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Chapter 2 - Neon Haven

The rain never stopped. It shimmered against the glass towers like static crawling over skin, humming in every nerve of the city. When I stepped out of the alley, the light hit me so hard I forgot to breathe. Neon Haven. The city of light—and rot.

‏Every sign screamed a different color, every shadow whispered a deal. Drones drifted overhead like lazy predators, their lenses blinking red through the downpour. Somewhere above, trains slithered along magnet lines, sighing like restless ghosts.

‏I didn't know where I was going. My legs just moved, guided by some echo inside the blade hanging at my side. Its name—my name—glowed faintly against the dark: KAEL. Every time it pulsed, I felt… memories trying to surface, like faces behind fogged glass. But the harder I reached, the more they slipped away.

‏A vendor called after me, his voice warping through the rain.

‏> "Hey, drifter! Need a charge? Fresh circuits, cheap!"

‏I ignored him. The people here looked wired to the core—eyes flickering with implants, nerves buzzing with low-grade code. Even the children had data-ports glittering behind their ears.

‏Neon Haven wasn't built for humans. It was built for whatever came after.

‏I passed a screen wall showing a broadcast—some corporate god preaching salvation through upgrades. Voss Kyran Industries: Light Beyond Flesh. The same emblem that was etched into the back of my blade's sheath. My pulse spiked. Coincidence, or something carved into my past?

‏The rain thickened. I ducked under a canopy where a woman sat hunched over a console, selling black-market memories—silver capsules swirling with trapped light. She looked up as I approached, her eyes blank white from too many neural dives.

‏> "You lost, ghost?" she asked.

‏"Maybe," I said. My voice sounded strange, like I'd borrowed it from someone else.

‏She chuckled, static in her laugh.

‏> "Then Neon Haven's the right place. Everyone here's lost—some just sold their way out of remembering."

‏I was about to walk away when the city glitched. Just for a second. The lights flickered, sound bent, and every screen turned blue. A symbol flashed across them—a circle divided by a single blade of light. My blade.

‏Then it was gone.

‏People went back to their noise, but my heart wouldn't slow. The sword at my hip vibrated, humming like it recognized a voice.

‏> Nova.

‏The word wasn't mine, but it slid into my mind like a whisper from somewhere deep inside the circuitry of the city.

‏I moved again, faster now. Down streets that reeked of ozone and oil, through corridors of glass and steam, until I reached the city's heart—the Data Spire. It rose into the clouds like a needle stitching heaven to hell.

‏Every instinct screamed that I'd been there before.

‏My hand tightened on the hilt. For a heartbeat, the world around me bled into fragments—memories, flashes: a lab, white light, screams through a commlink, someone saying "Project Requiem is unstable."

‏Then reality snapped back. I was standing alone at the base of the Spire, rain falling harder, thunder rolling like applause.

‏Somewhere up there, my past was waiting. Somewhere beneath the noise, a voice was calling my name.

‏I tilted the blade, watching the blue letters shimmer through the storm.

‏> "If the city built gods from code," I whispered, "maybe it buried its devils too."

‏And then I walked toward the light.

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