Neon Signals

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Neon Signals

The acid rain in New Boston did not fall in drops so much as in sheets—thin, corrosive curtains that turned every neon sign into a bleeding watercolor. Mara Kowalczyk had developed a habit of watching this effect through her lenses: "Filterglass Mark IV" implants that allowed her to see the faint glow of data streams flowing through the city's infrastructure. From her vantage point in a third-floor walk-up above Tremont Street, New Boston looked like a circuit board lit from within, every light representing a person doing something, hiding something, surviving something.

Mara was a data scavenger by trade. She specialized in digital cleanup for clients who needed their traces erased: browsing histories, surveillance footage, the digital ghosts of inconvenient lives. She did not touch criminal records—that was a different profession, and she kept her distance. Her work was cleaner than that. More neutral. More invisible.

On a Tuesday in November 2089, Mara was clearing a data trail in an old industrial district when she saw a figure standing beneath a holographic billboard on Blue Hill Avenue. A woman in the rain, looking up at the neon text that scrolled across the sky: REMEMBER EVERYTHING. BECOME EVERYTHING.

The woman was not looking at the text. She was looking at something beyond it—something Mara's Filterglass could not render. The woman's face was wet, and her tears mixed with the acid rain in a way that made every drop visible to Mara's enhanced vision. Each tear was a tiny data event: cortisol spike, elevated heart rate, a cascade of neurochemical responses that told a story of grief so pure it bypassed the usual data compression the city applied to human emotion.

Mara's professional instinct told her to keep working. Stopping meant being seen. Being seen meant a data trace. A data trace meant risk.

She finished the cleanup and left.


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