On the morning of the trial, Metroville was jolted awake. The roar of Apache attack helicopters sweeping across the sky in tight formations became the city's wake-up call. The air, normally filled with the hum of traffic, vibrated with a palpable tension. It was the day. The day they would move the world's most famous prisoner, and the city held its breath.
On the television in a downtown café, the morning news anchor spoke with a solemnity reserved for declarations of war, his face projected onto dozens of screens throughout the city.
"…and the Metroville Police Department has confirmed this morning that the individual responsible for the incident known as 'Code Black' remains unidentified. Internal sources admit to having no leads, describing the attacker as a ghost who vanished without a trace. With this unknown threat still at large, the city's and the nation's attention is now focused on the federal courthouse, where security measures for Gamma Jack's transfer are unprecedented…"
In a hotel suite on the thirtieth floor, Yuls Sinclair muted the TV. She didn't need the reminder. The sound of the helicopter rotors, passing so close they made the windowpanes vibrate, was more than enough. She adjusted the jacket of her charcoal gray suit.
She looked at herself in the dressing room mirror. She didn't fully recognize the woman staring back. Her eyes had the inevitable dark circles from sleepless nights studying legal precedents and contingency plans, but her expression held a hardness she didn't know she possessed.
"I am Gamma Jack's lawyer."
The sentence still sounded absurd in her head. Her phone vibrated on the marble dresser. She saw the name on the screen: "Arthur Davies." He was the senior partner of the law firm Jack had hired to assist her. They wouldn't act directly on the case, but they would offer support if she needed it. She hesitated a second before answering.
"Yuls here."
"Sinclair," Davies's voice was tense and laced with disapproval. "Are you seeing this? It looks like a war zone. I've had three calls from the firm asking if we've lost our minds."
"The deployment is… considerable," Yuls admitted, walking to the window and watching a convoy of armored vehicles blocking the avenue below.
"Considerable? It's a circus. And you're in the center ring. I just want to make sure, one last time, that you know what you're getting into. This man isn't your typical white-collar client, Yuls. He's not some executive who embezzled funds. He's… a monster."
"I'm aware of that, Arthur."
"Are you? Because the Pentagon is involved. Organizations that don't even have names. There are people who say giving him a legal defense is treason."
"Everyone deserves a defense, Arthur. I thought that was one of the first things a lawyer learns," Yuls replied, her voice firmer than she felt.
There was a sigh on the other end of the line. "That's the theory. The reality is that sometimes you come across a shark. And our job is to defend people, not get in the cage with him. Be careful. That's all I'm saying."
"I'll keep that in mind. Thanks for calling, Arthur."
She hung up before he could add anything else. She stared out at the city. Davies didn't get it. Nobody got it. She wasn't getting in the cage with the shark. She was opening the door.
At street level, Captain Frank Miller felt the weight of the deployment in his shoulders. He wore a tactical vest over his uniform. Around him, hundreds of police officers and National Guard soldiers formed a seemingly impenetrable perimeter.
"Never seen anything like this, Cap," said Officer O'Connell, a young kid with barely two years on the force, his knuckles white from how tightly he gripped his rifle. "Not even when the president came."
Miller grunted. "The president can't level a building with a stray thought, kid. The order is clear: if he sneezes in the wrong direction, the protocol is to shoot. Though I doubt it would do much good."
"You really think he's that dangerous?"
Miller turned to look at O'Connell, his eyes hardened by twenty years on the streets. "See the crowd?" he said, nodding his chin toward the people crowded behind the metal barricades. "Look closely. They're not just curious onlookers."
O'Connell followed his gaze. He saw a group of young people in homemade t-shirts bearing Jack's symbol, a stylized atom. They were cheering for him, their faces glowing with an almost religious devotion. A few feet away from them, another group held signs calling him a "monster" and a "terrorist," their expressions twisted with hatred and fear.
"Some love him, some hate him," O'Connell observed.
"And I don't know which is worse," Miller answered, his voice low and gravelly. "Hate is predictable. You get it, you can handle it. But that adoration… that's terrifying. Those people don't see a man. They see an idea. And you can't put handcuffs on an idea."
A sergeant approached them. "Captain. Convoy is five minutes from the extraction point. All quiet for now."
"Received," Miller said, turning his attention back to the empty, sealed-off street. "Keep everyone on high alert. I don't like this quiet."
