The bird was the first sign.
Kai saw it on a Tuesday morning, three days before the world broke. She was standing on the observation deck of the Spire, seven hundred meters above the gleaming heart of the city, waiting for her coffee to cool. Below her, the mag-lev trains traced silver lines through the canyons of glass and steel, and the floating广告—holographic projections the size of city blocks—cycled through their perfect, vibrant messages. Drink Zenith. Feel Alive. Your Future Awaits.
It was a morning like any other morning in the 22nd Century. Hyper-real. Seamless. Beautiful.
And then the bird flew backwards.
It was a small thing, a sparrow, darting between two of the advertising platforms. For one impossible second, its flight path reversed. It didn't stumble or flutter; it simply flew backwards, as if someone had hit the rewind button on the world for a fraction of a second. Then it corrected itself and vanished into the city's glittering maze.
Kai's coffee cup stopped halfway to her lips.
She blinked. Her mind, trained for years to catalogue anomalies, tried to rationalize it. An optical illusion. A trick of the light off the holos. A moment of personal distraction.
But she knew. It was a glitch.
A soft chime sounded in her ear, the sound of an incoming message on a private, encrypted channel. The voice that followed was calm, synthesized, and utterly without gender. It was the voice she knew only as "Oracle."
"Good morning, Kai."
"Oracle." She didn't turn her head. She kept her eyes on the space where the bird had been. "Did you see that?"
"I see everything in my designated sector, Kai. I am aware of the anomaly you just witnessed. Its classification is minimal. A quantum fluctuation in the local data-stream. It has been logged."
"A quantum fluctuation." Kai's voice was flat. "That's what we're calling it now?"
"It is what it is. The system is vast. Minor variances are inevitable. Your concern is noted, but your primary function remains. Your next assignment has been uploaded to your nexus."
Kai felt the familiar tingle at the base of her skull as the data packet arrived. Her schedule for the day. A new glitch to hunt. A new anomaly to smooth over. She was a ghost hunter, a problem solver for the unseen machinery of reality. Most people lived their entire lives never noticing the tiny seams in the fabric of their world. It was her job to make sure it stayed that way.
"Understood," she said, though her eyes remained fixed on the empty sky.
She finished her coffee. It was perfectly brewed, of course. Everything in her life was perfectly curated. Her apartment, her clothes, her job. It was a good life. A stable life. She took a deep breath, letting the calm, reassuring order of the city wash over her. The bird was nothing. Just a quantum fluctuation.
She turned away from the railing and walked back into the Spire, leaving the impossible moment behind her. But as the glass doors slid shut, she couldn't shake the feeling that something was watching her. Not Oracle. Something else. Something patient and sad.
And somewhere, deep in the code that underpinned her perfect world, a ghost was beginning to stir.
