The Final Gambit
The hospital room was a sterile white box, but in my mind, it was a war room. I lay there, tethered to a dozen machines that beeped in a rhythmic, mocking cadence. They called it 'end-stage renal failure'. I called it a tactical disadvantage.
I had spent thirty years as the Commissioner of the 12th Precinct, and I had spent the last five of those years being systematically dismantled by the very syndicate I had sworn to destroy. They had framed me, stripped me of my badge, and finally, left me to rot in a bed of bleached linen.
But they had made one mistake. They thought I was defeated because I was dying.
My lawyer, a shark named Miller, sat by the bed, looking at his watch. "The deal is on the table, Commissioner. Sign the confession, and the syndicate will pay for your palliative care. You can die in comfort."
I looked at Miller, and then I looked at the man standing behind him—Vane, the syndicate's cleaner. Vane was smiling. He thought he had won. He thought the 'Great Commissioner' was now just a piece of meat waiting for the butcher.
"I'll sign," I whispered, my voice a ghost of its former authority. "But first, I want to make one phone call. A final request."
Vane shrugged. "Fine. One call."
I didn't call a priest. I didn't call my estranged daughter. I called a number that didn't exist on any official record.
"It's time," I said into the receiver. "Execute the 'Scylla' protocol."
Vane didn't know that for the last six months, I had been using my remaining strength to leak a series of carefully curated, false leads to the three rival families that hated the syndicate more than they hated me. I had painted a picture of a hidden treasure—a ledger of every bribe, every murder, every secret account—and I had told each family that the other two were about to find it.
The 'Scylla' protocol was not a plan for my survival; it was a plan for their mutual annihilation.
As I hung up the phone, I saw the first notification flash on Vane's phone. Then another. And another. The rival families had just converged on the syndicate's main vault, each believing they were the only ones with the key.
Vane's smile vanished. He looked at his phone, then at me, his eyes widening with a sudden, sharp realization.
"What did you do?" he hissed.
I smiled back. It was a small, bloody smile, but it was the most honest thing I had felt in years.
"I just reorganized the board, Vane. I may be leaving the game, but I decided to make sure the table was flipped on the way out."
I closed my eyes as the distant sound of sirens and gunfire began to echo through the city. I didn't need to see the end. I had designed it. And as the machines finally flatlined, I felt a surge of power that no medicine could provide.
*** OTMES-v2-O4P5Q6-090-M0-045-3R6010-M3N4
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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