"Nervous, Yuls?" Gamma Jack's voice was a low rumble, barely audible over the buzz of anticipation in the room. "You look like you're about to jump out of your skin."
"Someone has to be," she replied without looking at him, her eyes fixed on the empty judge's chair. "You seem far too calm for a man whose future is being decided today."
Jack leaned back in his chair, the movement fluid and relaxed despite the cuffs binding his wrists. The custom-tailored, dark prison jumpsuit couldn't hide the powerful musculature of his body.
"What's the point of being nervous? The plan is laid out. The pieces are in place. All you have to do is play your part."
"This isn't a game, Jack. This is a preliminary hearing that could end with you in a black hole that not even I could pull you out of."
"'Exactly. 'Could'," he smiled, a flash of arrogance in his eyes. "But it won't. Trust the plan. And trust yourself. That's why I chose you."
Yuls clenched her jaw. She hated it when he was right. She took a deep breath just as the side door opened and the clerk announced the judge's entrance.
"All rise."
The room rose in a wave of motion as Judge Thompson, a man whose expression seemed carved from granite, took his seat. His gaze swept across the room, lingering for a fraction of a second longer on the defense table before he struck his gavel. The sound was sharp and final.
"This court is now in session. We are here for the preliminary hearing in the case of the State versus John Simmons, also known as Gamma Jack. Mr. Davies, is the prosecution ready?"
Howard Davies, the prosecutor, stood up. He was a heavyset man, and his suit seemed to be fighting a losing battle to contain him.
"We are, Your Honor. The prosecution intends to present overwhelming evidence demonstrating probable cause to proceed to trial on multiple counts of…"
"Your Honor."
Yuls's clear, firm voice cut through Davies's speech. She hadn't stood yet, but her interruption drew everyone's attention. Davies turned to look at her, his face already flushing with indignation.
"Excuse me, Ms. Sinclair? Does the defense have something to say before the prosecution has even had a chance to present its case?"
Yuls rose slowly.
"Yes, it does, Your Honor. Before the prosecution presents its arguments, the defense wishes to file a motion."
Davies let out a disbelieving laugh.
"Objection, Your Honor! This is a delay tactic! A complete procedural ambush! The defense has given no prior indication of its intent to file any motions. We've received no notice, no paperwork. This is an abuse of process!"
"The defense is not required to announce its intentions in advance of a preliminary hearing, Mr. Davies. You know that," Yuls replied with an icy calm, not deigning to look at him. Her eyes were locked on the judge. "We are not in the discovery phase. This is a preliminary hearing, and we have the right to raise fundamental issues that affect the very validity of this proceeding."
Judge Thompson leaned forward, his brow furrowed.
"And what is the nature of this motion, Ms. Sinclair?"
"We are filing a motion to dismiss all charges against my client," Yuls declared, and a murmur swept through the press gallery. "Based on fundamental government misconduct and malicious prosecution."
The murmur grew into a flurry of whispers and scribbling pens. Judge Thompson's gavel came down hard.
"Silence in my courtroom!" he roared, his voice vibrating through the wooden panels. "The next person who makes a sound will spend the rest of the day in a holding cell!" He waited until the silence was absolute before addressing Yuls again. "Ms. Sinclair, that is an extraordinarily serious accusation. I expect you have more than just rhetoric to back it up."
"I do, Your Honor. But it's not something I can present in a simple brief. It's something that must be demonstrated."
"Demonstrated how?" the judge asked, impatience sharpening his tone.
"I intend to prove that the government agency investigating my client operates outside the bounds of the law. I intend to prove they used illegal surveillance methods and deliberately concealed exculpatory evidence to build a narrative against him. They didn't arrest him, Your Honor. They framed him."
"Fantasies!" Davies snapped, unable to contain himself. "This is a circus! She's inventing a conspiracy theory out of a dime-store novel! The defense doesn't have a shred of evidence for these wild and defamatory claims against federal agents who risk their lives for this country."
"The evidence exists, Your Honor," Yuls said, her voice so controlled it was sharper than any shout. "The government simply refuses to produce it. They refuse to hand over the complete recordings, the unedited field reports, the psychological profiles of the agents involved. Why? Because if they did, their case would fall apart."
*****
Former Agent Thorne ducked under the yellow police tape, ignoring the plastic clinging to his jacket. The Metroville PD had done their job, as they saw it. They had taken photos, collected shell casings, interviewed potential witnesses who saw nothing, and finally shrugged, declaring the alley massacre a "Code Black," an unsolved case. Probably a gang hit that got out of hand. But Thorne knew better.
The night enveloped the narrow alley walls. He put on a pair of night-vision goggles, and the world turned a ghostly green. He pulled a device the size of a phone from his bag, a small satellite dish on one end. A prototype field energy spectrometer. One of the many things he had taken from the agency before he was "retired."
He switched it on, and the screen came to life, showing not the visible world, but its energetic residue. The ground and walls were stained. They appeared as dark shadows on the screen, dead zones where vital and electrical energy had been ripped away with unimaginable violence. They were the scars the monster had left behind.
"Alright, let's see what the uniforms left behind," he muttered to himself.
He walked slowly down the alley, following the darkest "stains." The police had looked for prints and DNA. They were looking for a man. Thorne was looking for the absence of all that. He knelt beside the chalk outline of one of the withered bodies. The spectrometer let out a sharp, steady beep.
"Anomalous residual signature," he said quietly, reading the data on the screen. "Not gamma radiation. A perfect void."
