The fourth member, a hacker known only as Phlox, had been silent, fingers steepled. He finally spoke. “His augmentation requires a stabilizer injection every forty-eight hours. Without it, his nervous system cooks itself. He’s got maybe one dose left. He needs a pharmacy—or a corpse with the right blood chemistry.”
They moved out before dawn, vehicles extinguished, moving through flooded roads with the patience of wolves. Vega found the first sign at a bait shop on Highway 317: a shattered lock, a single drop of blood on a glass counter—type O negative, Kō confirmed, too high in cortisol and synthetic adrenaline. 29 was hurting. That made him more dangerous, not less.
A voice answered from the dark. Calm. Almost amused. “Morrow. I read your file. You’re supposed to be dead.” A pause. “You ever wonder if we’re the same program? Different patch on the shoulder, same leash.”
They found the clinic at the end of a gravel lane, rain hammering its tin roof. The front door hung open. Inside, a single fluorescent light buzzed and flickered over a reception desk splashed with blood.
The team’s handler, a woman named Driscoll who never smiled and never missed a detail, pinned a satellite photo to a corkboard. “Twenty-nine was spotted twelve hours ago near the Atchafalaya Basin. He’s moving west. We think he’s trying to reach a smuggler’s airfield outside Lafayette.”