Sarah Vance woke up not to her phone's alarm, but to the phone itself. It was vibrating against the wood of her nightstand with a frantic insistence. She opened her eyes to the dimness of her apartment, disoriented. For a moment, the terror of the previous afternoon returned, the image of a man disintegrating into a cloud of gray ash. Then, the memory of her own face on the television screen replaced it.
She grabbed the phone. The screen was swarming with notifications. Hundreds of messages, social media mentions, emails from colleagues and strangers. Her report had set social media on fire. A pirated video of her live broadcast had seventeen million views. The headline beneath it, coined by some anonymous blogger, was the one everyone was using now: "The Radioactive Angel of Metroville."
"Angel…" Sarah whispered with a dry, humorless laugh. There was nothing angelic in that man's eyes.
An incoming call interrupted her stupor. The caller ID read "Don Henderson." Her boss. She took a deep breath and answered.
"Sarah?"
"Hi, Don. Yes, I'm awake."
"Are you awake? Sarah, the entire world is awake and they're looking at your face! Have you seen the morning numbers? We've crushed the competition! We've wiped them off the map! Channel 4 is still re-running a story about a cat stuck in a tree!"
Henderson's voice was a whirlwind of euphoria and caffeine. He was a man who lived for ratings, and Sarah had just handed him the biggest hit of his career.
"I'm glad to hear it, Don."
"Glad? You should be ecstatic! You're the most famous journalist on the planet right now. Your name, his name… Gamma Jack! It's incredible! It's perfect! Now listen to me, this is important. Forget everything else. Your only priority is to find him."
Sarah rubbed her forehead. The headache that had been building behind her eyes was starting to throb.
"Don, I don't think it's that simple. This guy… he's not someone you find in the phone book. No one knows who he is. The police have nothing."
"I don't care! The police look for criminals, you look for the biggest story in human history! I want the exclusive, Sarah. The first interview. Imagine the viewership. I want you to sit down with him. I want to know where he came from, what he wants, what he had for breakfast. I want everything!"
"Understood. But, Don… did you see what he did? He didn't arrest those men. He executed them. No trial, no nothing. People are calling him a hero, but…"
"But nothing," Henderson cut her off, his tone losing its euphoria and turning sharp. "Our job isn't to judge him, it's to report on him. You're the face of this story. You're the only one he spoke to. He chose you, Sarah. Don't screw it up. Find him. You have unlimited resources. Now, get to work."
He hung up. Sarah was left holding the phone, the silence of her apartment suddenly feeling overwhelming. She had the story of a lifetime, the opportunity she had always dreamed of. And she was completely terrified.
****
Twenty kilometers away, at the central district precinct, Captain Frank Miller stared at a cold cup of coffee. He hadn't slept. How could he? Every time he closed his eyes, he saw a smoking hole in a man's chest and a charming smile on the killer's face.
His desk was a chaos of preliminary reports with details that seemed torn from a science fiction novel.
"Cause of death, subject 1: total bodily disintegration. No remains recovered." "Cause of death, subject 2: thoracic perforation by unknown thermal energy source." "Cause of death, subject 3: instantaneous vaporization."
The medical examiner, a veteran guy named Al, had called him in the morning. His voice sounded hollow, defeated. "Frank, I don't know what to put in these reports. Do I say a guy turned to dust? That another got a hole punched through him with a sunbeam? They're going to pull my license."
A knock on his office door pulled him from his trance.
"Captain?" Sergeant Davies peeked his head in. "There are… there are some people here to see you. They say it's a matter of national security."
Before Miller could answer, two men walked into his office. They wore identical, impeccably tailored dark suits that didn't fit in with the worn-out surroundings of the police station. They weren't cops. They had the rigid posture of military men and the empty eyes of high-level bureaucrats.
"Captain Frank Miller," the first one said. It wasn't a question. His voice was as impersonal as the hum of an air conditioner. "I'm Agent Thorne. This is Agent Graves. You'll be coming with us."
Miller rose slowly, his hand instinctively near his service weapon.
"Excuse me? And who are you exactly? FBI? CIA?"