He analyzed the pattern of the "shadows" on the ground. They weren't random. They flowed from a point of impact in the center of the alley, where the negative energy was most intense. But there was something else. A weaker current, a kind of fading trail, led north out of the alley.
"You left a trail," Thorne whispered, a half smile forming on his face. "An incredibly cold one."
He stood and began to follow it.
*****
"Ms. Sinclair, your accusation of 'illegal surveillance' is based solely on the word of your client," Prosecutor Davies argued, gesturing indignantly. "A man accused of multiple homicides and acts of domestic terrorism! It's a farce! A desperate strategy to muddy the waters! I ask the court, I implore you, to dismiss this motion immediately and proceed with the hearing as scheduled."
"My client has the right to confront the evidence against him, Your Honor," Yuls retorted, standing firm against Davies's attack. "All of it. Not just the pieces the prosecution conveniently selects. And he also has the right to present evidence showing that the investigation itself is corrupt. If the government has acted in good faith, as Mr. Davies claims, then they should have absolutely nothing to hide. Let them turn over the entire file. Unedited."
"National security isn't a game, Ms. Sinclair," the judge interjected, his patience visibly wearing thin. "There are protocols. There is classified information that protects active agents and ongoing operations. You can't just throw around baseless accusations of spying and expect the government to open its most secret files."
"They aren't baseless, Your Honor. It's just that the person with the basis, the person who can testify to the illegality of those orders and the manipulation of evidence, is being conveniently silenced by the very government I'm accusing."
Judge Thompson massaged his temples, feeling a headache coming on. The attorney was cornering him, using the system's own rules against it. He realized he was being played, but she hadn't broken any rules; she was just stretching them to their breaking point.
"You are asking me to believe in a conspiracy based on the absence of a witness who, you claim, the conspiracy itself is hiding," the judge said, his voice laced with skepticism.
"Exactly, Your Honor. And that's why this motion is crucial. We cannot proceed if the very foundation of the prosecution's case is rotten."
"What is your point, Ms. Sinclair?" the judge asked, his gaze sharp. "Stop the word games. Be direct. What are you asking for?"
Yuls took a deep breath. She glanced at Jack, who gave her an almost imperceptible nod. It was time.
"A very simple point, Your Honor. In order to establish the grounds for this misconduct, for this motion to have any standing so we can proceed, the defense needs to question the source of that misconduct. We need to put that person on the stand, under oath."
****
The trail led Thorne out of the quarantine zone, through the forgotten industrial neighborhoods the city preferred to ignore. The spectrometer guided him, its soft beeps his only guide in the silent night. Every time he got closer to the negative energy signature, the beeping became a little more frequent, a little more insistent.
The trail led him to an abandoned meat-packing plant. A rusted sign swayed in the wind with a mournful creak. The place was dead. Thorne drew his pistol, a standard 9mm that felt ridiculously inadequate against whatever he was hunting.
"Let's see where you take me," he muttered, pushing open the main door, which swung inward with a metallic groan.
The interior was a cavern of stainless steel and silence. The air was frigid. The energy trail grew much stronger here, a dark, defined blotch on his device's screen that led him toward one of the massive walk-in freezers. The heavy door was ajar by a few inches.
Thorne pushed it open. The air that rushed out was an unnatural cold, a cold that had nothing to do with refrigeration. And in the center of the room, illuminated by the weak beam of Thorne's flashlight, was the body.
It was hanging from a meat hook. Thorne recognized him from police reports: a small-time drug dealer who had disappeared two days ago. But he wasn't decomposed. There were no signs of conventional violence. He was desiccated. His skin was parchment-thin, stretched taut over the bones. His eyes were sunk deep into his skull, two dark pits in a face frozen in a silent scream of terror. He looked like a mummy, an ancient, forgotten thing.
Thorne approached cautiously, the spectrometer humming loudly in his hand. The negative energy reading emanating from the body was much stronger, more… concentrated than that of the victims in the alley. That was a burst, a chaotic release of power. This was different. This was methodical.
An icy realization washed over Thorne, colder than the air in the freezer. Cain hadn't fled. He wasn't hiding in some dark corner of the city. He had stayed. And he was hunting.
He was feeding. And with each victim, his control, his power, seemed to be refining.
****
Prosecutor Davies laughed openly in the courtroom, a sound of contempt that echoed in the silence.
"Absurd! The defense wants to question its own client to prove government misconduct? Your Honor, this has gone from a circus to a complete farce! You are wasting this court's time!"
"No, Mr. Davies," Yuls said, her calm voice cutting through the air and silencing the prosecutor's laughter. "We are not referring to our client. We have no intention of calling Mr. Simmons to the stand at this stage."
Judge Thompson stared at her, his eyes narrowed with suspicion, his patience finally gone.
"Then who are you referring to, Ms. Sinclair? The mystery is over. State the name of the person who is allegedly the source of this grand government conspiracy. Be clear. Now."
Yuls looked at Jack. He met her gaze, a spark of approval, of triumph, in his eyes. Then she turned back to the judge. The entire room held its breath as a complete silence fell over the court.
At the same time, miles away, Thorne stood before the withered body, the chill of the freezer seeping into his bones. He looked at the reading on his device, the energy signature now more powerful and defined than ever. A terrible, clear thought formed in his mind.
In the courtroom, Yuls spoke the words that would blow the trial wide open:
"To establish the foundation for our motion, the defense calls Special Agent Marcus Thorne to the stand."
And in the freezing, abandoned plant, Thorne looked at the mummified face of the dead man, then at the reading on his device, and whispered to himself, his voice filled with a new and terrible urgency:
"He's getting stronger."