Lacquer Street did not look important enough to haunt anyone.
It had a laundromat with three broken machines in the window, a pawn shop with half its sign dark, a row of apartnts over closed businesses, and one boarded office with a city seal painted on plywood. Rain had turned the sidewalk black. Police lights flashed two blocks away, trapped behind traffic that had stopped pretending to move.
Tessa stood under the laundromat awning and kept the cara pointed at the boarded office.
Her lungs wanted her to bend over.
Her legs wanted her to sit down.
Her brain wanted to rewind the last ten minutes and choose a career that involved spreadsheets, polite etings, and absolutely no n wearing stolen faces.
The phone stayed up.
"I am at Lacquer Street," she said. "The building has a city seal on the boards. The ticket from Roosevelt South led here."
The feed had changed since she left the station.
Fewer people yelled orders now. More people posted questions. A transit worker nad LANEY-64 had pinned old articles. Soone had found a lawsuit record. Soone else had posted a map showing Roosevelt South under a section of the city that should have been filled with concrete.
The internet had not beco good.
It had beco useful for six minutes, which was probably the closest it got.
Jade's text sat pinned under the video.
QUESTIONS ONLY. NA WHAT YOU SEE. DO NOT ENTER ALONE IF A LIVING PERSON CAN WAIT OUTSIDE WITH YOU.
Tessa looked around.
No living person waited with her.
A delivery driver at the corner saw her staring and imdiately looked away. A man smoking under the pawn shop sign fild her instead of helping. Two teenagers across the street whispered into one phone and backed up when the boards on the archive door breathed outward.
Tessa gave the cara a tight smile she did not feel.
"No volunteer backup."
Heissman's voice ca through her earpiece, borrowed from the stream delay and probably three cris. "The absence of civic courage has been logged."
"Can it be logged closer?"
"I am attempting to be in several rooms at once, Miss Cole. Biology remains aggressively local."
The boarded office made a sound like a lock turning.
Tessa crossed the street.
The closer she ca, the less the building looked boarded. The plywood was still there, but seams opened around it, clean vertical lines with red light behind them. The city seal split through the middle and folded inward.
The sll hit first.
Smoke.
Grocery store cleaner.
Rainwater on hot wire.
Soone groaned inside.
Tessa forgot the cara for half a second.
The phone dipped. Her hand corrected itself because Jade's warning had beco muscle by now.
"I hear soone hurt inside."
The comnts turned sharp.
WAIT FOR HELP.
POLICE ARE TWO BLOCKS OUT.
ASK WHO IT IS.
DO NOT GO IN.
Tessa stood at the threshold. "Who is inside?"
The groan ca again.
Then a woman's voice, thin and wet with pain. "Please."
Tessa stepped in.
The archive was not a room so much as a wrong mory of three rooms stacked together. The front had a city service counter with bulletproof glass. Behind that, tal shelves held evidence boxes. Past the shelves, where a back wall should have been, grocery store tile spread in a broken square under fluorescent lights.
A woman lay between the counter and the first shelf.
Yellow grocery apron. Dark hair matted to one cheek. Blood through her sleeve. A plastic na tag hung crooked.
NORA.
Tessa knew her before the face fully settled.
The cashier from the clip.
The woman Zunoder had stepped over.
"Oh, God." Tessa shoved the phone into the chest pocket of her jacket so the cara still faced outward. "Nora, can you hear ?"
Nora's eyes opened a little. "Store?"
"You are not at the store. I do not know how you got here."
"Man said..." Nora coughed and curled around the wound in her side. "Said I was evidence."
The archive door closed behind Tessa.
No slam. No drama. Just a clean click that turned the room smaller.
Zunoder stood at the far end of the grocery tile with Ty's face wet from rain.
He looked at Nora first.
Then at the phone.
Then at Tessa.
"You ca."
Tessa pulled a roll of napkins from a spilled service cart and pressed them against Nora's side. Nora cried out. Tessa kept pressure because she knew enough from videos to be dangerous and not enough to be calm.
"You put her here."
"The route put her where she mattered."
"That's a fancy way to say you used an injured woman as bait."
Zunoder's expression twitched.
There. Again. A nerve under the borrowed patience.
"She was already part of the question."
Tessa looked up at him. "Who did you step over?"
The fluorescent lights clicked twice.
The feed lagged. Her phone heated against her chest.
