the structural syntax. It was supposed to be uncrackable. But you cracked it.”
“Because you raised me to solve riddles, old man,” I grunted, my hand secretly sliding across the asphalt, searching for anything I could use. My fingers brushed against a heavy, jagged piece of shattered metal from our car’s door frame. I gripped it tightly, ignoring the sharp edge slicing into my palm.
“Which is why it pains me to do this,” Arthur said, nodding to the operative holding me down. The man chambered a round in his pistol, aiming it directly between my eyes. “Some secrets must remain buried, even from family.”
“Not today,” a sharp voice echoed.
From the wreckage of the car, Maya appeared, holding a heavy, discharged fire extinguisher. With a desperate yell, she swung it with all her might, slamming it into the side of the second operative’s head. The man dropped like a stone.
The distraction was all I needed. I slammed the jagged piece of metal into the thigh of the operative pinning me. He shrieked in pain, his balance breaking. I rolled instantly, sweeping his legs out from under him and sending him crashing hard onto the pavement. I scrambled up, lunging directly at my father.
We collided with a heavy, brutal force. Arthur was older, but he was fueled by a cold, desperate rage. He threw a sharp elbow that caught me in the ribs, cracking them, but I refused to let go. I tackled him over the concrete barrier, and we both tumbled down a short, grassy embankment beneath the overpass.
We rolled through the dirt, punching and tearing at each other in a frantic, chaotic brawl. He gripped my throat, his fingers squeezing tight, cutting off my air. “You can’t stop it, Ethan!” he hissed, his face twisted in fury. “The system is already automated! It goes live across the federal grid in five minutes!”
With my vision fading, I brought both of my hands up, smashing them violently against his ears. He gasped, his grip loosening just enough for me to drive my knee into his midsection. He fell back, gasping for air.
I didn’t hesitate. I pulled the encrypted device from my jacket pocket—the override key I had spent days building. “It’s over, Dad,” I breathed, my chest heaving as I slammed my thumb onto the final sequence trigger. “I didn’t just crack your code. I uploaded a virus that wipes every single server connected to the Ural syntax. The scaffolding is coming down.”
Arthur stared at the glowing screen, his face turning completely pale as the data streams turned to zero. The empire he spent fifteen years building in the dark vanished in a fraction of a second. A distant siren began to wail in the night air, drawing closer.
He looked at me, a mixture of profound defeat and a strange, terrifying pride in his eyes. He didn’t try to fight anymore. He just sat back against the cold concrete pillar as the flashing red and blue lights of the police cruisers began to illuminate the highway above us.
I leaned against the embankment, bleeding, broken, but finally free. The shadow network was dead, the truth was out, and the ghosts of the past were finally laid to rest.
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