Felix couldn't feel his fingers anymore.
They had been typing for eight hours straight. Not the rhythmic coding he was used to — this was surgical. Every keystroke asured against the risk of tripping Silas's tripwires. One wrong packet, one timing hiccup, and the bridge they'd spent two days building would turn to smoke. His knuckles ached. His wrists burned. The coffee on his desk had gone cold three hours ago, and he hadn't touched it since.
He sat back and flexed his hands. The server room was cold, but his palms were sweating. That never happened.
"Switch," Dayo said.
They had a system now. Felix on the keyboard for ninety minutes, then Dayo took over while Felix read the traffic patterns, spotted the anomalies, pointed. It was like they'd been working together for decades instead of years. Dayo typed differently than Felix — slower, more deliberate, but with a precision that Felix had to admit was technically beautiful. The system interface Dayo never talked about gave him an edge. Felix didn't ask about it. He had learned early that so things you didn't question. You just used them.
Felix rolled his shoulders and moved to the secondary monitor. His eyes were dry from staring at screens, and he blinked hard, forcing moisture back into them. The routing map filled the display — Silas's architecture rendered as a web of glowing nodes, each one a potential trap. He traced the data flows with his finger, not touching the screen, just following the paths.
"Pattern shift," Felix said, pointing. "Geneva hub. Traffic volu just jumped forty percent."
Dayo leaned in. "They're convening."
"All four?"
"Looks like it." Dayo's voice was flat, controlled, but Felix heard the edge underneath. This was what they had been waiting for. Not a breadcrumb. The whole trail.
"Audio channel opening," Felix said, leaning forward. "Geneva ti. Midday."
The screen flickered. A voice stream decrypted in real-ti, the text transcription scrolling alongside the raw audio waveform. Felix felt his stomach tighten. They weren't just looking at data anymore. They were listening. Actually listening. Two n in a basent in Texas, eavesdropping on four of the most dangerous people in the world.
He adjusted the gain. The audio cleared. Four distinct voices, each tagged by the system with a confidence rating above ninety-four percent.
---
Isobel spoke first. Her voice ca through sharp, clipped, the accent Swiss-edged and furious.
"—not a question of if soone betrayed us, Graham. It's a question of who you told."
"I told no one." Graham's voice was rougher, older, carrying the strain of a man who had built an empire on discretion and was now watching it crack. "I've been in this room with you people for twenty years. You think I'd burn my own house?"
"Your house is the only one with smoke coming out of it," Isobel shot back. "São Paulo. Your account. Your signature."
"The signatures were forged."
"By who?"
"I don't know."
Leonard's voice entered next. Quiet. Careful. The kind of voice that made you lean in because it gave away nothing. "Let's assu Graham is telling the truth. Which ans soone manufactured evidence against him. Soone with access to his financial architecture. His private ledgers."
"That's a short list," Isobel said. "And getting shorter."
"Not necessarily," Leonard said. "Soone could have breached our infrastructure. Extracted the data externally."
"Silas's network is airtight," Isobel snapped. "We've had this conversation. It's unbreachable."
"Nothing is unbreachable," Silas said.
The channel went quiet. Even through the speakers, Felix felt the temperature drop.
Then Silas spoke again.
"The architecture of this leak," he said, "is too familiar."
Felix looked at Dayo. Dayo was staring at the screen, his body completely still. Not even breathing.
"The routing," Silas continued. "The timing. The precision with which the evidence was frad. The way the tadata was stripped, jurisdiction by jurisdiction, each hop landing exactly where it needed to. This is not an external breach. This is not a hacker in a basent. This is soone who built our walls. Or studied them long enough to know where the mortar cracks."
"What are you implying, Silas?" Leonard asked.
Silas paused. Felix counted the seconds. Two. Three. Four. In the silence, he could hear his own heartbeat in his ears.
"The architect of our systems," Silas said, "has been quiet lately. Too quiet. While the rest of us scramble, he watches. While we point fingers at each other, he takes notes. And quiet n with access to foundations have a way of becoming demolition crews."
"You can't an — " Graham started.
"I an what I an." Silas's voice had hardened back to ice. "I suggest we all review who has access to what. And I suggest we do it quickly. Before the next wall falls."
The channel dropped. Dead. Gone.
Felix sat back in his chair. His heart was hamring against his ribs. He turned to Dayo.
Dayo wasn't smiling. But his eyes had changed. They held sothing Felix had never seen before — not triumph, but recognition. The look of a man who had been playing chess against four opponents and had just watched one of them accuse another of knocking over the board.
"He suspects Michael," Dayo said.
"Michael built their network," Felix said. "The relay architecture. The encryption protocols. The server contracts. If anyone knows where the bodies are buried — "
"It's him." Dayo stood up. Started pacing the small space between the server racks, three steps forward, three steps back, his mind clearly working faster than his feet could carry it. "Silas built the organization, but Michael built the infrastructure. The servers. The routing. The dead drops. He knows every back door because he installed them. He knows every relay because he booked the contracts. And now Silas is wondering if those doors swing both ways."
