Rowan kept to the edges of the interchange the way someone who had learned to read the seams of a torn map keeps to the margins: because margins meant an easier exit. Nova Quay at dusk was a hard city to get lost in. Steel ribbons of monorail threaded the skyline; neon panels shifted faces and prices with the crowd; personal adverts skinned storefront glass to whisper promises into ear implants. It smelled of ozone and sushi carts and the exhaust of cargo magnets. She moved with the rhythm she’d taught her body over a dozen extraction jobs—three steps forward, an angle left, hands free for the quick misdirection that never looked like a misdirection at all.
The oblong on her back was a courier pack designed to vanish into crowds: thin, odorless, lined against scanners. It had a sealed manifest and a client code she’d been paid to trust. Tonight it was a tidy job with no attachments—pay up front, one hand, one signature, all gone. That’s how the safe ones worked; the dangerous ones were rumors told in alleys, and Rowan had enough scars to know the difference by the calluses on her palms.
She saw the wrong thing because the wrong thing made its own pattern. A woman in a gray coat moved against the flow, clutching a case like a treasure you swore to keep. Two men in dark jackets closed in with a practiced shuffle, shoulders set to shepherd, eyes absent of pity. The crowd parted because people in Nova Quay were trained to move or get out of the way of trouble. Rowan watched the pockets of space and the way the woman’s gait stalled when she noticed the handlers. It was the small hunch in someone’s shoulder—something a courier learned to read when the package mattered more than the pay.
The shard hit tile and sang underfoot. It was a small, rounded thing—no bigger than a thumb—plastic cut to let light pyramid through it. Data shards were the dumb cash of the city, and couriers traded them like whispers between palms. Rowan’s boot brushed the edge and she scooped it up before the handlers could. Cold and slick, it fit between her fingers. The choice in a moment like that is a simple ledger: leave it and walk away, or pick it up and watch the consequences ripple out.
She bent to tuck the shard under her wrist and heard the command. On a half-breath someone in a Helix uniform barked for retrieval. The handlers unfolded like dark knives. People scattered; a drone above the interchange blinked into brighter red as a security beacon. Rowan moved without thinking: a practiced roll into shadow, a slide along a maintenance rail, hands working the pack straps to keep weight even. She tasted adrenaline like metal. She had walked past snatching hands before. She had chosen to move through their reach because she’d learned to be the ghost that keeps breathing.
They were fast. The handlers pivoted and ran. One of them recognized her first by the cut of her coat, another by the way couriers carried themselves. Rowan sprinted up the access stair toward the rooftops, heartbeat steady, boots clanging, shard warm against her palm. Above the interchange a monorail whined, a ribbon of light that carried a dozen commuters oblivious to the drama underfoot.
She could feel an instinct in her body that had nothing to do with the job—old blood and younger promises braided into a single, stubborn rope. She had seen the kind of file that sealed the wrongened future of a person—documents that made families into ledgers and people into nodes. In the shard’s weight there was something that tasted like possibility and betrayal at once. Rowan’s lungs burned, and the city spat up a wind that smelled of saltwater from the harbor and transformer dust. She moved across tin roofs and HVAC hum, her path a clean arc practiced on runs where minutes mattered more than caution.
The handlers reached the roofline at the stair’s mouth and guns bloomed, a bright and efficient threat. Rowan vaulted a low parapet and ran along the rim of an advertising quad, the world spread below in a soft blur of light and motion. A drone dipped to slice off the angle, and a camera tracked her from a light mast. Rowan dropped into an alley, teeth clenched, and slid behind a stack of shipping crates. She pressed the shard to her palm like a truth and breathed. It was then, under the noise of a city that never slept, that she had the luxury of looking at what she'd taken.