The God of the Machine
Midtown Manhattan felt silent, as if the city itself were holding its breath.
Inside the backup command center, the air-conditioning hummed with a clinical indifference. Victor Hale sat in a high-backed leather chair, staring at a wall of monitors. On one, he saw the Red Hook office erupt in flames. On another, he saw the plummeting stock price of Scott Enterprises.
He didn't look worried. He looked bored.
"The girl is dead," Victor said to the empty room. "The lawyer is dead. The ledger is ash."
"You always were bad at math, Victor."
The voice came from the shadows behind the server racks.
Victor froze. He didn't turn around immediately. He recognized that voice—the timbre of controlled rage, the cadence of a man who had walked through fire.
"Andrew," Victor said, his voice smooth. "I must admit, your resilience is... inconvenient."
Andrew stepped into the light. He looked like a corpse brought back to life—dusty, bloodied, his arm bound in a gore-stained sling. But he held a high-caliber pistol with a steady, unwavering hand.
"The files are out," Andrew said. "The encryption just broke. The SEC has the bribe logs. The Times has the structural maps. Your 'Origin' is extinct."
Victor finally turned. He leaned back, a thin, mocking smile on his lips. "And what does that buy you? You're a fugitive. You're the face of the collapse. Even if I go down, I go down on a bed of silk. You? You die in a firefight in a lobby."
"I'm not here to arrest you, Victor."
Andrew walked forward, his boots crunching on the glass shards he had brought with him. He stopped three feet from Victor's desk.
"I'm here to show you what happens when you turn a person into a liability."
Andrew reached out with his free hand and tapped a command into the master console on Victor's desk. The monitors shifted. They no longer showed the shipyard or the stock market.
They showed a live feed of Victor's private offshore accounts. The numbers were moving. They weren't just dropping; they were being redirected.
"What are you doing?" Victor's voice lost its calm.
"I didn't just leak the Origin files," Andrew said. "I used the breach to bypass your personal biometrics. Every cent you've stolen, every bribe you've taken—it's currently being funneled into a trust for the families affected by the environmental leaks. Starting with the Patrick estate."
"You're bankrupting yourself to destroy me?" Victor stood up, his face reddening.
"I was never the money, Victor," Andrew said, leaning in close. "I was the architect. And I just pulled the primary support."
Outside, the wail of sirens grew deafening. Blue and red lights began to dance against the glass of the command center.
Andrew lowered the gun. He didn't need it anymore.
"The police are here for the embezzlement charges I just pinned on your personal MAC address," Andrew whispered. "And the FBI is here for the murders."
Victor looked at the door, then back at Andrew. The realization of total, irreversible defeat settled into his eyes.
"You'll go to prison too," Victor hissed.
"Maybe," Andrew said, his gaze drifting toward the monitor where the Red Hook office was still burning. "But I'll be the one who chose the cell."
Suddenly, Andrew's private phone vibrated in his pocket. A text message from an unknown number.
I'm out. We're safe. - J
Andrew closed his eyes for a single, fleeting second. The tension that had held his broken body together finally snapped. He slumped against the desk, a ghost of a smile appearing through the blood and dust.
The doors to the command center burst open.
"FBI! Hands in the air!"
Andrew didn't move. He just watched the city lights through the shattered window, waiting for the gravity to finally take him down.