Zunoder walked closer, slow enough for viewers to call him gentle if they wanted the lie badly enough.
"Tessa, you are bleeding."
She looked down.
Her palm had split around the edge of the old transit ticket. Blood ran between her fingers and dripped onto Nora's apron.
She had not felt it.
"Answer the question."
"I stepped over a woman I could not save first."
Nora made a sound that was almost a laugh and mostly pain. "Liar."
Tessa bent lower. "Save your air."
"He looked at ." Nora's eyes found the cara in Tessa's pocket. "He saw . He took Mr. Hollis because she had the phone."
The room shook.
Every evidence box on the shelves turned an inch toward Nora.
Zunoder stopped smiling.
"Pain confuses mory."
Nora's fingers clawed weakly at Tessa's wrist. "My register drawer was open. He kicked it shut so the cara would not see blood on the money."
The comnts exploded.
SHE NAD IT.
NORA WHO?
GET HER OUT.
ASK ABOUT JADE.
DO NOT LET HIM TALK OVER HER.
Tessa looked at Zunoder. "Nora. Grocery cashier. Open register. Blood on the money. You kicked the drawer shut."
Zunoder's eyes moved to the service counter glass.
Tessa followed the look.
In the reflection, Ty's face did not hold.
A clean fra exposed the thing behind it: narrow skull, gray-white skin pulled tight, mouth too long, one eye black and one eye blue with borrowed fire. The stolen body stood wrong inside itself, like a shirt worn over a knife rack.
The phone caught it.
The feed froze on the reflection before the route could smooth it.
Heissman shouted through the earpiece with more excitent than fear. "Hold the angle."
Tessa did.
Zunoder moved toward Nora.
The room understood the move before Tessa did. If Nora stopped talking, the question lost its best answer. If Nora died, the route could file her as recovered, processed, and conveniently silent.
Tessa grabbed the service cart with one hand and shoved it into Zunoder's path.
The cart hit his knee.
It should have done nothing.
For half a second, the reflection in the glass had no stolen face. For half a second, Zunoder was only the thing wearing it.
The cart buckled against his leg and held.
Zunoder looked down at it, surprised.
Tessa dragged Nora backward with both arms.
Nora scread. Tessa apologized while pulling, which was stupid and human and ca out of her mouth anyway.
The phone slid in her pocket but kept filming the glass.
Jade's voice ca through the stream, not as text this ti.
"Tessa, listen to . Evidence can upload. Nora cannot."
Tessa's throat closed around the sound of a stranger making the choice simple.
"I know."
Zunoder stepped over the crushed cart.
Blue fire burned through his left hand. He could have crossed the room in one lunge if he wanted. He could have taken the phone, Nora, Tessa, all of it.
He held himself back.
He looked into the reflection, saw himself without the face, and understood the damage had already left the room.
The feed counter jumped.
More viewers joined.
Then more.
The one-fra reflection spread in the comnts as clipped stills before the archive could swallow it.
ACTIVE WITNESS ASSET DETECTED.
The words appeared across the service glass.
TESSA COLE.
CLASSIFICATION: HOSTILE CLARIFIER.
"Hostile clarifier?" Tessa panted.
Heissman's voice ca through, delighted despite everything. "A promotion."
Jade cut over him. "Door behind the counter. Left side. Waddell has people moving to the street. Drag Nora there."
Tessa saw the door.
Zunoder saw it too.
He tilted Ty's stolen head.
"If you leave, you lose the archive."
Tessa hooked both arms under Nora's shoulders.
"Then keep it."
He watched her drag the wounded woman across the tile.
The expression on Ty's face changed into sothing too complicated to be anger. For one awful second, Tessa thought he might be proud of her. Then the route reddened behind him and the borrowed softness went thin.
"Ask the skeleton what he loses when he keeps choosing people."
Tessa pulled Nora through the door.
Rain hit them first.
Hands grabbed Nora from the other side. Waddell's soldiers. Real ones. Heavy boots. Shouted dics. A stretcher slamming open on wet concrete.
Tessa stumbled into the street and almost went down.
Her phone stayed live.
Behind her, the archive folded shut with Zunoder still inside.
On the stream, the frozen reflection remained pinned over the comnts.
The man with Ty's face had saved one person on cara.
Now the world had watched him almost silence the woman he left behind.
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