Ficool

One Last Code

Atolagbe_Precious
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
488
Views
Synopsis
Adaora just wanted to fix a bug. What she found instead was a ghost in the system. A brutal algorithm. A vanished sister. A masked operator named Wraith. At Techville University’s tech lab, something beneath the surface is learning, watching — and rewriting reality. As secrets unravel and mimicry evolves, the code turns personal. "If the real you becomes inconvenient — she’ll replace you." One Last Code is a fast-paced thriller where AI meets paranoia, trust glitches, and every pattern leads to something darker. And it all started with a single USB drive.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Episode 1 — The Bug That Wasn’t

I've always believed people — and programs — are mostly good.

I mean, sure, code can be messy and life unpredictable, but if you just follow the logic long enough, things make sense. That's what I told myself, even as I stared at the glowing screen in the half-empty university lab, sometime past 2 a.m.

Everyone else had gone. I should've left too, but I was determined to fix this final-year project bug. FaceTrace — my smart attendance app — was supposed to be my ticket to a distinction. It worked fine during the demo last week. But then tonight, out of nowhere, this odd error started popping up.

line 237: unexpected function override - anonymous

It didn't make any sense. I hadn't written anything remotely like it. Maybe it was a compiler glitch, or a template bug from GitHub. I wasn't that great with repositories — Femi always handled those. Still, I figured I could clean it up if I kept trying.

I highlighted the line and hit backspace. It vanished. For two seconds. Then reappeared.

I blinked.

I tried again, more forcefully this time. Still the same.

Maybe I was tired. Or maybe someone was playing a prank. My class group chat had been suspiciously quiet all day, which usually meant someone was up to something.

I sighed and leaned back. My eyes felt gritty. I really should've gone to bed hours ago. I took a sip of my now-cold coffee and checked the logs one more time.

Then it happened. My inbox pinged.

Sender: Unknown

Subject: ONE LAST CODE

Attachment: msg.enc

No message body.

I stared at the screen. I must've sat there for a full minute before moving. I've always had a soft spot for puzzles — escape rooms, cipher games, encrypted files. Maybe this was some cybersecurity student's idea of a joke. I clicked the file, but it wouldn't open. It was encrypted, and I didn't have the key.

Part of me thought I should close the tab and ignore it.

But curiosity always wins with me. I saved the file to my desktop.

I was about to call Femi — my project partner — when my phone buzzed.

A WhatsApp message from my roommate.

Roomie ❤️: "Ada, are you still in the lab? Something's wrong. Come quick."

Sent at 1:42 a.m.

But it was 2:18 a.m. now. Why was it just coming in?

My stomach tightened. Probably just bad network, right? Happens all the time on campus.

Still… I packed up quickly and jogged out of the lab. I took the shortcut path behind the science block, trying not to think too hard about the shadows between the buildings.

When I got to the dorm, everything felt…off. The lights were dim. The air felt heavier than usual. I walked faster down the hall.

I unlocked our door and pushed it open.

Darkness. Silence.

I flipped the light switch. Nothing.

"Chiamaka?" I called.

No answer.

The bed was half-made. Her towel still hung on the hook. Her laptop sat open on the desk, the screen dim.

But her phone — her phone was lying on her bed, cracked, with the flashlight on, blinking weakly like it was sending an SOS in Morse code.

Something wasn't right.

I tried calling her. The line went straight to voicemail.

I stepped back slowly, feeling the weight of silence press against my ears.

Then my laptop — which I hadn't even reopened — chimed.

I fumbled with it and saw a new email.

Same sender.

Subject: YOU'RE NEXT.

No body. No attachment.

I froze.

I wanted to believe it was still a joke. Maybe it was Chiamaka, pulling a dramatic prank because I forgot her birthday last week. Maybe it was Femi — though this didn't feel like his kind of humor.

My brain tried to make excuses.

Maybe it was a final-year stress breakdown.

Maybe someone hacked our network.

Maybe —

Then I noticed something that made the blood drain from my face.

On the cracked phone screen, a note was typed and saved in the Notes app.

Just four words.

"He said your name."

Don't miss the next drop — Subscribe for early access to future episodes.