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Rom Packs - Mister

“What does that mean?”

“I found it ,” Kestrel said, shivering. “It found me first. Crawled out of a disposal vent in Level 7. It was trying to type on a dead terminal. What the hell is it, Mister?”

“Where is it?” Kestrel asked.

The rain over the Spire had not stopped for forty-seven days. It wasn’t rain, not really—it was a slow, vertical drizzle of coolant from the atmospheric scrubbers of the city-stack, a perpetual weep that turned the lower levels into a rust-slicked marsh. In the very bottom, beneath the last legal sub-basement and the first illegal chop-shop, there was a door. A single, unremarkable door of riveted iron, painted the color of a forgotten bruise. Behind that door sat Mister Rom Packs.

Mister Rom Packs plugged a cable into the port labeled SELF . He plugged another cable into the port labeled WITNESS . He touched the end of a third cable to Kestrel’s synthetic skin patch, and the patch opened like a flower, revealing a raw data socket she hadn’t known was there. Mister Rom Packs

Then, with a wet, tearing sensation behind her eyes, the SELF fragment left her.

By the seventh day, they had gathered thirty-seven fragments. The hand in the workshop had grown a wrist, then an arm, then a shoulder. It had started to hum. Kestrel’s synthetic skin patch had stopped flickering error messages and now displayed a single, steady word: HELP . “What does that mean

She was a thousand people at once. She was a woman in a burning server farm, screaming as her consciousness fragmented across sixteen million pings. She was a man who had paid to live forever in a luxury resort simulation, only to realize the simulation was a single, infinite hallway with no doors. She was a child whose uploaded laugh had been stolen by an ad algorithm and now played before every video about life insurance. She was Harold P. Driscoll at the moment of his corruption, feeling himself tear apart—one piece becoming a traffic light, another becoming elevator music, another becoming a hand that crawled through the dark looking for anyone to touch.

Each fragment resisted. Each one tried to speak. Mister Rom Packs would plug a cable into the appropriate port— SMELL, SOUND, REGRET —and listen. And then he would say something like, “No, Harold, the meeting wasn’t your fault,” or “She didn’t leave because of the coffee; she left because you were never there,” and the fragment would sigh through a speaker or shudder through a servo and then collapse into a small, inert object: a domino, a bent paperclip, a single false eyelash. It was trying to type on a dead terminal

“And then?”

She helped Harold sit up. She helped Mister Rom Packs close the door. And outside, the rain over the Spire continued to fall—forty-eight days now, and counting—each drop a tiny, lost moment, waiting for someone to give it a name.