They danced around each other with words. Fu10 left finally with the knowledge that Mateo’s absence was a mechanism in a much larger machine — a machine that rewired the city’s power lines every night.
"Who sent you?" she asked. Her voice was a low stone rolling.
Fu10 slid the photograph of Mateo across the table. The Gotta’s pupils shrank: recognition is a small bright blade. "You have ghosts," she said. Santos laughed; laughter is a bad habit of the worried.
Fu10 returned to his art of moving like a glitch. He took jobs, of course — the city needed men who could slide past bolts and eyes — but he had learned a truth that fit in the crease of a photograph: some things you steal are not things at all but opportunities to change how stories are told.
The Gotta read the recall note with eyes like flint. Anger is a precious commodity; she spent it carefully. She summoned Santos, who smelled of old tobacco and the guilt of men he’d broken. They chewed the ledger like a patient wolf. The ledger spoke of routes, of bribes tucked into fish boxes, of a network threaded straight into the city’s marrow. At the bottom of a page was an entry that did not belong to commerce: a name, Mateo, and a single line — "Left 2006 — never returned."
In the days that followed, Fu10 became more than a shadow. He began to push — a light fingernail at the skin of corruption. He coaxed sailors to remember details they had told the tide. He bribed a clerk to copy a key list. He traded favors like currency until he had the outlines of a trail that led from the docks to a boutique law office downtown where polite men laundered memories with contracts and notarized forgettings.
"You wouldn’t like the names," El Claro said. "You would like them even less if you heard the reasons."
Fu10 realized then that the ledger had become a reliquary; its pages stitched people together across time and cruelty. It explained why someone would want it gone, why it would be worth more than a life to keep it hidden.