Several miles away, in an anonymous motel room, Agent Thorne completely ignored the media circus. The small TV in the room showed the same aerial footage everyone else was watching, but to him, the parade was a farce.
His attention was fixed on a laptop screen, which displayed a map of the city covered with overlaid energy data. He was reviewing the "Code Black" reports for the umpteenth time, looking for a pattern everyone else had missed.
He muttered to himself, his fingers moving quickly over the keyboard. "Particle dispersion is inconsistent with a singular energy source… The residual fluctuation is too erratic… It's not him. It's not Jack."
His burner phone, an old, no-frills model, vibrated on the table. He snatched it up instantly.
"Speak."
"I told you not to call me on this number," a digitally distorted female voice replied.
"I need the sensor data from the financial district last night. The data that's not in the official report," Thorne said, ignoring the complaint.
"You're asking for too much, Thorne. You don't have a badge anymore. If they find out I'm talking to you, they'll stick me in a hole so deep they'll have to mail me sunlight."
"The 'Code Black' attack wasn't Jack," Thorne insisted. "It was something else. And while everyone is watching the prisoner parade, that thing is still out there. I need that data."
There was a long silence on the line, broken only by the crackle of static.
"I'll send it to the secure location," the voice finally said. "But this is the last time. You're on your own with this. The ghost you're looking for… I don't think the government is interested in finding him. Maybe they like having a monster on the loose to blame things on."
The line went dead. Thorne stared at his screen. While the entire world was watching Jack, he was the only one hunting the real ghost.
In the underground parking garage of the detention center, the silence was absolute. Jack walked between two rows of special forces guards, his hands cuffed in front of him. Each guard was equipped with advanced weaponry. He wore the orange prisoner jumpsuit, but his gait was calm and confident, completely out of place for a man on his way to trial.
As he passed a young guard, whose eyes remained fixed straight ahead, Jack paused for a fraction of a second.
"Nice watch," he whispered. "Your daughter has good taste in birthday gifts."
The guard tensed visibly, his professional discipline warring with the sudden chill that ran down his spine. He said nothing, but Jack smiled to himself and kept walking.
He was led to the central vehicle of the convoy, an armored, matte-black beast designated "Titan." The rear door, nearly a foot thick, opened with a hydraulic hiss, revealing a claustrophobic interior. Two hard seats, facing each other, were bolted to a metal floor. No windows. Just a small camera in one corner.
Jack climbed in without resistance. Before they could close the door, an authoritative voice echoed through the garage.
"Wait."
A man in his sixties, with slicked-back silver hair and an immaculate suit that radiated authority, approached with a determined stride, flanked by two nervous-looking aides.
"Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert Matheson," the lead guard said, his tone a mix of surprise and subordination. "Sir, you weren't on the transport manifest."
"I am now," Matheson replied, his voice that of a man accustomed to giving orders and being obeyed. He didn't look at the guard, but directly at Jack. "I'll be riding with the prisoner."
A tense silence fell. The guard looked to his superiors. After a brief radio communication, one of them nodded reluctantly. Matheson dismissed his aides with a gesture and boarded the Titan.
The heavy door closed, sealing them in metallic silence. The convoy started to move.
Matheson sat across from Jack. He looked at Jack, but he didn't see a man; he saw a complex problem that needed to be solved, a dangerous specimen that needed to be analyzed.
"Gamma Jack," he said, testing the name. "You have the whole city on edge. It's cost over three million dollars in logistics alone just to move you ten blocks. Does that make you proud?"
Jack, who had been staring ahead with mild boredom, finally turned his head. He gave Matheson a slow smile that didn't reach his eyes.
"Proud isn't the word I'd use, Mr. Secretary," he replied. "Flattered? Maybe a little. Amused? Definitely. It shows just how incredibly scared you all are."
"Don't mistake caution for fear, Mr. Jack," Matheson said. "The United States government does not get scared. And we are very, very prepared for you."
"Oh, I highly doubt that," Jack replied, his tone light. "You're prepared for a terrorist. You aren't prepared for a paradigm shift. That's why they sent you, isn't it? Thorne was the attempt at intimidation, but he failed. So now they send the diplomat to see if the monster can be negotiated with before he gets to court."
