The polished concrete hallway stretched out, silent under the artificial light. The only sound was the rubber soles of six pairs of boots on the floor, a rhythmic and oppressive echo. Jack walked in the center of the diamond formation of federal marshals, his wrists bound by a device of titanium alloy and polymers that hummed softly, a constant reminder of his status.
The guard on his right, a young man with the fuzz of his first mustache still visible, kept swallowing hard. His name was Jensen, Jack had overheard another guard say it. To his left, an older, heavyset man named Graves maintained a hard expression, but a vein pulsed with restrained fury in his temple.
"You okay, Jensen?" Graves muttered, without turning his head. His voice was a low growl, not meant to travel far.
"Yes, sir. It's just..." Jensen's voice faltered. "It's too quiet."
"That's how it should be," Graves replied. "Quiet is good. Quiet means no surprises. Keep your hand near your piece and your mouth shut."
"It's just that I've never escorted anyone like him," Jensen whispered, casting a fleeting glance at Jack. "I read the file. What they say he did..."
"You don't get paid to read, kid. You get paid to aim and, if necessary, shoot," Graves snapped. "Treat him like any other high-risk asset transfer."
Jack smiled to himself. An asset. That's how they saw him. A variable in an equation they couldn't solve. He decided the silence had become boring.
"You're right to be nervous, Agent Jensen," Jack said. His calm, conversational voice made the guards tense up. Jensen nearly jumped. "Surprises don't usually announce themselves. They just happen."
Graves stopped abruptly, forcing the entire formation to a halt. He turned slightly to face Jack, his eyes narrowed. "No one gave you permission to speak, Simmons."
"I don't need it," Jack answered calmly, meeting the veteran's gaze. "I was just trying to reassure your partner. The anticipation of danger is often worse than the danger itself. Although, in your case," he added, his gaze shifting to Jensen, who was now pale, "you should probably stay worried."
"Shut your mouth!" Graves spat, shoving Jack by the shoulder to get him moving again. "One more sound and I'll activate these cuffs so fast your teeth will rattle."
"I don't doubt it," Jack said as they resumed their march. "But electricity only works if your enemy is made of flesh and blood. The problem, Agent Graves, is that you don't know what you're facing."
The rest of the way to the armored van passed in a silence even more tense than before. A silence that was no longer peaceful, but heavy with Jack's words.
Inside the van, Jack sat on the steel bench, his back straight. He watched the men. Jensen kept adjusting his grip on his rifle. Graves stared at him, his hostility clear. Jack simply returned the look, unfazed. It was a battle of wills, and Jack knew he had already won.
The vehicle lurched forward and plunged into the darkness of the exit tunnel. The journey was short. Soon, the sound of the outside world began to filter in. First a dull murmur, then a rising clamor. Shouts, chants, the roar of a crowd.
The van slowed and came to a stop.
"We're here," Graves said, the obviousness in his voice betraying his nerves.
"It seems I have an audience," Jack replied with a calm smile.
The rear door opened with a hydraulic hiss, and an explosion of light and sound flooded the interior. Camera flashes went off everywhere, leaving purple spots in their vision. Dozens of microphones lunged toward them. Questions overlapped in a chaotic clamor.
"Jack! Is it true you worked for a secret agency?" "Mr. Simmons! What's your response to D.A. Davies' accusations?" "Do you have any regrets?" "Jack! Are you a terrorist or a savior?"
The marshals formed a barrier with their bodies, pushing to clear a path. "Move it! Make way! Press, back up!" Graves shouted, his voice nearly lost in the uproar.
Jack stepped down from the van with a fluidity that clashed with his escort's rigidity. His eyes scanned the crowd, ignoring the random questions, searching for a face. He found her in the front row. Sarah Vance. Her jaw was tight, her eyes burning with a fierce intensity. Their gazes met for a split second. It was enough.
Her question cut through the noise.
"Jack! The government claims you are the greatest threat to Metroville's security. What is your answer to your city?"
It was the signal.
The marshals tried to push him toward the courthouse steps, but Jack stood his ground. The move was so sudden that Jensen stumbled into him. The crowd, seeing he was about to speak, fell into an abrupt, expectant silence. The only sound was the incessant, frantic clicking of cameras.
Jack swept his gaze over the reporters. There was no defiance in his face, no anger. Just a deep, somber concern.
When he spoke, his voice didn't need to shout. It was deep and powerful, and it took command of the space, charged with an authority that crushed the chaos.
"Last night," he began. "While I slept in a government cell, a creature of their own making continued to hunt on our streets."
An electric murmur went through the reporters. They looked at each other, confused. What was he talking about?
"They call it 'Active Zero'," Jack continued. The name hung in the air, heavy with implications. "An open secret among the men who now judge me. They accuse me of being a danger, but ask yourselves: who is the real monster? Me, the one who stops threats, or them, the ones who unleash them and then hide behind their laws?"
He held up his cuffed hands, a gesture of impeccable theatricality.
