Page 28 of Aaron


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That doesn’t happen by accident.

That happens when someone wants plausible deniability.

I open the first file.

Maps bloom across the screen—shipping lanes, cargo flights, humanitarian corridors repurposed just enough to hide in plain sight. I recognize some of them immediately. Others make my stomach drop.

These weren’t routes for weapons.

They were routes for people.

I hear my mother’s voice like she’s standing behind me again.

If something keeps repeating across systems that aren’t supposed to talk to each other, someone is paying a lot of money to keep it invisible. I worked in the same building as my mother did before she died.

My chest tightens.

I scroll.

Names appear. Not full manifests. Fragments. Initials. Ages approximated. Redactions that pretend to protect privacy while actually erasing accountability.

And then—

There it is.

My name.

Not as a target. Not as cargo.

As a node.

A reference point.

The screen blurs.

I blink hard and force myself to keep reading.

I wasn’t listed because I was being moved.

I was listed because I touched the data.

Because once you interact with a closed system, you become part of its footprint.

A risk.

A loose thread.

My hands shake.

I hear footsteps and feel Aaron’s presence before I see him. He stops a few feet away—far enough not to crowd, close enough to catch me if I fall apart.

I don’t look at him.

“They weren’t moving goods,” I say. My voice sounds distant, like it belongs to someone else. “They were moving people through legitimate channels. Aid routes. Evac corridors. Medical transfers.”

“I know,” he says quietly.

I glance up, startled. “You do?”