They climbed from the service tunnel into a different kind of ruin. Where the pier had been, the water smoked and the skyline was ragged with missing balconies and shattered glass. Above them, the city blinked awake, indifferent, already filling the day with errands and noise as if nothing had ripped its bones open overnight. The difference was in the new geometry of fear—how people angled their faces when they glanced at the water, the way vendors refused dockside stalls, the sudden presence of men in suits cataloguing damage without touching anything.
Cain moved like a man carrying a map burned into his bones. Every step he took was measured, not because he had to save energy, but because he had to keep the thought of the leviathan from swallowing everything in his head. The service hatch slammed behind them and the sound felt obscene in the narrow corridor. The air smelled of oil and salt and something else—metal bent into grief.
Steve's voice came thin and fast over the comm when they surfaced into the alley behind the wrecked pier. He had patches of noise in it, but the information was clean where it mattered. "Grid teams are quarantining the waterfront. They found traces—chemical and thermal markers—but the logs are scrambled. Whoever routed the feeds pulled a phantom signature through a ghost channel. That's not amateur. That's infrastructure access tied to old port accounts."
"Old port accounts mean someone with keys," Hunter said. He kept to the shadows naturally, as if the dim light belonged to him more than to anyone else. His voice never carried more than necessity.
Roselle stared at the ruined docks, then back at Cain. "Keys from who?"
Susan laughed, low and hard. The sound had the shape of a breaking bone. "Great. So not only monsters. We've got logistics wizards and nautical horrors. Perfect."
"Don't mock logistics," Steve cut in. He was the kind of man who'd rather chart movement than pull triggers, but his eyes were rimmed with the same steel as the rest. "If they can move cargo, they can move weapons and information. We need to know the routes. We need a name."
Steve cursed softly. "Working on it. I've got bits—delivery manifests altered, ghost transactions, encrypted comm chatter at odd intervals. Whoever's running this has staged noise to make the Grid look slow. They want attention, but only the sort that forces your eyes where they choose."
"That's desperation," Roselle said. Her voice was neutral, but Cain heard the edge beneath it. "Attention means risk."
"Risk pays," Hunter answered. "You expose the people who hide in plain sight."
Cain let a moment slide between them, then settled the plan like a stone on a river. "We split. Hunter and Roselle move clandestinely—check the old manifests, the north wharves, the crews that didn't clear the morning. Steve, you push the feeds for a shadow corridor. Once you have the route, we take a run at the warehouses. Susan stays with me. If the city has handlers—people who set the tides—she keeps the rear."
Susan hissed. "You're asking me to babysit you. Again."
"You're asking less than you give," Cain said. He didn't try to make it tidy. He didn't gild the danger. He gave her the blunt truth of the role. "Keep the line hot. Keep them looking at false seams."
She spat and slid a fresh cigarette into the corner of her mouth, the match a small flame that steadied her hands. "Fine. But I'm not waiting for you to come back. If you're stupid enough to die, I'm leaving you for the fish."
Cain didn't smile. He nodded once and the group dispersed like a problem splitting into smaller problems.
They moved with a rhythm Cain had built over years of misdirection and small wars: quick shadows through alleys, silent leaps across roofs, words reduced to signals and nods. Hunter and Roselle vanished among crates, slipping to where pier records were kept like old bones. Steve melted into a backroom of a defunct shipping office and began running ghosts across old channels, fingers a blur as he seeded false packet noise and then watched for the echoes. Cain and Susan threaded through market vendors and tired laborers, looking for the men in suits who were a little too neat for dock work.
What they found in the warehouses was patience made architecture. Stacks of pallets with foreign markings. Storage drums whose contents read as plausible on paper and suspicious in smell. Shipping manifests with holes where names should be. The kind of paperwork that either belonged to an international trade company with loopholes or a mafia with a ledger. Both were useful.
"Hunter," Roselle whispered through the comm as they searched, voice flat. "You have to hear this. A relay. Old channel. Tagged to a warehouse in the south bend. Code—broken, but consistent. Someone's been opening and closing it as if cadence matters."
Cain's thumb tightened on the hilt. "Seal that corridor. Force an echo. If they move something, make their relay pick up the wrong footprints."
Steve's laughter—the kind that breaks and reforms quickly—came soft and tense. "Echo in place. I'm pushing breadcrumbs. Someone's already sniffing the line. Expect a reaction."
As if on cue, it came. A convoy moved—two armored vans and a tug that looked like it wanted to be cargo but had the stubborn posture of sentries. Men with scanners and tattoos that mapped allegiance to a map Cain didn't have began flanking the warehouses. Traffic lights blinked in a pattern that meant the Grid's eyes were being guided away. The city's hands were moving.
"Time," Cain breathed. He felt the surge of it like static, a river cresting. "Now."
They struck with precise violence. Hunter appeared between steel ribs and metal like a phantom; Roselle's blades were whispers that stopped the breath of drivers. Cain moved to the vans, sliding along shadows, his blade an economy of motion. Susan fired at a radio that tried to shout a warning; sparks and a shout replaced it. Men fell before they could make a call. The convoy didn't die clean; it died in parts. The tug's engine stuttered and stalled like a beast that had been drugged.
In the chaos Cain found the ledger—wet and smeared but legible enough. A list of docks and drop coordinates, dates and small, neat marks.