Matheson didn't flinch, but a slight tic in his jaw betrayed his surprise. He had expected a thug with superpowers, not this.
"You're very perceptive."
"It's my job. My real power isn't radiation, Mr. Secretary. It's seeing things as they are. And I see you. I see a man who has spent thirty years climbing the ladder of power, one compromise at a time. A man who believes in the system because it's the only game he knows how to play. You're not here out of patriotism. You're here because I am the greatest threat to your system."
"That 'game,' as you call it, has kept the world standing for centuries," Matheson said, his voice hardening. "A world of laws, of order. A world you seem determined to burn down."
"I don't want to burn it," Jack corrected, leaning forward slightly. "I want to remodel it. The system isn't broken, Mr. Secretary. It's obsolete. You're too slow, too weak. While you debate sanctions against a dictator for six months, I could end his regime in the blink of an eye. While you argue over the budget to fix a bridge, Apogee could stop it from collapsing."
"That's tyranny, not progress," Matheson snapped. "That's one-man rule. History has taught us where that leads."
"Has it?" Jack inquired, his smile vanishing, replaced by an icy intensity. "You talk about tyranny and laws. Let me ask you something. 'Operation Red Flag' in Vilkeizen, three years ago. A drone strike that, according to the official story, eliminated a key terrorist leader. But you and I know it also eliminated an entire wedding. Thirty-four civilians, twelve of them children, incinerated. You signed the order. Was that 'law'? Was that 'order'? Or was it a blunder you buried under multiple layers of 'classified' stamps?"
Matheson fell completely silent. His face, once full of confidence, was now pale.
"How… how do you know that?" he whispered.
"Like I said. I see things as they are," Jack said, his voice now quiet and sharp. "I see a man who talks about order while signing death warrants from the comfort of his office. The only difference between you and me, Robert, is that I don't hide behind a desk. I am infinitely more honest than you."
Visibly shaken, Matheson shifted tactics. He opened his briefcase with trembling hands. Inside were no documents, only a tablet.
"There's another way," he said, his voice softening. "It doesn't have to be like this. The world is changing, you're right. And people with your abilities… could be a valuable part of that change."
"Valuable to whom?"
"To us. To your country," Matheson said, turning the tablet to show a logo: a stylized eagle clutching an atom. "Project Chimera. A new division. Work with us. Help us understand your abilities. This trial, the charges… it can all disappear. We can give you unlimited resources, a lab, a purpose. You could be this nation's greatest asset, not its greatest threat."
Jack listened patiently. When Matheson finished, a silent laugh shook his body.
"Mr. Secretary, after all this time, you still don't get it," he said. "You don't want a partner. You want a weapon on a leash. You want to control power so you can use it as you see fit. And I am no one's weapon."
He leaned forward again, the sound of his chains filling the silence. His voice dropped to a whisper.
"The problem isn't me. It's your system, which prefers to lock away what it doesn't understand. It's your fear that someone more powerful could do your job better than you. And the truth is, we can. I didn't come to join your world, Mr. Matheson. I came to replace it. And when I'm done, men like you, the ones who make the real decisions in secret, will no longer have a place in it."
The convoy came to an abrupt stop. The door of the Titan hissed open, flooding the interior with light and the noise of the crowd.
Jack stood up.
"It's been a fascinating conversation. Have a good day, Robert."
He stepped out of the vehicle, blinking in the flash of hundreds of cameras, a calm smile on his face. Behind him, Robert Matheson exited, stumbling slightly. He looked ten years older. His face was pale, and his immaculate suit now hung from his shoulders, his posture defeated.
The press captured the image: the prisoner, radiant and victorious, and the free man, pale and defeated.
Across the police line, Yuls saw Jack emerge and felt her doubts vanish, replaced by a cold, absolute confidence. Her plan was working.
On the street, Captain Miller saw Matheson's face and knew the Deputy Secretary had just been slaughtered in a battle no one had witnessed. He turned to his partner.
"You see that look on the politician's face, O'Connell?" Miller muttered. "That's the face of real fear. Not the screaming kind. The kind of man who's just seen the future and realized he's not in it."
Jack walked up the courthouse steps, Yuls by his side. He leaned in and whispered in her ear, his voice inaudible to everyone but her.
"Act one, complete. Matheson is no longer a factor. Now, the real fun begins."