"Is he right?"
Dayo stopped pacing. "I don't know. I don't know if Michael turned on them, or if this is just paranoia eating Silas from inside. But I know this — four n facing outward are a wall. Four n looking over their shoulders at each other are a ss. And I'd rather fight a ss than a wall."
Felix let that settle. The server room humd its constant chanical song. Sowhere in London, Silas Vane was sitting in a dark office, staring at a screen, wondering if the man who had served him for twenty-three years had just aid a gun at his back. And sowhere in Los Angeles, Michael was probably doing the sa math in reverse.
"We need to docunt this," Felix said. "Archive the intercept. If Michael really is moving against them, that's leverage we might need."
"Already on it." Dayo sat back at the terminal, his fingers moving with that sa deliberate precision. "I'm pulling everything. The full transcript, the routing data, Silas's voiceprint analysis. If this fractures further, we want to be holding the pieces."
They worked in silence for twenty minutes. Felix ran backup protocols, encrypting the intercept across three separate drives, each one in a different physical location. Dayo cross-referenced Silas's statents against months of previous communications, looking for patterns, for confirmation, for anything that proved this wasn't just a suspicion but a crack that would widen.
When the screens finally went dark except for the baseline diagnostics, Dayo turned to Felix.
"Three years ago," Dayo said. "We were driving back from that server farm in Nevada. The big one outside Reno that took us fourteen hours to crack. You hadn't slept in thirty hours. You looked out the window at the desert mountains and said sothing. Do you rember?"
Felix shook his head. He didn't.
"You said, 'I've always wanted to see Norway. Just once. The fjords. The northern lights. Sothing quiet.' Your eyes were closed when you said it. I thought you were talking in your sleep. I didn't say anything then. You were half-asleep. I didn't think you rembered saying it either."
Felix stared at him. He had no mory of this. It was a throwaway sentence, maybe. Sothing mumbled in exhaustion while staring at red rock formations and imagining cold water. A thought that had floated up and drifted away without him noticing.
"You also pointed at a magazine last month," Dayo continued. "In the break room. Tuesday morning. Car and Driver, I think. Page thirty-four. You didn't say you wanted it. You didn't say anything at all. You just looked at it longer than you looked at the other pages. Maybe two seconds more. Maybe three."
"The RS e-tron GT," Felix said quietly. Midnight blue. The color of deep water. The color of the sky in that Norway photo he had kept as his phone wallpaper for a month before replacing it with sothing less embarrassing.
"Pack a bag," Dayo said. "Two weeks. Norway. The car will be at the airport when you land. Not a company car. Title in your na. Yours."
Felix opened his mouth. He had argunts ready — the timing was bad, Silas was cracking, Michael was moving, they needed every hand on deck, this was the most dangerous mont in the war and he couldn't just leave. He had practiced these argunts in his head a hundred tis, the script for when Dayo tried to give him sothing he didn't earn, sothing too big, too personal, too much.
None of the words ca out.
"Boss, I — "
"You found the crack," Dayo said. "Not . You sat in this chair and you typed until your fingers went numb and you found a way into a network that nobody else has touched in twenty years. And in the process, you handed the na of the man who's tearing them apart from inside. You gave Michael. You gave Silas's suspicion. You gave the first real advantage I've had in this war." He paused. "That's not overti, Felix. That's soone paying attention to soone who pays attention."
Felix looked at the terminal. The dark screens. The server lights blinking green in the corner. He thought about the rain in London. The park bench. The £10,000 that had bought his life back when he was nobody. He thought about every ti Dayo had rembered sothing he said — a preference, a fear, a sentence mumbled half-asleep — and filed it away like it mattered. Like he mattered.
He closed his mouth. Nodded once. It was all he had.
Dayo put a hand on his shoulder, squeezed once, then let go. He walked out of the server room without looking back. The elevator doors closed behind him with a soft ding.
Felix sat alone in the hum of the machines. He didn't stand up right away. He sat there for five minutes, maybe ten, letting the cold settle into his bones and the weight of the gift settle sowhere deeper. Norway. The fjords. The northern lights. Sothing quiet.
Then he shut down the last monitor. The room went dark except for the server lights. He grabbed his hoodie from the back of the chair, walked to the elevator, and pressed the button for the lobby.
Max and Bella were in the lobby, sa as always, both reading sothing on their phones. They looked up when he stepped out, nodded at him. He nodded back. Neither of them asked why he was leaving at 6 AM with a smile on his face. That was their job — notice everything, ask about nothing.
Outside, the Austin morning was warm and pink and ordinary. Felix got into his black Audi — the one Dayo had given him last year, the one that still felt borrowed even though his na was on the title. He sat behind the wheel for a mont, staring at the parking garage concrete, thinking about fjords and northern lights and the color midnight blue. Thinking about a man in London who was currently wondering if his servant had betrayed him, and a man in Texas who had just proved that so debts never get small enough to forget.
Then he started the engine and drove ho to pack.
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