"Every minute they hold me here is another minute that... plague... has to feed on your fear. On your safety. On your children." His voice dropped, becoming more intimate, more dangerous. "The city needs a savior, and the government has him in chains."
The silence that followed was absolute, heavy, on the verge of breaking. And then it did. The dam of questions burst, ten times louder than before. But Jack was no longer listening. With an almost imperceptible nod to Sarah Vance, he turned around.
"Let's go," he said to the marshals, who stared at him with a mix of awe and bewilderment.
They led him inside the building, leaving behind the chaos he had orchestrated. He had just turned his trial into a referendum on the city's safety. The pressure was no longer on him. It was on the man holding the gavel.
The courtroom was thick with a silent tension. The press gallery was packed to the last inch, reporters leaning forward in their seats, expectant. Howard Davies, the prosecutor, wiped sweat from his forehead with a silk handkerchief, his flushed face a mixture of anger and nervousness. Yuls, sitting next to Jack at the defense table, could feel her pulse hammering in her temples.
"You shouldn't have done that, Jack," she whispered, her eyes fixed on the judge's empty bench. "You've put Judge Thompson in an impossible position. Either he lets you go and looks weak, or he keeps you locked up and looks complicit if something else happens."
"That was the plan," Jack replied in a low voice, his tone calm, almost detached. He watched D.A. Davies with a distant curiosity.
"The plan was to use legal channels," Yuls retorted, frustrated. "Present the evidence of the agency's activities, force a dismissal. What you did was throw a grenade into the middle of everything."
"Legal channels are for legal problems, Yuls. This is no longer a legal problem," he said, turning his head to look at her. His eyes were intense. "This is war. And in a war, you don't win by playing by the enemy's rules. You win by breaking them."
"Thompson isn't the enemy. He's a man of the law. He's predictable."
"Everyone's predictable until their world falls apart," Jack murmured. "I'm just speeding up the process."
Yuls sighed, rubbing her temples. She mentally reviewed the arguments, the contingencies, the motions she had prepared. It all seemed insignificant now. Jack had moved the trial to the street, and she felt like she was drowning in a sea of technicalities that no one cared about anymore.
"Trust me," Jack said, his voice a reassuring whisper. Yuls looked at him. Despite the situation, despite the cuffs and the prison jumpsuit, he seemed to be the only person in the room who was in control.
The side door opened and Judge Thompson entered. The silence deepened. His face was stern and impassive, his eyes cold. He didn't look at anyone as he took his seat. The crack of his gavel was a sharp, brutal sound that made everyone flinch.
"This court is now back in session," he announced, his voice ringing with a forced gravity. He adjusted his glasses and pretended to read some papers, though everyone knew he was just buying time, composing his response to Jack's challenge. Finally, he looked up, his gaze landing, hard as steel, on the defense table.
"In recent days," the judge began, his voice taking on the tone of a harsh sermon, "this courtroom has been witness to extraordinary procedural maneuvers and accusations of unprecedented gravity." His gaze paused on Jack for a second. "There has been an attempt to turn a judicial proceeding into a media circus. Bad faith accusations have been leveled against government agencies, and there has been an attempt to undermine the very authority of this court."
He paused, letting the words sink in. Davies nodded slightly, a smirk of approval forming on his sweaty face.
"Allow me to be unequivocal," Thompson continued, his voice rising in volume, each word a hammer blow. "The law is not an instrument for political debate. It does not bend to public opinion, nor is it intimidated by threats, veiled or otherwise. The law is the foundation on which this society rests. It is the wall that separates us from anarchy. And in this courtroom, the law is absolute!"
He leaned forward, his knuckles white on the edge of his bench. His gaze locked onto Jack, an attempt to subdue him through sheer judicial force of will.
"The defense's motions to dismiss the case for governmental misconduct are denied," he declared. "While the investigative agency's tactics may have been... unorthodox," he admitted grudgingly, "they do not invalidate the overwhelming amount of evidence that justifies a trial against Mr. Simmons."
Yuls felt a cold knot in her stomach. It was the worst-case scenario. She knew it. Jack didn't react. Not a muscle in his face moved.
"Therefore," Judge Thompson proclaimed, with an air of grim finality, "regarding the matter of bail and the continuation of the proceedings, and after considering all arguments presented, as well as this morning's... public display..."
He leaned into the microphone, the final verdict on the tip of his tongue. The room held its collective breath. Yuls braced for the blow.
"In the case of the State versus John Simmons, this court has decided..."
BOOM!!!
It was more than a sound; it was a physical force that shook the building's foundations.
A thundering shockwave hit the structure. Yuls's world was reduced to white noise and violence. The marble floor buckled beneath her feet. The majestic arched windows of the courtroom exploded inward, and a blast of sharp glass swept through the room. The heavy bronze chandelier hanging from the ceiling tore loose with a metallic groan and crashed with a deafening roar onto the empty prosecution tables, splintering them to pieces.
Screams. A discordant chorus of pure panic and terror.