"We are the competent authority on this matter," Thorne replied, ignoring the question. "The Metroville Central Bank case is now under federal jurisdiction. All evidence, reports, and testimony related to the incident will be transferred to our custody. Including you."
"I'm in the middle of an investigation…"
"Your investigation is over," Graves intervened, his voice even flatter than his partner's. "Please come with us, Captain. We would prefer not to insist."
The threat was subtle, but unmistakable. Miller looked at Davies, who stood in the doorway, pale and uncertain. Then he looked at the two men. Their expressions were unreadable. He felt a wave of helpless frustration. Yesterday, he was facing a man who could melt people. Today, it was a government that wanted to erase it all. He realized both problems were probably connected.
"Alright," he said, grabbing his jacket. "But for the record, this is a formal protest."
Thorne almost smiled.
"Noted."
****
The Channel 8 newsroom was buzzing with activity. When Sarah walked in, conversations stopped. All eyes turned to her. Some looked at her with admiration, others with barely disguised envy. She felt every eye on her.
"There's our star," said Dave, her cameraman, walking over with two coffees in hand. He offered her one. "You look terrible."
"I feel terrible," Sarah admitted, accepting the coffee. The warmth of the paper cup was comforting. "Henderson wants me to find him."
"Of course he does," Dave snorted. "That man would sell his own mother for an exclusive. And what did you tell him?"
"What could I tell him? I said I'd try. That's what we're supposed to do, right? Chase the story."
"Sure. But the last story we chased couldn't turn people to ash. Listen, Sarah, I was there. I saw that guy's face. He's not a hero. He's something I don't think we should be poking."
"I know, Dave. Believe me, I know. But everyone's talking about him. Half the city thinks he's the second coming of Christ and the other half is too scared to say what they really think. If we don't tell this story, someone else will. And they'll probably get it wrong."
She sat at her desk and turned on her computer. The home screen was a mosaic of articles about Gamma Jack. She spent the next three hours on a dead end investigation. She searched police databases for anything related to strange incidents, unexplained deaths, anything that might indicate Jack had acted before. Nothing. She searched property records, social media, the darkest internet forums. There was no trace of him.
"It's useless," she finally said, leaning back in her chair. "It's like he appeared out of thin air yesterday."
"Maybe he did," said Dave, who had been watching over her shoulder.
"Nobody appears out of thin air," Sarah replied, more to herself than to him. "Everyone comes from somewhere. We just have to find out where."
****
The car transporting Miller had no windows in the back. It was a black, anonymous vehicle that slid through city traffic before entering an underground service tunnel. When the doors opened, they weren't in Metroville. They were in a complex of concrete and steel. A metal table, three chairs. No windows. The door shut with a final, metallic click that told him it wouldn't open from the inside. He waited. Ten minutes later, Agent Thorne entered alone, carrying a thin digital tablet.
"Thank you for your cooperation, Captain."
"You didn't give me much of a choice," Miller answered.
Thorne sat across from him. There was no trace of his earlier thuggish demeanor. Now he was all business, cold and distant.
"I need you to tell me everything you saw yesterday. In full detail. Don't omit anything, no matter how insignificant you think it is."
For the next hour, Miller recounted the events. He described the man leaning against the parking meter, his unnatural calm, the way he dealt with his officers, his entry into the bank. He described the terror on the hostages' faces when they came out.
Thorne listened without interrupting, his fingers occasionally tapping on the tablet. When Miller finished, a long silence followed.
"You said the hostages were terrified," Thorne finally said. "Not relieved."
"They were alive, but they didn't feel saved. I saw their eyes. They had watched one monster kill three other monsters. They didn't know whose side they were supposed to be on. To be honest, neither did I."
Thorne nodded slowly.
"Your assessment matches our preliminary profile. An individual with omega-level destructive capabilities, along with traits of malignant narcissism and a possible messiah complex. He doesn't act out of altruism. He acts out of ego."
"He acts like he's God," Miller corrected.
"An important distinction," Thorne conceded. He slid the tablet across the table for Miller to see. "Five years ago. A foundry in the industrial district. A supervisor named Murdoch. Died in an alleged industrial accident."
