Font Size:

Coffee first. The machine sits like a temple, and I worship accordingly. While it brews, I claim a barstool and prop my injured foot on the lower rung. The laptop opens to my calculus portal.

Removing the camellia pendant, I press my fingers against the hidden seam until it clicks open, and connect the USB to my laptop. A new network appears on my screen, secure and anonymous.

This beautiful little thing.

A notification pops up in my private chat window before I can even check the exam schedule.

Phoenix:Morning, stranger. Missed you yesterday.

Me:Had a situation.

Phoenix:"Situation" sounds serious.

Me:Just some personal stuff. Nothing I couldn't handle.

My fingers hover over the keys. Phoenix is the closest thing I have to a friend in the digital underworld, but I've never shared anything real. We keep it professional, discussing coding problems, security puzzles, and occasional debates about encryption algorithms.

Phoenix:Working on anything interesting?

I've been obsessed, digging for information because Anton wouldn't tell me anything. So I went through the people around him instead.

Desperate? Absolutely. Effective? Not remotely. I learned exactly nothing about Anton Baev that mattered. In the end, I learned about him the old-fashioned way—he finally talked.

But Morrison won't leave my head now. Not because of Anton, but because someone tried to kill me, and I want to understand why. I'm not sitting here helpless when I can find my own answers.

Me:Just school. Calc is kicking my ass.

Phoenix:Calc? You crack government-grade encryptions for fun.

The coffee machine beeps. I grab the mug, holding it in both hands to soak up the warmth, then sit back down on the barstool.

Phoenix:Hey, wanted to give you a heads-up. There's a competition coming up—dark web security challenge with a big prize pool. Thought you might be interested.

Me:Maybe. When?

Phoenix:Next month. I'll send details. Could be fun to see how we stack up against each other.

Phoenix:Random question—you ever work with a team? Or are you solo like me?

I stare at the message. We've never asked each other personal questions about our work. That's the unspoken rule: we don't cross that line.

Me:Solo. Why?

Phoenix:Just curious. Some of the challenges are team-based. Was wondering if you had people you work with regularly.

Me:Just getting ready to take my final exam. I should go.

Phoenix:Right, sorry. Didn't mean to pry. Good luck. Don't let the derivatives win.

Me:Thanks.

Phoenix:See ya!

I close the chat window, but the conversation sits wrong in my chest. They've never asked about my work setup, my team, or whether I'm alone. Why start now?

I pull up the exam portal. Two hours until test time, and I can't focus worth a damn. Can't stop thinking about yesterday's bullets and last night's bed and Phoenix's weird questions.

Why does this even matter? I don't need this degree. Dad will hand me whatever I want.