ยฉNovel Buddy
BLOODCAPE-Chapter 140: Ash Broadcast
The city was wrong.
Not broken. Not burning. Just... wrong. ๐ณ๐๐ฒ๐๐จ๐๐ฏ๐๐๐ง๐๐น.๐ฐ๐ผ๐
They emerged from the Zodiac freight tunnel in silence, boots thudding softly against concrete slick with condensation. Hernan blinked into the open space of the Sector Nine transit corridor, where sodium-vapor lights once bathed commuters in washed-out yellow. Now, the lights pulsed faint blue, rhythmic, wrong โ like breath being held just a little too long.
Aya stepped out behind him. Iro followed, rifle half-slung, scanning rooftops without being told. Dekra came last, her cloak trailing like smoke, collecting ambient noise like static.
Nothing had changed in structure. The signs were the same. The benches. The distant echo of a train along an unseen line. But everything else โ the feel of it โ had shifted. The atmosphere was layered now, like another version of the city had been painted thinly over this one, and the new paint hadnโt dried.
"Lighting gridโs off by thirty-two nanoseconds," Iro muttered, eyes on his HUD. "They rewired the tempo."
"Why?" Aya asked.
"To make people feel unsettled," Dekra said. "It makes them more likely to accept new certainties when offered."
A vendor stall that used to sell synth-noodles now displayed prefab armor patches emblazoned with a sleek, abstracted emblem โ an angular "E" formed from broken chain-links. Above it, a screen flickered in perfect intervals.
ECHO DEPLOYMENT READINESS: TRUST WHATโS RETURNED.
Ayaโs jaw tightened. "We werenโt gone long enough for this."
"We were," Dekra said, tone dry. "You donโt understand how fast Ash Logic works. It doesnโt seed data. It seeds perception. Once the logic enters the system, the city doesnโt need a timeline. It creates inevitability. People donโt remember when this started โ just that it feels like it was always true."
Footsteps echoed. Two teens passed them. One looked up, caught Hernanโs face โ and froze. Recognition flickered, then shifted. Something in the boyโs eyes fractured: memory mismatch.
"Sir..." he started to say. Then stopped. His expression blanked. The boy turned and tugged his friend along faster, muttering under his breath.
Hernan stood still.
Aya moved beside him. "You saw that."
He nodded once, slowly.
"He recognized you," she said.
"No," Dekra corrected. "He recognized someone. But when his brain tried to resolve two copies in one frame, it rejected the ambiguity. He defaulted to safety โ and you werenโt it."
Aya pulled her portable scanner from her belt. "Letโs see how bad this is."
She ran the local neural tag log.
Her eyes narrowed.
"Thereโs a ghost entry," she said. "My scannerโs registering two pings for Hernan. One of them flagged as passing through Gate 6 โ thirty minutes ago."
"Weโve never been to Gate 6," Iro said.
Aya rotated the display to show Hernan. Two biometric entries. Same ID. Same retinal lock. Same life signs.
No errors.
No warnings.
Just duplication, perfectly accepted.
"The system isnโt flagging this as identity fraud," Aya murmured. "Itโs not even confused."
"Itโs treating both records like verified truth," Dekra said. "Two valid copies. Two continuous Hernans. Youโre not the same man anymore โ youโre data with conflict resolution disabled."
Hernan stared at the screen. His name. His markers.
One was real.
One was walking ahead of him.
"Itโs not about who came first," he said. "Itโs about who fits better."
A gust of wind swept through the corridor, carrying with it the murmur of a crowd in a nearby plaza โ unaware, unconcerned. Digital signage above flickered, mid-cycle.
WELCOME BACK, VALE.
It held there.
Then blinked.
YOU WERE NEVER GONE.
Aya turned slowly, eyes tracing the people walking by.
No one screamed. No one pointed. They just looked.
And their eyes couldnโt agree.
Her scanner chirped softly again.
Side by side.
Two faces.Two biometrics.One name.VALID.
Hernan didnโt speak. He didnโt need to.
Because for the first time since all of this began, he looked โ truly โ unsure if he was the original.
And the city?
The city looked just as confused.
โ
The wind rattled through the vents of the abandoned signal tower like a breath stuck in a throat. Cold night fog ghosted in low swirls across the grated floors and whispered between server racks and dangling coils of old fiber.
The place had once been a Zodiac relay node.
Now, it was a tomb for misremembered truth.
Dekra moved first, boots silent. She reached a scorched panel on the north wall and slotted in a narrow data-prong. The servers groaned awake โ groggy, suspicious, angry at being disturbed.
"Weโve got a window," she said. "Forty seconds before Scorpioโs side-net realizes weโre awake."
Iro positioned at the door, rifle steady. "If you need another thirty, I can give you fireworks."
Aya approached the console, already scanning. "What exactly are we pulling?"
"Intercept logs," Dekra said. "Ash Logicโs burst transmissions. Hidden under public systems. City maintenance alerts, transit routes, drone pathing โ itโs all camouflage."
Hernan didnโt speak.
He stood near the cracked glass of the towerโs long window, staring out over Sector Nine. Somewhere out there, people were eating dinner. Sleeping. Existing. And maybe forgetting things they hadnโt realized theyโd lost.
Dekra began decrypting. Lines of glyphs scrolled by in fluid cascade. Her implants pulsed. Then โ a stutter.
"I found him," she said.
Aya turned. "Zero-B?"
"Heโs not just active. Heโs integrated. Embedded himself inside an old Zodiac tactical support unit. New paperwork. Clean ID. Heโs officially city-sanctioned."
"Zodiacโs defunct," Aya said.
"Not anymore," Dekra said. "Scorpio resurrected the badge through Ash Logic. And the city โ hell, the surveillance AIs โ are honoring the chain of command."
Iro swore under his breath. "So heโs not pretending to help the city."
"He is helping it," Dekra said. "In their eyes."
She pulled up another feed.
"Hernanโs tagโs been flagged twice. Not for being dangerous. For being... inconsistent."
Ayaโs voice turned sharp. "Define that."
Dekra looked at her. "The network labeled him a ghost. A temporal distortion. His memory profile doesnโt align with the consensus perception index."
She tapped the terminal. "In short โ the city thinks he is the fake."
A low tone buzzed from the console.
A new window opened.
A video feed.
Sector Twelve. Live broadcast. Timestamp: ten minutes ago.
Ayaโs hand froze.
Onscreen, a crowd had gathered beneath a massive curved billboard. The plaza was calm. Controlled. No riot shields. No panic.
Then a new figure stepped into view.
Echo Zero-B.
Hernan Vale.
Polished. Clean.
He wore the same coat โ but newer. Sharper. His eyes didnโt carry the weight of memory. They gleamed like purpose.
He raised one hand, palm open in faux humility.
"My name is Hernan Vale," he said. "And I want to thank this city... for its loyalty."
The crowd didnโt react.
They didnโt need to.
Because nothing about this felt strange to them.
The feed cut.
Silence.
Iro was the first to speak. "Heโs not hiding anymore."
Aya shook her head. "He doesnโt have to. He is the narrative now."
Dekra added, "This was never about replacing Hernan. It was about replacing the world around him. Piece by piece. Until it stopped recognizing him."
Aya raised the scanner again. Two tags.
Still side by side.
Still green.
Still valid.
"He doesnโt need to kill you," she said quietly. "He just needs to make them believe heโs always been you."
Hernan stared at the screen, lips parted slightly.
Behind his eyes, something cracked.
Not fear.
Not doubt.
But the dawning truth that to survive this... heโd have to wage war not on a man.
But on memory itself.
And memory?
Memory doesnโt bleed.