On the screen was a grainy crime scene photo. An ash silhouette on the concrete floor, unsettlingly familiar.
"There was a witness," Thorne continued. "A worker who called 911. He was hysterical. Talked about a young employee, a kid named John, who argued with Murdoch. He said the supervisor 'just burned up.' The witness recanted his statement the next day, said he was in shock. The case was closed as an accident."
"John…" Miller repeated, feeling a chill. "Is it him?"
"We don't have a clear photo of him from back then. He disappeared right after the incident. Hasn't been a trace of him in five years. No tax records, no traffic tickets, no credit card activity. A ghost. We believe he's spent that time honing his abilities. What you saw yesterday wasn't an accident. It was a performance. A debut."
Thorne stood up.
"We have opened a file on this individual. Codename: Gamma Jack, courtesy of your reporter friend. Your directive, Captain, is simple. Go back to your precinct. Continue your work. If Gamma Jack appears again, your only action is to observe, report, and do not engage. Is that clear?"
"Do not engage? What if he starts killing more people?"
"Then we will ensure you are observing from a very safe distance, Captain. You do not have the tools to deal with this. No one in your department does. We do."
Thorne left the room, leaving Miller alone with the image of the ash silhouette and the cold certainty that the nightmare had only just begun.
****
Sarah got to her apartment after nine at night, mentally and physically exhausted. She had spent the day chasing a ghost and all she had to show for it was a headache and the growing feeling that she was in over her head.
She ordered Chinese food and poured herself a glass of wine, trying to disconnect. She turned on the news. Her own face stared back at her from the screen. A panel of experts was debating Gamma Jack. Was he a hero? A menace? The next step in human evolution? Everyone was talking about him, but nobody knew anything.
Her phone's ringing startled her. It was a blocked number. She hesitated for a second before answering.
"Hello?"
There was silence on the other end of the line, just faint static.
"Ms. Vance."
The voice. It was him. Unmistakable. Smooth, deep, and with that same tone of amused arrogance. Sarah's heart began to pound against her ribs.
"Who is this?" she asked, though she already knew.
"Come now, don't be modest. I know you recognize my voice. You've been playing it all day on your network. A very flattering camera angle, by the way."
Her mouth went dry. She stood up and walked to the window, looking out at the expanse of city lights, instinctively searching for him among them.
"How did you get this number?"
A soft laugh came through the phone.
"You'd be surprised how easy it is to get things when people are eager to help. It seems I'm quite popular. Thanks to you, in large part. I should send you flowers."
"What do you want?"
"The question is, what do you want, Ms. Vance? You've spent all day looking for me. You've had your entire team turning over every rock in this city. Well, here I am. I found you."
The subtext was clear. He was in control. He always had been.
"I want an interview," Sarah said, trying to make her voice sound steadier than she felt.
"I know. And you're going to get it. I think it's time the world got to know its new…" he paused, as if searching for the perfect word, "…savior. But it will be on my terms."
"What are your terms?"
"Tomorrow night. Ten o'clock sharp. The Spire restaurant, top of the Nakatomi Tower. Reserve the corner table, the one with the view of the city. And come alone. No cameras, no hidden microphones, no burly friend of yours, Dave. Just you and me. A conversation."
"And how do I know it's safe? How do I know you won't…?"
"That I won't turn you into a cloud of ash?" he completed the sentence for her, his amused tone turning icy for an instant. "If I wanted to harm you, Ms. Vance, I wouldn't be calling you on the phone. Consider this a professional opportunity. The biggest of your life. Don't waste it."
The silence stretched on. Sarah could hear her own breathing, quick and shallow. It was insane. It was professional suicide, and quite possibly, literal suicide. But it was also the only way.
"I'll be there," she said finally.
"I knew you would. You have determination, Ms. Vance. I like that."
The line went dead.
Sarah stood by the window for a long time, looking out at the city. She realized she wasn't just a reporter chasing a story anymore. She was a player in someone else's game, and she had no idea what the rules were.