Dust and smoke enveloped everything in seconds, turning the solemn courtroom into a blurred, gray nightmare. People screamed, crawled, tried to get under the sturdy wooden benches. Order, law, Judge Thompson's absolute authority... it had all been annihilated in a split second.
The judge was still on his bench, the word half-formed on his lips, his wide eyes fixed on the huge, smoking hole that had appeared in the west wall of the building. His face was a mask of pure, absolute terror. The law had just been wiped off the map by a brutal, incomprehensible force.
At the epicenter of the pandemonium, Jack was completely serene. He had risen from his chair as the chaos erupted around him, as if welcoming it. This was his element. Order was his cage. Chaos was his freedom.
Yuls was on the floor, next to her overturned chair. A sharp, piercing ringing drilled into her ears, and she tasted plaster and dust. "What... what happened?" she stammered, more to herself than anyone. She was as stunned as everyone else. Near her, a marshal was shouting unintelligible orders, trying to snap the judge out of his catatonic stupor. She saw Davies crawling under what was left of his table, sobbing like a child.
Then, firm hands gripped her shoulders and pulled her to her feet with a strength that surprised her. It was Jack. His face, covered in a thin layer of dust, was strangely alive, his eyes shining with a feverish light in the smoke.
"Are you okay?" he asked, his voice steady and clear over the din.
Yuls could only nod, still dazed.
He pulled her closer, his voice dropping to an adrenaline-fueled whisper that cut through the noise of the screams and the alarms that were beginning to blare.
"That's the sound of inevitability, Yuls," he said, his breath warm in her ear. "The real world just came knocking. You can't reason with it. You can't arrest it. You can only face it."
He paused, making sure she was paying attention, that she was past the initial shock.
"Go. Put on the suit."
The order was so simple, so direct, and so insane in that context that it took Yuls's mind a second to process it. The suit? Now? Here? She looked around at the chaos, at the injured people, at the broken structure of the law. Then she looked back at Jack. The absolute certainty in his voice was a point of calm in the middle of the madness.
Then he did something that shook her more than the explosion itself. With a speed she barely registered, he gave her a short, firm slap on her ass. It wasn't a lewd or playful gesture. It was a command. An act of ownership and absolute trust. A transfer of will. "Now," he added in a low voice. He followed it with an almost imperceptible wink, a flash of his true nature beneath the facade.
An intense heat rose up Yuls's neck, a blush that had nothing to do with embarrassment and everything to do with the sudden, overwhelming clarity of her purpose. The shock evaporated, replaced by a surge of pure adrenaline that sharpened her senses. He wasn't asking her to be a lawyer. He wasn't asking her to be a hero. He was ordering her to be his weapon. And her body and mind obeyed instantly, without question.
Without a word, she turned and ran. She moved with an urgency-born agility, surprising the guards who were trying to establish a useless perimeter. She dodged falling debris and terrified, crawling people, heading for a service exit she had memorized on her way in. It was the fastest way outside, to where she had left her gear.
Jack watched her go, a swift shadow disappearing into the smoke. Then, he turned slowly to face the rest of the room. The remaining marshals, finally reacting, aimed their weapons at him. Their hands, Jack noticed, were trembling visibly.
"On the ground! Simmons, on the ground now!" one of them shouted, the agent Jensen. His youthful voice cracked with panic.
Jack ignored the command. His gaze was fixed on Judge Thompson, who was finally moving. He was descending from his bench in his tattered robes, his face pale with shock, looking like a ghost of the authority he had once been. Their eyes met over the barrels of the trembling guns between them.
And Jack smiled.
It wasn't a smile of triumph. It was a smile of condescension, almost of pity. A smile that said: You see, Your Honor? Your paper cage, your rules, your stone walls... they mean nothing. The future doesn't ask for permission. It just kicks down the door.
"Your court," Jack said, his calm voice echoing in the sudden silence that had formed around him, "is adjourned."
Then, he raised his hands. Not in surrender, but so everyone could see the high-tech cuffs. There was a faint blue flash at the device's central joint. A high-pitched, almost inaudible hum that lasted less than a second. And then a dry, metallic CRACK that echoed like a gunshot in the devastated room.
The titanium alloy split in two. The electronics sizzled and died with a small wisp of smoke. The two halves of the shackles fell to the floor with a dull, heavy thud.
The marshals took a simultaneous step back, their faces a mixture of disbelief and fear. Graves opened his mouth to shout an order, but no sound came out.
Jack dusted off the shoulders of his prison jumpsuit with a calmness that was more terrifying than any shout or threat. With deliberate slowness, he began to walk. He walked past the paralyzed guards as if they were statues, heading straight for the massive hole in the wall that opened to the outside.
He didn't move like an escaping prisoner, but with absolute authority.
He stopped at the edge of the breach, his back to everyone in the room. The sunlight enveloped him, creating an imposing silhouette against the smoke and dust-filled sky. Down on the street, the screams of the people and the rising wail of sirens filled the air.
And Jack, its herald, was ready to offer them their salvation.
For a price.