Jalen looked at her then, sharply. “Are you ready?”

They worked under the halo of the relay, cutting a line here, sealing a node there. Each cut was a small war—a pop like a bubble bursting, a flare of light, the brief scream of displaced code. The Bond retaliated. Memory-waves rushed through Mira: fragments of strangers’ joys, strangers’ griefs, the warm tiredness of an old woman’s hand in a child’s. Each memory fancied itself a right to remain. Each was a temptation.

The sky above the Aeroplex had been a bruise of bruises all evening: violet bruised into bruised indigo, trailing the last heat of day like a wound that refused to close. On the surface of the cloudlet platform, steam rose in slow, nervous fingers from vents built into the walkway. The vents hummed—low, mechanical breaths—while neon veins pulsed through the platform’s translucent rails. Heat clung to clothes and skin as if the air itself remembered the sun and refused to forgive it.

At the base of the relay tower, maintenance bots had formed a loose circle. Their panels were blanked—standard precaution. Behind them, a man in a maintenance coat watched Mira and Jalen approach. His face was softened by age and practice. “You two shouldn’t be here after hours,” he said, voice crackled by a throat that had seen the Aeroplex at its worst.