Casefiles for: #Nocturne

Educated Access Only

In Finn’s white room they installed turnstiles. To enter you don’t have to show a document: you must upload proof that you won’t bring anything unexpected inside. Above the reader flashes a blue sign, EDUCATED ACCESS ONLY. Case lays down the deck like a relic; the machine doesn’t ask who he is, it asks whether he’s already been normalized enough to desire safely.

Inside, the room is larger than possible, made of shielded corridors that twist upon themselves like hospital intestines. On the walls there are slow charts, in place of windows. If I try to look outside, the glass returns a report: insurance premiums, shipping routes, fuel, spread, casualty count. The war isn’t missing; it’s been stretched until it became interface.

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Origin Known, Judgment Missing

At the customs gate in the Sprawl they do not inspect bodies. They inspect telemetries. Everyone enters by presenting a graph instead of a face.

Case holds out his deck like a passport. The officer stamps it with the words AUTHORIZED SURPRISE: NO.

On the arrivals board there are no cities, only costs: jet fuel, gas, insurance, margin. The war is already inside, disguised as a tariff sheet.

Miller looks for a witness and finds only verified feeds hanging like votive icons. Molly keeps walking without turning around. She knows the corridors. She knows the only luxury left is not believing in them.

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Certificates of Humanity

At the customs office in Ninsei they inspect certificates of humanity. Everyone wears a signed tag around the neck, a human.json stitched into the skin. Case is looking for one that will let him back into the matrix, but they tell him the problem is not who he is. The problem is who is willing to attest to him.

Behind the desks an officer with Armitage’s face is stamping coordinates instead of passports. Every stamp makes one window go dark on the wall, and somewhere oil starts moving again. Miller understands that the stamps do not prove what is true. They only prove that no one will look twice.

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Twenty-Three Signatures a Minute

Case is sitting in a room without walls. He says, I want to get back inside. Miller asks, inside what. Case points at the screen. Hundreds of coordinates are flashing. Every point has a name.

A man in uniform walks in and signs a page without reading it. Every time he signs, one of the points goes dark. He signs fast, twenty-three a minute. Miller counts. The man never raises his eyes from the page.

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Insurance Against War

I am standing on a stranded oil tanker. There is no war anymore. The war is over. Still, the ship will not move. No one wants to insure it.

The captain hands me a sheet of paper. Across the top, in red, it says: SUPPLY CHAIN RISK. There is a Pentagon stamp in the corner. I tell him the contract was rejected. He says that is exactly the problem.

I climb down into the hold. A screen is waiting there, lit by a thousand coordinates. I cannot tell whether they are targets or families. I search for PULIMANTI and it appears forty-two times, all of it clustered in Lazio. The icons spread over the coordinates until the two maps become the same wound.

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